Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Are these bullet holes? This is the
runway.
>> Holy smokes.
>> Look at the floor. Dude, there used to
be a mazuza over here. So, this is like
where a guard would sit. Oh my god,
there's a bat. Without going into too
much detail, we have made it onto the
roof of the terminal.
>> Yeah, that would be the control tower.
Little rickety, but luggage conveyor
belts.
>> This actually a postcard published by
the Jordanians.
>> Wow.
>> Take Alia to Iran into Europe.
>> Wow. Look at all this detail. The amount
of history that took place in this room.
Unreal. Here you have uh King Hussein,
right?
Until 2000, there were flights here. But
there's actually grapes growing here.
What is this?
>> Surveillance cameras.
>> Bar
literally in the VIP lounge. I bet
there's a way in.
>> They look like we're
>> just another storage.
>> Good morning from Ramatko,
Jerusalem, Israel. Today I'm going to
attempt to do something I've been trying
to do for years now. You see, most
people don't know this,
but Jerusalem, Israel,
used to have an airport of its own.
These days, the airport is in Tel Aviv.
It's a big airport. Many airlines fly
there, but
there used to be airport here in this
city. Most people don't know about it.
And today, we're going to try to visit
this place, which is now abandoned.
Um, and for this little mission of ours,
we will be joined by a tour guide in
Israel. And I've hired him for the day
to show me around. But first, a word
from our sponsor.
So, we've just arrived. Check this out.
This is the gate to the I guess the
airport area, which is not closed.
Although sometimes I mean I hear that it
is closed. And I don't know if we're
specifically supposed to be here, but I
also don't know that we're not supposed
to be here. Like, there's no one around
to tell you anything. So, hopefully this
works out.
This video is sponsored by Daily Giving.
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>> Okay, so I told you earlier that we're
going to be meeting with a guide. He
does not want to be filmed, but he's
going to tell us a little bit about the
history. So this road is what?
>> The road built by the Jordanian
authorities uh back in the 1950s.
There's a road going in, a road coming
out.
>> This is the one going in, and down there
is the one going out. and you know the
entrance, security gate, whatever.
>> Okay, I'm going to check about this
little building.
This is so cool.
>> So, this is like where a guard would
sit.
>> Yeah. checking cars coming in and out,
arranging taxis for tourists coming in.
>> Well, there's something similar at Tel
Aiv airport. They just don't arrange
taxis
>> only on a smaller scale.
We've walked a little bit further. The
guard building is behind me and we are
approaching the terminal which is just
unbelievable. Like I've seen pictures of
this place, but to be here,
this place was bustling, right?
>> It was bustling. I mean, um, we're
talking hundreds of thousands of
passengers in the peak tiers in the mid
1960s
or especially around 1964, 1965.
The building's simple, modernist style,
late international style is the
scientific term. All the antennas were
added by the Israelis over time, of
course.
Now, the place is somehow designed like
an airplane. This would be the body and
the two wings coming out.
>> Oh, yeah. I see that.
>> Both sides,
>> they're even angled like the
>> Yeah. Yeah. They're angled and seen from
above. It somehow resembles an aircraft.
You see, there used to be an historic um
exhibition about the old Jewish mashab.
Nothing is left of it, of course.
They recently put up this sign by the uh
council for uh the preservation of
listed sites.
>> So this door is locked. It should be.
Yes. But we can't go down this side. I
mean
because you
Oh yeah, dude. This is neat. They've
locked the entrance to the main hall.
Wow.
Disappointing. There's a VIP lounge
or used to be. You can still somehow
walk around it.
>> I bet there's a way in.
>> Oh, they barred everything. Wow, this is
new.
Oh man, it's all sealed.
Sometimes junkies would come here and
they're trying to keep them out as well,
>> right?
>> There's got to be a way.
>> So, this is like the historic exhibit
showing the I know it was vandalized by
actually by Israeli soldiers who were
stationed here during the second in
the place shut down in 2000.
>> The airport.
>> Yeah. And until 2002, even three, you
had soldiers stationed here.
>> So till 2000, there were flights here
>> on and off.
>> Where were they flying from this
airport?
>> Initially, there were flights from Tel
Aviv, if you can believe it. I mean, the
planes went up and down. There were
flights to Kaipa.
>> That's probably like a 10-minute flight.
>> Not even.
>> Wow.
>> Um Kaipa Mahan in the upper Galilee.
>> Mhm.
>> Just by Kya Elot, of course. that when
Sinai was still ours, they were placed
to sh
um private janitors would use this place
with their private jets to go to
Cypress, to go to Europe, whatever.
>> Mhm.
>> Their work tends to have international
airlines serve this place, but they
wouldn't for political reasons. Their
governments wouldn't allow them.
>> Interesting.
which is somehow hypocrite because when
Jordan ruled here and Jordan's rule over
the West Bank was no more legal than
ours was uh Arab airlines had no qualms
about this.
>> Mhm.
>> Once we took over, Arab airlines of
course would wouldn't fly here and
Western airlines wouldn't as well.
>> Interesting.
>> What's behind the terminal?
>> Well, the runway.
>> The runway.
>> Now it's turned into a bus park.
This is the main hall where you would
wait for, you know, for the board call.
Oh,
barbed wire.
So, we are about to get onto the runway.
>> But I still I haven't given up on
getting into the terminal. I have some
ideas.
>> I'm going to try and climb.
>> Yeah, that's what I was thinking. It
doesn't look too too hard to climb up
there and then onto the roof. And then
>> there were no how do you call it? You
know, where you have these um shulim
those sleeves that would take you from
the terminal into the plane like you
have today. There's no such thing. So it
was buses down these stairs.
>> So So somebody somebody getting on their
flight would go down these stairs
>> and walk a few meters. The plane that
was land that was waiting on the apron.
This was the apron enlarged by the
Israelis of course.
>> And what neighborhood is that?
>> Kafir Akab.
>> That's a Arab town.
>> It's a Palestinian neighborhood that was
incorporated into Jerusalem back in
1967. Like back in 2002 when they built
the separation barrier, they decided to
exclude it by way of the barrier. So
it's a no man's land between Ramla,
which is further north and Jerusalem.
But these buildings are Jerusalem.
Nothing of what you see here is legally
permitted.
And that's one of the reasons there will
never be an airport here again because
these buildings are too high and too
close.
>> The residents are too hostile.
>> But the this is interesting though. This
is the whole airport. Like the whole
runway is this is it?
>> No, this is the apron. That's the
runway.
>> Oh, okay. Okay.
>> Now, the runway was built, of course, by
the British. It was rather short. When
the Jordanians turned it into a civilian
airport, it was extended.
>> It's okay. It was extended. Then they
had plans to extend it again. And they
were halfway through it when the 6- day
war erupted.
So, when we took over 1967, we completed
the work. We extended it to almost 2 km.
Well, allowing for medium-sized aircraft
to land and take off safely,
even jet planes.
There were plans to extend it even
further to about 4 km, which allow big
Boing planes to take uh to make use of
this place, but it was never done.
And the runway is now just under 2 km
long,
not including the end points where the
planes would rotate. It's about 2 km.
>> Wow.
>> Bloody big.
>> Yeah.
>> And two taxi ways and one runway.
>> This is the runway.
As you can still see, there are those
lines to direct the planes.
At this point, it's pretty much
abandoned. I mean, there's some trucks
coming and going, construction. There's
a little bit of people come here to race
cars. Down there is a
parking lot for buses that service East
Jerusalem.
So, this place does not get a lot of
action, but back in the day in, I know
only a couple decades ago, pretty wild,
there were daily flights to Iran, to
Lebanon, to Kuwait, and to many other
places around the Middle East.
It's just hard to imagine all that
happening from Jerusalem, but that
that's the truth. That's what it was.
>> Arab airways. This is run by like
>> was a Jordanian airway.
>> Jerusalem. Wow.
>> This plane specifically was called
Jerusalem.
>> Okay.
>> And some were flying on behalf of
Western airlines like BAC, uh, Air
France, TWWA, Panama of course, and KM
because those companies wouldn't land
here. Their points were too big.
>> Got So it was like coat sharing.
>> Can we take a moment to appreciate the
fashion?
>> Sure.
>> Oh, I love those hats.
>> In those days, flying was still quite
romantic. Not as bale as it is today.
>> Yeah.
>> So groups would take their pictures,
pose in front of the planes.
>> Mhm.
>> Sure. Most Western pilgrims were
Americans, but many Scandinavians as
well.
>> I actually see Is that the hills in the
>> That that would be in that direction.
There used to be there still is a a a
vocational school for refugee children
run by UNRA.
>> So isn't that there?
>> No, that's another one.
>> Okay,
>> another one.
>> There are many refugees.
Um, look at this great photo. This is
actually a postcard published by the
Jordanians. Jordan International Airways
was another airline that used this
place. There were six Jordanian
airlines.
>> Wow.
>> In a country of what, 3 million people.
also from the mid9.
>> So this is flying the Jordanian flag of
course.
>> Yeah.
>> Two observation decks and of course big
and big letters on both sides on both
wings in Arabic and in English. There
used to be a big clock over here.
Another one towards the uh parking lot.
How cool is that?
>> Wow. And then this uh an advertisement
in a Lebanese newspaper uh now three
daily flights to Jerusalem. in one of
the churches on the Mount Mount of
Olives flying MEA, Middle Eastern
Airlines.
>> I've flown with them.
>> Oh, yeah. All right.
Um, yeah. The biggest airline in the
Middle East, one of the oldest.
And
see, Unra had their own gear for
boarding the planes and whatnot.
>> Mhm.
>> Taxis would come here.
>> Look at those cars. Chevy Impalas.
>> A Those are great.
>> There was a city bus coming here as
well. There were plans to build a tram
from here into the city. It was never
done.
Wow. You know what's so weird? It's like
you see these pictures and it kind of
brings the place to life, but while
you're standing here, it's kind of dead.
>> It's dead. Of course.
>> The young king Hussein.
>> Oh, there you go. Abdul Mati Kutub he uh
he established Air Jordan Air Jordan of
the Holy Land the first airline to fly
to Rome from here. His son gave me some
of these pictures. He has a big villa
just south of here.
Um yeah again.
Yeah.
And then tourists coming into Jordanian
and Jerusalem could cross into the
Israeli city through the Mandal bound
gate, but they can only cross once in
one direction. Meaning if they go into
Israel, they're not allowed back and
vice versa.
>> I didn't know there were crossings.
>> Only one. It was open to tourists and
diplomats and so on.
>> Citizens couldn't cross.
>> N me and you couldn't cross. Jews
officially were not allowed into Jordan.
They managed to sneak through but
officially they were not allowed
officially. It was an anti-semitic uh
policy.
>> So if you landed in Jerusalem and you
wanted to visit the Israeli side of town
and see the rest of Israel, you had to
fly out of Beni. It wasn't called back
then. And vice versa. If you wanted to
see the Jordanian side, you would have
to fly out from Aman or from Jerusalem.
>> So this is the crossing,
>> the Mandelbound crossing. Of course,
this shack is not there anymore. But
look at these posters through Jordan in
his Jesus's footsteps
and Jordanian soldiers with these plinth
hats like British influence.
Yeah.
Many photos from what used to be
Jordanian Jerusalem. But anyway, very
cool. So, as we discovered not long ago,
um, somebody put up some kind of
barriers which don't really allow us to
get into the the best parts of the
terminal.
But I believe that if there's a will,
there's a way and we got to find a way
in.
So this right here
is actually
a luggage conveyor belt.
I guess it goes from here into this into
the terminal through that
little
Oh my god. I can't believe I'm actually
standing on a con. I've always wanted to
do that, you know, to take a ride on the
conveyor belt.
>> Look at this.
There's still a sticker here.
>> You know what? There's tons of them.
There's
Wow.
>> Take Alia to a lot into Europe. You
know, I
secondary a
>> They're all over the place. There's
these like these are luggage stickers or
>> Yeah, a lot.
ETH is a lot.
>> Wow.
>> What was the name of of this?
>> And you know SDF SDV is the old airport
of Tel Aviv that's no more.
>> There were flights to Dead. Imagine the
planes would go up and down.
Amazing.
Hyper.
>> So SDV is stav which is an airport in
the north.
>> No. North T. It's normal.
>> Okay. This is ETH a lot. Here you have
>> HFA.
That is so cool.
>> Where'd you find those?
>> Wow.
So this is actually a vineyard. Oh, well
I mean this is actually like a wild
grape vine. And look, there's actually
grapes growing here.
How crazy is that?
We have to find a way in. We absolutely
must
find a way
onto the roof of this building.
From there, it should be pretty simple.
Okay, thank God. I haven't climbed this
much since I was a little kid.
But
without going into too much detail, we
have made it onto the roof of the
terminal,
which should hopefully allow us now to
get inside the control tower.
There was a coffee shop inside during
times. We know the name of the family
who ran it. And people, even people who
wouldn't use the planes, would come here
just to look at the planes land and take
off. It was a social gathering place.
>> This looks like a kind of observation
area.
>> Yeah. It was built for that by the
Jordanians
to allow onlookers,
people waiting for their loved ones who
would arrive from being there to Cairo.
Wow.
This was a coffee shop.
>> This was a coffee shop.
>> Yeah.
>> Here. There's a clock here. An old
clock.
>> Yeah.
>> Be some tables and chairs.
>> Oh, this must have been a great place to
get a coffee and
>> watch the planes. Yeah.
Oh, there's still a lot of
operation around.
>> Are these bullet holes? They look like
bullet holes.
>> They might be. Yeah.
Oh,
>> so this is like the kitchen of the
coffee place,
>> I guess. Yeah, they're doing it. This
This is all Israeli, but they're doing
it through a little kitchen going.
This parking lot.
So right down here you'd have like cars
pulling up and families getting out with
their suitcases.
This circular staircase is nice. And the
railing is all burned.
>> No, there's still No, there's still one
more floor we can go up. I just want to
see the this room.
So, previously like half hour ago, we
were here on the other side
of this
recently built wall, which I guess is
supposed to prevent people from getting
into this part of the terminal. Thank
god we uh overcame those challenges.
Oh, this is like the main entrance to
the
>> Wow, there was luck on the other side.
>> There's books.
>> Do you know this book?
>> Yeah, I used it.
>> It's a from a former aircraft
fighter. It was handed out when the
government had a they had a ceremony
here.
Yeah.
Oh, wow.
This is the other side of the vineyard
or the wild grapes. Look how beautiful
that is.
See the VIP lounge.
>> Oh, is this the VIP lounge?
>> Over here.
Offices.
Okay, so these are little offices.
Oh, they installed doors and they locked
them. The main peeling was right inside
there.
What is it? This one's open. We got to
get a flashlight out. Yeah, just a room.
No, the VIP lounge had like wooden
wooden walls, panels, and
>> Oh, look.
>> Oh my god, there's a bat.
>> Bat?
>> Yeah, there's a bat flying around.
There's literally a bat flying around.
I'd rather not get hit in the face by
the bat.
This is some interesting art.
>> Cameras.
>> What is this?
>> Surveillance cameras.
>> Oh,
too bad.
Dude, there used to be a mazuza over
here.
And these were definitely the bathrooms.
And
looks like there was a shower here.
I love taking showers at airport
lounges. I could especially use one
right now. I'm all sweated up.
But where would this go? It
>> might take us into the VIP lounge.
You don't have a knife sharp cutter or
>> No, it looks like you should be able to
untie it.
>> Just another storage.
>> Yeah,
>> that we take this into the lounge.
>> There you go.
There you go.
>> I bet you're pretty proud of yourself
right now. Holy smokes.
>> Look at the floor.
Wow. Look at all this detail.
>> So, this is the lunch.
>> King Hussein would accept his guests
here.
>> Yeah.
>> Couple
there's anything inside. Can you hold
the camera for a second?
No, it doesn't seem like it.
>> It's only the muza case.
>> Yeah, there's even tape to hang the
muzzle
cover. I need one.
>> Maybe cases.
>> That's interesting.
>> But are they empty? I mean, it's kind of
heavy.
>> This one might not be. I I wonder if you
can use the cutter to open the cases.
This is quite heavy. I think there's a
>> there is there is
>> Yeah, there's a scroll inside.
>> Is it recording?
>> Yeah.
>> There you go.
>> Wow. So, I don't know. They'll be
honest. I don't know if it's appropriate
for them to be left here.
>> They took place here. An air show.
>> Yeah, an air show with Apachi. Um um
this helicopter.
>> Do you know what year this was?
>> This was a couple of times. The last one
was 1988, I think.
>> Wow, this is so cool. We're literally in
the VIP lounge and there's photos all
over the place of different things that
happened here. This is when you said
Prime Minister Bean of Israel flew to
Egypt.
>> Oh, look. This is February 1973 after an
Israeli renovation of the place. Former
minister of transport Shimon Paris Ben
Guron who was nothing at that point but
out of honor they invited him and
Minister of Transport at the time Gadia
Kobe.
>> And this was all in this room.
>> Yeah.
>> Wow. They put a photo of the citadel.
>> I wonder where in the room it was and if
you can figure that out. Look, the the
wood panels is all Jordanian.
>> And the floor is so pretty.
>> Yeah.
>> I wonder if this is Jordanian work or is
your own work.
>> Uh, it kind of looks Jordanian.
>> I I can't be sure.
>> Have you been to Alman airport?
>> No. I've been to many times, but
>> Okay. So, there's there's a lot of this
like this red stone tile. It looks
Jordanian to me.
Okay,
>> this is Israel's former prime minister
bean um around the time on the day of
his trip to Egypt. And here to see him
off at the airport, you have former
chief rabbi of Israel, Rabbi Avadia
Ysef.
The amount of history that took place in
this room, unreal. Here you have uh King
Hussein, right? Yeah. This is receiving
guests in this room. Here you have um
prime minister of Israel, former prime
minister Ben Guran.
>> Ben Guran. This is Shiman Paris, a
former president. Was he also a prime
minister?
>> He was former minister of transport.
>> But then later he became president.
>> He never Oh yes.
>> Much much later. And Gadia Kovi also
senior politician. One of them was
minister of transport at the time that
it was reopened in 1967. M
>> be really irresponsible.
Kings, heads of states, princes, prime
ministers
from all over the world landed here.
The three quart landed here in 1864 to
visit the pope as he came to Jerusalem.
>> It's interesting that it's marked here
like how to get up.
This seems to be a elevator shaft.
Yeah.
>> Oh yeah,
>> this elevator shaft.
>> And
I don't know what this is. Somebody
seems to have lived there in the past.
So
>> we are now headed up the stairs to the
old control tower or the control tower I
should say.
>> Bathroom even shower.
>> Little bathroom.
>> Wow. How did they shower here?
>> Or maybe this was built for the soldier.
So, this is obviously a room that had
a whole bunch of technology in here. I'm
not sure what it was.
>> Like the military unit that was here,
there were four soldiers or four
commanding officers. They're like
holding up the whole structure. Take one
away and the whole place falls.
>> Well, this is the actual control room,
right?
>> This was this was the desk on which all
the
machinery was.
And you can still see the sandbags
placed by the soldiers here in 2020 when
this was a a gun imp placement.
There are still the um boxes of
ammunition lying around as well. I
remember last time I was here.
>> Place where you can oil your gun. Shim
in the mic.
>> You know, I' I've never been in a
control tower before.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh I kind of wish it was a little more
impressive, but still pretty cool.
>> Oh, they took away all the machinery, of
course. But here you can see the layout,
the two uh the two taxi ways. Yeah,
>> the apron and the runway.
>> So, right out here. Um,
>> and also a helipad over there where that
car is going.
>> So, let's just see right out here, which
is where the planes would kind of like
park.
>> Y
>> and then they'd go take those two taxi
ways out to the larger runway
>> which spans across, you know, all the
way.
>> You know what that is? this enclosure.
>> No.
>> When the Gardinians were extending the
runway, they came across the old
cemetery of Atarot and there was a
military rabbi, an American military
rabbi who was here and he overlooked the
uh removal of the bones very
respectfully and they had them reeried
over there.
>> So that's that's actually a cemetery.
>> Yeah.
>> That gated area.
>> Yeah.
>> Wow.
>> And look, that's the garage for the fire
trucks over there.
>> Oh yeah.
>> Yeah. You see very tall entrances for
the fire trucks.
>> There's one more story we didn't go to.
>> Yeah.
>> Well, up there is the actual uh control
tower.
>> Oh, so this is not it. So, we got to we
got to get up here. Look.
>> Yeah, that would be the control tower.
Little rickety, but
holy smokes.
Here we are. This is the actual control
tower.
>> You can see there's a tattered Israeli
flag
and we're looking out over the runway.
Incredible.
Okay, so I kind of get the feeling that
we should leave now. Um, nothing
specific triggered it. I just, you know,
when you get away with something long
enough, it's time to call it a day and
go home.
sandbags.
So apparently during the inif
Palestinians would shoot from those
areas towards the airport. The IDF
forces would shoot back which is why
they set up these firing points or
snipers nests behind sandbags. And you
can see right there there's a
neighborhood that has not always been so
friendly.
See, there's another staircase here.
>> Whoa.
Seems to be the basement.
See, you got to be really careful here
because
you never know what you're going to
find. This is a hole.
This is a hole that had an up and watch
I could have fallen into. So you got to
exploring abandoned places is not
necessarily a great idea, especially if
you're not if you don't know what you're
doing.
So this is some kind of cellar.
No idea what this is or what was here,
but I want to be very careful.
Oh, and this is this seems to be the
bottom of the elevator shaft that we saw
earlier. Yeah. Max load 50.
What is that?
Next load. Five.
I don't know what that is. This used to
be elevator. It's tiny.
Electric pipes.
Wow,
that was awesome.
Where you at?
>> Okay, I'm coming down
right here. This is another area
on the roof of the main terminal
from where you could see the tarmac.
Be careful. There's razor wire right
when you get out.
I got caught. I got caught on the razor
wire.
Okay, there we go.
So, the airport is right behind us. It
got really sunny.
protecting my eyes a little. And now we
are walking through this little field
here. Really dry.
And this is a cemetery. You said an old
Jewish cemetery.
>> This might be the place where they
injured the bones when they were
relocated. The bones of the deceased
from the Jewish Moshaba.
>> Mhm.
>> When they were extending the runway.
>> Uhhuh. Um the fact that it's surrounded
by this um decorated fence and these
stone pillars might attest to that, but
there's no real knowing.
>> So, you're saying this might be a
cemetery. This might not.
>> This might be a like a common grave for
the bones that were found back in the
1950s.
>> I'll say a quick prayer cuz I wonder how
often people come to visit.
minutes.
>> You said the
>> No, no, Kadesha. I can only do with 10
people. I just said uh one Absam.
>> So, we already left the terminal, but
now we're just checking out some other
buildings around us. We saw the
cemetery.
And
see, this is something to do with the
airport cuz there's antennas on top.
The architecture is distinctly
Jordanian. You can tell it was used by
Israelis because again there's an in
here.
There's another building that's almost
seems almost identical. Going to check
that out, too.
I can't make out what this says.
Oh, Assuran.
No smoking.
So,
>> the jet fuel storage.
>> That looks like jet. I was about to say
that.
>> Yeah.
>> You see the uh vents for the gas from
the uh
>> Okay. Look, there's even a oil drum.
Yeah.
>> Wow.
Very cool.
Seems like this might have been What
does this say? Says something else. Oh,
it's Oh, it's upside down.
>> So, it fell that I got it.
>> Yeah.
>> Well, I guess this is where they stored
the fuel.
>> So, apparently the place we were before
is not where the bones are, but it's
over here. There's some kind of memory
plaque over here.
This would be the
Say another song.
Okay, we are now approaching what is
probably the last stop at the airport
for us. This seems to be the little fire
station. So, for those of you who are
not familiar, most airports or all
airports, all airports should have them
just in case something goes wrong with
the plane, there's a fire or whatever,
will have trucks waiting at the end of
the tarmac and they can just come out of
their little garage and head right down
there to wherever the problem is.
>> The ceiling, which was for fire trucks.
>> Yeah. Nice. Nice tall ceilings.
Once again, there's a bizaar case
flag.
Not much to see. As I mentioned earlier,
you know, there were literally daily
flights to Iran, Kuwait, and all over
the Middle East. And right now, it seems
like
>> Saudi Arabia.
>> Saudi Arabia. Nice.
>> Post October 7th, post the war with
Iran.
It's it's like so hard to imagine and
believe that that once happened right
from here. Direct flights from Jerusalem
to all those places in the Arab world.
But I'd like to believe that it could
happen again. I don't know how.
>> Not from this airport.
>> Not from this airport. this will never
be up.
>> Anything's possible. Or let's say forget
this airport
>> and an airport,
>> another airport in Jerusalem. That would
be so cool to be able to pick up, you
know, to be able to get up in the
morning, drive a couple minutes to
Jerusalem airport, hop on a flight
anywhere in the Arab world. No war, no
killing, no violence, just peace and
love and
happiness for everyone.
Here's to hoping that it happens. Maybe
one day.
So, that's it for now. We're going to
call it a day.
So glad I was able to come here. I've
been wanting to come for years and uh
thankfully finally happened.
Don't give up on your dreams, guys.
Never give up on your dreams.