. "4575"^^ . . "Trempiyada (accent on the syllable -ya-) is Hebrew (\u05D8\u05E8\u05DE\u05E4\u05D9\u05D0\u05D3\u05D4, derived from the German trampen) for a designated place at a junction of highways or main roads in Israel from which hitchhikers, called trempists, may solicit rides. There are often many people waiting at trempiadas, and passing motorists often stop to pick them up. Trempiadas often also have bus stops at the same location. Some scholars have pointed out the religious or spiritual connotation that hitchhiking carries in Israel. Nehemia Akiva Stern writing for the University of Pittsburgh argued that it's \"almost exclusively practiced by religious Zionists, mainly youth...primarily within the West Bank\" and that \"in short, the practice of hitchhiking within the West Bank is a ritual of sacred travel.\""@en . . . "1059226449"^^ . . . . . . . . . . "Trempiyada (accent on the syllable -ya-) is Hebrew (\u05D8\u05E8\u05DE\u05E4\u05D9\u05D0\u05D3\u05D4, derived from the German trampen) for a designated place at a junction of highways or main roads in Israel from which hitchhikers, called trempists, may solicit rides. There are often many people waiting at trempiadas, and passing motorists often stop to pick them up. Trempiadas often also have bus stops at the same location."@en . "Hitchhiking in Israel"@en . . . . "8530198"^^ . . . . . . . . . . .