22 readers online now

Latest Articles

 

ADVERTISEMENTS



Premium Links
by Wikio

Computers
Electronics
Communication
Appliances

A Consulate in Jerusalem

by Daniel Pipes
Thu, 29 Dec 2005

updated Wed, 28 Dec 2005

Print Send Comment RSS Share:    

Illustration from JW McGarvey, "Lands of the Bible" (1881). The American consulate is on the left side.

The U.S. Consulate in Jerusalem has a storied history, going back to 1844, when it was established to function as a sort of "tourist agency" that helped plan trips for traveling Americans.

In recent years, however, things have become less quaint. In particular, since World War I, there have been two consulates, one in the eastern and predominantly Arab part of the city and one in the western, or Jewish area. Although both are now in lands under Israeli control, an Arab/Israeli divide remains in place, with perhaps political overtones. A reader reports on the situation these days:

The two U.S. consulates in Jerusalem could not be more different. The one in a Jewish neighborhood has ample parking facilities but does not provide consular services and so does not deal with the public. The one in an Arab neighborhood provides those services but has no parking available nearby. Ironically, of the tens of thousands of U.S. citizens who live in Jerusalem and surrounding communities, nearly all are Jews. This means that any citizens needing to renew a passport, report a birth, deal with Social Security, etc. must go there, at least part of the way on foot. Also, despite the fact that most American citizens in the Jerusalem area are Orthodox Jews with large families, no strollers are allowed. Babies and toddlers must be carried.

As far as one can see, nearly the entire staff at the consulate dealing with the public are Arabs, including the security guards, clerks, ushers, cashiers, et al. The only reading material available in the waiting area is the State Dept's, Hi International magazine - in Arabic, of course. The whole set-up feels like a slap in the face to the American citizens it is meant to serve.

And this: U.S. missions are mandated to display a listing of the "Most Wanted Terrorists," which consists of about 25 FBI flyers and photos of Islamists, all Arab. How embarrassing – so where in the eastern Jerusalem consulate does this display turn up? In a dark and narrow hallway, at the bottom of a stairwell, that leads only to the exit, making it noticeable only to an observant passer-by.

Given the known historic predilection of the eastern Jerusalem consulate for the Palestinians, none of this comes as a shock. But when will adult superivision come to that sensitive mission? (December 29, 2005)

Trackbacks

Links to weblogs that reference this post.
TrackBack URL for this post: http://www.danielpipes.org/blog/trackback.php/567/46574/091

I've Heard This One Before
From: Kloognome.Com
Excerpt: About the American consulate in Jerusalem: And this: U.S. missions are mandated to display a listing of the "Most Wanted Terrorists," which consists of about 25 FBI flyers and photos of Islamists, all Arab. How embarrassing – so where in......

Reader comments on this weblog entry

Title By Date

how can we protest this? [78 words]

Oren Ben-Bassat 

Mar 18, 2008 05:55

Further obnoxiousness [139 words]

Jonathan Goldberg 

Jun 7, 2006 08:45

  An explanation, Jonathan [177 words]

Tito Cohen 

Jul 10, 2006 17:38

Add on to the story [153 words]

Jerusalem inhabitant 

Jan 20, 2006 08:09

Experience with the US consulate [191 words]

William Cantor, MD 

Jan 19, 2006 13:20

More Proof of American Politician's Lack of Will [92 words]

Stephen Hancock 

Jan 19, 2006 07:28

Two American embassies [77 words]

deegee 

Dec 31, 2005 04:59

The US Consulate In Jerusalem [125 words]

Adina Kutnicki 

Dec 30, 2005 12:04

A prediction [52 words]

Robert Koslover 

Dec 28, 2005 18:39

Comment on this weblog entry

Name:
Email Address:

Email me if someone replies to my comment
Title of Comments:
Comments:

Note: Opinions expressed in comments are those of the authors alone and not necessarily those of Daniel Pipes. Comments are screened for relevance, substance, and tone, and in some cases edited, before posting. Reasoned disagreement is welcome, but not hostile, libelous, or otherwise objectionable statements. Original writing only, please. For complete regulations, see Guidelines for Comments.

Top 25 recent comments
Daniel Pipes Blog Homepage

Daniel Pipes Blog Homepage

ADVERTISEMENTS