Arab News

Palestinia­n twins open cafe in converted jet in West Bank

Khamis Al-Sairafi, brother Ata convert old Boeing 707 into cafe for customers to board

- Ramallah

Few Palestinia­ns in the occupied West Bank get to board an airplane these days. The territory has no civilian airport and those who can afford a plane ticket must catch their flights in neighborin­g Jordan. But just outside the northern city of Nablus, a pair of twins is offering people the next best thing.

Khamis Al-Sairafi and brother Ata have converted an old Boeing 707 into a cafe and restaurant for customers to board.

‘‘Ninety-nine percent of Palestinia­ns have never used an airplane. Only our ambassador­s, diplomats, ministers and mayors use them. Now they see an airplane and it is something for them,’’ said Khamis Al-Sairafi.

After a quarter century of effort, the brothers opened “The Palestinia­n-Jordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al-Sairafi” on July 21.

Families, friends and couples turned up for drinks in the cafe situated below the body of the plane. Many others came to take photos inside at a price of five shekels (about $1.50) per person.

Customers said they were motivated to visit after seeing pictures of the renovated plane circulatin­g online. ‘‘For a long time, I have wanted to see this place. I wish I had seen this place before it was turned into a café,’’ said customer Majdi Khalid.

For years, the jetliner sat along the side of a major highway in the northern West Bank, providing endless fodder for conversati­on for passersby baffled by its hulking presence.

The 60-year-old identicall­y dressed twins’ dream of transformi­ng the airplane into a cafe and restaurant was born in the late 1990s when Khamis saw the derelict Boeing aircraft near the northern Israeli city of Safed.

At the time, the plane already had an illustriou­s history. The aircraft was used by the Israeli government from 1961 to 1993 and flew thenPrime Minister Menachem Begin to the US in 1978 to sign Israel’s historic peace agreement with Egypt, according to Channel 12 TV.

It was later bought by three Israeli business partners who dreamed of turning it into a restaurant, but the project was abandoned following disagreeme­nts with local authoritie­s, the station said.

After tracking down one of the owners, the brothers agreed to buy it for $100,000 in 1999. They spent an additional $50,000 for licenses, permits and to transport it to the

West Bank. Khamis said the thenmayor of Nablus, Ghassan Shakaa, quickly approved the transporta­tion and renovation of the airplane.

Moving the plane to Nablus was a 13-hour operation, requiring the wings to be dismantled and the temporary closure of roads in Israel and the West Bank. At the time, Israel and the Palestinia­ns were engaged in peace talks and movement back and forth was relatively easy.

The Al-Sairafi brothers were successful traders and scrap metal merchants. They regularly traveled to and from Israel buying pieces of metal that they then sold and smelted in the West Bank.

They also owned a successful waste disposal business and used their earnings to build an amusement park — including a swimming pool and concert venue — on the same patch of land where the plane was placed.

But they said their project was put on hold after the outbreak of the second Palestinia­n uprising in late 2000.

An Israeli military checkpoint was built nearby, they said, preventing customers from the nearby city of Nablus from reaching the site. The checkpoint remained for three years and the Israeli military took over the site. The project collapsed.

For nearly 20 years, the airplane and the site were abandoned. After the uprising faded out in the mid2000s, the brothers scraped by with their waste disposal business and the small amusement park in

Nablus they opened in 2007.

After more than a decade of saving, they decided in 2020 to begin rebuilding what they lost, this time starting with the renovation of the airplane.

The coronaviru­s crisis, which included multiple lockdowns, hit the Palestinia­n economy hard and caused further delays.

Following months of work, the aircraft is almost ready for full service. The interior is freshly painted, fitted with electricit­y and nine tables and the doors are connected to two old jetways allowing customers to board safely. The nose of the plane has been painted with colors of the Palestinia­n flag and the tail with Jordanian colors.

The cafe is already open and the brothers hope to open the restaurant next month. They plan to install a kitchen below the body of the plane to serve food to customers on board.

However, their long-term goal of re-building the amusement park and swimming pool remains a long way off. The pair said they were disappoint­ed they had not received financial support from the municipali­ty and are looking for investors.

 ?? AP ?? Ninety-nine percent of Palestinia­ns have never used an airplane. Now they see an airplane and it is something for them.
After a quarter century of effort, the brothers opened ‘The Palestinia­nJordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al-Sairafi’ on July 21.
AP Ninety-nine percent of Palestinia­ns have never used an airplane. Now they see an airplane and it is something for them. After a quarter century of effort, the brothers opened ‘The Palestinia­nJordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al-Sairafi’ on July 21.

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