Nothing to do. For a guy like me who never drove from TLV to Neve Yaakov, or never drove in Yerushalayim (ended up right near Al-Aqsa), or drove back from the north and for some (extremely) odd reason didn't get directed via Kvish 6 (did on the way there).. One minute you're in the heart of Jewish Israel and a minute later your surrounded by Abduls..
Actually, I would be surprised if it DID route you through the 6. The 6 is less efficient in some ways, and costs money to use. The road you were probably routed on is called the Kvish Habik'a (Jordan Valley Road), which is route 90. This road does, indeed, pass through some Arab areas - but is under Israeli control and considered to be quite safe. There aren't more incidents on that specific road than other roads in Israel - it's just as safe as any other road.
I don't understand where seichel comes into the equation when driving around unknows roads, especially when relying on a GPS...
My comment wasn't directed at you specifically, but at GPS users in general. I have heard too many "horror" stories from tourists who did not use seichel along with their GPS. I.e. if you see signs on the highway that says "Ramallah, next right", "Shechem, next right", "WeHateJewsville, next right", etc, and the GPS says "exit on right", don't just assume that the GPS knows what it's doing, just because it's set to avoid bad areas! Rather miss your exit on purpose, and let the GPS redirect you! Yet so many people just follow the GPS, without even looking at road signs altogether, counting on the little machine's intuition. That's where seichel is required...
Aderaba, if you have some fullproof tips to never end up in Arabland please share as I am IYH going there in a few months (as of now I'm considering not renting for the above mentioned reason)...
No problem, we'll have a mini-DO, you'll tell me which places you want to visit, and I'll tell you what to look out for.

Definitely not a reason to avoid driving here. You just need to take proper precautions. Like I always tell guys, if my wife can drive the Kvish Habik'a at night, you can do it too.
