Atallah and Khamis Al Sairafi are calling their project The Palestinian-Jordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al Sairafi Nablus.
Palestinian twin brothers Atallah and Khamis Al Sairafi, 60, wave from the cockpit of a Boeing 707 being converted into a restaurant in Nablus in the occupied West Bank.
The aircraft being converted into a restaurant that the brothers are calling The Palestinian-Jordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al Sairafi Nablus.
Atallah and Khamis Al Sairafi climb into the fuselage of the Boeing 707. Electricians and painters are working on the aircraft, which will become a restaurant and events hall.
A technician drills holes in the cockpit of the aircraft in Nablus in the occupied West Bank. The plane was bought by the twins, former scrap metal traders, for $100,000 from an Israeli in Kiryat Shmona, northern Israel.
A youth stands in the cockpit of the aircraft being converted into a restaurant by Palestinian twins Atallah and Khamis All Sairafi
The brothers high-five each other inside the Boeing 707.
The Al Sairafi twins, former scrap metal traders, expect to open their plane's doors to customers within a month.
The fuselage of a Boeing 707 being converted into a restaurant in the city of Nablus.
Atallah and Khamis Al Sairafi are calling their project The Palestinian-Jordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al Sairafi Nablus.
Palestinian twin brothers Atallah and Khamis Al Sairafi, 60, wave from the cockpit of a Boeing 707 being converted into a restaurant in Nablus in the occupied West Bank.
The aircraft being converted into a restaurant that the brothers are calling The Palestinian-Jordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al Sairafi Nablus.
Atallah and Khamis Al Sairafi climb into the fuselage of the Boeing 707. Electricians and painters are working on the aircraft, which will become a restaurant and events hall.
A technician drills holes in the cockpit of the aircraft in Nablus in the occupied West Bank. The plane was bought by the twins, former scrap metal traders, for $100,000 from an Israeli in Kiryat Shmona, northern Israel.
A youth stands in the cockpit of the aircraft being converted into a restaurant by Palestinian twins Atallah and Khamis All Sairafi
The brothers high-five each other inside the Boeing 707.
The Al Sairafi twins, former scrap metal traders, expect to open their plane's doors to customers within a month.
The fuselage of a Boeing 707 being converted into a restaurant in the city of Nablus.
Atallah and Khamis Al Sairafi are calling their project The Palestinian-Jordanian Airline Restaurant and Coffee Shop Al Sairafi Nablus.