The
Voice of Peace was still broadcasting. The owner had been in prison for over 40
days just for talking peace, surely a contravention of his human rights. I felt
aggrieved and wanted to help, so I brought a book to use as a petition. I asked
Marion to sign and, even though she had no idea what it was about, duly placed
her signature on the dotted line. She asked if she could sign for her brother
too but the offer was declined.
Next
to the marina was a large gym where I thought I might find an aerobics
instructor. The place was lush and had something I had not seen for a long
time- carpets. Even the receptionist was high tec. She rippled with pumped up
charisma.
“Good
morning sir, how may I help you?” how did she know I was english?
“I’ve
come about aerobics. I…”
“Sorry
sir, our classes are for females only.” she interrupted.
‘What
a sexist’ I thought. “No, no, I’m looking for an instructor.”
“All
our fitness advisors are under contract. Here’s our rates- 100 shekels per
hour, minimum 2 hours. Good day.”
As
I walked across the plaza the ladies of the night were doing a day-time shift.
“Hi
Bob.” my reputation had preceded me. “Want some business?”
“How
much?”
“50
shekels, as I like you.”
I
smiled; at least they offered a fair
price.
google image
I
called in at the British Council to read the newspapers. Here was an oasis of
calm sanity in amongst the hub-bub of Tel Aviv. It was cool in summer and warm
in winter. It had carpet and wall-to-wall Shakespeare. It nurtured middle-class
values of country cottages and nightingales singing. The stark reality was one
of an ailing health service and lengthening dole queues. Not even Satan could
keep the mills open.
However,
I could retreat there and peruse the sport pages and the biased propaganda. One
time a member of staff allowed me to use the photocopier 1 minute after the
building had closed. I wrote a letter to John Major informing him of the
dedication over and above the call of duty of an outpost of the British Empire.
I
suggested that perhaps he might consider awarding all the staff OBE’s in the
New Year’s honours list. I did not receive a reply maybe because in a PS I
wrote ‘nothing personal, but I hope you lose the next election’. The Council
staff were impressed by my audacity and I always got red carpet treatment on
every visit. I never did check to see if any got an award, I think probably
not.
I
took a biography of Gareth Edwards hoping it would improve my passing, but
dropped it before I had opened it. I noticed a fit-looking female take a book
and came and sat on my table. Under the English system of manners, it would
have been polite to have asked before, but this was Israel, and any concept of
space-invasion was different.
The
title of her book was ‘Jane Fonda’s Advanced Workout’, from which she made
notes and kept shaking her head.
“It’s
just wrong.” she said.
“What
is?”
“Look!”
she showed me a photo, “That back position is dangerous and she doesn’t have a
clue about warming up, far too stressful on the joints.”
Her
knowledge sounded impressive. She was 2 years into a PE degree at Wingate
University. I told her that was where I played Rugby; I kept my previous
occupation secret.
Her
Yemenite features were finely chiselled and she mouthed her words poetically.
She had a job as a waitress to make ends meet. I had a proposition to put to
her, in the best possible way- to lead the classes at the Ego-trip.
“We’ll
call it ‘robics’, with no air.” I proffered. “We’ll go 50/50.”
We
agreed and I held out my petition for her to sign.
google image
“No
way! If that schmuck wants to talk to an illegal organisation he can take all
the consequences that come his way.” I could see she was angry. It made her
flashing eyes glimmer. We could broach the subject at a later stage perhaps.
Her name was Orit.The
Voice of Peace was still broadcasting. The owner had been in prison for over 40
days just for talking peace, surely a contravention of his human rights. I felt
aggrieved and wanted to help, so I brought a book to use as a petition. I asked
Marion to sign and, even though she had no idea what it was about, duly placed
her signature on the dotted line. She asked if she could sign for her brother
too but the offer was declined.
Next
to the marina was a large gym where I thought I might find an aerobics
instructor. The place was lush and had something I had not seen for a long
time- carpets. Even the receptionist was high tec. She rippled with pumped up
charisma.
“Good
morning sir, how may I help you?” how did she know I was english?
“I’ve
come about aerobics. I…”
“Sorry
sir, our classes are for females only.” she interrupted.
‘What
a sexist’ I thought. “No, no, I’m looking for an instructor.”
“All
our fitness advisors are under contract. Here’s our rates- 100 shekels per
hour, minimum 2 hours. Good day.”
As
I walked across the plaza the ladies of the night were doing a day-time shift.
“Hi
Bob.” my reputation had preceded me. “Want some business?”
“How
much?”
“50
shekels, as I like you.”
I
smiled; at least they offered a fair
price.
I
called in at the British Council to read the newspapers. Here was an oasis of
calm sanity in amongst the hub-bub of Tel Aviv. It was cool in summer and warm
in winter. It had carpet and wall-to-wall Shakespeare. It nurtured middle-class
values of country cottages and nightingales singing. The stark reality was one
of an ailing health service and lengthening dole queues. Not even Satan could
keep the mills open.
However,
I could retreat there and peruse the sport pages and the biased propaganda. One
time a member of staff allowed me to use the photocopier 1 minute after the
building had closed. I wrote a letter to John Major informing him of the
dedication over and above the call of duty of an outpost of the British Empire.
I
suggested that perhaps he might consider awarding all the staff OBE’s in the
New Year’s honours list. I did not receive a reply maybe because in a PS I
wrote ‘nothing personal, but I hope you lose the next election’. The Council
staff were impressed by my audacity and I always got red carpet treatment on
every visit. I never did check to see if any got an award, I think probably
not.
I
took a biography of Gareth Edwards hoping it would improve my passing, but
dropped it before I had opened it. I noticed a fit-looking female take a book
and came and sat on my table. Under the English system of manners, it would
have been polite to have asked before, but this was Israel, and any concept of
space-invasion was different.
The
title of her book was ‘Jane Fonda’s Advanced Workout’, from which she made
notes and kept shaking her head.
“It’s
just wrong.” she said.
“What
is?”
“Look!”
she showed me a photo, “That back position is dangerous and she doesn’t have a
clue about warming up, far too stressful on the joints.”
Her
knowledge sounded impressive. She was 2 years into a PE degree at Wingate
University. I told her that was where I played Rugby; I kept my previous
occupation secret.
Her
Yemenite features were finely chiselled and she mouthed her words poetically.
She had a job as a waitress to make ends meet. I had a proposition to put to
her, in the best possible way- to lead the classes at the Ego-trip.
“We’ll
call it ‘robics’, with no air.” I proffered. “We’ll go 50/50.”
We
agreed and I held out my petition for her to sign.
“No
way! If that schmuck wants to talk to an illegal organisation he can take all
the consequences that come his way.” I could see she was angry. It made her
flashing eyes glimmer. We could broach the subject at a later stage perhaps.
Her name was Orit.