Jerusalem - “God made man because he loves stories,” the famous Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel often stated in his speeches.

So it is, that the July 2 date of his death, made for one of those moments when real life is “stranger than fiction.”

It linked a man who had met with presidents and kings, with an Israeli teacher and administrator Rabbi Michael “Miki” Mark, who was killed in a terror attack just one day earlier in the South Hebron Hills region of the West Bank.

On the surface of it, that sun baked stretch of the small gray asphalt road, where Palestinian gunmen shot Mark to death as he drove with his wife and two of his kids, seems worlds away from the international hub of Manhattan, where Wiesel lived and died.

It is a mostly barren and desert stretch of the West Bank, that hugs a similarly isolated part of the Negev.

Beersheba is already off the beaten path for many tourists who never make it beyond Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. So foreign visitors, certainly ones of Wiesel’s stature, are almost like a rare species.

That description rang even more true almost two decades ago, in 1999, when the head of the Otniel Yeshiva, Rabbi Beni Kalmanzon, and Mark, the school’s director-general, were in the midst of planning ..read more at VIN