From the DW:
“UAE's
tourism sector gets a shot in the arm as Israelis flock to Dubai”
Despite
COVID-19, up to 50,000 Israelis have been flying to Dubai since last November.
The UAE is adapting to the new clientele as mutual business interests start to
take off. If there was any way that Dubai could be become even more
international than it used to be, it did so following the Abraham Accords peace
agreement last August. On November 26,
the first commercial flight took Israelis officially for the first time to this
business-cum-holiday destination across the Arabian desert. Since then, in less
than eight weeks, more than 50,000 Israelis have made the three-and-a-half-hour
flight to Dubai and four airlines now cater for 15 direct flights a day. The
UAE is no longer home to a quiet and small Jewish group, but to a vibrant
community of locals and travelers that flock to just opened kosher restaurants,
celebrate large Jewish weddings in elegant hotels or, during the Jewish holiday
Chanuka last December, sang Hebrew songs at a giant candelabra (menorah) on the
square of the world's highest building, the 163-story Burj Khalifa.
Unprecedented
wave of Israeli tourists Israel was under strict lockdown for most of 2020
which prompted financially well-off secular and religious Jews alike to
enthusiastically embrace the Gulf state for its open restaurants, tourist
attractions and shopping malls. What also helps is that there is no visa
hassle. "In addition to this, up until two weeks ago, the UAE, the
Seychelles and Rwanda were the only three countries without quarantine
requirements for Israelis," says Adam Cohen, spokesperson of the Israeli
Health Minister Yuli Edelstein. However, following a number of cases of
COVID-19-infected Israelis who had to stay in their hotel rooms in Dubai and
having to send up to 250 people into quarantine upon return, Israel has now
hissed the red flag. To avoid singling out one country, Israel now requires
quarantine for returning Israeli travelers from international destinations in
general. And as the Israeli Airport Authority is not allowing foreigners to the
country during lockdown, the holiday vibes are one-way only at the moment. So
far, only a few Emirati nationals reported that they had traveled to Israel for
business purposes last fall. In comparison, Dubai's airport authority requires
negative PCR tests from all passengers, as well as downloading and registering
on an official app and completing a health declaration.
Jewish
impact on the Muslim region The growing number of new tourists and
business-oriented visitors from Israel has an impact on Dubai as well. A
popular caterer has converted its service to a kosher kitchen within a few
weeks, while the Jewish community center has just signed a contract with Abu
Dhabi tourism officials to train and certify hotel kitchens as
kosher-compliant. Consequently, the country is not only adjusting to
temporary visitors but also to the tradition of brand-new traditional religious
baths (mikhva). A Jewish school is also under construction and Dubai's local
rabbi Levi Duchman has become somewhat of a celebrity. Israelis are given instructions on how to
behave at their holiday destination as kissing in public, cutting lines or
shouting is not only considered impolite but inappropriate. Swearing, insulting
or harassing anyone in Dubai is punished with jail or deportation. Still, these
regulations are part of what makes Israelis feel safe in Dubai, along with one
of the world's highest number of CCTV cameras and the world's lowest crime
rates.
Bombastic
business boost It didn't take long for businesses, beyond the tourism
sector, to find common ground. While IT and engineering are major industries in
both countries, the diamond trade could also enjoy a sparkling future. The
Dubai Diamond Exchange signed an agreement with the Israel Diamond Exchange
less than a month after the peace agreement and has already opened a
representative office next to Israel's diamond trade center, the
"bursa," in Ramat Gan near Tel Aviv. Another premiere took
place in early December last year with a joint concert at the Dubai Opera.
Italian tenor Andrea Bocelli was invited as singer. The Israeli music producer
and musician Idan Raichel also contributed to this "growing momentum of
peace," as the Emirati Ministry of Tourism put it. The concert's title was
"A Celebration of Peace" — a fitting musical theme of the Abraham
Accords.
^ While I don’t
think it is a smart idea to travel for fun during a Pandemic I am glad to see
Israel and UAE growing closer. ^
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