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Life in Israel by Mati Milstein

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  • Life in Israel by Mati Milstein

    January 2005
    THE NEW MEXICO JEWISH LINK

    OPINION: Life in Israel by Mati Milstein

    ARMENIAN QUARTER, JERUSALEM---As the year drew to a close, a man who
    doesn't officially exist sang and danced for joy within the walls of the Old
    City of Jerusalem.
    Hrayr Yezegelian, 27, has lived half his life in the murky shadowlands
    between war and peace. The Beirut-born Armenian fled the Lebanese civil war
    to Israel with his family and has been stuck in bureaucratic limbo ever since.
    He has resided in Israel for 15 years, but has no permanent Israeli
    identification card---a document every resident is required by law to carry at
    all times. He holds no passport. He cannot even return to Lebanon, having
    forfeited his citizensip in that country. He said were he to return there, he
    would be interrogated by the secret police as a suspected Israeli spy, beaten
    and possibly killed.
    He lives in fear the Jerusalem police, out searching for suspected
    terrorists, will arrest him. He resides in east Jerusalem, is not an Israeli
    Jew, and carries irregular documents, if any at all. He is, on all accounts, a
    very suspicious character.
    The Interior Ministry, for reasons known only to itself, refuses to
    grant Yezegelian more than a temporary identity card and a six-month
    laissez-passe even though his parents and siblings all hold regular Israeli
    documentation.
    With no permanent passport, Yezegelian cannot leave Israel; no country
    will issue him a visa on a travel document valid for less than a year.
    His employer, a security company, subtracts a significant amount from
    his monthly salary for national health insurance, but lacking the proper
    documents Yezegelian is ineligible to reap the benefits of such deposits.
    A musician, Yezegelian met--and sang for--Yossi Sarid when the Knesset
    member came to pay his respects at a memorial service for victims of the
    Armenian genocide at the hands of theTurks. He has letters of support from MK
    Tamar Gozansky and the legendary former Jerusalem mayor Teddy Kollek.
    He speaks fluent Hebrew (as well as Armenian, Arabic, Turkish and a
    handful of other languages), has Israeli friends and is integrated into Israeli
    society (sometimes going by the Hebrew name "Ariel"). But he desires nothing
    more than to be recognized by the State as a normal resident and citizen.
    To no avail. Important Israeli personalities seem unable to provide
    him with answers, never mind results.
    Even the United Nations High Commission for Refugees has thus far been
    largely unhelpful.
    Yezegelian, originally, sponsored by the Armenian Patriarch, long ago
    lost faith in religion and abandoned his seminary studies in the Old City's
    monastery compound. He is tired of the Middle East conflict and living on the
    perpetual brink of war, sick of a home in the Old City cauldron amongst
    thousands of Palestinian Arabs.
    But in late December, Yezegelian the musician kept nearly a hundred
    Armenian celebrants dancing, laughing and toasting for hours on end in a club in
    the Old City's ancient Armenian quarter. Disco lights twirled and flashed
    and Yezegelian joined partygoers jumping for joy in the smoky, stone-arched
    cavern.
    What can he possibly be so happy about?
    Music and America. Yezegelian dreams of America, of joining the large
    Armenian community in southern California and developing a unique variety of
    music. Or maybe France or Canada; someplace far from the Middle East.
    How is Yezegelian ---a trapped stateless man in a land that can't quite
    bring itself to accept him---able to remain so positive?
    "I don't know, " he shrugged. "Everyone should be happy. You have to
    be happy to survive."

    Mati Milstein [from New Mexico] has lived in Israel since 1998. He
    began covering stories in Israel and the Palestinian Authority-controlled
    territories for Israeli and foreign media outlets.
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