My 1967 Israel
war experience started off, literally, with a bang.
Since the
end of January, or the very beginning of February that year, I had been living
and working at Amatzia, a moshav shitufi affiliated with the Betar
movement.
Amatzia today (top left) with three new communities
of those who were expelled from Gush Katif
Founded as a Nahal outpost in 1955,
it was abandoned by its garin and Betar took it over in 1956. My madrichim in Betar, who, like me,
participated in the Jewish Agency’s Youth and Hechalutz Department Machon
L’Madrichei Chutz La’Aretz program, had also done their agricultural hachshara
period at Amatzia for the previous few years.
At Amatzia
we were five Betarim, two members of ZOA Youth and one other Belgian who
somehow ended up with us later on. The
location was right on the border with Jordan, opposite the villages of Beit-Awa and Idna. Amatzia had always been a target,
first for the Fedayeen who operated from Egypt and Jordan in the early 1950s
(the distance from Gaza to Amatzia was not that long)
and starting in 1965, for
the Fatah. Several times we were alerted
to infiltration actions, some more successful than others.
During my stay at Amatzia, we had several incidents. Here's a newspaper clip from Davar in February on the discovery of land mines:
In mid-April we were informed we would be leaving for the onion fields later than usual as the IDF had to defuse a bomb planted under a culvert just outside the moshav entrance. Another time, an explosive was placed on the gate (which was locked at night). The newspaper clip:
On the
evening of Yom Haatzmaut, we listened on the radio to Shuli Natan singing Naomi Shemer’s “Jerusalem of Gold” and after
we had finally gone to bed, an explosion was heard. In a new area with houses under construction,
we were informed, an infiltrator had placed an explosive under the building
(all the houses were built raised off the ground). Here's the front-page item the day after Yom Haatzmaut:
The next
morning I traveled to Jerusalem to watch the parade and to participate in the Betar demonstration planned for the parade.
Due to
pressure from various countries, foremost the United States and Great Britain,
and the claim that the armistice agreements prohibited the presence of heavy
military vehicles in Jerusalem a city they asserted that Israel was not really
the sovereign power over the area, no tanks were to be included in the parade that
would come from the area of Binyanei HaUmmah, down Jaffa Road and then turn
right up King George Street. That was a demeaning demand and, as Betarim, that
wasn’t going to pass without a protest but, since the Israel government had
yielded, the demonstration was to be directed at their authority.
I made my
way to the local Jerusalem clubhouse, what we called the Maoz, which was located on King George Street in a 19th century building called Talitha Kumi (it was taken down in 1980 for the
project of the Rejwan Building and the Lev Yerushalayim hotel. The Maoz was under the Bank
HaPoalim offices). There, inside, some
two dozen Betarim were finishing off three or four “tanks” cut out of plywood
and painted as a tank on one side and on the back, the slogan ‘We Are Here!’.
At the
appropriate time, we walked out, trying to keep ourselves as unobtrusive as
possible. In this picture, the building
to the right of the red line was one side of a driveway which led into the
forecourt in front of the former school and now a place of youth clubhouses and
lawyers’ offices and where, in the dark corners outside, prostitutes would
engage in their occupation. On the other side was also a building and so we did
manage to sneak out to the sidewalk without problems.
The signal
was given and we broke into the parade.
I was in charge of photographing the event (as far as I know, no one
else took pictures). Below are the
“tanks” breaking in, some of us marching along, an altercation and the remains
of the “tanks” after the police halted our protest.
And here is a short news item the following day in a newspaper but it isn't quite strong on facts. As I wrote, we burst into the parade (and not after it was over) and we didn't proceed more that 75 meters or so, short of Ben Yehudah St.,
Some of us
then linked up with the “Chugim Leumiim” (Nationalist Cells). Dr. Israel Eldad, a member of the Lechi
command council had launched, at the end of 1966, a monthly called HeHazit (The
Front) and in the basement of the Ezry Gallery on the corner of Hess and King
David Streets conducted weekly seminars and lectures which I attended during my
Jerusalem period on the Machon.
In
preparation for the parade, Eldad had thousands of small leaflets printed up
with a picture of the Kotel and the caption of “The Wall Is Still in
Captivity!”. While Rabbi Tzvi Yehuda
Kook was speaking to the Merkaz HaRav Yeshiva about the territories of
Eretz-Yisrael we had lost in 1948, Eldad was doing the same. We spent the next two hours handing out the
leaflets.
I returned
eventually to Amatzia (in truth, I can’t recall if I slept over that evening in
Jerusalem) and we continued our schedule of work which included: collecting
eggs, weeding the onion fields (those were closer to Kiryat Gat) and riding
herd for Amatzia had beef cattle.
If you look closely, you'll notice a holster for my Uzi on the saddle. And that day we were informed that Nasser had
begun moving troops into Sinai.
Life, at
first, went on without too much of an immediate change but slowly, our lives
were altered. Reservists started to
arrive and their equipment came along.
Foxholes were dug. We spent
several evenings at Little Ben’s house at the end of May loading up ammunition
for the semi-heavy machine guns (the MAGs).
The atmosphere was just like back in New York at the Betar office on
Nassau Street when I worked to get out the monthly newsletter and included
chatting, coffee and, instead of paper to be folded and placed into envelopes,
bullets were slipped into feed-belts.
With the increase
in the level of security concerns, the windows came off to be replaced by
blankets. Foxholes were dug between the
homes. The boys were supplied with World War II ‘Czech’ rifles and we joined guard duty responsibilities. We were given
World War II British army helmets which had only one strap. That being the case, more than often, the
helmet was not tightly held in place, at least mine wasn’t, and would slip a
bit when I walked. Once, at about 2 AM, after
taking one step in my patrol near the fence, with the next one, the helmet
would slip and, striking my glasses, would make a metallic sound which, at that
time of the night, would carry for a bit.
I passed by
one house, in fact, someone who knew me quite well, and I heard his wife loudly
whisper, “I hear a strange sound outside. Maybe it’s a terrorist?” But her
husband reassured her, saying “don’t worry, it’s only Winkie”.
On June 4, I
took off to visit the group of Betarim, and some other youth movement members,
you had been the first group of volunteers who flew in the previous week to
assist Israel and its work force caught up in the third week of mobilized
reservists. As it developed, they were
the vanguard of thousands who came prior and during the summer. They were in Bar Giora (or Mevo Betar), a Betar moshav in the
Jerusalem Corridor.
I made my
way there and even got to participate in a first-aid course lecture. A bit ominously, it dealt with severe
shrapnel wounds to the stomach that would cause heavy bleeding. That meant that
everybody had to practice picking up another and carry him/her on one’s back to
help stem the bleeding in addition to any bandaging we applied. After ten
months without meeting close friends and some of my own madrichim, we spent
time afterward catching up.
The next
morning, I left for Jerusalem on my way to Tel Aviv to pick up I am 99% positive Chaim (Chuck) Hornstein who arrived to volunteer and who
was waiting for me at the Metzudat Ze’ev movement headquarters on King
George Street. Just as the bus was approaching Jerusalem, coming up the hill
from Motza, the 8 AM radio news report came on and we all learned the intense
fighting had broken out in the South. I
alighted and reversed direction towards Tel Aviv. There I picked up Chuck and
proceeded to the old Egged bus station.
The normal
bustling atmosphere was significantly subdued and as it was, we caught the last
bus headed for Kiryat Gat. After more
than nine months in the country I was quite at ease with the fellow passengers,
one of whom had a few chickens with him, live ones that is. Another was an Arab
dressed traditionally and that seemed to unnerve Chuck a bit but after 90
minutes or so, he managed to overcome the fact that the reality of life in
Israel is different from what one conceived in New York.
We made our
way to Amatzia and were received accordingly which perhaps for the volunteer,
was perhaps less than he expected. The routine of work and guard-duty
continued. I recall one evening when we were given a lecture by an Army office
explaining that if Jordanian tanks did manage to penetrate Amatzia’s perimeter,
we should not lose courage but, with a blanket and Molotov cocktail in hand, we
should carefully approach the vehicle, stuff its treads with the blanket and
ignite it with the firebomb. I thought to myself, ‘am I in a Hollywood World
War II movie?”
At another
self-defense lecture, one of the wives and a mother as well, upon being told
that if, indeed, there was a collapse of the perimeter defense, all the women
and children were to go to the one underground shelter, piped up. “I demand we be supplied with Uzis.” She
continued in a demanding tone, “we all served in the Nahal and we know how to
use the gun and that’s what’s it for.”
The war came
and we went into emergency procedures which were heightened awareness, extra
guard-duty, windows covered with blankets after the panes removed and such.
Some of the dried-up grass was purposely set aflame so that a clear view of the
approach from the border was afforded as well as removing possible hiding
protection for infiltrators.
We spent many hours in or near a fox-hole.
Me (left) and Yonel Charbit (right)
On the
second, or perhaps, third day, our soldiers spotted tanks and an air force attack
was called in. And, that was it. It
really didn’t even last the full six days on our front. The war was over except
for one incident a few days later when it was discovered that several score
Egyptian commandos, believing that Jordan was still in control of the “West
Bank”, had attempted to escape by crossing from Gaza and had been caught in the
fields just west of Amatzia.
The day
after Shavuot, we drove up to Jerusalem to participate in a ceremony honoring
the Betar and Irgun members who, since 1930 and until 1947, had blown the
shofar at the Western Wall as Yom Kippur finished. Giving in to the Muslim Waqf
demand that the act of the shofar being blown was a violation of the status quo,
a British White Paper in November 1928 proscribed it and it was made official
in a recommendation of an International Commission in early 1930.
And the mandatory (no pun intended) Kotel picture:
From there,
we traveled to Bethlehem and then on to Hebron and the Cave of the Patriarchs. Later on, there was an additional hike, led by Dr. Eldad, to Battir, site of the fortress Betar.
L-R: Chaim Fischgrund, Nissan Teman, Eli Solomon הי"ד, and me
Another trip was to the Women's Prison in Bethlehem where Geula Cohen, Rabbi Aryeh Levine and Dr. Eldad, among others, addressed dozens of former 'residents' of the jail.
A third trip I remember was to Tzur Natan and a walk east and drinking warm goat's milk from the udder via a canteen
I finished
my service at Amatzia and returned to Jerusalem for the summation seminar of
the Machon. There we were informed that
the Jewish Agency had told our parents during the war that all was well with us
as we had been placed “in the center of the country”.
I came back
on Aliyah with my wife Batya in 1970, arriving by boat after a 12-day trip, and
we moved into the Betar Students Hostel in the renewed Jewish Quarter on Plugat
HaKotel Street.
^
2 comments:
Received from Robin Feldman, my ZOA fellow Machonik:
"Thanks. Brought back memories. One event you might not have been aware of was Ruth Weinberg going into labor the evening after the army had taken Jerusalem. One of the machonicks got the tender ready and told me that if the baby came, he would pull over and let me deliver it. I had been staying with Ruth and Eddie. Eddie stayed with their 2 year old, Dorit and I joined Ruth in the jeep. We drove out Amatzia and didn't get too far when we encountered an army convoy. We were driving without lights as were they. I don't remember what I said (my Hebrew was much better then) but I convinced then to let us pass. We got Ruth to the hospital (I don't remember which one) and left her there. We drove back to Amatzia without incident. David was born about 15 minutes after we dropped Ruth off.
I remember doing practice drills going into the bunker. There were a lot of small children on Amatzia at the time. I know I got some of them to count the number of steps down, which would be useful if we were to take cover after dark."
Post a Comment