few trekking websites, this is a trail angel:
much-appreciated assistance to a hiker.
kindness by a trail angel; (see: ‘Trail Angel’).
but never met one up close until last week. And no, he did not have a halo, but
if I could read auras, I bet I would have seen one floating atop Aryeh’s head!
| Arad bursts out from the desert. |
the Shvil Israel, we are often gone overnight due to the distance from our home
to the desert. We have stayed in modest zimmers and have camped outside. Last
week, we decided to call a trail angel (in advance, of course) to book a place
in his Bedouin Tent in Arad for a night.
store in Arad to buy some food supplies. And a bottle of wine. Just because. We
called our trail angel and he told us he was not yet home. He said we should go
to his house where there would be a tent in the backyard.
piled up in the corners. There was a collection of hooka pipes, random cooking
items and toiletries, a kettle, a basket stacked with signed guest books and a
large photo of a handsome young man, Ofir. The inscription said he had passed away. We quickly understood that this was probably
our host’s son.
a toilet and shower and a palm frond roof like one would expect on Gilligan’s
Island.
brought us toilet paper and some tea bags. He was a bit surprised to see us hiking the desert in January. “It’s too cold now. Most hikers come during the spring and fall.”
of wine and we sat in his front garden as he smoked his pipe.
together for a photo which he printed out and pasted onto a blank page of an
album. “Please write something, he said.”
the past nine years. We asked him about Ofir and he told us his son was tragically
killed in a motorcycle accident at the age of 23. Aryeh decided to set up this
tent in his son’s memory.
meantime, he does so vicariously through his guests.
providing mattresses, hot water and a kind smile, he also picks up hikers in
trouble and drives long distances to return items that hikers forget at his
place. With a job, wife, kids and grandchildren, he has a very full life. Yet
he has a full heart.
when the National Geographic named the world’s epic trails in an article called
Holy Grails of Trails, the Israel National Trail placed way up there. Not only
is the trail magnificent by world hiking standards, “The biggest blessing here
comes in the form of ‘trail angels’ along the INT who give a helping hand and
often offer a place to stay free of charge to thru-hikers.”
Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel (SPNI) registered the program
and published a list of all of the angels.
strangers from all over the world. Some offer hikers hot food including Shabbat
meals, laundry, wifi, and if they have advance notice, a birthday cake and bottle of wine.
drop them off in morning. One trail angel explains, “I never say no.”
people have lost trust and where hospitality has been put aside due to a
fast-paced life, it is comforting to know that angels exist and random acts of kindness abound. And in Israel,
these acts are not so random; these are a way of life and are woven into the fabric that is Israel’s magic.
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