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Tuesday Mar 04, 2008
Living with Rockets: A typical day in Sderot Posted by Anav Silverman
Comments: 14
A typical Sunday in Sedrot. I begin the week working for Sderot Media Center in Sderot, realizing that I am coming to work in a middle of a war-zone. There are all kinds of indicators of Sderot being a rocket-shelled city besides the sirens and rocket explosions. Streets are emptier than usual, Sapir college usually teeming with life, has few students on campus, schools have let out traumatized students early, and the list goes on. Simply speaking to residents makes one understand that the Israelis of this region live in fear for 24 hours, seven days a week, even on days where there are only three rocket attacks. Everyday errands like buying food in the supermarket or mailing letters in the post office have become routines of terror and fear as these routines are punctuated by red alert sirens and rocket attacks. This Sunday morning is a perfect example. I am standing in the check-out aisle in a local Sderot supermarket when the red-alert goes off. All the customers and co-workers race to the back of the store where the shelter is located. We are some 25 people crammed into a tiny shelter, counting the seconds after we hear the boom. An old lady complains that she can't continue to run like this. The manager of the store tries to calm everyone down. When it is safe, we come out cautiously, awaiting the next siren and the next rocket explosion. I have never shopped in fear like this before. The next stop is the post office, where I mail my family a package back home. During the 30 minute wait, two red siren alerts go off. Once again, the same panicked rush to the shelter. A few seconds later we hear the rocket explosions. I spend the next few hours with our camera and video crew photographing and filming the rocket attacks. One of the Palestinian rockets is fired at a neighboring kibbutz, Nir Am. We find the rocket buried deep in the backyard of a home, just a few meters away from actually hitting the building. A group of kibbutzniks gather nearby and an elderly lady, Chana, tells me she was in her home when she heard the rocket explosion. "The explosion was so loud, that I thought that the rocket landed in my own yard," she says. "We were fortunate this time--no one was hit and no building damaged. But what will happen next time?" asks Chana.
Meanwhile, the rocket routine back in Sderot is interrupted by a visit from Silvan Shalom, his wife Yehudit, and Maccabi Tel Aviv representative, Roni Mane. A crowd has gathered in the center square of Sderot to hear the visitors speak.
The threesome has come to support the people of Sderot, as MK Shalom endorses a new bill to help small businesses in Sderot and in other surrounding towns which have been hit by Kassams. The Maccabi representative also promises that a new basketball stadium will be built for Sderot residents and their children, "to keep Sderot children off the street." One Sderot father, clearly distraught, interrupts, stating that most Sderot children do not play on the streets anyhow, "because the Kassam rockets have forced parents to keep their children inside for more than a year now." The politicians speak, the camera crews film and the people of Sderot live in a rocket circus, as visitors come and go. In the evening, I debate whether to spend the night in Sderot or at a friend's house in kibbutz Nir Am. It has been a long day at work, with 40 or more Kassams being fired at Sderot and the western Negev, along with three grad Katushya missiles at Ashkelon. As I am pulling out money from the ATM machine, another red alert goes off. I find myself far away from any bomb shelter so I take cover near a stone wall nearby along with a couple of other men. We wait as the whistle of the rocket can be heard overhead and the loudest explosion of the day occurs yet. The rocket hits an electricity line, causing a blackout in the city for a few minutes. I am dazed and shocked as the night sky lights up with the yellow sparks of the electricity pole into which the rocket has smashed. At that moment, I decide on sleeping at Kibbutz Nir Am. Of course, Kibbutz Nir Am is not that much safer from the Kassam rockets than Sderot. Neither is Ashkelon, as the city has now experienced the rain of grad Katushya rockets, with one falling close to the home of Israeli Internal Security Minister, Avi Dichter last week. Dichter warned back in December 2007 that the rocket fire from Gaza will threaten up to 250,000 Israelis living in the region including the cities, Ashkelon, Kiryat Gat, Netivot and numerous other towns and kibbutzim. As the war continues in the south, I wonder just how long it will be before the rockets reach Tel Aviv and central Israel. The rocket circus that the Palestinian terrorists have set up from Gaza is bound to include other major Israeli targets in the show sooner rather than later.
1 | Jack B., USA, Wednesday Mar 05, 2008
This is excellent writing and very informative. I find it difficult to understand why Israel's government lets its citizens be attacked so relentlessly. After all, Israel does have the ability to stop the terror from Gaza. This is a matter of security and justice -- it should not matter which political party heads the government. Leftist or left-leaning leaders have had power in Israel for at least a decade. Their policies seem more of a disaster with each passing day.
2 | Roddy, Thursday Mar 06, 2008
Here's the problem: The Bush government is pressuring the Olmert government to "restrain itself" in Gaza. Why? Because the Bush family fortune is closely dependent on the Saudi royal family. It's that simple. It takes a strong Israeli leader to stand up to Bush. Right now, no such leader exists.
3 | Scot A., Thursday Mar 06, 2008
One does not sit down and negotiate with the terrorists. The only language they understand is to fight fire with fire. The sitting down to "talk" is a nice idea--but it is ONLY an idea as long as the people who call themselves
"palestinians" indoctrinate their children with
tv programs with a mouse and a bee calling all Jews filth in the land. The Arabs enjoy being the "victims" and political pawn is the call of the day. The Israeli government is way too left and they will be begging for a TRUE warrior to lead Israel against the thugs from the terror/muslim and arab world.
4 | carole, israel, Thursday Mar 06, 2008
Brilliant informative article...why can't you arrange for its syndication throughout the world media. Then maybe the outside world will understand the plight of Israeli nationals
5 | Jack Parker usa, Thursday Mar 06, 2008
Their is no peace, Gaza needs to return to it's rightfull
owner.
6 | Akin London, Thursday Mar 06, 2008
We hardly hear what happens in Israel in British media. I am shocked with what I read in this article.
7 | Levani , Suva Fiji, Friday Mar 07, 2008
This is the result for "THE LAND FOR PEACE AGREEMENT" .Those terrorists want the land back just to launch their cowardly acts closer to the nation of Israel.
8 | Gidon bennett ...Tel Aviv, Friday Mar 07, 2008
For every rocket out of Gaze Israel puts one back in exactly where the the rocket was fired...stop the so called talks and cut of all electricity,and aid...within a month you would see a totally different situation with Hamas & Co wanting to broker a deal.....Israel should stop bowing to world opinion,...It is because of this that the Hamas thinks it has a chance.and the conflict continues. Grow up Israel your 60 this year...starting acting like an adult,and dont worry what others say about you.
9 | J.Glikstern, Friday Mar 07, 2008
Why wouldn´t the Government of Israel push back the border and create a de-militarised zone wide enough for the rockets not to reach Israel? Why drones are not used to seek out the scumbags that launch the attacks? Why IDF do not destroy a house or two or five for each rocket fired?
Wake up Olmert1
10 | Steven Chermak New York State USA, Saturday Mar 08, 2008
I wish the political left in my country could see this article and the reality of life in Sderot. The left is mostly pro-Palestinian and anti-Israel. I have never been able to figure out why that is. Many leftists wondered what we did to make the terrorists who killed people on September 11 angry, rather than expressing anger at the terrorists. It is discouraging because the efforts from people of their belief results in too much pressure on Israel to make concessions to terrorists who want Israel eliminated. Sorry, I don't have an easy answer how to turn this around, I wish I did.
11 | Bannister San Francisco, Saturday Mar 08, 2008
How many decades or days before Hamas or AlQuaeda lob WMD armed Missiles into occupied Palestine?
If you say "Never" , it would seem one must have a plan which will deter a suicidal attacker from Dying with far more massive casualties.
The Paradox of Technology is that it is equalizing.
12 | P Fanning USA, Saturday Mar 08, 2008
I cannot even imagine what it would be like to have to live in the constant fear people do.
It infuriates me how the world media manages to make Israel look like the villian regardless of the circumstances.
Israel MUST defend herself at all cost before her enemies do exactly what they have threatened to do and I wish the US Gov would keep their noses out of Israel's business and stop putting pressure on the government to give up even more land!
P Fanning
13 | DS, Dallas, Texas, Sunday Mar 09, 2008
It is time for Israel to deal with Hamas in a forceful way. Rocket attacks are unacceptable. Gaza is a dung hole, that needs to be cleaned out. Good thing Israel left the Gaza strip...you see how the Palestinians repay the favor?? The answers to the problem are not easy, but tit for tat might not be a bad thing here...they shoot kassam rockets, give them a few rounds from US made howitzers, might make them think twice, though thinking has never been something the palestinians were good at....
14 | Ted S. , USA, Sunday Mar 09, 2008
My heart goes out to the brave men, woman and children undergoing these unrelenting attacks. I find it incredible that this has been going on for so long, yet I fear these pigs are setting some kind of trap to lure the IDF back into gaza. I also understand that any strong response will only result in more unfair anti-semite condemnation. As we saw in Lebanon, a strong bombing response will ultimately drive them from the border and calm things down. Let's bite the bullet and bomb them back.
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