Banksy Exhibit @ The Walled Off Hotel - Palestine

in Pinmapple3 years ago

Banksy isn't your typical icon. I doubt anyone tuned into this is seeing the name for the first time, he's known around the world. Most everyone has a favorite Banksy memory like the painted elephant in the room or the time that painting sold for how ever many thousands or millions and it shredded itself at point of sale in front of a packed audience. But that's all we know. He doesn't promote himself on social media, no billboards, television ads or commercial sponsorships. Other than he's British and arguably the most phenomenal artist alive, we don't even know if Banksy is his nickname, first name, last, we don't know anything about it him—he isn't typical.

Neither is West Bank—an Israeli occupied settlement in Palestinian territory. The historical and religious divide between Palestine and Israel dates back pre Jesus. Both countries have been under numerous rule for thousands of years including The Romans and Islamic Ottoman Empire of Turkey until finally ruled by England following their WWI victory over Germany and Turkey in 1918. For the purpose of this article, we'll chronicle the last 100 years as quickly as possible, there's just so much ground to cover. Without first painting a history picture, appreciating and understanding The Walled Off Hotel and all of Banksy's art on display inside The Walled Off isn't just unlikely, it's not possible.

Between 1918 and 1947, while under British rule, Jews seeking refuge from Jewish extermination practices in both Germany and Russia fled to Palestine—then English territory. Without anywhere else in Europe offering safety from extermination other than England, an extremely wealthy Jewish banking family residing in the UK persuaded the British government to create a safe homeland for all Jews in their Biblical Promised Land—Palestine. That family is the Rothschild family. Up until 1918, previous to the British development of Palestinian division that drew a line between existing Jordan and Jerusalem, it's said that Muslims and Jews occupied the land together and lived peacefully.

During that 30 years, Muslims believed the dividing line was drawn unfairly and thought the land awarded to them was less prosperous. Instead of recognizing Jews as tenacious, they watched their former servants success which eventually led to anger as they became jealous of their soon to be wealthier neighbors. They've been at war with each other ever since.

In 1947, following nearly 30 years of English rule and a now 199 mile long divisional line drawn across the middle of Palestine separating Bethlehem nearest Jordan from Bethlehem nearest Israel, big oil became British priority in the Middle East—they washed their hands free from Palestine, handing the territory over to the United Nations. That's when the real chaos began; murders, suicide bombings, etc. that still exist today.

We're all caught up now right? Fast forward to 2000

Built in phases beginning in 1994, between September 2000 and July 2003, the first segment of separation, originally named "first continuous segment," was constructed by Israel while under United Nations scrutiny who opposed the wall's construction 144-4. The first barrier of electrified barbed wire fence stood two meters high (nearly 7 feet) with a 60 meter wide (197 feet) vehicle-barrier trench designed purposely to encroach Palestinian territory. In sections of Palestine, particularly the Israeli occupied Palestinian territory where The Walled Off Hotel is located, the separation wall is twice as tall as the Berlin Wall standing 27 feet high and twice as wide.

The 199 mile long divisional line created by England designed to cut through the middle of Jerusalem as suggested by the Rothschild's has since received Israeli military approval with a total completion length of 440 miles—more than double the original design. Upon completion, more than 85% of the wall's construction will occupy Palestinian territory with just 15% in Israel. The walled off section of Palestine isolated 10% of its occupants displacing roughly 25,000 Palestinians from what used to be their home, place of employment, farm, family, etc in West Bank. Banksy has since dubbed it "the worlds largest open-air prison."

I don't think a true appreciation of the art I'm about to show you is possible without mapping out the timeline. There's a lot of history and animosity worth understanding. Without this explanation, I'm defeating the purpose of his project not to mention his art work would've been difficult to understand—he has an artistic way of telling you the same story I've just explained only with a different medium.

Rumor has it, sometime near the turn of the century, Banksy began digging into the history of Palestine and West Bank. During his research, he discovered it was his own people responsible for developing the divide between the two countries who later chose to turn their back on the two countries unconcerned with the devastation they'd left behind. He felt compelled to bring national awareness to the issue. In 2003, shortly after the first completion of the West Bank Wall, Banksy toured the Palestinian territory and, while there, he painted the first mural on the wall—an eagle in a bullet-proof vest with laser sights zeroed in on its chest.

In the next two years, he assembled a team of 14 artists from around the world, including a few Palestinians, to join him in 2005 where each of them returned to Palestine and formed a collaboration he called "the ultimate activity holiday destination for graffiti writers." I snapped many pictures of the wall art with the GoPro including his first piece. During our three week stay in Israel, I snapped over 2,000 pictures covering everywhere between Tel Aviv and Jericho including West Bank, they're headed your way—one thing at a time.

For the next 10 years, the wall decorated top to bottom in graffiti art continued gaining national attention. In 2007, Banksy and his collaboration held an art fair called "Art For Hearts Sake" in Bethlehem—the location now home to The Walled Off Hotel. His intention was to bring international awareness to the destruction in Bethlehem by hosting an art exhibit and marketplace right in the middle of it—in person attendance required. Art collectors from across the world and those simply interested in a fresh Banksy attraction flocked to Bethlehem to attend. He accomplished his goal. By offering each of the displayed art exhibits for sale, he raised more than $1 million that was donated to local charities but equally important, everyone who attended the exhibit could relate to his inspiration and explain what they've seen. The exhibit was held at the base of the illegally constructed (declared illegal by the U.N) 27 foot wall encompassing Palestinians that prevents them from entering their own land as well as the heavily armed, 99 checkpoints required to pass prior to visiting family and friends, grocery shopping, employment, etc.

During the exhibit and while he and his assembled team were painting West Bank in Bethlehem, according to a spokesperson for Banksy, he was repeatedly threatened and harassed by Israeli military. In an interview after the event, when asked about the threats, he politely avoided the question by saying "during my visit to Palestine I felt safe."

In 2017, Banksy again returned to Palestine motivated by the international media coverage his messages were receiving. This time he had a bigger plan. He collaborated with a notable academic, Doctor David Grindon and, together, they designed the hotel boutique in Bethlehem located 25 miles from Ben Gurion Airport. The Walled Off Hotel stands less than 20 feet from the base of the wall and directly under an Israeli controlled guard tower. Inside the lobby is a museum with detailed history about the wall along with an elaborate display of some of Banksy's finest creations—we're almost there.

The hotel has a total of 10 rooms, each booked several months in advance and the hotel's theme is Banksy designed as well: "The World's Worst View." Since the opening of the hotel, Bethlehem's tourism increased by more than 140,000 visitors per year who, like me, are unequivocally aware of the current crisis between Israel and Palestine. Now I'm doing things like this—spreading the word. And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the reason for this lengthy introduction.

The Walled Off Hotel

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All images - GoPro Hero 5 Black

The lighting inside the lobby is dark and only his pieces have light fixtures directed toward them. After entering the double doors pictured above, you pass through a heavy fabric'd, burgundy colored curtain and you're inside the hotel lobby. This next one is looking back at the entrance doors.

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I had no idea I was looking at $2.3 million while snapping this next photo. It's called Triptych, "Mediterranean Sea View 2017," a three-piece oil painting of the Mediterranean Coast covered in life jackets as a memorial to asylum seekers and refugees who died in the ocean. About a month after we left, Banksy sold this piece and donated the $2.3 million to Bethlehem Hospital to fund a stroke unit and children's rehabilitation.

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Directly under that painting, resting on the mantle is a tattered wooden sailboat he carved—everything inside the lobby is his creation. The message under the boat deserves its own zoom.

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Next is a replica of the guard tower standing above the hotel, he painted it as a swing with children playing on it.

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It's tough to say which is my favorite so I won't try but I really liked this next one. Rather than showing the weapon in the portraits right hand, a vase is staged in front of the painting and the hotel's front desk replaces the flowers daily.

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Simple piece but the creativity behind the message is genius.

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The first of these next two is a cat clawing at a caged bird. He did a really good job with them, they looked real. I don't know the message behind it, if you think you got it, let me know in the comment section. The cage is hanging at the end of the bar if that helps. The second looks like a futuristic dozer with jets flying in the background destroying an aged village—don't miss the drones on the wall (left side).

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These next three are the entrance to the 10 rooms upstairs. The first is a pair of bowled gold fish—not sure what that's about. On the book shelf directly below the gold fish and to the left is an armless, white statue piece like an award, that's your room key.

After checking in to your room, you're issued that room key. Touch the key to the light switch just to the right of the book shelf, the statue's nipples light up red. The red lights activate the door switch and the book shelf opens to a staircase that leads to your room.

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These next three... The first one, with a lot going on over and behind it, is a grand piano that played itself the entire time. Check out the crucifix on the back wall turned grappling hook.

Take your time, zoom in, let me know what you think about all the surveillance equipment in the third one. Innate talent at getting his point across.

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The Museum

Four more. These final four images were taken at the museum inside the hotel designed to memorialize West Bank—a small room roughly 30x50 on the opposite side of the bar. The first one is an animated mannequin who collects your entrance fee. He welcomes you, tells you what to look for, accepts your fee and puts it in the drawer. Out of eight of us on the tour, Pura and I were the only ones who experienced the museum—I don't know what that's about either.

The second features a broken wall in the middle of the room with a sewing machine next to it. On the opposite side of that wall was an old black telephone—rotary type. When the phone rang, I didn't know I was supposed to answer it. Then I read the passage above it, I wish I would've taken a picture. The passage said something to the extent of 'recorded message Palestinians receive moments prior to their neighborhood being destroyed.' That got my attention—next time it rang I answered.

Even telling you about it is an eerie memory, I can't imagine being on the receiving end of the actual call. The phone rang, 'Hello?' The recorded line sounded something like this: "This is Israeli military forces. Your neighborhood and everything you own will be destroyed in five minutes. You'll receive a second warning with one remaining minute. Leave now or lose your life."

Could you imagine that?! I don't know how the person on the receiving end of that phone call managed. While we continued looking around the phone rang again.

"This is your final warning. Your neighborhood will be destroyed in less than one minute."

Take your time. Those signs have seen a lot. They're still protesting over there, even during a pandemic. They protest every Friday and risk death or jail. In July, 2020, an emergency government was voted in Israel and the Prime Minister of 11 years lost the vote to his rival who will take over the position in January 2022. As of right now, Israel has several outside nations including U.S and U.K urging them to stop construction of the wall but Palestinians want construction stopped as well as the demolition of what's been done.

Talks supposedly continue about removal of the wall but as it stands today, it's just talk. Plans to remove the wall have yet to be made but new construction is at least on pause at the moment.

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Sources:
British Empire/Middle East And The Holy LandBanksy in PalestineThe Walled Off HotelIsraeli West Bank BarrierCome All Ye Faithful Banksy in BethlehemA Look into The Israeli West Bank WallWalled off: 12 years of Israel’s separation barrier

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Thanks for sharing your unique post on Walled Off Hotel! Entertaining and educational.

cat clawing at a caged bird

This exhibit is tricky but I'll take a wild stab. Maybe life in Palestine felt like a fine line between a caged bird (trapped) and a cat hanging on the edge (precarious). Both are suboptimal and undesirable places or situation to get into. I might be wrong!

Being under constant surveillance is equally as damaging to the psyche as getting physically injured from behind by catapult or axe especially so when perpetrators were anonymous. Work of a genius!

@wittywheat, you need to stop by more often. 😉

If I remember correctly, this is the second time I've heard from you and the first was about the affordable medicine in your country as well as advice for Pura regarding her probiotic. And now this, an exceptional interpretation of that cat and bird exhibit--only Banksy himself could award a grade but if you ask me, you frikkin nailed it! I'm glad I asked for help with that one--stellar interpretation!

You're very welcome for sharing this experience with you, I'm glad you enjoyed it and, again, it's always a pleasure when you stop by. Enjoy the rest of your week and don't be a stranger.

Happy to be returning. Keep posting great content!
Wishing you and Pura an awesome week! 😄

Pretty epic, this one. I wanted to comment the other day, but didn't quite have any words worthy of this much work. Dude, people. Some of 'em just suck. I keep going back to the thought of living somewhere when at any moment you could be blitzed to rubble with just a few moments notice. I don't know how you can live like that.

I'm also in awe of some of you artist types. I can create some bomb food, but the talent and creativity to put so much into the tiniest painting or most seemingly simple of sculptures--it's no wonder artists were at one point considered national treasures. I'm sure I could spend hours just going back and forth through that hotel to try to attempt to take even a small part of that in.

Kudos on getting some traction on this one. Very well deserved.

Thank you.

If time is all you need to comment like that, take all the time you need you little southern belle you.

About the details. Very cool of you to notice and appreciate those things.

I think I finally have a guess on those gold fish--took a long time. Maybe they're two of the same specie who can't get to each other cuz they're separated by a wall. 🤔

We got to chill there for about an hour. A good 30 minutes or more before that just checking out all the wall art. Man it was a dope day! All day too. I was naive to all of it before that day. I thought we were just touring Bethlehem that day. Shame on me for not knowing Bethlehem's in West Bank.

Yours is art too. But you can taste it.

This is an excellent post. I learned so much. Your photos are wonderful and all the info you provided was awesome.

You're such a sweetheart @melinda010100 (I have the 010100 part memorized now).

Thank you. I put quite a bit of effort in this one, I'm glad it was received well by the community--your support means a lot.

Just heard about that shooting in Wisconsin, I hope it was ffFAarRr away from you guys.

I'm so glad that this post received the appropriate curation rewards! It truly is a marvelous effort!

Mayfair Mall is 70 miles from here. I've gone shopping there a couple of times. What a world we live in.

You're too kind.

What a world we live in

So you're sayin I'm not dead then, right? What happened to just living? I could name a gajillion questionable things and name a gajillion certainty things, unfortunately, the certainty things have a lot of catching up to do.

Thank you for bringing me to the Walled off Hotel. Great descriptions of everything you saw, at times I felt like I was there with you.

Good morning, you're welcome @lynds, my pleasure. I appreciate this compliment--nice message to wake up to. I'm glad you enjoyed this article and thank you for the reblog.

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I don't 'know' anyone who's actually been to the hotel, thanks for sharing.

Banksy is rumoured to hail from my local city so, pleased to see someone post about him.

Not as pleased as I am to receive this recognition from this article @livinguktaiwan, thank you! And a cover spot on travel digest?! I got so excited when I saw that. A lot of effort went into this one. Pinmapple, you, itchy, choo, the whole team continues to motivate me to keep sharing these travels.

I'm glad you enjoyed it. The Walled Off was such an experience and I'm glad I was able to represent the experience authentically.

See you soon @livinguktaiwan!

You know technology is far from its peak cuz you can't just text message me a bite of that truffle. 😉

!BEER

You may have broken the record here for the longest post in the history of the blockchain @dandays...?!?!?!? I'm not complaining, even though my eyes are (one good eye) red, itchy and blurry...

I sure wish my 'printer' wasn't on the fritz; that would have helped a lot😵

AnYwAyZ… It is a fine piece, regardless what anyone else might say.

@angryman, I'm glad you were able to get through this one, it took a printer and blurry eyes to read it eh.. you should seen the dude who wrote it! Man, Even my keyboard was 'really?! How much longer we gonna be here?!'

Thanks for keeping an eye on me sir. And thanks for dropping me a line, I always look forward to what you have to say.

Damn dude, I'm fucking jealous. Those photos have me asking where do I sign up.

I really wanted to go see banksy's theme park thing he did in England a few years back but couldn't make it happen. I knew he'd did a lot of stuff in Palestine but didn't quite realize the extent of it.

So the root of the conflict is that the Muslims were jealous of the Jews? I suspect that we may be disagreeing on that one until the Palestinians come home...

You're going to talk me into getting one of those newfangled goPro thingys ain't you?

If I can make @coloneljethro the photography extraordinaire jealous then I must've done something right.

I think that Muslim jealousy thing was the start of it, don't shoot the messenger. I got that shit from the internet and it's the most reliable source on the planet--never fake or anything.

From what I read and my research, prior to dividing the land, Jews were Muslims servants--that dates back to the days of Pharaoh in Egypt n shit. Once the land was divided, the Jews began to collect wealth that exceeded their Muslim neighbors. According to my research, that's where the anger and jealousy stemmed but continued from there. I tried to write this one from an unbiased position, tell me the truth, how'd I do?

On that note, I think the root of the conflict during the last 100 years was the Rothschild family coercing England to divide an already existing territory. Then England added fuel to the fire by abandoning the Middle East.

Maybe I'm wrong

Thanks for checkin this one out dude, it was pretty lengthy huh?

GoPro--dude the thing is dope! Their slogan is something like "say goodbye to blur." Theres like a millisecond delay between snapping and capturing so the thing doesn't take 'shaky/blurry' photos, you can swing it through the air while snapping and it won't take a blurry shot. Not to mention it's water proof and drop proof. Trust me, I know! I've had the thing in rain, fresh water, under the ocean diving n shit, not to mention I've dropped it at least 20 times. Maybe even 50 and it never fell on a pillow.

Runs like a champ!

Anything on the interwebs can be informative...factual is a slightly different critter though. Without knowing the provenance of that information I am a bit skeptical but my suspicion is that it is more in the nature of oversimplification than pure falsehood.

My history professors were rather particular about how things should be written so I've probably internalized a good bit of that. You did a damn good job with it, that was the only thing I could find to fuck with you about.

From a realpolitik perspective, the creation and support of Israel has been one of the worst foreign policy decisions of the 20th century (Versailles Treaty still holds the title for that though), the overwhelming majority of turmoil and instability in the middle east can be traced back to that. From a humanitarian perspective it makes a lot more sense but looking at the virtual apartheid state that exists currently it's hard not to think something went wrong somewhere along the way.

Do you actually think Bibi will be gone come 2022? His comeuppance has been a long time coming but I am suspicious that he will manage to find some way to wiggle out of it.

The gopro sounds perfect for all those times when things get really lively, I am going to be looking into them...

Well said dude. Seems someone paid attention to his history professors.

Apartheid. If only that word could become known as quickly as pandemic did.

The things I read and the way understand current Israel, I wouldn't be surprised if he remains Prime Minister. They say the two are working together now and dudes exit is scheduled. We'll see. Yeah, I think we'll see a switch.

Eh, and those GoPros are really affordable considering all they're capable of. Mine's a few years old now, so the newest ones are gonna be even better. Now they have 360 view and stuff.

It's cold here

Ha, when I wasn't half drunk and arguing with them I paid a little attention.

You would think that apartheid would already be well known but that would require people to pay attention. It is almost as if the Israelis decided it was better to build the world's largest cage instead of addressing the issues underlying the first and second intifadas.

I suspect that bibi's wholehearted embrace of trump and the gop is about to bite him in the ass, I was reading the other day how the opposition is already using that against him now that Biden is president elect. I think you are right but that dude has lots of connections and knows where lots of bodies are buried, if anybody can get out of that jam it's him.

I'm back. I'd like to respond to this one differently. So that's what I'm doing.

I read quite a bit when I put this one together, mostly newer stuff. That, combined with a couple thousand year old readings I do regularly, and my personal experience while touring there, I think I picked the word jealous because it makes a lot of sense. I did read that word too and it wasn't wrong to me.

To say I'm not jealous of the person who wins the lottery is probably a lie. I get over it quickly, like a few seconds, but I bet there's a hint of jealousy there even if only for a few seconds when I realize I've never even played and just learned about someone winning a gajillion dollars--dammit. little jealous maybe.

Still trying to speak from a neutral and unbiased position though dude (because I'm both), I think there's a lot of jealousy there. I think if for thousands of years, subject b was subject a's slave, literally slave and constantly working for sub a and suddenly the field appears to be level for a short time.. thousands of years of one thing to a level field for a few years. Shortly after, now the former servants are thriving. I probably could've gone with another word but I know what jealousy is and I think that shit woulda made me jealous.

I woulda been totally o0Oover it by now though

Well said. I don't dispute jealousy being a factor, but I feel reducing it to an emotional reaction trivializes and minimizes all the other factors that contribute to the situation.

Before the British it was the ottomans, before that the crusaders and the Romans and more in between. That area has one hell of a history of ethnic cleansing and doing unto others, I'm betting there is plenty of jealously, distrust, and hate to go around. Not exactly sure where I was going with that...

Eh, whatever word you use, it's a clusterfuck. I'm wondering why that conflict gets so much more attention and different treatment than similar ones elsewhere, say the Kurds or the Tamils or Chechens. Is it the religious connections of the area? The natural resources?

I'm not disagreeing with you on substance, just a bit of semantics. Plus I just like to debate things :D

Fuck yes, I knew you'd be back. Good stuff. A lot lot lot has happened there huh? At that particular time, though, when the line was drawn, that's the time I'm talking about and what inspired painting the wall and so on. The whole picture though, without it... it's a huge picture. Man I'm glad you mentioned Kurd.

A friend we made who's Syrian brought a friend of his over for dinner one night with myself and Pura. Good people. Really, really cool. It's impossible to pay a tab dude when you're with a Syrian. Chew on that one for a minute. It's a trip. The only way to get the tab is by showing up to the restaurant first. Yeah, so you end up showing up 30 and 40 minutes early. But anyway.. his buddy.

He's Kurdish, gave me the whole story by living it. Told me about all their books were destroyed, if you get caught speaking Kurd in those countries right there (Iraq, Turkey, Iran), they kill you. I got a hell of a story that night. He showed me the tattoo on his arm, proud n shit! Rolled up his sleeve: "Kurd" Said if he got caught over there and they saw that he's dead.

Just a wee bit. Conceded, lol, fine I will stick to that time period :)

Saladin was a Kurd. Did you know Kurdish PKK fighters were training in Lebanon when the Israelis invaded in '82, helped the Lebanese fight them? I've always had a fondness for the Kurds, they're just fellow hillbillies that everybody fucks with.

Never got to meet a Kurd though, although I just barely missed them brawling with Erdogan's thugs in DC the last time I was there.

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Hey @dandays, here is a little bit of BEER from @eii for you. Enjoy it!

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Hiya, @LivingUKTaiwan here, just swinging by to let you know that this post made it into our Top 3 in Daily Travel Digest #1033.

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Yeah I'd didn't get all excited and happy to see my article on the cover of travel digest or anything. Naaa.. not even a little. 😉

Thank you @pinmapple!