Vocable (Anglais)

Small, but Plenty of Wall Space

Visite d’un hôtel pas comme les autres.

- IAN FISHER ladder échelle.

Le célèbre et mystérieux graffeur britanniqu­e Banksy a ouvert un hôtel à Bethléem, face au mur de séparation de huit mètres de haut construit pour empêcher les terroriste­s de pénétrer dans l’Etat hébreu. Cette nouvelle initiative surprenant­e ne fait pas l’unanimité mais intrigue et suscite la curiosité. Suivez le guide !

BETHLEHEM, West Bank — The two tourists were from Berlin, so they knew something about walls. There they sat, one with tea, another with cappuccino, on tasteful patio chairs, across an alley from the ugly 26-foot symbol of all that separates Israelis from Palestinia­ns.

2.This section of the West Bank separation barrier was built 15 years ago, as violence raged. It is now a quiet tourist destinatio­n in the city where Jesus Christ was born: a hotel, gallery, museum, bookstore and spray paint shop by the elusive British artist Banksy. It is part whimsy and spectacle (note the plastic greeter chimp), part serious (note the very real Israeli security cameras). “Weird,” one of the Berlin tourists, Nadja Miller, 38, said. “It’s voyeuristi­c. At the same time it raises awareness that it exists and discussion about it.”

POPULAR

3. It has been just over a month since Banksy opened the Walled Off Hotel here — and unsurprisi­ngly it is proving popular: Its nine rooms are booked through June, for rates from $30 a night to $965 for the “presidenti­al suite.” Some 700 people visit a day, the owner says, 200 of them Palestinia­n. Many arrive on tour buses passing through checkpoint­s.

4.Some art is meant to inflict discomfort. Banksy’s hotel — which brags of the “worst view in the world” — falls clearly into that category, though visitors say the discomfort comes in awkward waves. There is the wall itself, endlessly debated over whether it comprises cell walls for Palestinia­ns, a security measure that worked or 400 miles of proof of the failure of negotiatio­ns. That is enough for some visitors. “All the world must see what is happening in the West Bank,” said Emad Khleif, 50, a Palestinia­n banker who brought his family to visit from Nazareth. 5.But not all locals are happy with the hotel. (“Who is this for?” barked a Palestinia­n woman, Sowsan Hashem, 49, standing just outside.) Some foreign visitors said it made them a little queasy. Part of the blame might come from Banksy’s unsubtle, commercial style. Part is from a feeling of “oppression tourism,” which allows those who pay $20 or so to stencil political messages on the wall with spray paint. Part is that the hotel is just, well, pretty nice, given everything.

BANKSY’S TAKE

6. Banksy has a long history in Bethlehem: Four well-known works are here, including “Girl and a Soldier,” and a dove protected by an armored vest. The artist has said that the separation barrier “essentiall­y turns Palestine into the world’s largest open prison,” though several emails sent to an address for Banksy were not answered. Yet he has not become an internal symbol of anti-Israeli activism, which is encounteri­ng growing legal resistance inside Israel.

Banksy has a long history in Bethlehem.

His website says of the hotel, “Operated by the local community, we offer a warm welcome to everyone from all sides of the conflict and across the world.”

CROSS THE BORDER

7. It is not as easy, though, for those on the Israeli side to visit. Technicall­y the area is under Israeli control, but the roads and checkpoint­s place the trip itself in a legal gray zone. Four admittedly scared Hebrew University students persuaded an Arab friend to take them the other day. “It’s Palestine,” said one student, Shaya Bon Stein, 29. “It’s dangerous.” All but one were art students, who all consciousl­y tried to dress like Europeans, and they conceded that the danger might be more perceived than real.

8.They were eager to see the hotel itself and its statement about the wall, something they do not get to see from the other side. “Is this a joke?” is first on the questions section of the hotel’s website. The answer is perhaps the business’ least ironic aspect: “Nope — it’s a genuine art hotel with fully functionin­g en suite facilities and limited car parking.” It is also not meant as a moneymaker: The hotel, on the site of a former pottery workshop, is owned by a local businessma­n, Wissam Salsaa. The website says all profits will be returned to the community.

9.Still, it has a feeling both of humor and commercial­ism: The coffee is excellent, and the hotel serves the “best hummus in the region” (according to the kitchen staff, the website jokes).

10.Finally, there is the wall itself: The concrete — visible from most parts of this hotel only feet away — is covered with graffiti. The Berliners finished their drinks as they gazed at a stencil reading: “Mr. Trump. Walls = Hate.” Doves perched on barbed wire. Saher Touna, 17, one of the Palestinia­n tourists from Nazareth, bought a stencil from the “WallMart,” next to the hotel, which sells spray paint and offers a ladder. “My home is here, my land is here,” she sprayed in Arabic. “It’s racist, and it’s here,” she said of the wall. “Might as well make something beautiful out of it.”

 ?? (Dan Balilty/The New York Times) ?? A hotel employee opens the door for a visitor at The Walled Off Hotel, opposite the Israeli security barrier in Bethlehem, West Bank.
(Dan Balilty/The New York Times) A hotel employee opens the door for a visitor at The Walled Off Hotel, opposite the Israeli security barrier in Bethlehem, West Bank.
 ?? (Dan Balilty/The New York Times) ?? A waiter serves customers seated in front of mounted security cameras and slingshots.
(Dan Balilty/The New York Times) A waiter serves customers seated in front of mounted security cameras and slingshots.
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