There are many details here with which most of us are
familiar. We know about the call-ups, about the streets empty of able-bodied
people for weeks as everyone waits. We are familiar with the dread that people
felt and the overwhelming feeling of betrayal that Israel faced, realizing that
no other country cared enough to help.
What Rabbi Feldman brings to the stage is his unique
perspective. He lived through these days as an American on sabbatical in
Israel. He could have left at any moment, and was actually encouraged by his
family in the States and by the American government to get out. Yet he and his
family stayed; in doing so, they lived through some of the most significant, terrifying,
exhilarating and ultimately victorious days in our history.
While reading his journal, I was moved and surprised by how much
I related to many of his experiences, as an American Olah living here 50 years
after the war. At the beginning of the book, writing about the efficiency with which
the call-up takes place, Rabbi Feldman writes, “In view of the pathetic
bumbling, hopeless red-tape, and buck-passing bureaucracy of almost every
aspect of public and governmental life in Israel, the remarkable efficiency of
the mobilization is miraculous.” While the bureaucracy has certainly improved, I’m
often surprised by the juxtaposition of inefficiency and efficiency in our
daily lives.
There are so many anecdotes with which I can relate, even so
many years later. I’ve always been touched by the news we still hear every
hour, on the hour, in Israel. It amazes me that the country is still small
enough to have a national news review, and that the situation here is still
ever-changing enough to need this review hourly. In the middle of the book, he
wrote,
Even with today’s hyper-connected world, I can picture this happening.“Every few hours the radio carries messages to and from the soldiers and their families: ‘Chaim Zohar’s wife and daughters from Ein Hanetziv wish Chaim well and ask him to write.’ ‘Yosef Kohen is fine and sends love to his family in Haifa and tells them not to worry, everything is b’seder.’”
In one humorous account, he recalls going to the post office to send a telegram, and watching as the post office clerk changes every person’s message to include only positive alerts. As Rabbi Feldman explains, “He edits and deletes and rewrites and censors – a word here, a phrase there. If the outside world this morning is receiving unusually ecstatic messages from a country at war, they have this clerk to thank.”
Short and easy to read, the book is uplifting and inspirational. It’s certainly a great reminder to those of us who have moved to Israel and set our future with this tumultuous, miraculous country. It’s a life-affirming account of one family’s tenacity and victory, along with a nation’s.
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