Rishon Lezion, Israel - Darya Zelenkov was working her shift in a downtown clothing shop in this central Israeli city when she was startled by a knife-wielding Palestinian trying to burst in. The quick-thinking saleswoman quickly slammed the glass door in his face.

“I looked him straight in the eye. He had this lost look about him,” said Zelenkov. “Until yesterday I thought all the troubles were ‘there.’ I thought it had nothing to do with me.”

After years of relative quiet in major Israeli cities, a seven-week burst of violence has brought the Palestinian issue to the country’s heartland and pushed the long-festering conflict back onto the national agenda. Disillusioned by years of failed negotiations and a controversial withdrawal from the Gaza Strip, the prevailing inclination among Israelis isn’t to revive peace talks, but to create distance and separation from the Palestinians.

Ami Ayalon, a former head of Israel’s Shin Bet security service and current fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute, said despite the fear and anger, the unrest is having some unexpected results. He cited a recent poll showing more than three-quarters of Israelis ready to hand over Arab-majority neighborhoods of Jerusalem to a future Palestine, in contrast to the government position that the city must remain unified.... Read More: VIN