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Just before my stop, I caught the eye of an older woman who was standing and told her that I was giving her my seat. She kept insisting that she was fine standing and I should sit. It took me a bit to convince her that I needed to get off at the next stop, so I wasn’t getting up because I thought she looked more decrepit/elderly than myself.

The bottom line is that I had a safe trip on the train and got to where I needed to be without any hassles and relatively quickly, when you take into account I didn’t wait long and didn’t need to get off and then wait for a bus which could easily have been slow due to the hour.

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The talk on the train among strangers and conversations I’ve had with friends about the lightrail centers on one theme. There should be a way for the train to bypass the Arab neighborhoods. The train should be able to get from Pisgat Ze’ev to the depot. It can already go from the depot straight to Givat Hamivtar/French Hill. That would have the double advantage of making the trip faster and staying out of the Arab neighborhoods where trains and train stops have been attacked. None of the ticket machines can be used there. The Arab terrorists/rioters have destroyed them.

The train goes right by the location of “my terror attack” making the trip a reminder of how G-d saved me. That attack was long before the lightrail was built. And that terror attack was the first one in which a terrorist used a vehicle to mow down innocent people at a bus stop. It happened over eighteen years ago and now is the popular one by Arab terrorists. It’s also the most impossible to fully prevent or predict.

And about predictions, I wouldn’t dare try my hand predicting what’s next concerning security and terror in Jerusalem.

Let’s pray that our leaders get wisdom and use it.  And let’s also pray for the speedy and complete recovery of all the injured in previous terror attacks.

Shabbat Shalom u’Mevorach
May it be a Peaceful and Blessed Sabbath, G-d willing

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Batya Medad blogs at Shiloh Musings.