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In Israel, Remembering The Yom Kippur War
Israel News Agency / Google News ^ | October 8, 2008 | Joel Leyden

Posted on 10/08/2008 12:10:34 PM PDT by IsraelBeach

In Israel, Remembering The Yom Kippur War

By Joel Leyden
Israel News Agency

Jerusalem ----October 8, 2008 .....As I wrote the below account 5 years ago, the first time retracing steps taken thirty-five years ago during Yom Kippur in Israel and the US in October 1973, memories began to pour back along with the anxiety and tears that we all experienced at the time. For many of us, the scars of war will never heal. Nor should they.

Sitting in the relative safety of a suburban Long Island home, I first heard news reports of Arab armies attacking Israel on October 6, 1973. It was not exactly clear what was transpiring in the Middle-East. News accounts were censored and the media was not overly kind to Israel.

I heard my father Bernard say that Israel's UN Ambassador Abba Eban was to address the United Nations General Assembly. I did not know of Abba Eban, I was expecting an Israeli to speak with a thick Israel accent that most would not understand. Abba Eban had served Israel and Israel's public relations efforts in a manner that was not appreciated by Jerusalem, but only to world Jewry which saw this man as a brilliant leader.

Due in part to faulty intelligence and arrogance, Israel was unprepared for a Syrian and Egyptian surprise attack. The Yom Kippur War took the lives of 2,688 Israeli troops.

My family had just extended our green, tree lined, middle-upper class home in Westbury, New York. Our living room was now twice the size, with shining white marble floors, a bear rug, antique chandeliers and the latest TV and radio players. I sat down on one of the soft couches with my father to watch Abba Eban address the world on a color television set.

I watched as this portly man in a neat two piece suit wearing large black glasses walked down an aisle at the UN and took his place at the podium. He spoke clearly with an English accent. A voice which embraced all of the desperate passion of the moment. His English accent was a surprise. To an American, we are seduced by this English UK mother tongue twisting of vowels and nouns. It says to the American ear that the speaker is "authoritative".

Eban was the first professional Israel public affairs professional to serve the Israel government. His gifted and creative talents went unnoticed in Jerusalem as Golda Meir requested F-15's and not PR from the US.

Weighing each and every word that Eban smoothly articulated, we awaited the latest news of what Israel was facing. Then I heard a defining sentence.

"This was a brutal and unprovoked attack in great mass by Egypt and Syria across the cease-fire lines," said Eban.

Israelis don't speak like this. They never admit weakness. To use the word "brutal" meant that Israel was bleeding. At that point I knew that Israel's very survival was in jeopardy. I said to my father that I was going to go to Israel to help out. He shrugged with disbelief. He must have asked himself where would a teenager find the money and an aircraft which would fly a young boy into a war zone?

My father was a Jewish activist, he was and remains a Zionist. He served as the Chairman of the Transportation fund raising division of the United Jewish Appeal, was the president of his Temple and was a consultant to Israel's Ministry of Defense in New York.

I had been in Israel only the year before as a Kibbutz volunteer. It was the most romantic summer of my life. To wake up at sunrise, to be driven by tractor into the lush, green banana fields and then to sit down for a breakfast of fresh scrambled eggs with sweet halva was paradise.

It was Ma'ayan Baruch, a kibbutz located directly on the Israel - Lebanon border which was founded before the War of Independence by South Africans and Americans.

I also had family in Tel Aviv, warm people who greeted me as if I was one of their sons. Israel was all that I expected it to be. A romantic, exotic and pioneering state where all of the people pulled together. The collective warmth was infectious. As I left my many months on kibbutz, I promised that one day I would return to this Jewish state and make it my home.

As Eban walked off the UN podium and the news anchors began to deliver commentary, I walked into my bedroom, closed my door and called Kibbutz Aliya Desk - a center for volunteers to Israel located in New York City.

I asked if I could immediately volunteer for a kibbutz in Israel. I expected a negative response. Who had time for some kid from New York who wanted to pick apples at a time of war?

"If you come to Israel to assist us and promise us that you are not coming to fight, then we may have room for you on a flight in the next few days." I had to pay a very small fee as the flight was subsidized. I went into New York City the following day for an interview. They accepted me and I was to leave from JFK airport to Israel on October 11.

My parents were in disbelief. I remember how my father was proud of my actions, as my mother cried and begged him not to let me go. But as a young man, I had decided my course and now had the means to implement it.

I arrived at the El Al terminal at JFK Airport with my parents and was rushed by security up to the El Al VIP lounge. Now it sunk in. Here I was with a few hundred other people going off to war. We knew our lives were expendable as soon as we would step on board the aircraft. Tears flowed like a river in that terminal. It was a quiet, surreal scene, where I held back my own tears as not wanting to make the situation more tense.

I kissed my mother on the cheek, smiled and said I would call her upon arrival. "Don't worry," I said. "I am going to pick apples, I will not be shooting anyone." I stepped on board the aircraft, now somewhat afraid of what was in front of me but overshadowing this fear was the knowledge, the adage: "If not me, then who?"

There was no conversation on the plane. It was not as if you were traveling to Jamaica on vacation. There was no laughter, only quiet reflection. Many questioned themselves, would we actually make it to Israel or be shot down in flight?

I sat next to a medical doctor who had volunteered as well. He assured me that all would be okay. He said that his specialty was trauma and that he was now assigned to an army hospital in Israel. I was in good company. These were people of action. This was the Jewish nation standing up and being counted when it was most needed.

As we approached Israel, the pilot made an unusual announcement. He wanted us to close our plastic window shades. I guess the pilot, as many El Al pilots who had served as an Israel combat pilot previous to taking these commercial positions, knew a bit more than we did. Having a "lit candle" of civilian passengers flying into a war zone was not the best tactic that one would suggest.

As I looked outside one final time, I saw a grey, combat fighter flying off our left wing - just yards away. Then I heard the pilot make another announcement. "Don't worry - the combat jet which is flying next to us is one of ours."

Now the reality of war was all around us. There was no turning back. I thought that if I lived through this - so would Israel, if I died, then I would have given my life no different than those who had resisted the Nazis.

As the plane's wheels touched Israel soil, we applauded. We were not applauding the pilot and listening to tunes of Hava Nagila - we were applauding the fact that we were alive. That we had made it past the first hurdle and that we were only minutes away from physically joining our brothers and sisters in their defense for Israel's very existence.

The terminal was empty and dark. All of Tel Aviv was blacked out. Window shades were drawn on all of the homes and buildings we past. Even the headlights of cars and buses were painted blue. We were a group of about 40 people. I later found out that we were a few hundred foreign volunteers accepted from thousands who had applied.

We were the "official Israeli war volunteers" and we were greeted in the kindest manner. But we never forgot for a second that we were not on the front line - that there were others who were in far more danger than us and those Israelis who were assisting us in Tel Aviv were related to brothers, husbands and sons now in uniform.

The Yom Kippur War lasted for 3 weeks, starting on October 6, 1973 and ended on October 22 on the Syrian front and on October 26 on the Egyptian front.

It was evening in Israel. We were taken by bus to a large youth hostel in Tel Aviv by the Hayarkon River.

Holding luggage and wearing backpacks we mingled quietly outside on the grass next to the buildings. Then someone started to read our names out. As they went through the list, we were instructed to enter one of the buildings. As I walked in, I saw several dining tables all with candles burning. This was not Shabbat. We were in a blackout. The mood was eerie. Little conversation, no laughter and much reflection. A bearded man in his thirties stood up and made a prayer. He then spoke in English and thanked us for coming to Israel. He said that we would face very difficult days ahead, but with god's help, that we and all of Israel would be fine. We began to drink hot matza ball soup.

You could not escape the tension and anxiety. This was not the smiling Israel I had known from a year ago, neither was this Long Island. We were together, but yet alone as we sat and ate our first meal in the Yom Kippur War.

After finishing our dinner of chicken and mashed potatoes, we again mingled outside on the grass. We were taken to our rooms by flashlight.

We awoke early in the morning and after a brief breakfast, again heard our names called out. We were taken to buses which would take us to Tel Aviv's Central Bus Station.

It was a busy scene of soldiers coming and going. Then I spotted a long line of dark green ambulances with the white and red Magan David stars on their sides. These were military ambulances. With curiosity, I slowly walked over to one of the vehicles. I discovered that it was an emergency mobile blood donation station. I looked at the soldier in charge and gestured that I too wanted to donate blood. He wrote my name down and I stood in line. Next to me was another young war volunteer from France.

He didn't speak English and I knew no French. We just smiled at one another. We were both asked to enter the ambulance at the same time. There were two cots on either side of the ambulance. We rolled up our sleeves and as our blood began to drip into plastic bags, we again smiled at one another, tears began to form, we did not need words.

As we both stepped off the brown Israel Defense Forces ambulance, we shook hands. I said good luck in English and he said the same in French. We now looked for our buses which were to be identified by number. Buses which were to take us somewhere in Israel, it was anyone's guess. After a few hours I found myself on the Israeli-Jordanian border.

It was a quiet journey. The dusty roads were vacant except for an occasional IDF truck, jeep or tank quickly rolling by.

About five of us stepped off the bus at Kibbutz Beit Zera. Located in the Jordan Valley about 15 minutes south of Tiberius, Beit Zera was another Ma'ayan Baruch, another magical, romantic kibbutz with palm trees, apple orchards and haystacks.

We walked past the main gate and were greeted by the head of the volunteers. A one-armed Israeli kibbutznik in his late twenties. His warmth was evident from first eye contact. A warmth which remained consistent throughout the ugly, dark days ahead. He led us across a large, open grassy field to a group of wooden huts. This was to be home for the next several weeks. All seemed tranquil, as this is the normal environment for a kibbutz. But the tranquility lasted less than 24 hours.

At first it was the super sonic booms of low flying IDF aircraft intercepting Syrian fighters. We would run out of our shacks after being rattled by these heavy thuds, thinking that the kibbutz was being bombed.

We would stand out in the open field, point our binoculars towards the sky and watch dogfights taking place above us. We could make out the Israel planes from the Syrian MIGs. It was always the Syrian MIG which would be seen exploding or going down in a trail of grey smoke. We would yell in exhilaration for our brave brothers in the sky, we would laugh and walk proudly back to our work or beds. But this Hollywood show where the good guy would always win, would not last for long. Another dogfight, more missiles, but this time through the binoculars you could clearly see the Magan David Star painted on the tail or was it a wing, drop from the sky. We fell silent. We cried. We walked back to our beds for a sleepless night.

After two days on the kibbutz I sensed something was wrong. There were almost no men on the kibbutz. They were all in the reserves. Our job was to keep the kibbutz functioning. Whether it was in the factory, the cotton fields or in the kitchen we did our best to keep morale high.

On the third day, I walked over to the volunteers' bulletin board and my mouth opened. On a piece of yellow ruled paper tacked onto the cork was a sign stating: "Premilitary Training for Volunteers."

One of the conditions for which many of us were not pleased to accept was that we were not going to Israel to fight.

Now they were offering us weapons training. Within 24 hours we were taught how to fire World War 2 carbines, instructed where we could find mortars and grenades and the positions around the kibbutz that we should take up if the kibbutz was attacked. There was no more magic or romanticism associated with this kibbutz. The war was not going well and we felt it.

I spent one day working at the kibbutz pool and became friendly with the man who managed it. I didn't see him for a few days and then I spotted him in the kibbutz dining room. He was sitting at a table by himself. With a big smile I walked over to him and asked him how he was. He responded: "my son is dead." I had no words. I was in shock. We were all in shock.

"The situation has become very bad. We will be lucky to see the sun set this evening…... even luckier to see the sun rise tomorrow morning. I thank you from my heart for being here … for helping us…now I wish all of you and us good luck."

As the war worsened for Israel, one afternoon all of the volunteers were called into a meeting set for 5:00 p.m. Having been on a kibbutz, I thought nothing of this meeting except for some kibbutz bureaucracy about to take place or the kibbutz secretary was now, finally going to introduce himself. I was right, it was the kibbutz secretary, but it was not about bureaucracy or introductions. Without wasting anytime he said these words: "The situation has become very bad. We will be lucky to see the sun set this evening…..even luckier to see the sun rise tomorrow morning. I thank you from my heart for being here … for helping us…now I wish all of you and us good luck."

Israel takes the offensive and crosses the Suez Canal. Russia responds with the threat of using paratroopers. The world was now on the brink of WW3

You could hear the proverbial pin drop on the floor. What was actually happening in the south that for which we were completely unaware of was that Israeli troops had successfully crossed the Suez Canal. They were now marching towards Cairo and Moscow had just told the US that if the Israelis did not immediately leave Egyptian soil, that they would deploy paratroopers within 24 hours against the Israelis. We were facing World War Three. The kibbutz secretary, having been briefed by IDF home front command intelligence, expected the Jordanians to enter the war and over run the kibbutz.

We walked slowly back to our shacks. Not a word was muttered. We were just told that we were living our last hours. All we could do was look at one another. We began talking about our families in the States, in the UK and Australia. All of our radios were on. We tried to maintain contact with the kibbutz secretary, but to no avail. We were alone. When we stepped on board that El Al aircraft we knew very well that this scenario could take place. But none of us ever imagined that this could or would happen. We were not prepared. How does one prepare to die?

It was the longest night of my life. As the sun's first rays began to peak over the Jordanian mountains, over the Golan Heights which were nestled at our very door, I remember hearing the sounds of birds singing. The sound of factory machinery drilling and cutting metal and wood. The sun rose and we were alive. I put on a pair of running shoes, as I did often to start my day and set out with a run to the kibbutz entrance and then around the kibbutz. As I approached the entrance of the kibbutz I saw a mass of people. I slowed to a walk. Then as I got nearer I saw that they were carrying an Israeli flag draped coffin into the kibbutz. I stared and cried. I turned around and again retreated to my kibbutz shack. I took off my shoes and just lay in bed.

By this point a very deep cloud of depression hung over the kibbutz. We volunteers, whose job it was to keep the kibbutz functioning and keep morale high could no longer manage a smile.

Finally, I suggested to my roommate Jeffery, a schoolteacher from London, to hitchhike into Tiberius. We needed to get out of this environment. Without hesitation, we grabbed our shoes and some money and made our way to the kibbutz entrance. An army truck stopped and we got into the back. It was a bumpy ride but it was heaven just to leave Beit Zeir. Tiberius was wall to wall soldiers. Some preparing to go the Syrian front, others with mud stained shirts enjoying some Rest and Relaxation in the many pubs.

As Jeffery and I walked into one of the pubs, we realized that we were the only civilians there. We ordered some beer. Many of the soldiers stared at us. In retrospect, they were most likely thinking to themselves why we were not in uniform. One soldier walked over to us and said something in Hebrew. I responded by asking him if he spoke English.

The tension immediately turned to laughter. "You are the volunteers, you are the volunteers who have come from the States and England - yes?" We smiled. I was not quite sure if "we" were the volunteers he was speaking about. "You are the heroes who left your homes to help us. What do you want to eat? What do you want to drink? You pay for nothing," he said.

Another soldier walked over to us and took out a plastic bag of green peppers. "I picked these peppers just outside of Damascus - I want you to have some," the soldier smiled. This was an ambush. A friendly ambush for as we placed the peppers in our mouths our throats began to burn and eyes began to tear. These battle weary soldiers were having a joke on us and we could not be happier. This is why we had come to Israel. We were finally home. And we were alive.

Editor's note: On this Yom Kippur evening in 2008, Israel is not the same innocent country as it was back in 1973. On this evening the Israel Defense Forces, our ground forces, our air force, our naval submarines, the Israel internal security Shabak, the Israel external security Mossad, the Israel police and several Jewish media organizations are at their desks working.

As long as Iran, Syria, Islamic Jihad, Hamas, Hezbollah and al-Qaeda continue to declare to "wipe Israel off the map" Israel will stand tall. Let it be known that here in Israel - on this sacred of sacred days - we are watching everything in Damascus and Teheran. Nothing will go undetected on or outside our borders.

There will be no more surprises.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Israel; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: godsgravesglyphs; idf; israel; terrorism; yomkippurwar

1 posted on 10/08/2008 12:10:34 PM PDT by IsraelBeach
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To: IsraelBeach

God bless the armed forces of Israel!


2 posted on 10/08/2008 12:13:13 PM PDT by chippewaman
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To: IsraelBeach

I’ve been a Zionist since 10th grade, when I read Leon Uris’ “Exodus”. That essay brings back those days when the fire of Israel burned brightly. Since becoming a Christian 26 1/2 years ago, it’s only become stronger. I truly believe we’re in the last days, and those Israelis are living out the prophecies of Daniel, Ezekiel, and Revelation.


3 posted on 10/08/2008 12:30:49 PM PDT by HammerOfTheDogs
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To: IsraelBeach
This is like Chicken Soup for the Zionist Soul.

very inspiring

4 posted on 10/08/2008 12:41:20 PM PDT by Smedley (It's a sad day for American capitalism when a man can't fly a midget on a kite over Central Park)
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To: HammerOfTheDogs
On this eve of Yom Kippur its important to wish all a peaceful fast and a wonderful new year. May it a a year of peace for the USA, Israel and all of the world
Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting

Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting


5 posted on 10/08/2008 12:55:02 PM PDT by ncfool ("Obama been lying. "Get it? Sounds Like "Osama bin Laden"?)
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To: IsraelBeach

I have tears in my eyes, thank you for posting this. :-)


6 posted on 10/08/2008 1:15:22 PM PDT by gura (R-MO)
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To: IsraelBeach

Thank you for posting this! I was in my freshman year of college when the Yom Kippur war occurred. I remember that I was very worried about Israel’s survival, and though I wasn’t especially religious at that time, I prayed that God would not let Israel fall.


7 posted on 10/09/2008 4:36:53 AM PDT by Convert from ECUSA (“Do you know the difference between a hockey mom and a pit bull? Lipstick.” - V.P. Sarah Palin)
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To: AdmSmith; Berosus; Convert from ECUSA; dervish; Ernest_at_the_Beach; Fred Nerks; george76; ...

The Man Who Predicted the Yom Kippur War
Vision and Values | Frontpagemagazine | October 06, 2008 | Dr. Paul Kengor
Posted on 10/06/2008 5:54:50 AM PDT by SJackson
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2098586/posts

Israel on high alert for Syrian, Hizballah Yom Kippur attacks
Debka | October 8, 2008, 11:05 AM (GMT+02:00)
Posted on 10/08/2008 5:58:04 AM PDT by Perdogg
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2100354/posts

Yom Kippur riots in Akko
JTA | 10/10/2008 | Staff
Posted on 10/10/2008 1:29:59 PM PDT by forkinsocket
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2102581/posts

Three Jewish rioters hurt, Arab home set ablaze in latest Acre
Haaretz | 10/12/08 | Jack Khoury and Reuters
Posted on 10/11/2008 9:26:58 PM PDT by Nextrush
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2103574/posts


8 posted on 10/12/2008 4:36:08 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_______Profile finally updated Saturday, October 11, 2008 !!!)
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To: StayAt HomeMother; Ernest_at_the_Beach; 1ofmanyfree; 21twelve; 24Karet; 2ndDivisionVet; 31R1O; ...

· join list or digest · view topics · view or post blog · bookmark · post a topic ·

 
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To all -- please ping me to other topics which are appropriate for the GGG list.
GGG managers are SunkenCiv, StayAt HomeMother, and Ernest_at_the_Beach
 

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9 posted on 10/12/2008 4:39:13 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_______Profile finally updated Saturday, October 11, 2008 !!!)
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To: SunkenCiv

i remember yom kippur,

ariel sharon kicked some arab butt!


10 posted on 10/12/2008 4:47:40 PM PDT by ken21 (people die and you never hear from them again.)
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To: ken21
He sure did. The surprise the Arabs managed led to the ouster of the Israeli gov't, and the cost of the war was enormous in life, reputation, and treasure. But the fact is, Israel outfought Syria and Egypt, despite surprise and long, intelligent planning by both; innovated new tactics to counter massive numbers of SAMs in both theaters; annihilated almost 1000 Syrian tanks; and (as you noted) Ariel Sharon got his wish to carry the fight "into Africa" and onto Egyptian soil. Israel was and remains grateful for the US airlift, begun when a embattled President Nixon ordered, "send everything that will fly". Despite the much greater distances, the US out-airlifted the USSR, and (unlike the Soviets) sent exactly what was needed.

Operation Nickel Grass
Google
Seventh Brigade Golan
Google
This one can't be posted on FR (copyright complaints, I've tried in the past), but it is well worth the surf:
Yom Kippur War: Sacrificial Stand in the Golan Heights by Gary Rashba

11 posted on 10/12/2008 5:24:28 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (https://secure.freerepublic.com/donate/_______Profile finally updated Saturday, October 11, 2008 !!!)
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