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Sderot Update from the Jewish
Agency
Dear
Friends,
Last
Tuesday, barrages of kassam missiles
again shook the city of Sderot and the settlements
of the Western Negev and we again paid a heavy
toll in injuries and damage to property. But all this is nothing compared to the
high emotional price which thousands of area residents have been paying for
several years, as they face a cruel and heartless enemy who aims
missiles at population centers,
schools, educational institutions, community centers and villages for youth in distress and unsettles
everyone’s lives.
On Friday
I went to Sderot. I went to be with the residents, to show solidarity with
their suffering. To listen to them. To offer the assistance of the
Jewish Agency to the city and its residents. Several minutes before I
arrived in Sderot, three rocket barrages fell on the city, one of them making a
direct hit on a house. As I entered the city I saw ambulances passing,
evacuating the wounded to the hospital.
I would
like to share with you the trying experiences which I witnessed as I met with
the mayor, civic leaders, residents, senior citizens, children and youth, whose lives depend each day on the
warning sirens which are heard only seconds before the missiles land. Families living in daily fear and anxiety. Children who have learnt to keep against the wall on
their way to school. Mothers and fathers who are afraid to leave their
children at home even for several
minutes. Young people who have lost their joy of youth and have matured
before their time. The emotional distress, anxiety and tension seen
clearly in their eyes.
And all
this, my friends, is happening in the light of day, in the midst of audacious
attacks against civilians whose only
crime is that they chose to live close to Israel’s border, across from the Gaza Strip, a
wasp’s nest of terror and hatred of Israel. The Government of Israel
restrained itself for a long time and did not respond, so as not to aggravate
the situation. Until there was
no longer any choice.
As soon
as I heard of the renewed rocket attacks Tuesday evening, I turned to my friends
and colleagues in the UJC and UIA Canada. Knowing the leaders and their
commitment to the State of Israel and its citizens, there was no doubt in my
mind that, like last year, when the Second Lebanon War broke out in the North,
this time as well they would be the first to come to the aid of the residents of
Sderot and the surrounding communities and give us their commitment to make
emergency assistance available for
Jewish Agency activity in the immediate stage as well as for the longer term of
the summer.
In
parallel, we started to organize Jewish Agency activity in Sderot and the area’s
settlements. On Friday morning we already took out the first group of
dozens of children from settlements in
the area for a break of a few days in Jerusalem. In addition, we are planning a
series of activities, among them treating terror victims and their
families, taking more than 8000 young
people out of the area for activities and time out, in partnership with the
youth movements, young communities and students villages which we support, as well as assistance to
businesses, etc.
Representatives of the Jewish Agency have been on hand since Tuesday and
are in constant contact with the local systems in order to identify needs in the
area so that our activities will be
focused, efficient and as valuable as possible.
This
provides me with the opportunity to commend the wonderful partnership we have
with the UJC and UIA-Canada, with Keren Hayesod and Jewish Federations around
the world, who through their faith in us, enable us to be a leading and
significant factor in assistance to the citizens of the State of Israel the
whole year round and especially in their most difficult hour. The
expressions of thanks and appreciation which I heard during my trip to Sderot on
Friday for Jewish Agency activity for the city and its citizens – these are
primarily thanks to you. Thanks
to the steadfast partnership between us. Thanks to your being with us and
your commitment to the Jewish People and the State of Israel.
This is also an opportunity to thank the employees of the Jewish
Agency for their speedy reaction, dedication and professionalism which proved
itself in the Second Lebanon War and will surely do so once again.
As the
bridge between the Jewish People in the Diaspora and the State of Israel, we in
the Jewish Agency and World Zionist Organization are committed to the mission of
being in the forefront of activity on behalf of our brethren in distress whether
in Israel or anywhere in the world.
At this time, during this emergency in the south of Israel,
we all join together for the sake of those who so need us.
Zeev
Bielski The Jewish Agency for Israel
Results of a kassam rocket attack
on a school in Sderot
A kassam rocket lands on a child's
bed in Sderot
An Israeli child runs for a bomb
shelter in Sderot during a kassam rocket attack
Hamas:
Jews Must Flee Ashkelon
Nizar Riyan, a Hamas leader in Gaza, says his
organization is determined to have Israel wiped off the map and be replaced by a
state called Palestine. Speaking with the Hamas television station, Riyan called
upon the PA Arab factions in Gaza to keep fighting the Jews "even if the Arabs
and Abu Mazen do not agree, until the last Jew leaves Palestine."
Further dispelling any illusions that only Judea and
Samaria are contested lands, Riyan called for the bombardment of Ashkelon "until
its Jews run away just like those of Sderot. The Arabs were expelled from Sderot
and Ashkelon, and now the time has come to expel the land-stealers and allow the
Arabs to return."
Ashkelon Mayor Roni Mahtzri is to meet with the
Director of the Prime Minister's Bureau Monday in light of the threats facing
the city. Mahtzri has already had meetings with top government and military
figures on the question of how to protect Ashkelon from a feared onslaught of
Kassam rockets. The city of Sderot, besieged for over five years by Kassam
rockets, has many non-reinforced homes and schools; Ashkelon's population, close
to 110,000, is more than five times that of Sderot.
In late 2005, intelligence sounded a warning that
Ashkelon was already in range of Kassam rockets and that the city would
eventually be targeted. Within a few weeks, rockets began hitting the southern
outskirts of the city almost weekly, often landing near the Rotenberg Power
Plant. The station is Israel's second-largest electric station, supplying about
a quarter of Israel's electricity.
Meanwhile, Cabinet ministers are threatening Hamas
leaders with personal liquidation. Infrastructures Minister Binyamin Ben-Eliezer
(Labor), a former Defense Minister, said Monday that terrorist officres and even
Hamas government ministers must be targeted directly, in addition to those who
plan and execute Kassam attacks. Public Security Minister Avi Dichter said
Monday that even Hamas prime minister Ismail Haniyeh and exiled leader Khaled
Mashaal are legitimate targets.
To those who urge talks with Hamas, analysts say:
It is too late. Hamas leaders are no longer seeking acceptance from the
world community or anyone else, but have got the bit between their teeth, so to
speak.
Gaza, according to one intelligence agence's
estimation, is today the most powerful Islamist terror base in the world. The
only agenda for talks with Hamas now would be terms for Israel's capitulation
prior to its demise.