Julie Baretz received her license from the Israel Gov­ern­ment Tour Guides train­ing pro­gram in 1987. Since then she has guid­ed thou­sands of Jew­ish and Chris­t­ian vis­i­tors to sites all around the coun­try. Her book, The Bible on Loca­tion: Off the Beat­en Path in Ancient and Mod­ern Israel, is now avail­able. She will be blog­ging here all week for Jew­ish Book Coun­cil’s Vis­it­ing Scribe series.

Israeli tour guides are leg­endary. With their ency­clo­pe­dic knowl­edge, hyper-enthu­si­asm and salt-of-the-earth ded­i­ca­tion to the Zion­ist enter­prise they mag­i­cal­ly draw you into a par­al­lel uni­verse where everyone’s Jew­ish, accom­plished, and proud of it. Watch­ing them in action thir­ty years ago, I knew this job was a per­fect fit for me.

In truth, I didn’t have too many options. I was on my way to Israel a year out of col­lege, my Eng­lish lit­er­a­ture BA wound tight­ly under my arm. I had no pro­fes­sion­al expe­ri­ence and no prac­ti­cal skills. Just stars in my eyes – the kind with six points.

My poor par­ents nev­er under­stood me. They raised a fine Jew­ish fam­i­ly but mak­ing aliyah was not part of their game plan for us. Until his dying day my father insist­ed I moved to Israel to run away from my prob­lems. My moth­er still main­tains I was brain­washed by Young Judaea, my fanat­i­cal bund.” How else to explain this pecu­liar child who aban­doned her fam­i­ly, board­ed an El Al plane, and nev­er looked back? 

It cer­tain­ly wasn’t nur­ture; I was the first per­son in my fam­i­ly to vis­it Israel. It wasn’t a reli­gious awak­en­ing; I was done with syn­a­gogue ser­vices the day after my bat mitz­vah. It wasn’t for love, either; I found that lat­er. Ulti­mate­ly it was nature, pure genet­ics; a muta­tion of the Jew­ish dou­ble helix as it spi­raled down through the Dias­po­ra over the ages. My Zion­ism is organ­ic, the man­i­fes­ta­tion of a gene whose vol­ume is dialed up real­ly, real­ly loud. Julie,” it booms, you’re Jew­ish. Get your butt over to Israel where you belong!” Some folks have a dri­ving need to save the envi­ron­ment, or the ani­mals. I feel com­pelled to save the Jew­ish people. 

I share this gene with such nota­bles as Moses, Ezra the Scribe, Gol­da Meir and Shi­mon Peres, although we are a select bunch. Of the 1.5 mil­lion Jews who left East­ern Europe from the turn of the twen­ti­eth cen­tu­ry to the First World War, only 33,000 of them turned east­ward to dusty Pales­tine, a mea­ger two per­cent. A mem­ber of my fam­i­ly who was des­tined to join them was some­how bam­boo­zled, or drugged, or dragged by the hair and end­ed up on the shtetl wag­on head­ing west. That’s how I mis­tak­en­ly wound up in America. 

Don’t get me wrong – Amer­i­ca is a won­der­ful place. I feel priv­i­leged to have been born and bred there, and I will nev­er be Israeli in the way that I am Amer­i­can. But the two parts of my iden­ti­ty strug­gled with one anoth­er for years, and ulti­mate­ly the Jew­ish side over­pow­ered the Amer­i­can one. By a knock-out. 

It’s unde­ni­able. My neshama longs to be in Israel, sur­round­ed by oth­er Jews and immersed in Hebrew cul­ture. It rev­els in the rever­ber­a­tions of antiq­ui­ty hum­ming down the pave­ments of the streets, through the books in the libraries and the in pots sim­mer­ing in the kitchens. It puls­es with the imper­a­tive to mold the work-in-progress that is the Jew­ish state. It aches to know all there is to know about Israel.


Ein Gedi

So, tour guid­ing was a call­ing wait­ing for me to answer. What do you seek in Israel — a spir­i­tu­al expe­ri­ence at the West­ern Wall, or a mys­ti­cal rev­e­la­tion in the moun­tains of Tsfat? The dis­cov­ery of a his­tor­i­cal thread beneath the stones of an ancient moun­tain fortress, or maybe a desert link to an ances­tor who stood at Sinai? Tales of hero­ism, moral dilem­mas or the jux­ta­po­si­tion of the words Jew­ish’ and demo­c­ra­t­ic’? Would you like to meet a new Jew,’ or per­haps an old one? Come. Take my hand. I promise to tell you everything.

Read more about Julie Baretz and her work here.

Relat­ed Content:

Julie Baretz | Jew­ish Book Coun­cil

Julie Baretz received her license from the Israel Gov­ern­ment Tour Guides train­ing pro­gram in 1987. Since then she has guid­ed thou­sands of Jew­ish and Chris­t­ian vis­i­tors to sites all around the coun­try. Her book, The Bible on Loca­tion: Off the Beat­en Path in Ancient and Mod­ern Israel, is now avail­able. Read more here.

Organ­ic Zionism

Read­ing Tanakh with Christians

My First Midrash