24H Jerusalem - Finding a new home in Jerusalem (9-10 p.m., Episode 16)

Описание к видео 24H Jerusalem - Finding a new home in Jerusalem (9-10 p.m., Episode 16)

Paramedic Daniel starts his night shift at Magen David Adom, an organisation comparable to the Red Cross or Red Crescent. His first assignment is an eight-year-old boy with troubles breathing.

Ruth Bach flips through her family photo albums. She remembers her time at a Jewish private school in Berlin, Germany. In the 1930s, the "Theodor Herzl school" became the only option for education for Jewish pupils - and a sort of refuge in the midst of an increasingly hostile environment. In 1938, her family first fled to Amsterdam and later to Jerusalem.

"Masters of the keys" at the Holy Sepulchre: Two well-established Muslim families share the "power of the keys" at the Holy Sepulchre. They are in charge of keeping the keys as well as opening and locking the gates every day. Both were put in place by Sultan Saladdin 800 years ago, because the Christians argued with each other about the hegemony in the building.

Abu Issam was evicted from his home village Lifa as a teenage boy, when the British mandate ended. His family thought that they would come back to their house after a few weeks, when the situation calmed down, but he wasn't able to return even until today.

Muhammad was born in the Shua'fat refugee camp. He never lived anywhere else, unlike his parents who were forced to leave Jerusalem and move to the camp. His new apartment is just above his parents' and has a view over the city behind the wall.

UN officer Christophe investigates incidents between Israeli security forces and Palestinians. He interviews the family of an imprisoned 17-year-old whose trial was postponed.

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24H Jerusalem: A multifaceted insight into Jerusalem's everyday life
The 24-hour TV show tells the story of the city through the eyes of the people who live in it and who are caught up in its contradictions: Jews, Muslims and Christians, Israelis, Palestinians and foreigners, women and men, immigrants and old-timers, believers and atheists, night owls and early risers. 70 film teams accompanied around 90 protagonists with the most diverse life stories at work and in their leisure time, in cramped apartments and spacious villas, in temples, mosques and churches, in Israeli settlements and Palestinian refugee camps.

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