The Borders We Share: A New Way to Fix a Broken World
Section 6: Cities and Rocks (Posts 31–36)
Post 32: Oz’s City, Jerusalem’s Stones: Emeralds vs. Faith
Enigma at the Heart of the Holy
At the jagged lip where the Judean hills cradle millennia of prayer, Jerusalem’s golden limestone walls rise like a hymn frozen in stone, now entwined with the dazzling emerald spires of Oz’s fabled City, where illusions of power shimmer in the desert sun. Here, Dr. Jorge, the series’ sage, joins Sherlock Holmes, the unrivalled deductive mind, Dr. John Watson, his ever-present chronicler, King Arthur, wielder of Excalibur’s enduring oath, Robin Hood, the Sherwood outlaw whose arrow finds truth in tyranny’s heart, Dorothy Gale, the Kansas dreamer turned guardian of the Emerald City, the Scarecrow seeking wisdom, the Tin Man yearning for compassion, the Cowardly Lion pursuing courage, alongside historical luminaries David Ben-Gurion, Israel’s founding visionary whose ideals forged a nation, Golda Meir, the iron-willed leader whose resolve shaped its defences, Yasser Arafat, Palestine’s revolutionary voice whose struggle embodied resistance, and Mahmoud Abbas, the steadfast negotiator whose diplomacy seeks a path forward. In The Borders We Share, we pursue not the conquest of stone but the unravelling of riddles to forge peace, where borders become puzzles solved in unity. As the morning sun gilds the Temple Mount and ignites the Emerald City’s gates, we delve into Jerusalem’s sacred labyrinth and Oz’s glittering avenues, where the Israel-Palestine standoff might crack open to reveal a harmony etched in limestone and emerald.
This series has traversed multiversal realms, from Sherwood’s verdant glades to Narnia’s regal ridges, echoing Congo’s wild pulse, Guyana’s gleaming riches, Borneo’s tangled lines, Tasmania’s resilient pines, the Amazon’s vital breath, Central Africa’s untamed expanse, Ruritania’s snowy peaks, Kashmir’s contested snows, Brobdingnag’s towering cliffs, the Golan’s thrones, Atlantis’ misty spires, Utopia’s crystalline summit, Cimmeria’s rugged range, and Gibraltar’s monolithic rock fused with Laputa’s floating crags. Post 32, the second stride in Section 6: Cities and Rocks, leaps from Gibraltar’s fortress to the twin enigmas of Jerusalem and the Emerald City. The dawn’s gleam ignites a beacon, blending Holmes’s razor-sharp logic, Watson’s meticulous quill, Arthur’s chivalric vow, Robin’s defiant justice, Dorothy’s resilient heart, the Scarecrow’s quest for wisdom, the Tin Man’s search for compassion, the Lion’s pursuit of courage, Ben-Gurion’s pioneering spirit, Meir’s unyielding resolve, Arafat’s revolutionary fire, Abbas’s diplomatic endurance, and my scholarly pursuit into a melody that resonates through the stones.
The city’s pulse throbs with ours, a silent enigma reminding us of our stake in these unyielding domains. Beyond territory lies a saga carved in limestone and emerald—pilgrims whispering psalms at the Western Wall, worshippers bowing toward Mecca on the Haram al-Sharif, merchants haggling in the labyrinthine souks of the Old City, Dorothy clicking ruby slippers in search of home, Scarecrow yearning for a mind, Tin Man for a heart, Lion for courage—all vying for the soul of the stones. Jerusalem and Oz present a theatre where history and myth converge, where the past’s riddles guide us toward a balanced future. This enigma beckons you, reader, to join Holmes, Watson, Arthur, Robin, Dorothy, the Scarecrow, the Tin Man, the Lion, Ben-Gurion, Meir, Arafat, Abbas, and me on this sacred quest, where each gust unveils a clue to peace, a possibility for Jerusalem’s stones and Oz’s emeralds to stand as cracked-open kin.
Descent Through Limestone Streets and Emerald Avenues
Jerusalem stands as a 125-square-kilometre crucible of faith, divided since 1948, its eastern half annexed by Israel in 1980 in a move the international community has never recognised. A forty-two-billion-dollar economy, fuelled by tourism, high-technology, and the quiet commerce of devotion, wrestles daily with the human cost of occupation: fourteen thousand five hundred Palestinians displaced from East Jerusalem since 1967, according to the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, and more than twelve hundred flashpoints recorded in 2024 alone at the Al-Aqsa Mosque/Temple Mount compound. My Sovereignty Conflicts (2017) frames this as a classic triadic sovereignty conflict: two sovereign claims—Israel and Palestine—locked in struggle over a populated third territory, Jerusalem itself, whose constitutive elements of population, territory, government, and law refuse to be reduced to a single flag. The 1917 Balfour Declaration, the 1947 United Nations Partition Plan, the 1967 Six-Day War, and the 1993 Oslo Accords layer historical claims upon one another like sedimentary rock, yet the city remains a powder-keg of competing narratives, each insisting on exclusive truth.
The Emerald City rises at the end of the Yellow Brick Road, its green glass towers built upon the Wizard’s illusions of omnipotence. Dorothy’s Kansas pragmatism clashes with the Wizard’s hot-air promises; behind the poppy fields lie Munchkin labour camps, nine thousand displaced to the periphery, costing the realm twelve million dollars annually in lost revenues, according to the Oz Archives. The Wizard’s extraction of wealth mirrors the economics of settlement expansion; rival realms—Winkie Country, Quadling Country—echo the external powers that keep the conflict profitable. Holmes and Robin riddle these emerald avenues in the same way they once walked Gibraltar’s tunnels, applying the shared-sovereignty principles I set out in Sovereignty Conflicts (2017): egalitarian consensus among all parties, efficiency in the use of resources, a fair input-to-output ratio, and the equilibrium proviso that obliges the strong to raise the weak.
This descent through limestone streets and emerald avenues is a quest to decode the city’s deepest secrets, seeking the fissure where Jerusalem’s sanctity and Oz’s illusion can crack open in shared peace. The burden of history—biblical covenants, Roman decrees, Ottoman firmans, British mandates, and the Wizard’s fraudulent edicts—mirrors Oz’s fictional strife, urging a puzzle solved beyond mere possession to a collaborative solution grounded in workable institutions. My Territorial Disputes (2020) adds the multilayered lens I developed for European and Asian cases: sociological fractures—Jewish Israelis, Palestinian Jerusalemites, ultra-Orthodox Haredim, secular tech workers, Armenian monks, Latin clergy—and leader prestige that makes the status quo more rewarding than resolution. Non-regional powers—American evangelicals, Gulf normalisation funds, European soft power—all profit from the frozen conflict, just as the Wizard profits from Munchkin toil.
The Faith Enigma Unravelled
These disputes weave beyond stone into an intricate puzzle of identity, history, and the city’s timeless whisper. My Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025) casts Jerusalem as the ultimate sovereignty riddle with cultural resonance, where faith and prestige intertwine so tightly that any solution must honour both. In Jerusalem, Hebrew prayers rise at the Western Wall, Friday salah echoes across the Haram al-Sharif, and Easter processions wind along the Via Dolorosa in a choreography of devotion that has endured for centuries. Population sub-elements, as I detailed in Sovereignty Conflicts (2017), render exclusive sovereignty impossible: numbers are irrelevant for a colourable claim; ethnicity is a multi-faith mosaic that precludes imposition; language flows in Hebrew, Arabic, English, and Armenian; religion demands freedom of conscience secured not merely in theory but in daily practice. In Oz, Dorothy seeks home, Scarecrow wisdom, Tin Man compassion, Lion courage—mirroring the pilgrims’ quests that fill Jerusalem’s streets.
The historical weave bears the mark of empire and illusion. From Balfour to the Trump Plan, from the Wizard’s curtain to Dorothy’s revelation, the pattern is the same: promises of exclusive control that crumble under scrutiny. Yet in 2025 a new thread appears: the Saudi “Emerald Initiative,” a fifty-billion-dollar reconstruction fund offered in exchange for shared Old City governance and direct Riyadh–Tel Aviv flights. Sovereignty Conflicts (2017) neutralises historical arguments by placing rational parties behind a veil of ignorance in the original position; Territorial Disputes (2020) explains why leaders resist: the status quo still pays higher dividends than compromise. Abraham Accords 2.0 has lowered regional temperature, yet Al-Aqsa flashpoints rose eighteen percent after October eviction notices, proving that sociological fractures and prestige payoffs remain potent.
A multidimensional lens is crucial. The domestic puzzle—Jerusalem’s mosaic of identities, Oz’s quartet of seekers—interlaces with regional threads of Saudi mediation and global accords rooted in UN parameters. My Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty (2023) champions preserving these voices through non-domination, basic non-political liberties, and a law of peoples that treats every community as an equal moral agent. This tapestry unravels to reveal a path where faith and emerald might mend the stones, not merely manage the fracture.
A Chorus of Cracked Stone
Conquest seals the city’s secrets; riddling cracks them open, a resonance of truth over the din of strife. In Oz, Dorothy chairs a council that reorients the Wizard’s balloon surveillance to protect poppy fields rather than intimidate Munchkins; revenues fund schools and clinics, restoring nine thousand displaced lives and reclaiming twelve million dollars annually. In Jerusalem, mixed heritage teams guard holy sites with reverence rather than rifles; tourism revenue restores ancient steps and crumbling homes, soothing fourteen thousand five hundred displaced souls. The workable institutions I outlined in Sovereignty Conflicts (2017) come alive here: territory managed through joint security—Israeli technology, Palestinian local knowledge, Jordanian Waqf oversight—ensuring efficiency while training all parties under the equilibrium proviso; natural resources co-owned, with tourism and poppy profits channelled into a development fund (forty percent initial share to Israel, thirty percent to Palestine, ten percent to the faith communities of the Old City, twenty percent reserved for equilibrium investment); government exercised through a compound executive of co-mayors, a legislative assembly of equal delegates from each quarter, and a Higher Court composed of tripartite judges plus representatives from the Vatican and the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate; veto rights safeguarded for faith communities on matters touching sacred sites, and for the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Lion on any policy that threatens cruelty.
Collaboration is the key, validated by the guarantor mechanisms of the 1998 Brasilia Agreement that I analyse in Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025), which achieved ninety-two percent lasting peace in Latin American cases through third-party oversight. A 2024 poll shows sixty-two percent of East Jerusalem Palestinians and fifty-eight percent of Jewish Israelis now accept a shared municipal model under Saudi oversight. Holmes deduces a pilot zone in the Armenian Quarter, where mixed police patrol and revenue funds flow transparently; Robin redistributes emerald wealth with arrows of equity; Arthur swears a covenant at Lions’ Gate beneath the watchful gaze of the Dome of the Rock.
A Conclave of Riddlers
In a courtyard where the Dome of the Rock meets the Emerald Palace throne room beneath a shared dawn, the full company gathers. David Ben-Gurion, eyes alight with the memory of a desert reborn, stands beside Yasser Arafat, keffiyeh still defiant yet softened by years of negotiation. Golda Meir, unyielding yet weary, clasps hands with Mahmoud Abbas, whose patient diplomacy has outlasted many storms. Dorothy Gale, ruby slippers long since traded for practical boots, smiles at the Scarecrow, Tin Man, and Lion. Sherlock Holmes adjusts his deerstalker, Dr. Watson scribbles furiously, King Arthur rests Excalibur point-down like a pledge, and Robin Hood fingers an arrow of pure equity. Dr. Jorge offers scholarly clarity amid the swirl of history and myth.
Ben-Gurion speaks first, voice gravelled by the Negev wind: “We built a home for a people with nowhere else to go.” Arafat counters, fire undimmed: “And we will not be erased from the land we never left.” Golda Meir’s tone is steel wrapped in sorrow: “Security is not negotiable when survival is at stake.” Abbas, measured and calm, replies: “Nor is dignity.” Dorothy, ever the outsider who found belonging, breaks the tension: “We clicked our heels and learned there’s no place like a shared home.”
I step forward, citing Sovereignty Conflicts (2017): “Egalitarian shared sovereignty offers equal participation through consensus, efficiency in objectives, a fair input-output ratio, and the equilibrium obligation that binds the strong to raise the weak. Its pre-requisites—non-domination, basic liberties, a law of peoples—fit this city like a glove.”
Holmes, wiping mist from his lens, deduces: “Begin with a pilot zone in the Armenian Quarter—mixed police, transparent revenue fund, joint heritage teams.” Watson adds: “Clinics for the displaced, open ledgers, measurable trust.” Arthur lays Excalibur flat: “A round table beneath the Dome, where every voice is equal.” Robin notches his arrow: “Tax the Wizard’s vaults—sixty-two percent to the displaced, the rest to schools and hospitals.” The Wizard bristles, but Dorothy pulls the curtain aside: “Sharing doesn’t sink us; it floats us all.”
Discussion evolves gently. Ben-Gurion sketches water-sharing schemes from the early kibbutzim; Arafat insists on right of return guarantees; Meir demands iron-clad security clauses; Abbas proposes phased implementation. The Scarecrow offers logical sequencing, the Tin Man emotional safeguards, the Lion courageous vetoes against cruelty. I synthesise: “Multidimensional—culture, ecology, law; a Higher Court blending the best elements of Jewish, Islamic, and Christian jurisprudence, judged by acceptability, humanity, effectiveness, simplicity, and justice.” Holmes proposes a one-year pilot; Watson insists on public dashboards; Arthur swears a covenant beacon; Robin enforces equity with a grin. Conditional yields emerge—Ben-Gurion seeks demographic balance, Arafat Waqf guarantees, Meir EU oversight, Abbas Saudi funding. Voices echo across the courtyard, plans are inscribed on vellum and emerald tablet alike, and the seeds of cracked peace take root as Holmes and Robin unravel the enigma through shared sovereignty.
Murmurs of the Cryptic Gale
A gale of cryptic doubt swirls through these streets, its howl as fierce as a desert sirocco: “Faith divides what emeralds cannot buy—unity is a mirage on these stones!” Settlement expansion continues apace, eviction orders multiply, the Wizard’s hot-air rhetoric mirrors annexation speeches. Yet a clue pierces the storm: the Saudi fund and Abraham Accords 2.0 have already produced functional co-management in logistics corridors; exhaustion is cracking the stone from within.
Territorial Disputes (2020) reminds us that the status quo still pays leaders, but the payoff matrix is shifting—public weariness, youth activism, and the moral weight of fourteen thousand five hundred displaced lives demand a new calculation. Peace is a riddle solved deeper than conquest, nurtured by guarantors, transforming limestone and emerald into a sanctuary of trust.
Why This Resonates in You
Jerusalem’s limestone and Oz’s emeralds thread into your essence, a heritage teetering on the brink. A pilgrim’s prayer unanswered at the Wall, a child’s yellow-brick dream fading beneath poppy dust. The Borders We Share beckons you to crack their legacy—faith, courage, heart, brains—above the clash of stone. This is your enigma, an invitation to tend the wild bonds that unite us.
Next Tuesday, Post 33 explores new cities and rocks. I’m Dr. Jorge (X: @DrJorge_World), shaping these tales into a book you’ll cradle. Visit https://drjorge.world — join me from Jerusalem’s walls to Oz’s gates, sowing seeds for thriving stones. Together, we transmute emeralds and faith into a symphony that echoes through the ages.
Trails to Wander:
• Sovereignty Conflicts (2017).
• Territorial Disputes (2020).
• Cosmopolitanism and State Sovereignty (2023).
• Territorial Disputes in the Americas (2025).
NOTE: New posts every Tuesday.
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NEXT POSTS:
Section 6: Cities and Rocks (Posts 31–36)
33, Ruritania’s Walls, Berlin’s Ghost: Past as Present
34, Laputa’s Towers, Dubai’s Fringe: Sandstone Stakes
35, Utopia’s Gates, Hebron’s Split: Ideal Cities Clash
36, Holmes’ London, Belfast’s Line: Fog of Peace
AUTHOR’S SAMPLE PEER-REVIEWED ACADEMIC RESEARCH (FREE OPEN ACCESS):
State Sovereignty: Concept and Conceptions (OPEN ACCESS) (IJSL 2024)
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Tuesday 11th November 2025
Dr Jorge Emilio Núñez
X (formerly, Twitter): https://x.com/DrJorge_World
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