It happened very quickly in late November 1977: an announcement was made that Egyptian President Anwar Sadat was coming to Jerusalem. For the first time in 30 years, the head of an Arab country would visit Israel and talk face to face on our soil. Within 48 hours, the entire city of Jerusalem was transformed physically and emotionally. Stores placed welcome signs in Arabic in their windows, and Jerusalem’s flag maker worked full speed to provide Egyptian flags to hang side by side on streets and public buildings. Nearly 2,000 members of the media, from every corner of the world, poured into the capital to find an exceptionally well-organized communications center at the Jerusalem Theatre.

On November 19, Israelis waited in near-freezing temperatures at the entrance to Jerusalem and along the route to clap, wave flags and shout welcome. Throughout the visit, Jerusalem traffic was practically at a standstill, yet Jerusalemites took it in stride if it could mean peace. People walked with transistor radios at their ears. Children wrote essays in school. Israel’s Arabic radio broadcasts went out clear for the first time in 25 years, not jammed by Egypt.

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