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A Postcard From Tel Aviv

A Postcard From Tel Aviv

This is a feature from Issue 10 of Charitable Traveller. Click to read more from this issue.

Miami Vibes

If you sit on the beach in Barcelona you won’t need to strain hard to hear the dulcet tones of a Brit, or 100, close by. But in Tel Aviv, Israel’s – and surely the Mediterranean’s – hippest city, I heard none. The city is called the Miami of the Middle East and no wonder. Retro tower blocks extend  right down to the sand, where palm trees, gaudy beach huts and the rainbow façade of the Dan Tel Aviv Hotel – which has hosted Madonna and The Rolling Stones – create an Instagrammer’s dream. Beautiful people parade the sun-soaked  promenade on foot or skates.
Most Brits don’t come to Tel Aviv for the beach though. It’s very much a city break destination, and a 24-hour party place if you want it to be. 

My favourite place was Carmel Market. Open since the 1920s, the Shuk Hacarmel, as locals know it, sells clothes and electronics along with piles of colourful fruit and vegetables and tempting street food. The smell of freshly-squeezed pomegranate juice and a persuasive man selling falafel decided my lunch.

The tiny square under Jaffa's clock tower has an Arab bakery selling bagels and pastries.

Biblical Views

Most of Tel Aviv’s architecture is modern – it has the world’s biggest collection of Bauhaus buildings – but keep walking south along the promenade and it starts to feel more like the Holy Land. Jaffa is thought to be the oldest constantly occupied port in the world having existed for 4,000 years. Its cobbled streets and stone alleyways are home to modern art galleries, silversmiths, and trendy bistros, but St. Peter’s church is built on the remains of a crusader castle.
After wandering amongst Jaffa Flea Market’s jumble stalls selling old records, vintage clothes, books and antiques, I stopped in at Dr Shakshuka. Battered pots and pans hung from the restaurant’s stone ceiling and the shakshuka (eggs baked in a spiced tomato sauce) came in a hot skillet.
As the sun sank into the Mediterranean, I stood on the sea wall under the spearmint minaret of Al-Bahr Mosque. caught between two world’s – Jaffa’s biblical pot and the glittering skyline of Tel Aviv.

Hit leafy Rothchild Boulevard for Bauhaus buildings, coffee kiosks and hip bars and restaurants.

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This is a feature from Issue 10 of Charitable Traveller. Click to read more from this issue.