An ex-PLO terrorist turned peacemaker last night travelled to Belfast to reveal how he transformed his life of violence.
Walid Shoebat (47), who was brought up in Bethlehem as a Muslim, became a  member of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) as a teenager and was  involved acts of terror and violence against Israel.
Walid, who yesterday  visited a synagogue in north Belfast, said he was raised to hate Jews - but now  is the founder of an organisation that seeks to combat anti-semitism and promote  peace in the Middle East.
Following this change in ideology he has  received death threats from his own family.
"I was very much anti-Israel  growing up," he said.
"I never understood the plight of the Jewish  people, never understood the Holocaust. 
"When I grew up, every aspect of  my life, the social, the religious, education, music and arts was very  anti-semitic.
"So that in itself produces a terrorist."
During his  youth he was involved in the attempted lynching of an Israeli soldier and was  later imprisoned in the Russian Compound, Jerusalem's central prison after he  was caught during a botched bombing attempt.
After his release, he  continued his life of violence and rioting.
However the course of Walid's  life changed when his parents sent him to the United States to get a better  education.
"I've seen members of my family killed and I've seen blood on  both sides.
"I decided in 1993 to put an end to it.
"My wife was a  great influence as she sparked the things that I needed to think about when I  tried to convert her to Islam - she was a Mexican American.
"She asked me  to show her what the problems are in the Bible, because she asked me why should  she leave her basic Christian heritage.
"I said I don't know what the  problems are, I've never read the Bible.
"She asked me, 'Do you always  criticise things before reading it?'"
"That sentence sparked the idea of  me reading it and finding the problem.
"But by the time I finished  reading it I found my problem.
" That was a revelation for  myself."
However his decision to convert to Christianity led to Walid  being disowned by his family.
" I got threats from my family," he  said.
"My brother called my wife he told her, 'Tell your husband we know  what you are doing against Islam and we know where you live'."
Despite  the threats and loss of family Walid says he has not changed his  beliefs.
" You'll never wash away the struggle that you go through, you  can't put a closure to it, because my family are still living and I love them,"  he said.
"And I love the Palestinian people. 
"A lot of people  would think that if somebody changes the way they think they hate their own  past. That's not true."
Walid added that he believes in order for peace  to be achieved speaking the truth is vital.
"But I believe in the truth,  and everything that I've said since '93." 
 
 
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