A new application in virtual reality has made it possible to visit the Palestinian territories, giving the picture as close as possible to reality on the ground.

Salem Brameh, 30, who heads a small local non-governmental organization, the Palestinian Institute for Public Diplomacy, is tasked with opening the eyes of the world to see what has been called a "two-state solution, peace, security."

The idea is to apply a video, called "palestine VR, Palestine," which, he says, is "Palestine without a candidate that the Palestinians offer to the other world." The idea, implementation and development are all local.

The idea came in response to a ban on two US congressmen from an official visit to Israel and the Palestinian territories in August.

Under pressure from US President Donald Trump, and under the pretext that they support the boycott of the Jewish state in protest against the occupation of the Palestinian territories, refused to grant Israeli visa to US lawmakers Ilhan Omar and Rashid Taleb, in an unprecedented unprecedented.

Access to the Ibrahimi Mosque in Hebron requires a number of checkpoints.

Show what Israel does not want to see
The application allows users to live the stages planned by the organizers of the visit through a series of 360-degree footage, rather than Israeli and Palestinian "guides and escorts" who were to accompany the Americans.

"The aim of the application is to see what Israel does not want to see, and to allow everyone to see the reality as it is to judge it," she said, from East Jerusalem to Ramallah, through Bethlehem and the Bedouin camps on the roadside, that is, Palestine as it is, not in virtual reality.

In addition to political objectives, the application allows access to areas that are already inaccessible, such as the Gaza beach and inside the Al-Aqsa Mosque, which is a rare opportunity for non-Muslims.

This application, especially for Palestinians - whether in exile, refugee camps or on one side of the wall - offers an opportunity to bypass checkpoints, barbed wire and borders, and to move without permission within a united country, such as Jed Baramah, the old man in Jericho who has not seen Gsm since 1973, to be put the helmet of this application on the head.