“The arson terror kites and balloons come
in the afternoon and the evening, sometimes in the middle of the night.”
That’s when the winds pick up, blowing
from the sea, inland, carrying Hamas’s flying firebombs to the people of Israel.
Israeli firefighter Tal Goldstein stood
in the sweltering heat, telling us about a more terrible heat (I had gone a
special tour to see the impact of Hamas attacks on southern Israel):
“It is our nightmare that a firebomb kite or balloon will land on the roof of a
home in the middle of the night, when everyone is asleep. A family could be
burned alive.”
Many who follow the news about Israel
take note of missile bombardments that send Israelis racing to bomb shelters.
How many truly understand the battle against arson terrorism?
Hamas, an internationally recognized
terrorist organization, openly states that their goal is the destruction of
Israel.
They tried to attack Israel by land and failed.
They tried to attack Israel by land and failed.
They tried to attack Israel underground, spending millions meant to assist the people of Gaza, to build attack tunnels that would allow Hamas commandos to burst from the ground and surprise Israelis (some tunnels targeted civilians, others military installations). They failed at that too.
Plying their ingenuity to destruction, Hamas
came up with an ingenious and diabolical solution – firebombs delivered by
kites and balloons. Children’s toys perverted into weapons of war, to attack
through the air. These weapons don’t need to be imported from Iran. They are
cheap, easy to come by and to the international media, look innocent, even
romantic.
Many media sources have published highly
stylized photos of masked Gazans preparing kites. Who is taking note of the Israelis suffering
from daily arson attacks?
There is no mention of Israeli farmers
who have lost a year’s work, a year’s income in one fire.
There is no notice of the ecological
disaster of torched nature reserves. The small animals, too slow or too young
to run from the flames, burnt alive.
The larger animals, deer, jackals, wild
pigs and even hyenas could escape the flames but have nowhere to return to –
their food sources are gone, their hiding places are gone. Land rejuvenates after
fires but that is when the fires are natural and singular. These are repeated
fires and their damage has reached deep into the earth, burning the seed banks
eliminating them as a possible source for regrowth.
Environmentalism is a popular interest
but not, it seems, when it is the environment Israelis are forced to live in. Standard
carbon emissions are nothing in comparison to being forced to breathe poisoned
air day after day after day…
I experienced a
single day of arson terrorism. The sky was full of smoke, the air in
our home, although we had sealed all the doors and windows, was thick and
difficult to breathe. The smoke permeated our clothes, the stench seemed
embedded in our skin.
And that was just one day.
Can you imagine living in this reality
day after, for months on end?! When you imagine that you will have the
opportunity to begin to breathe freely again, you discover that while there is
no fire in your community, there are fires raging in neighboring communities.
An air pollution expert spoke to us about
the long-term effects of the fires. Unlike breathing in smoke from a bonfire or
bbq where the effects are temporary, here people are breathing in microscopic
particles that are so small they get embedded in the lungs and the body does
not excrete them. These can have a carcinogenic effect, similar to breathing in
asbestos particles. As we are still in the midst of the fires, with no end in
sight, it is impossible to accurately foresee the impact this type of warfare
will have on the health of the Israeli population.
What I do know now is that my friend who
lives in Be’eri, near the Gaza border has reported that she is having difficulty
breathing and has to use her asthma pump all the time – which she has not had
to do in years. Needless to say, this kind of air quality can have immediate
and possibly even deadly impact on asthmatics, the very young or the
elderly.
Kite firebombs don’t sound like a real
threat. Balloons sound even sillier (especially when the balloons are made from
inflated condoms) but this is no game.
Kites have been found up to 40
kilometers from Gaza (24.8 miles!). Just a few days ago a balloon firebomb was
found in Be’ersheba (approximately 40 kilometers from Gaza).
Brush fires occur in Israel but they
are not prevalent as they are in places like Australia or California. Our homes
are not made with wood, fires that do occur inside tend to be from problems in
the electric wiring or with heaters in the winter. Now Israel’s firefighters
are battling flames around the clock.
We laughed when, a few years ago,
Israel’s firefighting service changed their name from the original Hebrew
utilitarian descriptive name: “Fire Extinguishers” to the more evocative: “Fire
Warriors”. Now there is no name that could be more appropriate.
Tal told us about his experiences
battling flames. He belongs to the Ashkelon fire department, the biggest in the
area. Most of the fires they have managed to extinguish within 15 minutes but a
few they battled for three days. Thanks to the volunteers who have arrived from
all over the country to assist, the firefighters have succeeded in containing
most of the fires.
All firefighters risk themselves to
protect others but Israel’s fire warriors have had to fight fire, under fire –
with snipers shooting at them and sometimes mortar bombs falling. They have no
choice but to hit the ground and cover their
heads hoping the mortar bombs won’t kill them and then get up and continue to
battle the flames.
Heroism doesn’t label itself heroic.
There is nothing self-serving or glory-chasing in the true hero. Men (and some
women), like Tal are quietly getting the job done, protecting the people, the
land, our animals, trying to keep the air as clean as possible - doing the hard
work because, if they don’t, who will?