Abu Dis, Ras Abu Sbitan (Olive Terminal), Sheikh Saed, Sun 8.3.09, Morning
Very few waiting to cross. The rules about where to stand and how to behave are very clear. Despite the sparseness of traffic, crossing is slow, while those crossing wait patiently until summoned to move along.
8:00 Zeitim Crossing
The checkpoint is almost empty. Very clean; a worker is constantly cleaning. Much more respectable looking than Kalandia, but those crossing are treated as less than respectable. An older man in Palestinian dress seems lost, doesn't understand Hebrew, stands at turnstile #1, after a few minutes is screamed at on the loudspeaker to move to line #3 because #1 is being cleaned. He crosses, as do we. An angry young man with tears in his eyes, stands there — he has been summoned by the Shabak. He has taken the day off, and is now asked to return tomorrow; says he won't. The clerk behind the glass partition invites him in to scold. When she sees me, she tells him to stand aside and waits for me to leave. I stay and remark on her tone of voice.
The Palestinian man is told to stand in line #3. I intervene again, angrily. The soldier tells me to leave. I refuse. The civilian guard comes up and tells me to leave, and a police officer also comes up and "gently" orders me to go away. Meanwhile, the Palestinian has gone to line #3, and the young man exits. So do we. The civilian guard tries to explain that we cannot complain about the small cogs in the system because they are only following orders. I wonder why this sounds too awful.
Abu Dis / Lazarus gate (formerly The Wicket)
See all reports for this place-
Abu Dis / Lazarus Checkpoint/Gate (east of the former “wicket”)
Construction of the wall in the Abu Dis area blocked all the gaps that allowed people to cross from al-Ezariya to the neighbourhoods of Abu Dis and Ras al 'Amud that are located within Jerusalem’s municipal boundary. The Lazarus checkpoint is a gate in the wall adjacent to the Lazarus Monastery. Until 2011 it had a door for pilgrims to al-Ezariya and for the monastery’s kindergarten pupils from al-Ezariya. The crossing is currently closed, but the site has infrastructure for conducting inspections.
-
Ras Abu Sbitan (Olive Terminal)
See all reports for this place-
A large checkpoint/crossing to the area of a-Tur, Abu Dis and the Old City; only for pedestrians. Located on Jerusalem’s municipal boundary.
One of the major crossings in Jerusalem’s central sector. It is located on the separation fence between the northern portion of the al-Ezariya neighborhood and the neighborhood of a-Tur and the rest of East Jerusalem. It is manned by Border Police soldiers and private security companies and operates 24 hours a day. Palestinians are forbidden to go through, other than permanent residents of East Jerusalem (holders of blue ID cards) and holders of work and commercial permits who are allowed through only on foot.
-
Sheikh Sa'ed
See all reports for this place-
A checkpoint limited to pedestrians, located on Jerusalem’s municipal boundary.
The checkpoint sits on the separation fence at the entrance to Sheikh Sa’ad, dividing it from its neighbourhood of Jabel Mukkabar. It’s manned by Border Police soldiers and private security companies and operates 24 hours a day. Palestinians are forbidden to go through, other than residents of Jabel Mukkabar or Sheikh Sa'ad who have permits. Both groups are permitted through only on foot. Residents of East Jerusalem who don’t live in Jabel Mukkabar are also allowed to cross to Sheikh Sa’ad, but not in the opposite direction; they must return through the Sawahira ash Sharqiya checkpoint.
Avital CFeb-27-2026Jerusalem, Damascus Gate: Crowd rushing to prayer
-