Tuesday, July 8, 2014

The Longest One Minute of My Life

Just a few minutes ago my friend, Rabbi Eric Gurvis, and I were walking to our apartment after an evening program at Hartman when we heard the tzeva adom (red alert) siren go off. We were across the street from the Jerusalem Theatre several blocks away from our apartment building. With only 1 minute to find shelter (in locations like Sederot and Ashkelon the timeframe is 15 seconds) we sought refuge under a few trees and behind a wall. Ironically that one minute felt like an eternity. We decided to make our way home when we heard an explosion in the sky, the sound of an Iron Dome missile intercepting the Hamas fired Ketusha or Grad missile. We continued to walk quickly not knowing if more missiles were inbound. When we reached our apartment building we found other residents emerging from the miklat (bomb shelter) in the lobby. They asked us in Hebrew if we had heard the siren and the explosion and if the alert was over. We told them they could return to their apartments. Watching the news we are learning that missiles were fired at Tel Aviv, Ashkelon and Jerusalem. I am very grateful for the Iron Dome system which the United States supplied to Israel, and to AIPAC which has played a crucial role in lobbying Congress for the funding of this life saving defense system.

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