Wednesday May 28, 2008

Living with Rockets: Netivot: The next Sderot?

Posted by Anav Silverman
Comments: 4
Decrease text sizeDecrease text size
Increase text sizeIncrease text size

This past Saturday, May 24, two red alert sirens activated throughout the western Negev city of Netivot. Two grad Katyusha rockets, fired at the city's population of 30,000, fell in open fields.
 
Founded in 1956 as development town, Netivot is home to a large number of Sephardi Jews from Morocco and was established three years after the formation of Sderot. Although Netivot has not experienced rocket fire as intensely as Sderot, Hamas’s more frequent use of grad Katyushas is making Netivot a target for Palestinian rocket fire.
 
Netivot is about 11 kilometers away from Gaza, slightly further away from the Gazan border than Ashkelon. The first grad Katyusha struck Netivot back in October 2007, landing several hundred meters away from a residential area in Netivot.
 
Grad Katyushas are a more sophisticated version of the Soviet-designed Katyusha rocket and can reach a range of 20 kilometers.
 
In light of the growing rocket threat, Netivot was connected to the red color alert system, familiar to Sderot and other western Negev cities including Ashkelon, only two weeks ago. Yehiel Zohar, Netivot's mayor, stated that the attack on Ashkelon's mall, convinced him to activate the alarm in his city.
 
The siren system, known as Tzeva Adom, activates when a laser device feels the heat of the ground as the rocket is fired. The siren allows Israeli residents between 10-15 seconds to escape to shelter before the rocket lands.
 
The trauma of sirens and rocket explosions is relatively new for Netivot residents, although that is only a matter of time according to Netivot resident, Meital Ohayon. "It is only a question of time when Netivot begins to experience the rocket terror as frequently as Sderot."
 
Meital describes the experience of the siren warning and grad-Katyusha explosion on Saturday morning, as unsettling and disturbing. 
 
"At 6:30 am in the morning on Saturday, I heard the siren go off throughout the city of Netivot," says Meital. "At first I thought I just imagined the siren so I woke up my sister and asked if she heard the siren. Suddenly we heard a tremendous BOOM, and I knew then that a Katyusha had been fired at us."
 
"My sister and I were both shaking from the explosion," says Meital. 
 
"It is only a matter of time before Netivot residents will become experts on these rockets," says Meital. "That angers me because I know that the residents of Netivot, like Sderot will also be ignored by our government."
 
Indeed, back in October 2007, when a grad-Katyusha hit Netivot, the city's mayor stated that the government had denied funds to Netivot for civil rocket defense. Zohar stated that the Israeli government will only allocate funds to rocket-shelled communities that are within a 10 kilometers radius from the Gaza border. Consequently, because Netivot is 11 kilometers away from Gaza, the Israeli government will not provide financial help for the community. 
 
"The people of Sderot before the disengagement in 2005, had no idea of what was to come in regard to the rocket fire," says Meital. "In Netivot, I once believed that we would never understand the meaning of 15 seconds either." 
 
"But now, even the conversations on Shabbat are beginning to revolve around the Katyusha rockets," says Meital. "During the meal last Shabbat, our neighbors debated whether it was safer to remain at home or run out to the bomb shelter, hoping to make it within 15 seconds of the siren sounding."
 
"I am even more frightened to think that this terrible routine of sirens and rocket explosions, known too well in Sderot, will soon become the normal routine in the city I was born and grew up in," says Meital.
 
Approximately 60 Sderot families have relocated to Netivot during the past seven years of rocket fire. "It is absurd to think that these families will have to move again," say Meital.

BOOKMARK or SHARE: technorati digg del.icio.us reddit newsvine facebook What's this?
Print
Comments: Post your own comment
1  |  Jake TUSA, Thursday May 29, 2008
Israel...(Govt) I don't understand you at all. One mile out of the Katusha rocket area and you refuse airial defense for Netivot? Are you mishugee? Where is Moshe Dyan and Ben Gurion when we need them? Get rid of this Olmert desease...The new Rome (radical Islamic terror) is at your gates. Send back ten rockets, indiscrimanatly back to Gaza for every one to Israel. Let the Gazans "duck" for cover. It's war! And in war civilains are killed...ask the residents of Hiroshima and Berlin!
2  |  Robert, Canada, Thursday May 29, 2008
Every town or cities self defense force should have an artillery battery and it should be automatic that a return salvo be fired at a mosque, power station, water station, sewage plant, police station , Hamas members homes, or other Hamas institution.
3  |  Jeff Florida, Saturday May 31, 2008
The residents of these communities near Gaza are crazy to continue living where rockets are showering down on them. The Israeli govenment is so corrupt that it doesn't protect its citizens. The people of these communities need to move further away from Gaza to protect their own lives. The arabs are laughing out loud that the Israeli government is instructing their people to listen for sirens then make a mad dash within a few minutes to a bomb shelter. This is probably the only comedy most arabs get in their lives. Jews have b ecome a joke to the arab world. Israel doesn't even respect Jews.
4  |  Susie Atlanta, GA, Saturday May 31, 2008
I can just imagine Mexico firing daily rockets into a small southern Texan town and President Bush restraining himself!! Can you imagine his tirade if the internat. community blamed the US for such an outrage and expected the US to use restraint??? Peace is a wonderful thing that is easy to talk about, but I can only imagine what hell 'peace' is for Sderot and now Netivot. Who understands the pressure the Israeli gov. is under from the Int. commun. and at home. It can't be easy to watch the rockets and they have my prayers for G-d to lead them now in His plan and it will work for all Israel.
Add your comment remaining characters
Name and Location *

NOTE: Comments are moderated and will not appear on this blog, until they have been reviewed and deemed appropriate for posting.

For more information, please see our
Readers' Submission Policy.

E-mail * (will NOT be published)
--------------------------------
* All fields are required

About this blog

Living with Rockets A glimpse into life under fire as told by inhabitants of Sderot, young people who devote their time to volunteer in the city and by writers from the Sderot Media Center.

Search this blog

Archives
Combined feed for all JPost.com blogs

Most Popular Posts

  1. Separating fact from fiction
    Posted in In the Trenches by David Harris
    Tuesday Sep 02, 2008
  2. Germany, the Jews, and business with Iran
    Posted in A Point of View by Abraham Foxman
    Wednesday Sep 03, 2008
  3. Why they love Livni
    Posted in The Warped Mirror by Petra Marquardt-Bigman
    Sunday Sep 07, 2008
  4. The public wants to know
    Posted in A-vital Blog by MK Colette Avital
    Tuesday Sep 02, 2008
  5. Commanders are just regular guys too
    Posted in Army Life by A.J.
    Sunday Sep 07, 2008

Recent Comments

Cliff Ross: The entire World wonders why the Israeli Government does not strike back with massive force when Israel gets attacked. The government seems too worried about any collateral damage that may occur by retaliating . This has to change. The response to an attack should be so massive that the terrorists will either stop altogether, or slow down a lot. Israel must need a new Government ! ! Make it happen, Israel ! !
Baruch: Just think how much the govt has saved: 1) not doing anything to prevent the rockets from beng fired 2) once the rockets are fired, making every effort possible not to pay for damage caused. If this situation wren't so sad, it would be hilarious.
Peter, San Francisco: May G-d love you and keep you safe. Bless your children because they are your future. Shalom.