When the
Old and New Cities of Jerusalem were reunited in 1967, a recently widowed Arab
woman, who had been living in Old Jerusalem since 1948, wanted to see once more
the house in which she formerly lived. Now that the city was one, she searched
for and found her old home. She knocked on the door of the apartment, and a
Jewish widow came to the door and greeted her. The Arab woman explained that
she had lived there until 1948 and wanted to look around. She was invited in
and offered coffee. The Arab woman said, "When I lived here, I hid some
valuables. If they are still here, I will share them with you half and
half." The Jewish woman refused. "If they belonged to you and are
still here, they are yours." After much discussion back and forth, they
entered the bathroom, loosened the floor planks, and found a hoard of gold
coins. The Jewish woman said, "I shall ask the government to let you keep
them." She did and permission was granted.
The two
widows visited each other again and again, and one day the Arab woman told her,
"You know, in the 1948 fighting here, my husband and I were so frightened
that we ran away to escape. We grabbed our belongings, took the children, and
each fled separately. We had a three-month-old son. I thought my husband had
taken him, and he thought I had. Imagine our grief when we were reunited in Old
Jerusalem to find that neither of us had taken the child."
The Jewish woman turned pale, and asked the exact date. The
Arab woman named the date and the hour, and the Jewish widow told her: "My
husband was one of the Israeli troops that entered Jerusalem. He came into this
house and found a baby on the floor. He asked if he could keep the house and
the baby, too. Permission was granted."
At that
moment, a twenty-year-old Israeli soldier in uniform walked into the room, and
the Jewish woman broke down in tears. "This is your son," she cried.
This is one of those incredible tales we hear. And the
aftermath? The two women liked each other so much that the Jewish widow asked
the Arab mother: "Look, we are both widows living alone. Our children are
grown up. This house has brought you luck. You have found your son, or our son.
Why don't we live together?"
And now they do.
1. Answer the following questions using your own words (2
points each)
a.
How long had it been since the Arab women had been in the home in Old
Jerusalem?
b.
What kind of treasure was there in the house and where was it?
2.
Are the following statements true or false? (1 point each)
a.
The Jewish woman’s husband was a soldier. ___
b.
The Arab woman had left a three-year-old son behind. ___
3.
Find a word or phrase in the text which, in context, is similar in meaning to
(1 point each)
a. A large
collection of something: _________ b. Very great sadness: _________
4.
What part of speech are the following words as they are used in the text above?
(1 point each)
a.
floor __________ b. fighting __________
c.
taken __________ d. now __________
5.
Choose a, b or c in each question below. Only one choice is correct. (2 points)
1.
When the Arab woman first visited her former house, the Jewish woman invited
her to
a. search for some valuables.
b. drink some coffee.
c. meet her son
2.
When the Arab woman told the Jewish woman that there might be a treasure in the
house, the Arab woman suggested
a. Keeping all the treasure.
b. Giving the treasure away.
c. Sharing the treasure.
3.
Who kept the valuables found in the house?
a. The Jewish woman
b. The Arab woman
c. The government
4.
What is the ethnicity of the twenty year old?
a. Israeli
b. Jewish
c. Arab
6.
What "color" are the following words? (1 point each)
a.
hid __________ c. found
__________
b.
liked __________ d. brought
__________
Brother, never have the Arabs and the Israelis lived in harmony since the siege of Jerusalem in 1948. If you read what is going on in Palestine right now, what the world has said against the Jews on how they treat the Muslims, all the tortures and injustice...hopefully you understand what I'm trying to say. I don't know where you got such misleading story.
BalasHapus@The Traveller, he got it from me - his English teacher. And it is a true story! The story does not suggest that the story is true NOW, but it DID happen. Indeed - there have been many opportunities even in my lifetime for the divide to be bridged, and for peace to be obtained. Your comment seems to suggest that this is not only impossible, but undesirable. What would be better? A Caliphate and the extermination of all Jewish people? I hope you have a more realistic answer than that - that is more far-fetched than the non-fiction story my beloved student has posted above. =)
Hapus