As the trauma in Israel/Palestine rages on, I try to keep my focus on growing peace between people, far from politics, wherever I see the light. Meet my friend Tali. Her life story is more stunning than most, but it is what she does with her experience, that makes her a poster child for love.
Tali Goodfriend was five when her father had a dream that he could help bring the Messiah to life. He moved their family from Miami, Florida to the Negev desert in Israel, and started to build a Jewish settlement in the sand. Tali was the first of nine kids to come, with her Dad’s two wives, her two Moms. They lived and went to school in a tent, with no running water or electricity, while her father and his followers worked to make the desert green.

Aravah: south of Beersheba, borders Jordan to the east.
Growing up, Tali became close to a family of Palestinian-Bedouins who lived in a camp nearby. Awwad was her age exactly; funny, brave and shy. He herded the goats and couldn’t always join the other kids at play, but sometimes, fun times, they’d hang with the camels and donkeys after school.
Like Tali, Awwad had two mothers, his father Ali had two wives. Tali loved Awwad’s Mom Frazah, the most. She taught her how to make pita and turn goat hair into yarn. Frazah was warm, easy-going and made her feel adored. In Tali’s ever-expanding heart, Frazah’s tent was home.
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One morning, a storm of dust and an Israeli army jeep blew into the settlement. Two unsmiling officers asked Tali and her family if they knew Awwad. They said he had been murdered in the desert and they needed someone to go with his father and identify his corpse. Ali’s Hebrew was not very good and Tali and her Dad took him by the hand and offered to go.
It was a four-hour trip through the desert to the morgue. Tali sat between their paralyzed fathers, bouncing in the back of the army jeep. She remembers the smell of goats and cigarette smoke, the frozen silence and the burning heat. Awwad and Tali had just turned 13.
Tali’s eyes close as she tells me her story, her hands flutter over her chest. She can still see the long, tiled corridor, smell the bleach and hear the clank of the metal door. Awwad had been stabbed, over and over. When they pulled back the sheet; her whole body shook, her ears buzzed and her vision blurred. The last time she saw her friend, he was a growing boy, alive. She was grateful that they covered his groin with a sheet, so he wouldn’t be shamed or shy.
Tali and her father caught Ali in their arms as he fell. They drove him back to his camp in the wilderness, to Frazah and their family, with their beautiful son’s slaughtered body in a bag.
The burial was a haze of tears, burning cigarettes and heat. Tali was amazed to be a part of it. They let her watch as they cleaned and then wrapped Awwad in a white shroud. Funny, shy and brave. Tali held and kissed his mother, as Frazah sobbed and quaked.
A shallow grave was dug on top of a hill. They covered Awwad’s swaddled body in clay, a layer of sand, then stones. There were no words. Everyone was reeling, not asking why. They sat all night, wrapped in the desert; shining stars and the deep, black sky.
Click here for Love & Squalor in the Middle East, Part 2.
Please share these stories to help stir the heart and promote love.
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Tali Goodfriend is an instructor in Early Childhood Education and teaches Art as a tool for Social Awareness. She uses Compassionate Listening, Peace Education and her experiences in the the Middle East and the Montreal Dialogue Group (for Arabs and Jews) in her work.
Thank you, dear Tali, for trusting me with your story. All respect for your brute strength and love as you walk through the minefields of Israel/Palestine, cultivating compassion and building bridges to peace.
Photos courtesy of Tali Goodfriend. Photo of Tali and a Tree by Ehab Lotayef.
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FAN THE FLAMES: Feel the love.
Now, thrill me and visit our spanking-new GIFTS PAGE: the home of all the art & merchandise we have to offer in exchange for your heart-growing donations. One click right here.
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GOOD NEWS FLASH: Grateful! This post, like Part 2, was Freshly Pressed by the good peeps at WordPress, who will feature and help promote it. To see my other Freshly Pressed posts, click on their individual widgets on the right sidebar. Proud.
This post was published again on Huffington Post! Thrilled to see it grow.
If you CLICK HERE, you can join an inspired movement on Facebook called: ARABS & JEWS REFUSE TO BE ENEMIES. I should know.
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Please COMMENT, QUESTION, DANCE and SHARE.
93 Responses to Love & Squalor in the Middle East, 1
Great story Brenda. Thank you.
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Thank you, Ivan. Please share!
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Ouf, so brutal.
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It wasn’t easy to write.
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Thank you for sharing it so sensitively.
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This is an exquisite and moving piece. Thank you
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Heartening to hear.
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I’m so sad to read this, and that times haven’t changed for the better. Nothing seems to change really. Thank you sharing Tali’s powerful story.
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As painful as the story is, Tali fills me with hope.
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Thank you for sharing this story, Tali and Brenda.
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Our stories need to be shared, if there is any hope for growing peace.
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What a powerful and moving story. My daughter became an Israeli citizen one week ago tomorrow. All I can do is pray for peace, for the families on both sides.
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We are all in this together.
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I love that beautiful portrait of Tali, full of gentle hope. What a story!
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Thanks, Karen. I’m glad you feel the hope, more on the way.
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Thank you Tali and thank you Brenda. Look forward to part 2.
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Reblogged this on Nigel Alexander.
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Thanks for helping to spread the word.
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Thanks for sharing!
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Beautiful story… I can’t figure out the connection between the two deaths, I guess there is a strange connection which my hollow mind can’t guess right now. The initiative of spreading love and peace through this heart wrenching story is appreciable.
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The connection between the two deaths will be shared in Part 2. I just clarified it on the post, thanks to you!
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Wait, wait! Did you get FP’ed for this? Woot woot!
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A fantastically moving story. Thank you for sharing this.
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A mesmerizing read. I do not do Twitter or Facebook, but I’m hoping that by ‘liking’ this post I will continue to receive your feed.
Thank you for bringing this forward. May Peace find us all and may we rejoice as One.
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Peace and rejoice are good words. To continue receiving the work, all you have to do is subscribe by clicking on FOLLOW BLOG VIA EMAIL on the upper right corner of this page, or click on SUBSCRIBE on the menu at the top of the page.
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Reblogged this on awkward living and commented:
This is so powerful!
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It was powerful to write. Thanks for spreading the word!
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Reblogged this on OmoBabaPension.
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Thanks for the reblog!
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Reblogged this on nutty-as-fruitcake.
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Thanks for the reblog!
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Fabulous! Loved the read. Keep it up. Let the light of hope shine brightly in this troubled world.
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Thank you and amen.
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Such a touching story, a world away from the lives and safety some of us are lucky enough to be born into. How inspirational. Thank you for sharing this!
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I’ll say it over and over: we are all in this together.
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Reblogged this on APS Newswire.
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Thanks for the reblog!
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Thanks so much for the blog!
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Can’t we just all get alone! I wish for peace in my lifetime.
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I hear you, but what I hope to illustrate through this series is that we can actually cultivate compassion and grow peace, one heart at a time, by sharing our own stories and listening to each others’. I see it happening on the internets every day. Stay tuned for more!
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http://karthikmpillai2003.wordpress.com/2014/09/09/the-handcuffed-fight/
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A very moving story, thanks for sharing.
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Truly excellent. Congrats.
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Reblogged this on rubynas and commented:
Excelente
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Thanks for the reblog!
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I liked your post!
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That was beautifully written. I don’t think I will ever understand the need for war. I have never met anyone who supports it but everyday there are new ones that surface. It is people like Tali and you who continue to restore my faith in humanity. Keep up the great work!
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I hope that people are as inspired by Tali as I am. Welcome, Manasa!
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Very moving
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Stunning. Stunning beauty and tragedy and sadness. I will carry this story with me today.
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Reblogged this on thoughts of a rambling mind.
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Thanks for carrying Tali’s story, exactly what I want to hear!
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What a beautiful story, I so wish and pray that peace may come and that conflicts may be resolves all over the world. Thank you for sharing ~ very hope giving ~
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Thank you! It helps when we work on building bridges to each other.
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Beautiful story… As someone said “times hasn’t change”.
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Thank you, and for the reblog.
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Reblogged this on 365 En Mi Estilo Latino and commented:
En honor a mi conexión con Middle East, les comparto esta inspiradora historia escrita por “Burns the fire”. Esperemos pues la segunda parte…
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Thank you for sharing.
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Reblogged this on lucille the gypsy.
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The imagery is remarkable. Thank you, I look forward to reading the next part. How do I share this with someone who isn’t on wordpress?
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Thank you and welcome, Lucille! Your reblog should allow you to share this post with anyone who knows how to get to your blog, or you can share it on social media (click on Facebook, Twitter, etc on the bottom of the post), or you can copy the post’s link and email it to whoever you like.
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Reblogged this on GoodOleWoody's Blog and Website.
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Welcome and thanks for the reblog!
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Reblogged this on okrote4real's Blog.
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Thanks for sharing! Welcome.
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What a moving story, Brenda. I really don’t know how to be at peace after experience so much pain, and I hope that, one day, Tali and Awwad will meet again. I really do.
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Muriel, I hope that Part 2 will help show you how greater peace and love is within reach.
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Reblogged this on abuchi06.
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Welcome and thanks for the reblog.
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Reblogged this on raresivanoiu94.
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Thanks for sharing!
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wonder when this hate & war will stop…….am sure that sharing such moving tale will definitely go a long way in that direction! thanks for sharing tali & brenda. God Bless
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Open hearts – open hearts. Welcome, Robert.
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Reblogged this on Apps Lotus's Blog.
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Beautiful story… I can’t figure out the connection between the two deaths, I guess there is a strange connection which my hollow mind can’t guess right now. The initiative of spreading love and peace through this heart wrenching story is appreciable.
truck tyre:www.gencotyre.com
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I doubt your mind is hollow. I will be talking about Tali’s brother’s death in the post coming up this week. Let me know how it makes you feel.
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Reblogged this on theproamateurblogger.
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Your post is so moving. I enjoyed it so very much. Thank you.
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[…] shy Bedouin boy was stabbed to death in the Negev desert of Israel/Palestine. At night, in front of the fire he built, by the stranger […]
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Reblogged this on viewable.
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[…] https://burnsthefire.com/2014/09/08/love-squalor-in-the-middle-east/ […]
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I read this before, but didn’t know what to comment. Honestly, I still don’t. It just makes me very sad. But I wanted to read it again before I read Part 2.
You’re an inspiration, Brenda. Thank you.
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Interesting how we react to things. I find this story sad, but more hopeful than anything because of the love.
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Yes. You DO always focus on the love. I find, more and more, that this is what is guiding me towards the light. And I tell everyone that you’re my inspiration.
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Writing these stories, I made a conscious decision to focus on the heart. It’s the place where peace grows. So we can touch people with our stories and open our hearts to each other. This is my activism.
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[…] Love & Squalor in the Middle East, 1 | burns the fire. […]
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In these times when large signs of hope are hard to find, it’s good to be reminded that the small ones are out there, and will eventually spark a fire.
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Sparking fire. Thanks for that, and welcome!
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Thanks for your analogy, Ellen, it inspired me to submit this post to Huffpo and keep the spark alive. Welcome to Burns the Fire.
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Fantastic! Hope they take it.
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They did take it, thanks! You were the spark.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brenda-keesal/a-poster-child-for-love-i_b_6192526.html?utm_hp_ref=middle-east
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They did take it, thanks! You were the spark.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/brenda-keesal/a-poster-child-for-love-i_b_6192526.html?utm_hp_ref=middle-east
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Reblogged this on Straight Path.
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