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Visiting Israel. Part 2. Ashqelon.

posted Monday, 29 September 2008

Population of Israel is 7 million including 5.5 mil of Jews. You may be surprised, but there are 1.5 mil of Arabs who are loyal citizens of Israel who use buses for commute and not to blow themselves up. They are pretty happy living in Israel among Jews. Average life expectancy here is 79 years for men and 82 for women.

I started my trip in the city of Ashqelon, which is located in one hour of driving to the South of Tel Aviv and will slowly move to the North.

Take a guess, where did I take this photo:

 
You guessed it right – these people are sitting in the pharmacy waiting in line. There are several health organizations in the country, and people attend those pharmacies that accept their medical insurance.
This photo is taken by my iPhone, which is pretty expensive to get here – around $1000 with the phone service. People with smaller income usually pay more for goods. I’m not sure if Apple commands more money or  local phone companies want to make a quick buck.

Interestingly enough, people here don’t complain.  Not only the iPhones, the gasoline here is about seven dollars a gallon. In the USA, people earn at least twice as much as in here, but wait for a year when we’ll start paying seven bucks a gallon. The US media will be screaming that it’s the end of the world.  In Israel, people keep quiet.  How are things? A kol beseder – everything’s fine.

My next challenge  was to purchase a boom box with a CD player.  There are two shopping malls (they call them kanyons) in the city of Ashkelon.  None has a store that sells boom boxes. The closest shopping area is Sector Gaza located in short 20 min drive from here. Nay, in Gaza I may get  a boom followed by a box, which is not exactly what I’m looking for. Actually, for some reasons, Palestinians were not too active this Summer some lazy bombing of the Southern cities don’t count.

Since I have a car, I wanted to drive places. Went to Google, Yahoo and Mapquest – the mapping service is not available for English speaking drivers. Google showed me the map with no street names on it - thank you very much. Found a 19-Century looking Web site that promised maps in English – tough luck – it has nothing there.  Oh well, I shouldn’t  be expecting the modern level of services of a developing country. No biggie. I’ll find my way around here. Who needs GPS if you have relatives?

Here’s the photo in the local farmers’ market.  Any vegetable you want at dirt cheap prices.



I visited India in May, and subconsciously I am comparing these two countries even though one of the is 200 times larger. It seems that a  small Israel is  more developed.

After lunch, I drove to the shore – the water in the sea was worm but wavy. I finished my day with a couple of beers.  I drink Belgium beer Leffe.  At home, they sell only Leffe Blonde in our supermarket. I prefer dark beers but Leffe is the best for me. The local liquor store made my day – they had Leffe Bruin. I bet bruin means dark in Belgium.

Till next blog from the central part of Israel.

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1. Michael left...
Tuesday, 30 September 2008 8:13 am

It is a bit disappointing to hear that Israel is just a _little_ bit more clean and developed than India. We used to believe that Israel is a modern developed country. Maybe we just do not notice how poor we are :)

I guess we do not complain on our gas prices since we buy much smaller cars and do not buy SUVs. Besides, I guess our commutes are shorter. For instance, commute to work was always about 15-20 km.

BTW Google shows street names on its map in Hebrew (but not in English). This service is good enough for us :)


2. Anna left...
Friday, 3 October 2008 11:36 am

Michael, The gas price in Israel is cheaper than in most European countries, and is cheaper than in Australia and New Zealand. So it might be higher than in the US, but not high in general.