Modiin Illit - In 2 Big Haredi Towns a Sign for a Deal in West Bank Settlements |
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Beitar Illit is a growing ultra-Orthodox settlement whose residents may be open to compromise with the Palestinians.
If, as is widely believed abroad, “natural growth” by Israeli settlers is blocking the creation of a viable Palestinian state, this community should show why.
But appearances are deceiving. Modiin Illit and its sister community, Beitar Illit, are entirely ultra-Orthodox, a world apart, one of strict religious observance and study. They offer surprising potential for compromise.
Unlike settlers who believe they are continuing the historic Zionist mission of reclaiming the Jewish homeland, most ultra-Orthodox do not consider themselves settlers or Zionists and express no commitment to being in the West Bank, so their growth in these settlement towns, situated just inside the pre-1967 boundary, could be redirected westward to within Israel.
Their location also means it may be possible, in negotiations about a future Palestinian state, to redraw the boundary so the settlements are inside Israel, with little land lost to the Palestinians. And the two towns alone account for half of all settler growth, so if removed from the equation, the larger settler challenge takes on more manageable proportions.
“If I thought this was a settlement, I would never have come here,” said Yaakov Guterman, 40, the mayor of Modiin Illit and a grandfather of three, his Orthodox fringes hanging from his belt, his side locks curled behind his ears. Asked about the prospect of a Palestinian state rising one day on his town line, he said: “We will go along with what the world wants. We have gone through the Holocaust and know what it means to have the world against us. The Torah says a man needs to know his place.”
Whether or not Mr. Guterman will be as pliant as he says, Middle East peace negotiators on all sides — Israeli, Palestinian and American — have long viewed small border adjustments and land swaps as key to a deal that would include a solution to the hundreds of thousands of Jews who have settled in the West Bank over the past four decades.
This week, three senior American officials will be in Jerusalem for talks that will include settlements: the Middle East envoy, George J. Mitchell; the White House Middle East adviser, Dennis Ross; and the national security adviser, Gen. James Jones. Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates will also be in talks in Jerusalem.
Break With Settler Movement
The ultra-Orthodox inhabitants often express contempt for the settler movement, with its vows never to move. The people here, who shun most aspects of modernity, came for three reasons: they needed affordable housing no longer available in and around Jerusalem or Tel Aviv; they were rejected by other Israeli cities as too cult-like; and officials wanted their presence to broaden Israel’s narrow border.
Yet they are lumped with everyone else. The settler movement and the Israeli government point to ultra-Orthodox settlements, with their large and ever-increasing families, to argue that there is no way to stop “natural growth” without imposing acute human suffering. Those seeking a freeze use the settlements as evidence that growth is so out of control that drastic action must be taken. More broadly, opponents say the settlements violate international law, legitimize force by armed messianic Jews and ruin the chance of establishing a viable Palestinian state.
But even those who strongly favor a complete freeze acknowledge that the annual settler growth rates of 5 and 6 percent owe a great deal to these two towns that have little to do with the broader settler enterprise.
Dror Etkes of Yesh Din, an antisettlement group in Israel, noted that half of all construction in West Bank settlements was taking place in these two ultra-Orthodox communities, adding that given their location next to the boundary, it was highly likely they would be in Israel in a future deal through a redrawn border. “From a purely geographic point of view, construction there is not as destructive as elsewhere,” he said.
But he does not want building to continue in Modiin Illit or Beitar Illit without a deal for a Palestinian state, nor does he mean to imply that these settlements have been a benign force. “Land has been taken from Palestinians, in some cases from private landowners, for the building in these settlements, and there are many other issues like sewage flow into Palestinian villages that must be addressed,” Mr. Etkes said.
Settler leaders reject any distinction. The fact that the ultra-Orthodox came to the West Bank to solve their housing problems is “completely O.K. with me,” said Dani Dayan, chairman of the Yesha Council, the settlers’ political umbrella group. “They are an integral part of our endeavor and our achievement.”
The Palestinian View
But even in Bilin, the Palestinian village that abuts Modiin Illit and has become a symbol of Palestinian resistance against Israel’s West Bank separation barrier, the settlers over the fence are viewed as different from the Jewish nationalists in, say, Hebron.
Abedallah Abu Rahma, a teacher from a farming family and a leading activist in the village, pointed toward the settler high-rise buildings visible across the valley from his living room window and said: “They tell us, ‘We are poor, the apartments here are cheaper and we did not know it was a settlement.’ Many told us, ‘Give us our money back and we will leave.’ ”
The Palestinians, who hold weekly demonstrations against the barrier, have even joined forces with some of the settlers. Two years ago, Bilin won a major Supreme Court case that forced a change in the route of the barrier, and some of the documents the victorious villagers used, Mr. Abu Rahma said, had been secretly passed to them by ultra-Orthodox settlers feuding with their own municipal leaders.
Still, none of that lessens the harm to the villagers caused by the very existence of Modiin Illit and the contest over its land. Mr. Abu Rahma said he would respect any agreement reached between the Palestinian leadership and Israel, including one that had Modiin Illit standing in Israel. But noting the village’s reliance on agriculture, its own housing needs and the settlement’s encroachment on Bilin’s territory, he insisted, “We need our land.”
Moreover, protecting the settlements from attack has meant construction of numerous barriers, checkpoints and bypass roads that impair economic development and disrupt daily life.
Across the West Bank and excluding East Jerusalem, there are nearly 300,000 settlers living on scores of settlements among 2.3 million Palestinians. And while some say they will fight to stay put, a third are the reluctant ultra-Orthodox, known in Israel as Haredim, Hebrew for the fearful ones, or those who tremble in awe of God.
They believe it important to live in the land of Israel, because certain commandments can be performed only here. But some Haredim actively reject the formation of a Jewish state before the arrival of the Messiah, while others are ambivalent. They also say that protecting life trumps holding territory. Very few serve in the military because the ultra-Orthodox say they do more good for the nation by studying the Torah and praying than fighting.
Until his death in 2001, Rabbi Eliezer Schach was the religious authority of the Haredim of European origin. He opposed building Jewish settlements that extended over the 1967 line into territory Israel seized in the war, once calling them “a blatant attempt to provoke the international community” and complaining that they endangered Jewish lives. In fact, when first offered housing for his followers in Beitar Illit, he took it as an insult, according to Yitzchak Pindrus, a former mayor of the settlement.
“Our people live around their families and rabbis, and they were terrified of the idea,” Mr. Pindrus recalled. But with thousands of new couples marrying every year, and the traditional ultra-Orthodox communities expensive and crowded, the Haredim needed homes.
Because few ultra-Orthodox men work, because on average their families have eight children and because they do not integrate easily into the larger community, Teddy Kollek, who was mayor of Jerusalem in the late 1980s, wanted to keep down their numbers. Other cities rejected them. Yitzhak Rabin, as both defense minister and then prime minister, championed the creation of large settlements around Jerusalem to fortify Israel’s hold on the capital, in line with his Labor Party’s strategic plan, so he and the Haredim struck a deal for Beitar Illit in the early 1990s.
For those wanting to remain closer to longstanding Haredi communities in the center of the country, Modiin Illit was an alternative. Private Israeli developers bought tracts of Palestinian land as its base, although the legitimacy of those sales has been challenged. Mr. Guterman, the mayor, said Mr. Rabin “gave his blessing to the city,” telling Rabbi Schach’s disciples that its strategic location on the first rise above Israel’s international airport guaranteed that it would not be given back.
There are smaller pockets of Haredi settlement deeper in the West Bank, where the arm’s-length attitude toward Zionist settlement has shifted toward a more distinctly right-wing ideology. Zvi Kastelanitz, of the Immanuel settlement, who produces silver-inlaid Jewish handicrafts, for example, said he had no objection to two states for two peoples, “but not here.” Still, the Haredi settlers even there remain distinct. After Palestinians ambushed two buses on the road to Immanuel, southwest of Nablus, in 2001 and 2002, killing a total of 20 people, the Haredi settlers did not react like their nationalist counterparts, defiantly setting up another settlement outpost. Instead, about a third of Immanuel’s 4,000 residents left.
Shunning Secular World
The Haredi world is all about being together and apart from secular temptations, an intricate patchwork of groups with allegiances to different rabbinic dynasties and courts. In the new cities, Haredi rules apply. At the entrance to Beitar Illit, a sign warns visitors to dress modestly. The streets are all named for rabbis and sages from Poland to Yemen. There is Internet access, officially intended for professional use only. Televisions are allowed, but nobody admits to having one. And there is poverty: about 40 percent of wives support their large families because their husbands do not work. There are few cars, lots of buses and baby strollers.
Dov Fromowitz, a father of nine who moved to Beitar Illit from the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn 12 years ago, runs a central charity fund that collects money from better-off residents and distributes it to the poor, while connecting them with other social welfare services outside the settlement. He says he has 1,200 needy families on his books.
Without most Israelis noticing, Modiin Illit and Beitar Illit have turned into the Haredi towns of the future, cleaner and saner versions of their often decrepit and densely packed neighborhoods elsewhere. They contain open space, even some greenery, and apartments with lots of bedrooms. Their young are shielded from secular Israel, and secular Israelis never see them, thereby reducing the tensions found in Jerusalem over driving on the Sabbath and sexy advertising at bus stops.
The Question of Coexistence
Even if the ultra-Orthodox appear to be less ideologically committed to the West Bank, the longer they live here, the more invested some have become.
In Modiin Illit, Mayor Guterman has ambitions to build what he calls “the largest Haredi residential community in Israel.” Over the past three years, he has set up a business center that he considers the wave of the future. Now 1,000 women, mostly mothers in their 20s, sit at work stations providing phone services to Israeli credit card clients and paralegal research for real estate businesses in the United States. It is outsourcing that seeks to take advantage of the educational level and work ethic of Haredi women.
The question of coexistence with Palestinians hovers, however. In Beitar Illit, farmers from the village of Husan enter daily in cars and on donkeys to work their lands in the valleys among the settlements’ built-up hills. The new mayor, Meir Rubinstein, is proud of the city’s cooperation with local Palestinians, whom he calls “the neighbors.”
“We very much want there to be peace here,” he said. “We pray for it three times a day.” But the question of peace at what price remains.
Avraham and Riva Guttman, who arrived in Beitar Illit 15 years ago from Toronto and have seven children, look out from their street at Palestinian villages. They believe strongly in living in the land of Israel, they say, and they are happy for the parks and space lacking in traditional Haredi areas of Israel. But they do not insist that it is there or nothing. “We are not here for political reasons,” Mr. Guttman said. “Ninety percent of the people are here for the affordability, not for ideology. Haredim don’t fight with Arabs.”
Perhaps not, but his wife, Riva, bristled at the idea of moving. “If you told me to move elsewhere because Arabs needed a place to live, it would not sit quietly on my conscience,” she said. “I am a Jew in the Jewish homeland.”
And increasingly, the Haredim have vested interests over the 1967 line. Yaron and Sara Simchovitch arrived in Beitar Illit from Jerusalem 13 years ago with a group led by their rabbi. The couple now have a thriving butcher shop.
Yoseph Shilhav, an expert on the ultra-Orthodox at Bar-Ilan University, said that almost every Haredi family now had a member beyond the 1967 border, subtly shifting their attitudes about settlement and withdrawal. The Haredim make up 10 percent of Israel’s population and are a fast-growing electoral force. The Chabad movement and Sephardic or Middle Eastern-origin Shas party have increasingly adopted the nationalist agenda.
The rocket fire into Israel that resulted after its withdrawal from Gaza in 2005 has also taken its toll on Haredi views. “In general, Haredim are very practical people,” said Mr. Pindrus, the former Beitar Illit mayor. “We are not right or left. If we get up in the morning and see that leaving Gaza means missiles, then no, we’re not leaving another centimeter.” He added, “We want to live, and our children not to blow up.”
Still, a surprising number do not oppose the establishment of a Palestinian state if safety can be guaranteed. Since housing is the No. 1 Haredi concern and they feel no need for it to be in the West Bank, redirecting the building of their new homes inside Israel could go a long way toward a solution.
“If the Americans can convince us there will really be peace and we won’t be living in fear of rockets, we’ll bring a recommendation to our rabbis,” said Mr. Guterman, the mayor of Modiin Illit. “Our rabbis want peace. We are not against withdrawing from territory. But life is above all.”
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Total37
Read Comments (37) — Post Yours »
1
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:07 PM Anonymous Says:
very wishful thinking
2
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:28 PM avy Says:
who know's clear'ly that it will be peace after the Palestin will get more land? I belive that it want they hate the jews doesn't have to do with land
3
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:21 PM shimon Says:
"the larger settler challenge takes on more manageable proportions."
Would the NY Times publish a sentence:
"the larger Arab challenge takes on more manageable proportions."
or we only "manage the challenge" if it means kicking out the Jews? The whole article is very biased. But for NY Times that's nothing new.
4
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:20 PM power up Says:
Not a bad article considering its from the slimes
5
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:19 PM chosid Says:
There's no need to be tzioni to use seichel. Giving land to people that believe it is not yours is suicidal.
6
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:48 PM suprised! Says:
I'm very supprised to read Ethan Brunner write something positive about Jews, he happens to be right on the entire article, and I'm very pleased to see it in the NYT
At least some good on the Chareidim, we are not fighters, we are innocent peace loving ppl...
After such a hard week of bad press, I feel much better now!
7
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:45 PM joe Says:
the charadim are fooling themself how nice sell out the settlers then what guess who's next on the lefty agenda yup u got the charadim
8
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:44 PM Israelis are IDIOTS! Says:
The Israelis MUST stop using the stupid word "settlements" or words like that! It is their own fault that these words are used against them. The CORRECT WORD IS CITIES!!!
CITIES!!!
CITIES!!!
CITIES!!!
CITIES!!!
CITIES!!!
GET IT????!!
9
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:32 PM halacha Says:
The halacha is clear see Hilchos Shabbos siman 329 about giving land to the enemy.
10
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:32 PM well said Says:
It is about time that the charaidim distance themselves from the zealots and bigot who put there and families lives in danger in the name of torah let us all stand up and tell the world that torah jewrey does not and will not grab land that is not leagely ours before the coming of moshiach and that yes we do respect out fellow human beings no matter what religon the are
11
Jul 26, 2009 at 11:23 PM Anonymous Says:
This article is suppose to counter the article in the World Stret Journal on Shabbos, where they call out Obama for his radicle anti Israel view.
12
Jul 26, 2009 at 10:37 PM Anonymous Says:
They are the most pragmatic group among the settlers. They understand that there will ultimately have to be a "land for peace" settlement and they want to control the outcome as much as they can rather than having it imposed on them which is what is more likely to happen if they simply "just say no" to every proposal under consideration.
13
Jul 27, 2009 at 06:44 AM Yaakov, ish tam Says:
The chareidim are fooling themselves if they see themselves as apart from the rest of the 'tziyonim'. The arabs want all the Jews dead. Period. They have said nothing or done nothing to the contrary.
Why do you think that if you distance yourself from other Jews in hashkafa and distance, that you will be saved? It never worked before and it will not work now. When the chareidim realize that we are in this boat, together, maybe they will help row the boat to the final destination (whatever that is), instead of staying in the rear and have everyone else do the work for them.
14
Jul 27, 2009 at 06:41 AM Meni in Baltimore Says:
"land for peace" was refuted by our withdrawal "for peace" from Gush Katif & we got violent Islamist Hamastan. It makes security as well as theological sense not to abandon one more inch to our enemies. The assurance by the Americans that the other side is "for peace" is their delusion at the risk of our lives.
15
Jul 27, 2009 at 06:23 AM Mendel Says:
Mr. Gutterman has his eyes on a Knesset seat as does Mr. Pindrus so they are careful; what they say in public.Mr. Pindrus wasn't even able to convince the arabs to lower their loudspeakers at 3 AM
The City (number wise it has become a city it is less of a settlement than Monsey or even Lakewood) is on land that was legally purchased by Mr. Rosenberg after the war in 1967. All purchases were documented and in writing so Beitar is legally owned Jewish land more so than the State of Texas and parts of California that were taken from Mexico and all the lands in the USA stolen from the Indians.
Before The illegal alien of unknown origin (Kenya or Indonesia) who occupies the White House possibly under fraudulent circumstances gives us advice what to do with our land, he should set an example by returning all lands stolen by the US from Mexico and the native Americans. Before he goes on his knees to apologize to the Muslims he owes the Native Americans and Mexicans a bigger apology first!
16
Jul 27, 2009 at 06:13 AM Anonymous Says:
'We will go along with what the world wants. We have gone through the Holocaust and know what it means to have the world against us. The Torah says a man needs to know his place'
What Kfira! The world said he should convert to christianity to islam to hellenism etc etc. I hope we don't rely on his psak for anything! And the torah is clear about the importance of pikuach nefesh and the fact that if we withdraw we get attacked more. This is an established fact.
And although the full shleimus haaretz is with moshiach, it is legally still ours and was always ours.
17
Jul 27, 2009 at 07:23 AM Anonymous Says:
Mr. Guttman said. “Ninety percent of the people are here for the affordability, not for ideology. Haredim don’t fight with Arabs.”
They only fight with Jews.
18
Jul 27, 2009 at 05:47 AM HolyRoller Says:
“ It is about time that the charaidim distance themselves from the zealots and bigot who put there and families lives in danger in the name of torah let us all stand up and tell the world that torah jewrey does not and will not grab land that is not leagely ours before the coming of moshiach and that yes we do respect out fellow human beings no matter what religon the are ”
The Torah is our deed and it says in Devarim :The land is yours, go and inherit it. Not sure which torah you were quoting, but it probably came from the same one that the Spies were learning.
19
Jul 27, 2009 at 04:12 AM Anonymous Says:
“ It is about time that the charaidim distance themselves from the zealots and bigot who put there and families lives in danger in the name of torah let us all stand up and tell the world that torah jewrey does not and will not grab land that is not leagely ours before the coming of moshiach and that yes we do respect out fellow human beings no matter what religon the are ”
Well, those two CITIES are within the Biblical borders for now. Re read Massei and look at the maps. All the "west bank" up to the Jordan was included.
20
Jul 27, 2009 at 04:11 AM Anonymous Says:
“ The halacha is clear see Hilchos Shabbos siman 329 about giving land to the enemy. ”
Mayor Guterman said it himself. "we will go along withe what the world wants..." Never mind what Torah wants.
He can hang fringes down to his toes, doesn't mean he' believes any of Torah.
Yuck!
21
Jul 27, 2009 at 07:38 AM well said Says:
It was ours untill hashem took it away because of our sins and wiil IY"H return to us with coming of Moshiach
22
Jul 27, 2009 at 12:59 AM Shmuel,Crown Heights Says:
“ The halacha is clear see Hilchos Shabbos siman 329 about giving land to the enemy. ”
The Lubavitcher Rebbe zatsa'l was of that opinion.
However it is not reasonable for a minority in the chareidi community to force their opinions on others.The fact is that almost all other rabbonim including gedoley yisroel, permit giving back land for peace.If it is a real viable peace.The peace treaty signed with Egypt upon returning the Sinai desert to them,, despite some tension has proven itself to be a success
23
Jul 27, 2009 at 12:01 AM Anonymous Says:
The Ultra-Orthodox are traitors! They make a chillul Hashem in Yerushalayim and now they wish to give the land to the pseudo-philistine, which will cause more death to their own brethren; religious or secular. Why live in Israel if you despise it - go to the US or any other place. Now, their city is called an settlement slated for resettlement, which makes them settlers- haha.
24
Jul 26, 2009 at 11:50 PM Anonymous Says:
They contradict themselves - on the one hand, they claim they cannot live anywhere else (they can't afford it, no one else will have them, special lifestyle, etc.), on the other hand, they say they will leave and go elsewhere for compensation.
WHERE ARE THEY PLANNING TO GO?!
25
Jul 27, 2009 at 08:01 AM NeveAliza Says:
“ It is about time that the charaidim distance themselves from the zealots and bigot who put there and families lives in danger in the name of torah let us all stand up and tell the world that torah jewrey does not and will not grab land that is not leagely ours before the coming of moshiach and that yes we do respect out fellow human beings no matter what religon the are ”
1) The land is ours. Try reading the first Rashi in Chumash.
2) "yes we do respect out fellow human beings". Right! Charadim don't respect their fellow Jews, let alone other "human beings" out to destroy us.
26
Jul 27, 2009 at 07:46 AM Tuna Fish Says:
They make it like all Chareidim have a universal view on Israel.
27
Jul 27, 2009 at 12:16 AM Anonymous Says:
To #12: There doesn't have to be ultimately land for "peace". Didn't Jews learn a lesson from World War II to stand up for their rights and defend Jewish lives? Control the outcome by electing politicians or influencing politicians who will not give in to forces threatening Israel's existence by giving up more land.
28
Jul 27, 2009 at 12:11 AM Anonymous Says:
Palestinians are the most racist people. They cannot stand to live with Jews inside "their" borders. They hate Jews and cannot live with them-that is the message they give the world.
29
Jul 27, 2009 at 08:16 AM Yudenrein?????!!!!!!!! Says:
What is the problem with Jewish people staying in their homes in a Palestinean state???? The world and especially Israel should not support the creation of a "yudenrein" state!!!!!!! If the arabs demand the Jews not live in their new state then Arabs should not live in the Jewish state!!!!!! No more double standards.
30
Jul 27, 2009 at 08:21 AM KACH 613 Says:
Dumb!! I know manny people in Beitar thgat will not leave no matter what. 90% of Charadim think along the way the settlers think, they where all opposed to what happend in Gush Katif.
31
Jul 27, 2009 at 08:46 AM Judean Judah Says:
These mayors are total sell outs. the guy from Modiin Illit is half man and half gutter.
32
Jul 27, 2009 at 09:35 AM Yehuda Says:
“ The Lubavitcher Rebbe zatsa'l was of that opinion.
However it is not reasonable for a minority in the chareidi community to force their opinions on others.The fact is that almost all other rabbonim including gedoley yisroel, permit giving back land for peace.If it is a real viable peace.The peace treaty signed with Egypt upon returning the Sinai desert to them,, despite some tension has proven itself to be a success ”
I see that you feel that the Rebbe was wrong in his opinion. The Rebbe was against talking to the Arabs and ging them land for four main reasons.
1) the more you talk the more they want.
2) The more you give them the more Jews ending up dying.
3) It is against shulchan Aruch
4) It is our inheretance from G-d.
The Rebbe's vision was far reaching and he never changed his mind. He said many times that by talking & giving away land you are causing the death of Jews C"V.
That still holds true today as we have seen from events in Gaza and other towns in Judea & Samaria which ahve been given away.
The peace treaty with Egypt has given the Jews nothing in return. The Rebbe was against that because we gave up oilfields, air fields and a large amount of land that could act as a buffer against a surprise attack which can still happen since the radical Muslims will eventually take over Egypt.
33
Jul 27, 2009 at 09:29 AM shlomo zalman Says:
The chareidim are parasites. Willing to take government subsidies for houses, then take money to leave the houses, then rely on the soldiers to defend them before, during and after. And then have the chutzpah to say they don't need the soldiers because their torah learning protects them. When the first mortar drops, watch them either scream for help or flee.
34
Jul 27, 2009 at 10:25 AM Anonymous Says:
Today Kiryat Sefer (Modin Ilit) tommorow Ramot/Gilo.
35
Jul 27, 2009 at 11:13 AM esther Says:
i don't think one person can speak for ''the chareidim'' and we can't say that all chareidim are this or that.
36
Jul 27, 2009 at 03:59 PM Anonymous Says:
“ The chareidim are fooling themselves if they see themselves as apart from the rest of the 'tziyonim'. The arabs want all the Jews dead. Period. They have said nothing or done nothing to the contrary.
Why do you think that if you distance yourself from other Jews in hashkafa and distance, that you will be saved? It never worked before and it will not work now. When the chareidim realize that we are in this boat, together, maybe they will help row the boat to the final destination (whatever that is), instead of staying in the rear and have everyone else do the work for them. ”
Perhaps it's time for everyone to align themselves with the "Chareidim" in their hashkafah. Why should it be the other way around? Put your money where your mouth is.
37
Jul 27, 2009 at 04:27 PM Beitari Says:
Well people, I live in Beitar and my ideology includes the fact that HaKadosh Baruch Hu gave all of Eretz Yisrael to Am Yisrael only.
Truth be told, I'd only consider leaving because of the
"Kanoim" in the city, who make it unpleasant for those who think and act differently than them.
Let's hope that they- and all of us- realize that if we stand united, no one can harm us.