4.3 • 2.6K Ratings
🗓️ 17 July 2024
⏱️ 40 minutes
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Since the start of the war between Israel and Hamas last year, the cry “From the River to the Sea” has been heard more and more as a pro-Palestinian slogan. But what river? What sea? And what exactly does the phrase mean? It’s the subject of intense controversy. In this two-part series, reporter Tim Whewell travels from the River Jordan to the Mediterranean Sea, across a tiny stretch of land – just over an hour by car if you don’t stop - that’s perhaps the most argued-over in the world. Along the way, he meets shepherds and teachers, soldiers and gardeners, artists and activists - Palestinians and Israelis of many different views and backgrounds. The shortest line from the River to the Sea doesn’t pass through Gaza. But everyone Tim meets on his journey across the Israeli-occupied West Bank of the River, and in Israel, is living in the terrible shadow of the October 7th Hamas attack on Israel and the war that’s followed. The future of the often-beautiful, fast-changing, overcrowded region he crosses will be at the heart of any eventual solution to the Middle East conflict. In this first programme, he goes from the Jordan, through the Israeli settlement of Argaman, the Palestinian herding community of al-Farisiyah and the Palestinian village of Duma, ending up at the Israeli settlement of Shilo. What do people in those places think now – and do they have any hope for the future? (In Part 2, Tim leaves the West Bank and travels through Israel.) Presenter/producer: Tim Whewell Sound mixing: Andy Fell and Neil Churchill Production co-ordinator: Gemma Ashman Editor: Penny Murphy
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0:00.0 | Hello, I'm Tim Huell. Welcome to the documentary from the BBC World Service and a two-part |
0:06.5 | journey to explore a slogan and a land. |
0:11.2 | If we're very, very quiet, can we hear it? The water? You can hear the water and the rustling of the leaves. |
0:22.0 | I'm not sure I can. It doesn't look very grand, does it for a river that's |
0:27.7 | so famous in geography, so famous in politics. It is a muddy stream completely encased in sick high walls of reeds. |
0:39.0 | You can't quite jump across it I'd say but how wide does that Ben? I think maybe |
0:46.6 | four or five meters. If we were to try and travel straight from here to the sea. How long would it take us? I think it's like |
0:56.0 | 18 90 kilometers tops. When I go with my kids to the sea it's about an hour 15 drive. |
1:05.0 | I'm at the beach. |
1:06.0 | I'm in Herzelia. |
1:08.0 | Herzelia is on the Mediterranean coast of Israel. |
1:11.0 | It's just north of Tel Aviv and the well apology for a river that |
1:16.0 | Ben Levy who's a very enthusiastic Israeli nature ranger with a bushy black beard and |
1:21.9 | I have crashed through the Reed's to is the Jordan. |
1:28.4 | Should we go? Yeah. They're not to agitate the Jordanian soldiers who guard the river. |
1:33.6 | They are really edgy about it. |
1:35.4 | Because the Kingdom of Jordan, on the other bank, on the east bank, |
1:38.5 | and Israeli occupied territory here on the west. |
1:48.8 | Politics. territory here on the west. Politics already. The Jordan's so near the sea that with good boots you could even walk it in three days. |
1:52.8 | And as I started to hear the phrase, |
1:55.1 | From the river to the sea, more and more, |
1:58.0 | I had a mad idea to try to find out on foot |
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