If Tel Aviv were a country, Purim would be its national holiday. This exuberant fling with hedonism has been its defining holiday since the founding of the city, when Dizengoff used to lead the annual Purim parade on his horse. It is fitting in a way, since Tel Aviv is the most secular of Israeli cities, and Purim is the most secular of the Jewish festivals. (God does not even get a mention in the story of Esther.)
We had heard a lot about how enthusiastically Tel Aviv embraces Purim, and we were not disappointed. But oddly, on the day of Purim itself, there was not much happening apart from the odd costumed person on the street, like two guys in full-on Louis the 14th garb , and a little party at our school… oh… and a lion, (or dog, if you want to get picky about it).
There are kids’ parties all week, but for adults things get going at night on Thursday and into Friday when the streets were hopping all day. Although many of the really over the top parties happen at night, there is a massive open air celebration at Kikar Medina on Friday which attracts something in the order of a hundred thousand people. Kikar Medina is a giant circular park which is lined with designer stores that no-one ever seems to go to. It is normally as dead as a doornail, but on Purim it is jammed. The party starts at noon and features performances from top musicians, lots of dancing and general frivolity! We could hear it going strong from our apartment which is about a 15 minute walk from the festivities.
So of course, we went over to have a look, but before doing that we had to outfit ourselves appropriately, which we did, all things considered.
I also invested in a special Purim purse which I am quite fond of.
So what did we see. Oh boy. Lots of people in all kinds of fancy get-ups. Families, bands of friends, even some senior citizens getting into the act, lots of food stands, and a big stage for the musicians with giant speakers to match. There was a massive security presence as you might imagine.
Some of our individual picks: not an easy task in the throngs of people milling about.
Okay, no more politics. Just some folks having fun…lots of them.
Purim is like Hallowe’en, Carnival and a giant street party all rolled into one. Inhibitions are frowned upon; costumes are required, (the more fanciful the better), and drinking is mandatory.
Did I mention that I really like this place?
On the way home we ran into this charming group of minions.
Of all the things I expected to do in Tel Aviv, touring the central bus station was surely at the bottom of the list…actually, it was nowhere near the list. But in my research on Brutalist architecture, it popped up as a building everyone loves to hate, and I also saw the following advertisement:
Come with us as we go into the belly of the New Central Bus Station of Tel Aviv. Two and half hours of mysterious oddities, located in one of the most notorious buildings in Israel. Join us to find out why it’s one of the craziest places in the country. Architecture, breakdancing, Yiddish and Tagalog. What’s with all the graffiti on the 7th floor? and WHAT?! There’s a bat cave?!!! Curious? Meeting point: Levinsky 118, Tel Aviv, gate #42-43.
Curious? You bet. And when it turned out that my friend Steve knew a tour guide who did this tour…well, my fate was sealed.
In the “What Were They Thinking Category!!!”, surely this structure must take pride of place. Designed in the sixties, covering 5 city blocks and containing 2.5 million square feet of space over six floors, it had a novel, and dubious premise.
Two competing bus lines were to share the space, but as arch-rivals, the only way they would agree to do so was if they each got their own depot. So the Dan buses were assigned to the lowest of six levels (which was 3 below street level), while the Egged buses were to come and go on the sixth level, then the top floor. Dan did not want to be somewhere called lower level “-3”, so the lowest level was called “1”, which is why, when you now enter off the street, you are on level #4.
To transfer from one set of buses to the other, (or just to get in and out of the place), required passengers to navigate from three to six levels on foot, through winding circular hallways. These were meant to evoke streets running off a main boulevard, and just like in Tel Aviv proper, those streets curved all over the place! Travellers would pass as they went, 4 floors of stores, (2300 of them at full capacity) SIX movie theatres, a food market, restaurants, sitting areas, and so on.
The labyrinth-like design ensured that this would take as long as long as possible with maximum opportunity to lose one’s way….oh… and to shop. This was intentional…and to this day, even the employees in the place can, and do, lose their way. Those of you who have been to the Dizengoff centre have only to imagine that particular mall “on steroids” to get the idea of the baffling layout that was employed.
The idea was that you would have plenty of things to do while waiting for your bus, like say: take in a film, have dinner, and do a little shopping. The mall owners wanted a captive audience, and the layout ensured they would have one!
This is what happens when you put a mall developer, a high profile Brutalist architect and an ambitious city administration together and shake well. Had any of them ever actually taken a bus?
Of course it never quite worked out as “planned” (if you can use such a word for the whole debacle). For one thing, shortly after construction started the country was at war and ran out of concrete. Once back on track, multiple redesigns delayed construction. Several bankruptcies, and almost 30 years later, the “New” terminal finally opened for use in 1993.
To give Tel Avivis credit, they knew pretty early on that this was a disaster in the making, and it was soon nicknamed the “white elephant”. At the official opening ceremony, a giant helium balloon in the shape of …yes… a white elephant… was released. This is the kind of thing I love about this place.
Within three years, the lower Dan bus level was abandoned because the exhaust from the buses made the floors around it unfit for human use. ( I am no expert, but it strikes me that this is the sort of thing that might have been considered before putting buses in the basement.) Anyway, some of the buses were moved to the 6th floor, and the rest to yet another NEW floor #7! (Why not double down!). Today the bottom level is used only on Sundays for soldiers returning to base. What a way to start the week!
All the stores that were on the levels 1-3, below grade, were abandoned due to lack of traffic, and air pollution…as were the movie theatres which were conveniently located next to the basement bus ramps. More lawsuits ensued, as all those store owners lost their investments. Today, only about 40% of the structure is occupied.
So what is left? Well, lots of abandoned stores, some 1300 of them. Many long, scary, dark, empty corridors.
But in a tribute to the human spirit, and the enterprising nature of the hardscrabble neighbourhood surrounding the station, you can also find about 1,000 little businesses, most of them crowded into a bazaar like atmosphere at ground level (#4,) and up to the second floor (#5.) The overall effect is one of mass confusion.
And there are countless shoe stores, hallways and hallways of them, clustered together into a kind of crazy “shoe neighbourhood”…hmmm…maybe this place does have some redeeming features.
“Little Manila”, which might have been the busiest part of the place; grocery stores, restaurants, and money-wiring services for the Philipina community which is as integral to elder care here as anywhere else.
What else? Let’s see. A dance studio, a church, a synagogue, endless space for skateboard fanatics and breakdancers, and Israel’s biggest, (of course), and most notorious nightclub, The Block. Also a few artist’s studios. Like this one.
This fellow is a ceramic artist and sells his goods in the Nahalat Binyamin market. He also has the keys to to the Yiddish Museumwhich is across the way, and which he opened up to show us around. Yes, of all things, there is a Yiddish Museum, in what looks like a tiny storefront, but which is much bigger when you get inside. It houses thousands of old books, old newspapers, other memorabilia, and a stage for klezmer concerts. And as we all know, where there is music… there must be a bar…and indeed there was one, which our ceramic artist put to immediate use. The whole museum is a labour of love staffed entirely by volunteers.
On the lowest level, there is also a bomb shelter that can hold 16,000 people. It has actually been used once.
And right by the bomb shelter, possibly the most peculiar feature of the whole crazy structure, a giant bat colony. Yes, nature abhors a vacuum, and when the buses left, the bats moved in. Thousands and thousands of them. So naturally, a decision was made to protect them, by walling off their own 200 metre long concrete bat cave. Then it was declared a nature preserve, under the supervision of Israel’s Nature and Garden Department (!)…(I have no words). You cannot actually see into it, but you can hear the little critters when standing by the wall. They are there…trust me.
And what about the buses, the “raison d’etre” of the whole place? Well they got a brand new floor on the top of the structure (# 7 !), which is actually quite nice, especially compared to the rest of the building. It has a great view of Tel Aviv.
The 7th floor also has a vast and exuberant collection of street art. The city invited some of the better known street artists to decorate the walls to celebrate the new floor, and this was such a success that it has been left there permanently. It was certainly worth seeing and I would go back for that alone. It casts Florentine into the shade. A couple of examples:
There is little certainty about the future of this bizarre structure. It is much too big for its purpose, and it squats right in the middle of a run-down neighbourhood that is in dire need of revival and refurbishment. All that empty dark space attracts all kinds of illicit activity, which drags the area down even further. City planners are desperate to get rid of it, but it is privately owned and nothing is simple in Israel, even in the rare case when all parties agree. Demolishing it would cause all kinds of pollution…and most importantly…let us not forget the bats. This is their home.
Just the other day I read an article from the CTV news feed about an Ontario woman who was issued a $110.00 traffic ticket for driving with a green parrot on her shoulder. (You can’t make this stuff up.)
She should move to Tel Aviv.
Here, the parrot would be made welcome in a Tel Aviv bar, as you can see below. Ben met one when he was out recently, perched on a fellow patron’s shoulder, but happy to be sociable with others. No big deal at all.
Throughout the city there are lots of formal art installations, in parks, on street corners and so on, like this mosaic egg.
But there are also what I would call informal, and often eccentric, personal expressions of creativity that pop up when you least expect them.
For example, walking down Frishman, a nearby residential street, there is an apartment building with a rare lower level apartment which has a nice stone patio a few steps down. Populating this little terrace is a whole collection of almost life-size ceramic figures; there is also a small table where regular people can sit. They won’t be lonely.
…and above them to the left, cats, also ceramic. And why not?
On a nearby street, a downed tree limb, repurposed, with exposed ends modestly covered.
And in the Yemeni quarter, a lovely wall full of inset ceramic odds and ends, plates, painted tiles, and whatnot, which just popped up out of nowhere.
On King George, on top of a pink store, a full size yellow car, driven by a mouse…or at least I think that is what it is.
As you can see, there is plenty of colour in the White City!
A while ago I signed up for a full day tour of Tel Aviv’s archeological museum, The Eretz Israel Museum. This was a bit (very) over-ambitious as I have about 2 hours of “museum stamina” in me. It was a special offer tied to the archeology lectures I have been attending, and featured tours given by the curators of three different collections, Glass, Pottery, and Man and his Work, so I went for it! It was exhausting, but worth it, to listen to the curators, all of whom are practising archeologists, and who were passionate about these collections which they had been instrumental in building.
The museum itself is built on the site of an archeological dig, Tel Quasile, (over 3,000 years old), on beautiful grounds overlooking Tel Aviv. As the dynamic curator of the “Man and his Work” pavilion said, it seemed a brilliant idea at the time to put an archeology museum right at a dig site. However, every time they sunk a shovel, the builders would find some new antiquity, everything stopped dead, and so it took quite a while to finish. The site is now home to several individual pavilions, each operating as a separate museum focused on a particular theme, including oddly, a museum of postal history, covering mail-service in the area from the 15 century to 1948! (I may have to go back for that one. I have never really thought about mail service that way.) Interspersed with all of these, are the original dig sites, and subsequent finds such as Byzantine olive presses etc.
Of the three museums we toured, the loveliest from a visual standpoint was the Glass Museum, featuring glass from the 15th century BC to the present. It was amazing to see how well preserved these ancient glass items were, especially compared to the pottery museum, where many pots were found in fragments and reassembled. As the curator pointed out, this is because glass items were precious in their day, and were often buried with their owners.
The most striking piece was a remarkable glass mosaic from Caesarea circa late 6th century (Byzantine period) unique in the world for its condition.
It was a pleasure to finish with some contemporary pieces. I especially like the splashing water.
When it comes to architecture, Tel Aviv is full of surprises.
On the plus side, you can lose yourself in the exoticism of the middle east (the Shuk, Jaffa, or the Yemenite quarter), wander in what looks like a charming European village (Neve Tzedek,), or stroll on a beautiful European style boulevard (Rothschild).
Equally, you can find yourself in a modern downtown, in an impressive cultural complex (Habima), or in a charming Bauhaus neighbourhood for which the town is famous. There is even a small neighbourhood of American colonial wood buildings (as far as I know, the only ones in Israel) which were built in 1866 by a group of settlers from Maine. They went so far as to bring their own wood with them, and thought they were coming to the Garden of Eden. (They lasted two years.) For some of this, you need to go looking, and it is worth the effort.
But this is no architectural paradise, by any stretch of the imagination. Most streets, even in expensive neighbourhoods, are lined with boxy, utilitarian, low-rise flats, covered in stucco that has weathered to a tired tan colour. (Fortunately there are lots of trees that soften the effect.)
There are also plenty of gritty commercial stretches, sometimes right next to, or interspersed with, nicer buildings. (One of the worst of them is right behind the seaside stretch of hotels, which can immediately give tourists the wrong idea about this city). This sort of thing serves to weaken the overall aesthetic considerably. For example, I post two pictures below of once identical buildings across the street from another in the centre of town; one restored, the other not. This is Tel Aviv in a nutshell…be prepared for both.
There are also some very prominent buildings that fall into the “What were they thinking category?” For example, the city hall. When I first saw it, I took it for a shabby office building, or even an apartment building.)
When I say the city hall is brutal, it is not my personal opinion. It is the formal term for pretty much the ugliest building style to afflict the planet, the aptly named “Brutalist” movement; and sadly Tel Aviv has an unfortunate amount of it. (Okay, so it also happens to be my personal opinion…)
I had trouble understanding how this happened. Perhaps it was built in a period when money was short? (Surely it wasn’t meant to look like that!) A little research proved me wrong. Brutalist buildings were expensive to build, prominent architects designed them, and the city is full of them. Clearly the planning department in the mid-twentieth century was infatuated with the movement. Most of beachfront hotels are (sadly) also in this style, and many other prominent buildings: the EL Al building, the Dizengoff Tower, the Shalom Tower and so forth. I pass a few of them every day…and they do not add to the pleasure of the walk. (Of course, who has time to look up when dodging bicycles and scooters.)
Toronto has its fair share of brutalist architecture as well, (the Robarts Library, being a prime example) , but the look seems less jarring in the concrete jungle of downtown north American cities, than in what was fundamentally a low-rise Mediterranean city. Here they pop up like a bunch of sore thumbs.
And while the City Hall is bad, apparently it pales in comparison with the Central Bus Terminal, a 2.2 million s.f. behemoth, spread over 5 city blocks and originally meant to house 2,300 stores! It is apparently the largest bus terminal in the world and reputedly the most hated structure in Israel. Every so often, planners talk about tearing it down, but apparently that is almost impossible, so thick is the concrete, and the fear is that the resultant dust would choke Tel Aviv for weeks. Needless to say, the architect was a Brutalist, and likely someone who never took a bus anywhere.
I have never been there, and most Tel Avivis avoid it like the plague, but the structure is now so full of so many bizarre things, that at least one enterprising company offers monthly tours…and since it is not in the nicest part of town, that might be the safest way to go. I am trying to persuade Mike to come along, but I may have to lean on Ben for this one. Either way, I think it will deserve its own post! Stay tuned.
I hate to bring this up, but the weather here has been amazing, mostly mild and sunny since we have arrived.
The weather does have some quirks however.
First, it is the rainy season, and although it has been drier than normal for this time of year, it does occasionally rain. And when it rains, well…pardon the expression… but it can be biblical. The winds sweep in off the Mediterranean, and the rain comes down in torrents, and with little warning…it feels as though there is someone throwing buckets of water from the sky. Since there are few or no storm sewers, the water rises quickly and before you know it you can be ankle deep in water as you step off a curb, tempting you to leap over giant puddles…which is a risky strategy, since the streets can be very slippery. So waterproof boots are a must; oddly so are sunglasses since it clears up in a hurry.
I was out on a walking tour the other day as part of my Hebrew course (trying desperately to put a coherent sentence together…not succeeding), and the skies opened. We had to duck into a construction site for shelter, which unfortunately was only marginally drier due to its sieve-like roof… As we dodged the interior rain drops, my instructor took a selfie of the two of us…you’ll note our friendly photo-bomber! After about 10 minutes huddling there, we made a dash for a local café…very crowded with like-minded rain refugees and spent a pleasant half an hour waiting for a break in the weather. (I am happy to report that I can now order coffee in Hebrew. Also wine and beer on other occasions…you will note I do have my language learning priorities straight).
Fortunately for us, but not for the country, it has rained rarely during our stay, and the rest of the time it has been bone dry here. I was surprised by this because I am used to humid weather in Tel Aviv, but in the winter, the winds often blow in from the east, i.e. from the desert, and they bring in very dry air. I am not the sort that takes a water bottle everywhere, but there are many times I wish I had. I even had to go out and buy a super intense moisturizer from AHAVA to battle my parchment-like skin. I figured if anyone understood how to combat desert air it would be them…and I was right.
Sometimes during those very dry periods, we see a brownish haze over the city. A little like Toronto on a very humid day. But there is no humidity and It is not pollution as we know it either. So our good friend, Eran, filled us in…Carried along by the dry winds from the desert, this haze is actually a very fine sand! It does not really feel like sand as we think of it, more like a very fine dust so you don’t see the particles, but it is pervasive, and sneaks into all kinds of nooks and crannies, including your throat. Tel Aviv can also have stronger and more obvious sandstorms, but so far we have only experienced the sneaky kind.
Tel Aviv is a young city, established only in 1909, (younger than my daughter’s Toronto house!), on sand dunes north of Jaffa. It was meant from the beginning to be a modern city, with sewage and running water, and with plans to create an orderly grid structure. A city for the future!
Well the grid did not really happen, as Mike and I have often discovered as we set out in one direction, say west, and find the street has sneakily wound around and we are facing north, or south.
And for all the planning, the notion that people might acquire cars, did not appear to cross anyone’s mind.
As a consequence, the majority of apartment buildings, which line every street in Tel Aviv, have no parking at all, and the residents are obliged to park on the street. Since these buildings are generally four-five stories, with anywhere from 8-12 units within, and space in front (if any) for maybe 3 cars…you can see where the supply/demand equation for parking can quickly get out of hand. Most streets are one way, so as to allow parking on both sides.
And it is not unusual to see cars parked in creative ways, at right angles between two parallel parked cars, for example.
Sometimes they are on the sidewalk Actually…often they are on the sidewalk. Sidewalk parking is something I encounter every day as I walk along King George. This creates short bottlenecks where hapless pedestrians (like me) have even less room to compete with the ever aggressive bicycles and scooters that dominate the sidewalks. I can’t imagine that parking this way is legal, but clearly whatever penalty might be attached to such an action, it pales in comparison with what a bus driver might do if a driver dared to pull over and block his lane.
There is little point driving within the city, but not so much because of traffic. It is because having actually secured a street parking spot within walking distance of home, it is very risky to get in the car and drive anywhere in town; i) because there will be no parking at the destination, and ii) because when you come back your spot will undoubtedly be gone. And good luck finding a new one!
The search for parking can provide plenty of opportunity for drama, as cars jockey for position and prepare to pounce on an empty spot (think Yorkdale on the weekend). A driver with a passenger is at an advantage in this game. Once a spot is identified, the passenger is dispatched to stand in the spot and fight off the competition, while the driver takes the necessary circuitous route through the one-way side streets to get there. The passenger then provides an extra pair of eyes to ensure that there is at least one centimetre left between the newly parked car and both its neighbours. How drivers manage to squeeze into some of these spots, and then get out again, is a mystery to me.
I did not come to Tel Aviv to cook, and so far, I am succeeding admirably on that score. It is possible that this is the most densely “restauranted” city I have ever visited. Even more so than Paris. You may recall I marvelled at the number of hair salons…well, restaurants and cafes outnumber them exponentially. And they are all full, pretty much all the time, and this is the “off season”! There are days when I wonder if anyone eats at home. Or goes to work for that matter.
There are some establishments that are really clear (to say the least) as to what is on offer, and I have been collecting photos of these commonly themed restaurant signs which I will share throughout the post. I find them to be a fine example of the direct approach for which Israelis are famous.
Over all, we notice less take-out than at home; it seems that Israelis prefer to eat freshly made food, right away. I am not sure if it is the “fresh” part or the “right away” part that is the deciding factor; I suspect the latter. With such a temperate climate you can eat outside most of the time, and people do. In fact, many restaurants have more outdoor space than indoor…and there are more than a few casual eateries that look a lot like someone’s main floor kitchen with a bunch of tables on the sidewalk. The joy of eating al fresco can be somewhat dimmed by the fact that this also tends to be the smoking section, and also by the proximity of some of the outer tables to the bicycles and other motorized vehicles that whizz by ON THE SIDEWALK, narrowly avoiding your table.
In all but the really “upscale” places, portions are huge; it is not unusual for us to take half home. Pastries and baked goods are delicious and abundant, and the gelato is excellent and widely (too widely) available… but people are mostly thin. This is an irritating trait that Tel Aviv shares with Paris, where we used to observe pencil-slim young women ask for extra whipped cream on their third course desserts (requisite dog at their feet), with a complete and utter lack of concern for weight and/or diet. The other day, the same thing happened as I ate my salad at Aroma. The thin young woman next to me had to sit down and savour a giant, and I mean giant, piece of cake. It happens all the time and it is really not fair.
In our immediate neighbourhood, just around Rabin Square, we have a 24 hour French-style brasserie, (although the French themselves would NEVER eat around the clock), a Vietnamese restaurant from France (kosher), a Hawaiian Poke place (built around marinated raw fish, and also kosher), 5-6 Italian places, a fine dining international style restaurant, several meat places, and at least 20-30 casual cafes with a wide range of menu items.
And that is all within a 10 minute walk…within 20 minutes we are numbering well over 100 places, maybe more, and so it goes. So much choice…so little time. And don’t get me started on the bakeries.
Our current favourite for a late breakfast or lunch is actually a book store on Rabin Square; it has a small, eclectic selection of English and Hebrew books, with maybe 12-15 tables wedged inside, another 6-7 or so outside, and a dairy/vegetarian menu as long as your arm. The first time we went there, I had 2 slices of challah french toast, with fruit, crème fraiche and date honey to die for. It was in the “small breakfast” section of the menu. (BTW, date honey is amazing…move over, maple syrup.)
I cannot really account for the prevalence of unambiguously “meat-based” restaurant signs but I sure enjoy seeing them.
Tel Aviv is consistently ranked as one of the coolest (or hottest) cities on the planet, and even though Mike and I are not in a position to judge the nightlife here (which I gather is a key component in this evaluation), I am going to agree that this is the case.
And while Tel Aviv has any number of trendy, hip, cool neighbourhoods, the most achingly Uber-cool of them all is currently Florentine. It is home to the Levinsky market (spices, dried fruit and nuts, olives etc), countless artist studios and old workshops, (often in disrepair), wonderful mid-century modern furniture stores, extensive graffiti, and a nightly party that starts soon after Mike and I go to bed. The neighbourhood is a blend of long-time residents (who are somewhat bemused by all this) and the newly arrived young, creative, partying class. I am not sure that new residents are allowed to move there if they are over 40. Think “La Boheme” or “Rent” in Hebrew (minus the fatal illness).
Needless to say, this has attracted all kinds of gentrification projects, so the neighbourhood is now an odd amalgam of ramshackle workshops, old gritty walk-up flats, brand new mid-rises, and future brand new mid/high-rises, aka construction sites. It could not be more different from the quaint neighbourhood of Neve Tzedek which is right next door. After the almost Disney-like charm of Neve Tzedek, it is at first jarring, and then refreshingly real, to step across Eilat Road into Florentine. How long this will last is anyone’s guess, since prices are rising here as new buildings go up. On the one hand, not everything old is worth saving. On the other hand, too much new could ruin the atmosphere.
On a recent walk-through I took some photos of the graffiti, (pardon me…street art), for the which the neighbourhood is justly famous.
The next one looks like nothing much but if you look closely you will see that it is in Braille!
I also went to THE ABSOLUTELY MOST ON TREND place to get coffee, and more importantly vintage “GAZOZ”, sparking cold seltzers, blended on the spot with fresh herbs, fruit preserves, and other delicious ingredients. This was once a tradition in Tel Aviv, and is now single-handedly being revived by one Benny Briga, a former chef (of some renown). A tiny and humble looking kiosk, with seating in a truck parked out front, see pics below, it attracts people from all over town. (I was introduced by Ben who has a friend that works there, and given its size, only one person at a time CAN work there.) Café Levinsky 41…the only one of its kind.
Finally, I went by the original workshop of the family that makes the wooden rackets, for the game of Matkot (beach paddle ball), that is ubiquitous on Israel’s beaches. You can often hear it before you see it, and the distinctively loud sound is due to the fact the paddles are hollow! (Thankfully I was with my Hebrew teacher, otherwise I would not have known that this was the original family that started making these, nor would I have been able to understand anything the young man tried to explain). Needless to say there are several grades of these rackets from the everyday plain wood, to the carbon fused, often custom decorated, “Mercedes” versions for the serious player. I am always a sucker for buying things from the original source, so I bought a pair of the “starter” paddles…which I hope to see in action when my nephew and niece come to visit.
In every extended absence from your home town, there comes a time when you have to take on the really tough assignments; and finding a hairdresser falls squarely into that category. (Men, I know this does not really apply to you, but among my women friends, most of us are convinced that there is only ONE person who can really understand our hair, and that is the person in the salon we currently go to…even if we just started going there in the last year.)
In Tel Aviv, the anxiety around seeking out a new stylist is amplified by the sheer number of hair salons that are sprinkled liberally throughout the city. Mike and I sometimes amuse ourselves as we walk about, by doing a running count of the number of hair salons that we pass by. Recently we walked around Medina Square, and I think we got to 10. (Okay…it was a quiet day). But really, you cannot walk more than a block or two anywhere without seeing one and often you will see three or four in quick succession. There is even one in the Shuk, and at the beach! Note the scissors.
You would think, from this example, that the streets here would be full of “beautiful people”, or at least people with beautiful hair, but I can’t say as this has particularly struck me.
After much research, (complete with the requisite horror stories), I finally obtained a recommendation that struck me as safe, and I phoned for an appointment. Being flexible with my time, I asked for something mid-week… on a Wednesday…any time during the day. What could be easier to fit in? In Toronto that would be a piece of cake…but here…Nope…fully booked. But they did have time to fit me in… at 4:30… on December 31!!! Nothing on Wednesday, but on New Year’s Eve, no problem. (Well, Toto, I guess we’re not in Kansas anymore.) This, if nothing else, will prove the point that New Year’s in Israel is totally a non-event.
While the abundant supply of hair salons is indeed striking, the real story is the evolution of the humble barber shop. In Israel it is “de rigueur” for young men to sport a handsome beard…and a beard must of course be groomed on a regular basis (or it quickly gets biblical). So there are a number of specialty places that have sprung up to attend to this very need. Our son Ben, has done the research, frequents one of the coolest of these establishments “Barberia”…and now, not to be outdone, so does Mike. Fear not, even though he is again a student, Mike has NOT grown a beard. This place will also trim regular hair, boring as that may be. But I call your attention to the ancillary services!
And these shops have a fifties beer fridge, a ruggedly masculine interior, and a logo to go along with it…the perfect companion to the one at the beach. Needless to say, this has proven to be a winning concept and the chain is popping up all over Israel.
I went along with Mike to his appointment to see it all this was really as advertised, and the proof is below. Mike, beer in hand…and then coming out the doors. And check out the door handles… this barber shop would fit nicely into Northern Ontario “Lumberjack” territory!
So in the hair department, I think the men have the better deal…herbal tea simply does not cut it next to free beer. However, for anyone who might be interested, Highlights, on Yehuda Maccabi is an excellent salon. Really, I can’t imagine going anywhere else.