Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Tattoo Charlie - Death of a Legend





Wheeler, Charles "Tattoo Charlie"

View/Sign Guest Book
WHEELER, CHARLES "TATTOO CHARLIE," 56, of Louisville, passed away Friday, September 14, 2007 at Jewish Hospital. He was the founder and owner of Tattoo Charlie's tattoo studio. He was a member of Pleasure Ridge Park Lodge 959, Louisville Scottish Rite, Kosair Shrine Temple, Patriot Guard, the Blue Knights, past president Kosair Director Staff, past president Kosair Street Machines, past commodore Kosair Boat Club, charter member of Kosair Roustabouts, past president and charter member of Kosair Mini Wheels, member of the 32 Club, past Camaxli Order of Quetzalcoatl, Kosair Motor Corp, Kentucky colonel, member of the Louisville Harley Owners Group, Louisville Boat Harbor member, the Islanders Club, president Bullitt County Motor Corp, Hillbilly Clan of Ashland, KY, originator of Toys for Tots in Hardin Co. and Bullitt Co. He is survived by his son, Buddy Wheeler; grandchildren, Zelda Marianna, Kain and Shaolin; brother, George Brown and sister, Linda Toebbe and many loving friends. His service will be held at 2 p.m. on Monday at Owen Funeral Home, 5317 Dixie Highway with burial in Garnettsville Cemetery. Visitation will be 3 - 9 p.m. Saturday and 2-9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. In lieu of flowers, the family would like expressions of sympathy to be made to Hospice of Louisville.
Published in The Courier-Journal from 9/15/2007 - 9/16/2007.


Charlie Wheeler was more than a tattoo artist. He was a shriner for Kosair. He appeared as Santa Claus at the Home of the Innocents, worked with Camp Quality in Leitchfield which serves children with cancer. Charlie's shop was most famous for its humorous "tattoos while you wait" slogan.
If you ask anyone in the city of Louisville, Kentucky where is the best place in town to get a tattoo, they will instantly reply, without hesitation, Tattoo Charlies. On Friday, September 14, 2007 Tattoo Charlies beloved owner and founder Charlie Wheeler passed away at Jewish Hospital after a sudden and unexpected illness.
According to an article published on the Courier Journals website Thursday, Charlie was a native of Louisville, and graduated from Pleasure Ridge Park High School, an entry on his obituary's Guest Book notes his graduating year as 1969.
According to Charlie's son Buddy Wheeler, he spent time working in the automotive department of JC Penney before taking up tattoo art at the age of 21. Charlie's first studio was in Fort Knox, Kentucky where he stayed for about five years before picking up shop and moving the business to Louisville.
The first Tattoo Charlies in Louisville opened in 1975 on Berry Boulevard, and is still in business today. At the height of his career Charlie operated six tattoo studios, five in Louisville and one in nearby Lexington, Kentucky. Today only four remain, the original on Berry Boulevard, one on Preston Highway, one on Dixie Highway, and the one in Lexington. The Dixie Highway location is also home to Charlie's Tattoo Museum which opened in 1999. According to the tattoo studio's website the collection contains many one of a kind pieces, and shows how tattooing has evolved over the last one hundred years. Charlie began collecting these items over thirty years ago when he started his business, and it has continually grown over the years.
Over the years Tattoo Charlies and their "Done While You Wait" Tattoos have become known as the cleanest, most modern, and most professional studio in the south. They have set high standards for themselves, and have maintained those high standards over the years. The standards that Charlie set reflect his character and values, no tattoos for anyone intoxicated or under the age of eighteen, Charlie refused for any tattoos done at his studio to reflect anything Satanic or anti-Semitic, and no tattoos on the hands, feet, or neck.
On the studio's website Charlie states "A tattoo on the neck is always visible whether you are at home, school, or work. It is visible when you go to your child's PTA meeting, when you go on a new job interview, when you go to court over a traffic violation, and when you go to your parents house for Christmas. It is unfortunate but true that the society we live in does still discriminate against visible tattoos. Is it really worth not getting a higher paying job, not getting out of a court fine, or not getting the simple respect you deserve just to have a tattoo on your neck?"
The Courier Journal on September 14, 2007 wrote the following:
Charlie Wheeler, better known as “Tattoo Charlie,” the proprietor of the “Done While You Wait” tattoo studios, died today at Jewish Hospital after a sudden illness. He was 56.
“It’s what he devoted himself to and he had an absolute love for it,” his son, Buddy Wheeler, said today of the tattoo business.
“I learned tattooing from an old tattoo artist,” Charlie Wheeler once told The Courier-Journal. “It’s handed down from one generation to the next.” He planned to retire next year, his son said. “He’s been grooming me to take over the business,” Buddy Wheeler said.
The elder Wheeler told the newspaper tattooing was “the role of my life.”“When you get a tattoo, you’re putting an external image of your internal self,” he said. “You show people you’re different.”
A native of Louisville’s South End, Wheeler graduated from Pleasure Ridge Park High School and worked in the auto department of J.C. Penney, his son said, before taking up his art around the age of 21. He had a tattoo studio in Fort Knox for about five years before moving shop to Louisville.
The first Tattoo Charlie’s opened on Berry Boulevard, where it remains in business 32 years later. At times, his was the only tattoo studio in Louisville. When the popularity of tattoos peaked in the 1990s, there were six locations, including one in Lexington, also still in business.
There are four current locations, as well as a Tattoo Museum in Shively which opened in 1999, but was temporarily closed earlier this year. Buddy Wheeler plans to relocate and reopen the museum soon, he said yesterday.“He had been collecting tattoo memorabilia that was in danger of being lost for years and years,” his son said of Wheeler’s decision to establish a museum. “He saw the value in it.”
Wheeler also recognized the value of a slogan he noticed on a sign in a Florida tattoo studio in the late 1960s and “thought it was absolute genius,” said his son. The elder Wheeler asked the owner’s permission to borrow the slogan, “Done While You Wait,” before making it his own.The original “Tattoo Charlie’s: Done While You Wait” billboard along Interstate 65 northbound between Elizabethtown and Louisville made the business something of a Louisville icon. There have been two other billboards at times, but the original is the only one left and “absolutely” will remain, Buddy Wheeler said. “It’s been on Johnny Carson, Jay Leno, David Letterman.”
The business was described in one Courier-Journal story as a place where “art overshadows business and principle comes before profit.” Wheeler’s principles included: no satanic, anti-Semitic or racist tattoos; none done on the hands, feet or face; and none for anyone intoxicated or under 18 years of age.
Wheeler also prided himself on his mission to talk people out of bad ideas, like tattoos of names.“Names change, but a tattoo is permanent,” he often said.“I’ve never talked anybody into a tattoo,” he said. “I’ve talked a lot of people out of tattoos.”
Burly and long-haired, dressed in a T-shirt, jeans and suspenders, often on his Harley Davidson, Wheeler’s appearance could mislead people about his character, but usually just once.“
His looks were quite deceiving,” said Gary Fields, a close friend and former Jefferson County Police officer. “When I was Potentate of Kosair Shrine Temple in 1995, Charlie came through and became a Shriner. … It was kind of funny to see this great big tattooed guy sitting in the back of the room.”“Little did I know then,” Fields said, “that this was gonna be a guy who was gonna leave such a mark — on my life and so many lives.”
Fields praised Wheeler’s dedication to children in particular, citing his frequent appearances as Santa Claus at the Home of the Innocents; his work at Camp Quality in Leitchfield, Ky., which serves children with cancer, who looked forward to rides in the sidecar of Charlie’s motorcycle; and his work starting Toys for Tots drives in Hardin and Bullitt counties.
“You couldn’t help but love the guy,” retired attorney Jerry Steinberg said yesterday. “When he first came to me, it was to try to get custody of his child. I looked at him and told him, ‘We’re not gonna win. Look at those things on your hands.’"
“He said, ‘just listen to my story,’” Fields said. “We won the custody and from then on we became the best of friends. … He was the most decent person I ever met. I mean, I’ve never met a person like him.”“Nobody has any idea the amount of money and time and energy he put out there,” said Fields, who represented Wheeler until he retired from practicing law.
“When he wasn’t at work, all he did was take care of other people. … This is a great loss, not just to his family and friends, but to the community.”

Sunday, July 1, 2007

The Little Mermaid

I received an email from Keri about tattoos and mermaids that I would like to share with you:

Ever since I was a child I have loved mermaids. Disney's "The Little Mermaid" was the first movie I ever watched, the stepping stone for my passion with the beautiful fish-tailed creatures.

When my tattoo-loving father asked me when I was 12 if I would ever get a tattoo I knew exactly what it would be of, but what would she be doing? Like you read in this website a tattoo is very serious. Its placement and design are permanent! I spent 6 years thinking about what I wanted, and when my grandmother passed away in October 2005 I knew what it would be. A mermaid sitting on a moon, covered in roses. The mermaid represented my love, the moon represented the sky where my grandmother now lives, and the roses, they are my grandmother. Roses where her most treasured of things. Mermaids are a figment of our love for the mystical, and for me my tattoo is a permanent reminder of the ones I hold dear to my heart.

Wednesday, June 6, 2007

Heart

Michelle sent in this picture of her lower back tattoo which features an heart. I've e-mailed her back asking for more info.


Pow Wow

I attended the Red Creek Pow Wow in Shepherdsville this weekend. There were lots of tattoos to be admired. I'll exhibit some that I gave cards. The owners said they'd write me with the stories and better pictures.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

I Wanted It!

Ashley, another Ashley from the bikini car wash, had this great tattoo. I asked her about it. She said, " I wanted a tattoo. So, I put together parts of several tattoos to make this unique one. It's not exactly like any other. And, I wanted it!"

Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Dreaming of Being a Playmate






I met Ashley at a local sports bar, but it wasn't until she was doing this bikini car wash that I saw her tattoos. She has promised to send me the story on the "dream symbol" and the "Playboy Rabbit".

Sunday, May 20, 2007

Young and Stupid







Marsha works at a local sports bar. She has a tattoo on her stomach and one on her shoulder.




She said, " I got both when I was young and stupid! I often wish I didn't have them. However, the one on my stomach was awesome when I was pregnant. It grew by two inches, but returned to normal after the pregnancy. When I get married in 2008, I'm going to either use make up to cover up the one on my shoulder because I don't want everyone staring at it as I go down the aisle or I may have it removed by laser."

Wedding Party


I went to my cousin Jason's wedding and there was this beautiful young lady with a tattoo on her shoulder. I asked her about it; however, there was no great story. It was a cover-up tattoo. She didn't like the original, so she a new tattoo applied over it.

Dallas and His Tattoos




Dallas from Louisville, KY sent in some pics of his tattoos.


"The ones in the pic with the dog, the top one is my sign...it says scorpio, the one below it is a sun with my son's name in it "Brandon". It's in memory of him.


The one on my forearm, Dallas, is not only my name it was my grandfathers name. It also is in memory of him.


The tribal is a cover-up tat. I wanted a tribal, and I had a tat that I wanted covered, not because it was a bad one, but I just didnt like it. So, a guy that I was working with at the time was just getting into doing tats, and he designed this one for me. I still need to have some more ink added but just havent done it yet.

Hopefully, I can get better pics of them for you, and I'm going to Florida for vacation and plan on trying to get a new tat down there."

Sunday, April 22, 2007

Lotus

Brittney from Chicago sent in this Lotus Flower.

She said, " This symblolizes me rising from a bad beginning to success and happiness. I've got this tattoo my freshman year a college to remind me of how far I've come!"

Lotus, Butterfly, and Symbols

Mandi from Baltimore submitted these tattoos.

Unfortunately, she didn't include a story. I e-mailed her back and hopefully, I'll get the story to go with the tats!

Pegasus and Other Tattoos

This tattoo was submitted by Sylvia in Dayton, OH.

Unfortunately, she did not include a story.

Please, always include the story behind the tattoo!!

Mardi Gras - Scorpio and Lotus

Late posting of a Mardi Gras photo. This is Stephanie from Atlanta.

The Scorpio is her sign.

The Lotus Blossom; "I have my Lotus flower, because it actually represents my life. The beginning of the life of the Lotus flower is down deep in the MUCK and the MUD of water and it actually grows up and OUT of the muck, mud and water and becomes a BEAUTIFUL creation of life. That's why I have mine, life for me did not start out so great but I fought my way through the crap of it all and succeeded."

Butterfly

This one was submitted By Betty who lives in in Pompano Beach, FL.

She said she got this butterfly 2 years ago. The butterfly reminds her that beauty can come from ugly things (caterpillars).

Saturday, March 3, 2007

Chinese Symbol for Family

Shelly has several tattoos. However, I think this one has the most meaning to her. It's the Chinese symbol for family.

"I got this one on February 28th. My son and I both got tattoos, mine is the Chinese Symbol for Family and he got this really cool tattoo of bats coming out of his rib cage! I chose the Family one because family is the strongest bond there is. In fact, my cousin is getting a matching tattoo."
Tattoo Artist: Pony Boy
Tattoo Studio: Louisville Tattoo Company, 1235 Bardstown Road, Louisville, KY

Thursday, March 1, 2007

For Grandmother - Breast Cancer

This tattoo is one of those that got me started thinking about doing a blog with stories. Last summer, I saw this pink ribbon tattoo when Brandy was doing a bikini car wash. When I asked her about it, she said it was for her grandmother who had breast cancer.

U. of L. Cards Fan







This is Deb's story about her tattoo of a Cardinal.

"I didn't think I'd ever get a tattoo - what what I put on my body that I'd love til I die? But, I'm a big U of L fan. Always have been. So, in the fall of 2006, I decided to get a U of L fighting Cardinal tattooed on my foot to support the team!

The Cards are the only things I'll love til the day I die!"

Tattoo by Shirts and Skin, 8663 Preston Highway, Louisville, KY.

Tuesday, February 27, 2007

Mardi Gras - In Memory of Her Mother

You can barely make out the tattoo on the wrist of the bartender at Coyote Ugly. She promised to send me a good picture and the story.

The tattoo is of the symbol for the Chinese Year of the Monkey. She said that both she and her mother were born in the Year of the Monkey. When her mother recently died, she decided to get this tattoo in memory of her mother.

Mardi Gras - Heart

I don't have a story on this one. I was reviewing my photos and noticed this tattoo in a crowd shot. So, I though I'd add it in.

Mardi Gras - Looking for Love in All the Wrong Places

I noticed this tattoo on the lower back of a young lady standing outside a gay bar. I asked her if it had any special significance. She said it stood for love and her quest to find that someone special. Since we were outside a gay bar, I asked her if she was looking for a guy or a girl. She replied, "Probably a guy, but she was open to other possibilities."

I decided to point out the obvious. If you're looking for a relationship with a guy, a gay bar might not be the best hunting grounds! She agreed that I was right. However, she said gay guys are so cute, funny, and nice. She wondered if she could convert one. I suggested that I didn't think that was very likely. She agreed that I was probably right. I wished her well on her quest.

Monday, February 26, 2007

Mardi Gras - La Dolce Vita



I
I met this young lady while waiting for a parade to start. She and her friend have several tattoos and told me they have photos on the internet. I gave her my card and asked her to send info. Here's her e-mail.
Hi there,

I ran upon your card when cleaning out my purse the other day! I think the two pictures you have of me are better than any I have.
My Foot-
My first tattoo is of the Kanji symbol for immortality. After looking over several, maybe even 100's of designs, symbols, etc. this one "came to me"....I knew it was the one. For me it represents the soul being immortal. My mother died when I was young and she was the nicest woman I've ever met...she was the embodiment of love. This tattoo is a constant reminder of her and that no matter what happens in life...the soul is immortal. Probably a year later I had the cherry blossom branch and buds added to sort of make it more feminine.

My Neck-
My very good friend, Mandy, gave me the gift of a friendship tattoo for my 30th Birthday. We spent quite a while at Cheap Trx trying to decide what to get...eventually we found designs and then with help of Stan and Jim we decided on "La Dolce Vita" (The Sweet Life). Basically, we've had a lot of trials and tribulations throughout our lives and wanted to bring a little positivity in...her tat has a little different design than mine, but the La Dolce Vita is the same. A few months later I had the cross added...my mother was a very Christian Woman...so this, too...has a significance. And, I thought it looked cool.

Thanks so much,

Allison

Mardi Gras - Intricate and Colorful


I noticed this guy's tattoo while walking down Bourbon Street. I gave him one of my cards (see photo 1). However, I also wanted to snap these pictures because the tattoos are so colorful and intricate. I hope he follows up and send me the stories!



Mardi Gras - Male Dancer




My sister took these photos of a male dancer at one of the bars on Bourbon Street.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Mardi Gras - Discovered at a Parade

I discovered this lady and awesome tattoo while watching a parade.

Mardi Gras - Hopeful Tattoo Artist


I also met this lovely young lady at Coyote Ugly Saloon. She had just donated her bra to their wall collection. The dragon tattoo was her design and she is interested in becoming a tattoo artist in New Orleans. She will hopefully send me a better photo.

Mardi Gras - Pet Wolf

I met this guy at Coyote Ugly Saloon. He had several tattoos so I asked him which was his favorite. This Tattoo of a wolf was his choice. He said its a likeness of a pet wolf that he had for 14 years before it died.

Mardi Gras 2007

I went to Mardi Gras this week and took several photos and handed out cards asking folks to e-mail me photos of their tattoos and their stories. hopefully, They'll start coming in soon. Until then, I'll post some of the photos.

Saturday, February 17, 2007

CELEBRITY TATTOOS

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Bald Britney appears at LA tattoo parlor


Bald Britney appears at LA tattoo parlor


LOS ANGELES -
Britney Spears' appeared in a tattoo parlor in the San Fernando Valley with her head shaved completely bald.

Video on KABC-TV showed the newly shorn Spears with tiny tattoos on the back of her neck as she sits Friday night for a new tattoo — a pair of red and pink lips.


"She just wanted something real small on her wrist, something dainty," Max Gott, the tattoo artist at Body and Soul in Sherman Oaks, told the TV station. "She got some cute little lips on her wrist."


Derrik Snell, who works at the tattoo parlor, said Spears showed up without notice and stayed for about 90 minutes as about 60 fans, photographers and gawkers gathered outside.
"She seemed fine," Snell said. "I didn't really notice (the hairdo) at first, she had a hood on when she showed up."


Angelique Uram, a Spears fan who stood on the tattoo parlor's sidewalk for Friday night's spectacle, was aghast at the singer's new look.


"We could see her in the mirror, and her head is completely shaved," she told KABC. "It looks terrible."


Police arrived to control the crowd and helped Spears' bodyguards guide her into a waiting SUV, her head covered by a hooded sweatshirt.


Monday, February 12, 2007


Story to come. Cynthia

Monday, February 5, 2007

Chakotay: Star Trek - Voyager


I found this image at http://www.vigyan.com/~blbates/star_trek/voyager/index.html . As far as I'm concerned, this is one of the most famous tattoos around - the facial tattoo of Chakotay, first officer of the Voyager. There was a great episode that explained the tattoo - it was season 2, episode 5 aptly named "Tattoo."


In that episode, "Chakotay explains that he wears the tattoo to honour his father, who wore it to honour his ancestors. (His father died defending his home which was along the Federation/Cardassian border.) The alien leader explains that they knew those ancestors whom the aliens called "the Inheritors" when they visited Earth some 45,000 years earlier and gave them a gift of knowledge after being impressed by their respect for the land. It is this deep race memory which had earlier prompted Chakotay to have a brief mental image of one of his ancestors. " for the full episode synopsis go to http://star-trek-voyager.net/a1episodes/seasn2/ep25synopsis.htm


"With Robert Beltran as Chakotay they wanted to put a tattoo on him, so they said go to work and do some designs. And the designs went from a full Maori face to what we finally wound up with which was just this section up here on his head, but we did a full face, we did a half a face, and then when they finally decided we were going to keep it down to a localised area, then I started to get books out. I had books on Filipino designs and New Zealand designs and Japanese designs. And I made combinations of all these different whirls and twirls and twists and things that we could do on Robert. Then finally, after looking at a lot of them, we did a little testing. The one that he wore was a combination of Maori and Filipino."



Til The End of Time or Not

I was in a CVS Pharmacy and there was an older lady (about 75) behind the counter. She spoke with an accent. As I was paying for my stuff, I noticed she had an old tattoo on her left forearm. It was hard to make out because it had faded and her skin was wrinkled. I didn't comment on it, but I wondered if it was a concentration camp tattoo - right age, accent, unusual for women in the 1940's to get tattoos.

The next time I went in, I asked her about the tattoo.

I said, "What does your tattoo say?"

She replied, "It's TTE of T." "A lot of people want to know if it's a concentration camp tattoo."

I still couldn't make it out. So, I asked her, "Is it in another language?"

"No, it's in English, just old."

"What does it mean?"

"It stands for ' Til the End of Time'". When I was a young girl I met a man and fell in love. We each had TTE of T tattooed on us to signify our undying love."

Of course, I asked if she had married him.

"No, it didn't last. I don't even know what happened to him."

Monday, January 29, 2007

Holocaust Education from a Bartender's Arm By Alison Stern Golub


The horrific story the Nazi concentation camps and the tattooing of prisoners was one of the reasons I started developing an interest in the stories behind tattoos. Here is a story from a fellow blogger. Hope she doesn't mind me borrowing it.
*************************
Holocaust survivor Sam Sitko shows his tattoo from living in a concentration camp during an assembly at Whitwell Middle School in Whitwell, Tennessee.
*****************************************************
April 27, 2005

A few weeks ago a friend of mine told me a rather startling story. I started to wonder whether it was a "This could only happen in Israel" kind of story (of which I have heard and experienced many), or whether it reflected some kind of new movement of which I am unaware. I haven't been able to get it out of my mind since, and so I thought you all might want to hear it too. I am still trying to formulate my own thoughts about it, so I welcome your insights and opinions as well. So this friend of mine was hanging out at a pub in downtown Be'er Sheva with some other friends. As he approached the counter to order his drink, he noticed that the young bartender, a student dressed in jeans and a t-shirt, had a short row of numbers tattooed on his arm. Given that the guy was a good fifty years too young to be a Holocaust survivor, my friend's curiosity got the better of him and he asked what the tattoo was. The young man answered, "Exactly what you think it is." My friend couldn't stop there, and pressed him further. The man replied that his grandmother survived Hitler's camps and was now nearing her end. She had given her grandson her blessing to tattoo onto his arm a likeness of the very same numbers she had on her own. My friend, in recounting this story to me, remarked that he was quite moved by the gesture.

I must admit that at first I was quite taken aback. Quickly, however, my shock turned into appreciation and not a small amount of admiration. I have spent most of my academic life studying the Holocaust from political, psychological, and personal perspectives, and this is the first time I can remember that I have come across a truly original idea in the domain of Holocaust memorialization. With what amounts to probably twenty minutes in a tattoo artist's chair and the marking of a 1-inch by 3-inch area of skin, this young man has managed to both honor his grandmother and her experience, as well as send a rather striking societal message. Indeed, whether the people around him are respectful of or appalled by his choice, there is no doubt that he causes at least a hundred people a day to think about the Holocaust, if only for a moment.

My friend was most impressed by how the young man's action represents a kind of "taking back" of the image of the tattoo and the victim experience. In much the same way as African Americans have reclaimed and empowered the term "nigger" by using it amongst themselves, there is something powerful and honorable about taking a tattoo that was forced upon his grandmother without her consent and purposefully choosing to place it upon himself with her blessing.

The fact that Jews still exist in the world is proof that Hitler didn't succeed, and many say that simply living an honorable life can be our own revenge. This young bartender has taken this a step further. His existence would not have been possible without his grandmother's survival, but in thirty years when her life is a distant memory, his simply being alive won't be enough to memorialize her. Perhaps these numbers on his arm will be.

Indeed, one of my biggest fears regards the landscape of our global society in thirty or forty years. What will Holocaust education and memory be like when the last survivor has left us? I fear this period deeply, and I will weep the moment when our world will be deprived of the brilliance and strength of spirit and beauty and insight that Holocaust survivors bring to us.

When the Holocaust exists only in history textbooks and museums, this young man will have and show a personal connection that won't be attainable in any other way. In the summer, when he will roll up his sleeves and have no choice but to show his tattoo, he will make people think and feel and react in a way that no one else will be able to do.

So I have informally polled a great deal of people already, and received greatly mixed reviews. People over the age of 60 have tended to be enthusiastically in favor of the young man's choice, while those between the ages of 35-55 have generally been vehemently against it. Responses from individuals in my own generation have been fairly equally split. I'm still not totally sure how I feel about it, but I'm inclined to believe that anything that can evoke such strong emotion, on both sides of the spectrum, is worthy of deeper investigation. In any case, that young bartender in Be'er Sheva has certainly made a lot of us think.

My friend also posted an article about this experience at www.israelity.com, and he has a blog at www.arimiller.blogspot.com.

Views expressed by the author do not necessarily reflect those of israelinsider.

http://web.israelinsider.com/Views/5411.htm