Sunday, October 15, 2023

Israel on the Domestic Front -- At War


"People are hysterical. Companies are not able to provide supplies."
"Their Jewish workers have been called up to reserves or are afraid to come out."
"The Arab workers are afraid to come out."
Michael Rabani, 40, Israeli-Palestinian, owner of two Jerusalem grocery shops
At Jerusalem's Malha Mall, a popular shopping spot, the parking lot is almost empty. Makes sense, since almost every mall shop is closed. Not only at this mall, but across the country. And for a simple enough reason, life in Israel has been turned upside-down, inside-out. Where employees who would under normal circumstances be working in the shops are answering the call for reservists and others to report to the military. 
 
Uniforms and protective vests being prepared for distribution to reserve soldiers, October 10, 2023. (Israel Defense Forces)
Uniforms and protective vests being prepared for distribution to reserve soldiers, October 10, 2023. (Israel Defense Forces)
 
The transformation from a country at peace to one at war after the deadly surprise attack that the Hamas terrorist group sprang on Israel's southern communities close to the Gaza border had an immediate effect. Five days ago the population was busy in its normal routine, people at offices unsuspecting they would soon be back in uniform -- an estimated 360,000 at final count in one of the largest mobilizations in Israel's brief history. Schools have been closed, and local governments are attempting, even as their workforces dwindle, to provide services.

"We're working under fire now, but we have no choice", explained Shaul Schneider, executive chairman of Ashdod Port, Israel's largest where over eight percent of its staff have left to report to the army. Leaving the port authority to call in retirees so cargo can move. When Hamas rockets screech overhead, at times ten daily, crane operators hope for the best. "Unfortunately", said Mr. Schneider, "Israel has experience in such situations".
 
Empty produce shelves at a Machsanei Hashuk supermarket in Jerusalem, on October 10, 2023. (Amy Spiro/Times of Israel)
 
Streets that would in normal circumstances be full of honking traffic, are now still and quiet prevails. Jaffa Street in Jerusalem, popular as a shopping street, appears like a ghost town, lined with flashing police cars. Palestinian labourers who ordinarily work at construction sites have been prohibited entry from the West Bank, so construction sites are shuttered.    
 
The shopping that is taking place is that of families anxious to stock up on essentials. The military Home Front Command instructed Israelis to equip their bomb shelters and basements with several days of supplies. Residents of apartment buildings have been instructed to remove bicycles and personal items from safe-rooms and instead stock them with emergency provisions.
 
Goods donated by supermarket chain Shufersal await distribution, in a photo released on October 10, 2023. (Courtesy)

Israel's largest supermarket chain, Shufersal, as shelves began to empty took the step of limiting sales of basics to two packs of water, two cartons of eggs, two loaves of bread and three containers of milk for the time being. Palestinians living in Israel have been making themselves as invisible as possible as preparations for war proceed. They can feel, they say, the fury in Israel, directed at Hamas.
 
Tzvi Shore, right, with a group of American and British teenagers who came to Israel to join the army.
Group of American and British teenagers who came to Israel to join the army. Ivana Kottasova/CNN

Twenty kilometres' distance from reservists gathering outside Julis military base near Ashkelon, air force planes were bombing the Gaza enclave, likely to become the target anew of an imminent ground war. "It's a big change, but for us very natural. When you live in Israel, you always know that you'll be back in the army", explained Daniel Blum, 30, a counsellor for troubled teens.
 
There are circulating reports the military is struggling to be able to equip the teeming number of reservists reporting for duty. Supplies are being managed, according to army officials; even so civilians organize equipment and food drives across the country. Restaurants have taken to cooking for troops and for civilians displaced by the fighting. A top Tel Aviv eatery, Brothers has been sending 20,000 meals to the south. 
"One of the reasons we're in our current situation is because Israeli society is not connected [referring to the recent protests against the government's judicial reforms plan]."
"If we don't come to our senses and join forces, the situation will become even worse."
Brothers restaurant co-owner Yotam Doktor
https://static01.nyt.com/images/2023/10/13/multimedia/13db-israel-startups-01-zhbt/13db-israel-startups-01-zhbt-jumbo.jpg?quality=75&auto=webp
Israeli reservists patrol streets in Sderot   New York Times
                        

 

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A Hero of Israel

"The woman in the photo is named Inbal Liberman. When it's all over, this woman will receive the Israel Prize. The story of her heroism is a story that will enter Israeli myth for generations. Inbal is the reason that there is one kibbutz in the entire surrounding area that remains unharmed -- Nir Am."
"Liberman, a daughter of the kibbutz, was the first in the entire State of Israel to understand what was happening."
"She ran like mad from house to house, organized the emergency squad and prepared a work plan to protect the kibbutz and placed men in ambushes on the kibbutz's fence."
"All the terrorists who came to the kibbutz were killed at the fence: 25 terrorists."
"A hero of Israel."
Social Media report
https://images.jpost.com/image/upload/c_fill,g_faces:center,h_537,w_822/558321
INBAL RABIN-LIBERMAN.
(photo credit: COURTESY OF THE FAMILY)

Inbal Liberman, 25, served as military security coordinator of Kibbutz Nir Am, appointed in December of 2022. Early Saturday morning, she heard explosions and quickly understood those explosions  were not the same as the sound of the rocket attacks she was accustomed to hearing. She spared no time in further introspection, convinced that something unusual was underway. And because she did, her swiftly-devised scheme of self-defence succeeded in saving the lives of the members of her kibbutz.
 
Hers alone among the attacked kibbutzes, suffered no casualties. Her kibbutz's swift reaction and preparation for self-defence led to the deaths of all the terrorists whose assumption was that theirs would be a day of glorious conquest when they could boast of having massacred Jews in their beds, families in their homes, taken vulnerable children as hostages, burning others in a gruesome orgy of savage barbarism, as occurred in other kibbutzim nearby.
 
Inbal Liberman rushed to open her kibbutz's armory, distributing weapons to her twelve-man security team comprised of other kibbutz members. She then placed them along the kibbutz fence, located a mere stone's throw from the Gaza border. And just in time ambushes were set up for the swiftly-impending arrival of the terrorists they knew were en route. 

And when the aspiring killers-of-Jews arrived in the expectation that they would encounter no resistance by surprised and unprepared kibbutz residents, still drowsy from sleep as dawn was breaking, the kibbutz guards launched their own surprise greeting. The security team themselves gunned down twenty of the terrorists, the Hamas terrorists encountering a wall of gunfire that they had intended as a gift for the Israelis. Inbal herself is credited with having dispatched five of them, herself.

One of the security team explained that Liberman had been instructed by the Israel Defense Forces only to remain on standby. According to Sa'ar Paz of the security team, she took her own initiative in  unsurpassed self-agency decision-making to send her team to various sectors of the kibbutz protective fence with the aim of protecting the kibbutz through her meticulously planned defence scheme.

Man holding Israeli flag as in the background IDF artillery shooting.
 Ilia Yefimovich/picture alliance via Getty Images
 
"I'm not a hero."
"I'm still digesting everything that I'm going through, which is why I'm not telling the real story yet. I promise you will hear from me."
"There are so many people on the ground, still fighting for their lives, and there are still many who fought beside me and around me."
Inbal Liberman

 

 

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