"I feel like I’ve lived four or five lifetimes,” says Mark Pellegrino. He’s in the lobby of the Inbal Hotel in Jerusalem, getting ready to head out for a tour of Yad Vashem on his last day of a week-long trip to Israel.
The rugged TV star, who has been featured in roles on Lost, Dexter and Supernatural, was on his maiden exploration of Israel together with almost a dozen members of the American entertainment industry.
Among the delegation were Sonequa Martin- Green from The Walking Dead, Daniel Dae Kim from Lost and Hawaii 5-0 and Meagan Good from the films Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues and Saw V.
They were hosted by America’s Voice for Israel, a US-based organization that has been bringing delegations of celebrities, athletes and taste makers to Israel for the past decade.
Pellegrino said that he had been impressed by the breadth and scope of the Israel he had seen, specially lauding Rambam Medical Center in Haifa and the African Hebrew Israelite community of Dimona where he said he saw people “integrating philosophy with life and using knowledge to make the world a better place. In that respect I feel like Israel is unique in this region.”
Writer and film producer DeVon Franklin was also on the trip, calling the experience something that “starts the journey, it doesn’t end it.”
Acknowledging that the media makes Americans wonder if Israel is safe and that the “safety piece is what keeps people away,” Franklin said that the trip showed them “not only that it is safe, but it is actually more peaceful than you’d think,” a comforting thought for people who might want to visit, but in Franklin’s words, “[they] think they’re not going to be OK.”
Actress Sonequa Martin-Green, who is set for a banner year in 2017 after being cast as the lead role in a TV reboot of the Star Trek series, came with her husband Kenric, who also has a role in The Walking Dead.
They were excited to be in “such a spiritual land, where [so many] of the worlds’ beliefs reside.”
For Kenric and Sonequa, touching the rock of Golgotha, where Jesus was crucified, was their most “impactful moment,” but the couple also raved about their experience seeing doctors in action at Rambam Hospital in Haifa and being baptized in the Jordan River.
Acknowledging that the people they met along the way were just as impressive as the historic and religious sites they saw, Sonequa said, “All the people that we’ve met from all the different walks of life here, they’ve all said something that we can carry with us.”
Editor's note: This article has been edited from the source material.