Berliner Boersenzeitung - Year after riot, Israeli chef rebuilds on sensitive foundations

EUR -
AED 3.784975
AFN 72.60338
ALL 97.819514
AMD 408.649608
ANG 1.857344
AOA 939.798855
ARS 1063.235085
AUD 1.658455
AWG 1.854866
AZN 1.7514
BAM 1.950767
BBD 2.080851
BDT 125.21814
BGN 1.954648
BHD 0.388419
BIF 3047.76603
BMD 1.030481
BND 1.406798
BOB 7.121694
BRL 6.392385
BSD 1.030551
BTN 88.40562
BWP 14.333297
BYN 3.372664
BYR 20197.43257
BZD 2.070079
CAD 1.487196
CDF 2957.48138
CHF 0.937207
CLF 0.037361
CLP 1031.151371
CNY 7.521999
CNH 7.560404
COP 4553.253553
CRC 525.349643
CUC 1.030481
CUP 27.307753
CVE 109.982302
CZK 25.169502
DJF 183.518285
DKK 7.458799
DOP 62.948198
DZD 140.260893
EGP 52.311663
ERN 15.457219
ETB 131.498995
FJD 2.397672
FKP 0.816123
GBP 0.831573
GEL 2.895578
GGP 0.816123
GHS 15.144074
GIP 0.816123
GMD 74.194574
GNF 8909.100072
GTQ 7.950641
GYD 215.615782
HKD 8.013337
HNL 26.184695
HRK 7.391545
HTG 134.613989
HUF 413.501122
IDR 16717.961093
ILS 3.758969
IMP 0.816123
INR 88.369796
IQD 1350.042954
IRR 43370.384577
ISK 143.876059
JEP 0.816123
JMD 160.366239
JOD 0.730922
JPY 161.763909
KES 133.199878
KGS 89.651736
KHR 4157.354291
KMF 480.333034
KPW 927.432552
KRW 1514.31796
KWD 0.317883
KYD 0.858801
KZT 540.88496
LAK 22485.204088
LBP 92291.773457
LKR 302.16332
LRD 190.141261
LSL 19.290316
LTL 3.042744
LVL 0.623327
LYD 5.064932
MAD 10.427397
MDL 19.004336
MGA 4880.45529
MKD 61.434159
MMK 3346.962915
MNT 3501.575166
MOP 8.255779
MRU 41.099358
MUR 48.380907
MVR 15.873873
MWK 1787.006683
MXN 21.375948
MYR 4.615007
MZN 65.851595
NAD 19.290503
NGN 1593.206365
NIO 37.922891
NOK 11.704304
NPR 141.448793
NZD 1.837881
OMR 0.396741
PAB 1.030551
PEN 3.871087
PGK 4.188235
PHP 59.743693
PKR 287.169959
PLN 4.27272
PYG 8039.335712
QAR 3.757542
RON 4.973516
RSD 116.99468
RUB 114.901447
RWF 1419.963908
SAR 3.870075
SBD 8.639096
SCR 14.590372
SDG 619.830988
SEK 11.442737
SGD 1.407859
SHP 0.816123
SLE 23.494566
SLL 21608.679768
SOS 588.991773
SRD 36.149569
STD 21328.881416
SVC 9.017821
SYP 2589.115315
SZL 19.286613
THB 35.328506
TJS 11.233326
TMT 3.616989
TND 3.30773
TOP 2.413487
TRY 36.385129
TTD 7.003997
TWD 33.879097
TZS 2509.22212
UAH 43.403935
UGX 3790.257532
USD 1.030481
UYU 45.433219
UZS 13299.814191
VES 53.547712
VND 26233.476513
VUV 122.340798
WST 2.847001
XAF 654.281586
XAG 0.035038
XAU 0.000389
XCD 2.784928
XDR 0.790276
XOF 654.275253
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.006744
ZAR 19.280454
ZMK 9275.565702
ZMW 28.675293
ZWL 331.814543
  • BTI

    0.2700

    36.59

    +0.74%

  • GSK

    0.2000

    34.02

    +0.59%

  • BP

    0.3650

    29.925

    +1.22%

  • AZN

    0.8100

    66.33

    +1.22%

  • NGG

    0.2300

    59.65

    +0.39%

  • RYCEF

    0.1600

    7.24

    +2.21%

  • RBGPF

    -2.9800

    59.02

    -5.05%

  • RELX

    0.1300

    45.55

    +0.29%

  • CMSC

    0.2600

    23.19

    +1.12%

  • BCE

    -0.0050

    23.175

    -0.02%

  • BCC

    0.2350

    119.095

    +0.2%

  • CMSD

    0.2520

    23.382

    +1.08%

  • VOD

    0.0250

    8.515

    +0.29%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    12.19

    +0.49%

  • SCS

    0.0550

    11.875

    +0.46%

  • RIO

    0.3000

    59.11

    +0.51%

Year after riot, Israeli chef rebuilds on sensitive foundations
Year after riot, Israeli chef rebuilds on sensitive foundations / Photo: JACK GUEZ - AFP

Year after riot, Israeli chef rebuilds on sensitive foundations

On May 4 of last year, star Israeli chef Uri Jeremias was at a meeting of inter-faith leaders where his hometown of Acre was applauded as a "symbol" of Jewish and Arab co-existence.

Text size:

Exactly a week after that gathering, Arab rioters torched his seafood restaurant Uri Buri and a nearby luxury hotel, the Efendi, which Jeremias also owned. The attacks in the north-coast city were part of unprecedented intercommunal violence that shook Israel's mixed communities one year ago.

Nearly three decades earlier, Jeremias had opened Uri Buri in Acre's majority-Arab Old City. The travel site Tripadvisor named it the 19th best restaurant in the world last year.

He has always employed Arab Muslims, several of whom are now among his most senior staff.

Jeremias told AFP that he -- and Acre's community leaders generally -- had grown "very satisfied" with what they believed were harmonious Jewish and Arab relations in the Old City, a UNESCO world heritage site where the remains of a Crusader town lie almost intact.

But Jeremias, known for his Father Time beard, said his hometown had failed to recognise its rising numbers of struggling youths, some with fraught family lives, and others out of school, who were vulnerable to radicalisation.

"We didn't see the transparent people, the people that were not so happy," he told AFP.

The violence perpetrated by both Jews and Arabs in mixed Israeli cities in May, 2021 was sparked by a convergence of crises.

Palestinians had clashed with police across Israeli-annexed east Jerusalem, including at the sensitive Al-Aqsa mosque compound.

At the start of an 11-day war, Hamas Islamists who control Gaza fired rockets at Jerusalem on May 10 in response to the Al-Aqsa clashes, triggering Israeli retaliatory bombardment of the blockaded strip.

The intercommunal violence began the next day, ultimately leaving two Arabs and two Jewish people dead. Businesses from both communities, mosques and synagogues were targeted from Haifa in the north to Jaffa further south.

- 'Threatening silence' -

Jeremias has a long track record of hiring disaffected youths -- Jewish and Arab -- with no professional training to work in his restaurant and hotel, which he said made the Efendi and Uri Buri a target.

"I would be offended if I wouldn't be the target," as they wanted to harm mutual coexistence, he said. "I, in a way, was a symbol for it."

He was supposed to be off on May 11. But given the crises unfolding nationwide he wanted to pass by the restaurant, if only for a bowl of soup to support his staff.

Jeremias recalled that a "threatening silence" hung over the Old City when he entered.

As he finished his soup, four masked men carrying crowbars shattered the restaurant's high arched windows.

"Then they went away so I thought they have expressed their anger and now they are going home."

Next, his phone rang. The Efendi was on fire.

By the time he arrived, his neighbours had extinguished the blaze, but an 84-year-old guest would eventually die from smoke inhalation and burns.

With the Efendi blaze contained, a man came running down the narrow cobblestone alley outside the hotel to report that Uri Buri was on fire.

Jeremias raced the 350 metres back to the restaurant and fought the blaze himself, with help from neighbours.

Police, the army and firefighters were deployed to crises elsewhere and did not respond: "Acre was naked," Jeremias said.

As he watched his restaurant burn, Jeremias focused on the future.

"I said the next thing, tomorrow morning, we are going to look for an alternative place."

Soon, Uri Buri was serving its famous salmon sashimi with wasabi sorbet from a temporary site at a grey concrete business park several kilometres from the old walled city, where tables remained in high-demand despite the drab surroundings.

- 'We are the problem' -

While his food continued to find acceptance, Acre's social problems did not. In the immediate aftermath of the violence Jeremias saw worrying signs of denial among local leaders.

"People were saying the rioters aren't from Acre, and all kinds of excuses not to look at the problem in the face and say we are the problem."

But he personally resolved to learn from what happened.

He stressed that maintaining calm in the city of roughly 50,000 people near Haifa could not be the sole responsibility of the security forces, or municipal authorities.

His restaurant re-opened in January at its historic site a few metres from the sea wall, and Jeremias voices optimism that despite warnings of copycat unrest during Ramadan, the Muslim holy month passed peacefully in Acre this year. Israel and the Palestinian territories saw violence elsewhere.

And, Jeremias stressed, complacency would be a mistake.

"We have to keep our hand on the pulse."

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)