The one-woman show was directed by Pnina Gary herself, and it is still performed by Adi Bielski, who won the Israeli Best Actress Award in Fringe Theater in 2009 for this multi-character role.
[12] On April 13, 2013, the play premiered in Paris (translated from English to French) under the name "Une histoire d'amour israélienne".
In 2016 the film (in Hebrew) "Sipur Ahava Eretz-Israeli" was released, inspired by the monodrama, starring Adi Bielski (as "Margalit Dromi") and directed by Dan Wolman.
[citation needed] In October 2016, the play was translated to Spanish and performed for the first time in Lima, Peru under the name of "Una historia de amor israelí", directed by Gonzalo Tuesta, starring Macla Yamada as Margalit Dromi.
Therefore, the name of the play implies that the story takes place in the British Mandate of Palestine before the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948.
A year has passed and Margalit is sent by the Nahalal's culture committee to the Youth Instructors Seminar in Kibbutz Yagur.
The policy of the White Paper resulted in Holocaust survivors fleeing from Europe, being treated as Illegal immigrants.
He tells her, that he has separated from the girl from Yagur, and co founded a new Kibbutz, Beit Keshet in the Lower Galilee.
When she alights the bus, immediately after Ami told her he was busy and couldn't join her, his friend Motke asks her out.
Margalit cries her heart out to her roommate, Mikhal, who excitedly mentions that her cousin is a member of Beit Keshet.
At Beit Keshet, Margalit is happy to hear from Mikhal's cousin, that there are vacant beds in his room, and that his roommate is some guy called Ami Ben-Avraham.
In Beit Keshet, On the nearby hill under the Carob tree, Ami shows Margalit the surrounding view.
He points at the houses of the local Bedouin tribe and tells her that their leader, Sheikh Abu-Nimer, is a friend of his father and always declares that he is Ami's brother.
After driving in an armored car, through road barriers, in the pouring rain, she reaches Beit Keshet, only to learn that the cows were just bait.