What does it actually feel like to live next door to Palestinians — and have your car fixed by a Muslim neighbor hours after a terror attack?
This is the conversation most news channels won’t show you. In this candid, unscripted conversation, two long-term residents of Israel — living just meters from Palestinian villages and the West Bank boundary — share what daily Jewish-Arab coexistence really looks like on the ground.
From freely crossing into Bethlehem in the late 1990s, to the fear of the Second Intifada, the Knife Intifada, and the shadow of October 7th — this isn’t analysis from a studio. This is lived experience from the Green Line itself.
Why does this matter? Because the media covers the conflict. Almost nobody covers the coexistence — the awkward, real, complicated humanity underneath it.

