percentage of the Israeli population. Israel’s largest, most densely populated cities,
including Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Haifa, are under threat. But not under siege.
me know if you think these rocket blasts are stopping Israelis in their tracks?
Operation Protective Edge (Tzuk Eitan) Ra’anana
drive back to Ra’anana where we are staying in a friend’s apartment. Sitting in
the car, I am reading the news and hear of rockets falling in Ashdod and
Sderot. My son calls me from Rishon L’Tzion to tell me there have been rockets
fired near his army base. Hmm, that’s right outside Tel Aviv.
apartment building is.”
ever used my own bomb shelter to store wine.
later, we hear two loud explosions overhead. It is the Iron Dome intercepting
two rockets on their way to Hadera perhaps? Wherever they were headed, they
were close.
floors below the apartment. I go onto the Home Front website and learn that I have 90 seconds to get to a shelter when I hear the siren. I decide to sleep in my
clothes. Just in case I have to run.
in Jerusalem. This city has also been targeted. Should we go? Of course. We do
not give it a second thought.
Jerusalem is brimming with tourists and is as vibrant as ever. We go to our
appointments. Nothing is cancelled. It is business as usual.
Refaim for lunch at Cafit and have a pasta dish with a cold beer, then stop for chocolate ice cream at Aldo’s. We stroll along the street with our ice creams. Music
is playing in the cafes, people are shopping in the markets and children are biking
and playing in the parks.
stop for a second then get on with their lives.
We hit the highway back to Ra’anana.
meeting in an office tower, the secretary runs in and says “Tzeva Adom.” Red Alert? We did
not hear a siren but follow her out of the office into the bomb shelter down
the corridor and continue our meeting there. The secretary remarks that it is nice to finally chat with the workers in the other offices.
![]() |
| Mingling in the office bomb shelter…. a bit like chatting around the cooler? |
group on his phone that beeps with new messages of road closures, rockets that
land nearby and threats of Bedouin uprisings.
glances at his phone, then continues with the work at hand.
orchard and are told that with so many hi tech high rise buildings in this area, this is a prime target. No one around here seems to acknowledge this potential threat. It is now lunch time and hungry office workers must dine on sushi and
salad outdoors in the sun.
talking to us, her cell phone rings.
outside of Sderot with three small children, I understand why she picked up the
phone so quickly. Her daughter, she tells us, lives in a house
that is a bomb shelter. So if they are in the kitchen or bedrooms, they need not
run when they hear the siren. The children’s school is also one giant bomb
shelter. This is how they have had to adapt to nine years of pummelling from
Hamas.
sounds. Our doctor thinks her daughter will soon pack the kids in the car and head to
Ra’anana.
every time a rocket is fired into Israel and tells us the location. We know many rockets have been landing but are in shock at how often the phone is
beeping.
Read about how our technically savvy population has become aware of the rockets falling.
with diners eating outside. Kids are mingling on the street and couples are out for
a stroll.
buying challot in the bakeries and sipping espressos in the coffee shops.
a siren. It is soft but distinct. People grab their kids and rush. A man
directs me to a sheltered area under an awning, but I decide this is not safe and
run with a family to a stairwell. We stand there for a minute and hear a big
“Boom.”
I am standing with a couple who have a young boy and no one seems frazzled. It almost looks as if they have dashed in here to get protection from a rain storm. Surreal?
After another minute, we go outside. An old man is pointing up and
shows me smoke in the sky just to the south. The Iron Dome.
sure their loved ones are fine, then go back to sipping their coffees. My husband
did not even hear the siren. Think I
will go back to the apartment and keep the windows open. Just in case.
husband and seven-year-old son have slept right through the siren. She is very
anxious and is on the phone every few minutes trying to call home. She seems to be the most panicked person I have seen all day. Finally her
husband picks up the phone and she blasts him. In Arabic.
enjoy life in spite of its challenges. This video clip taken today at the beach
tells the surreal story.
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My husband’s phone continues to beep the Red Alerts as sirens blare in different parts of the country. Constantly. There have been over 700 rockets fired into Israel so far and we must be prepared. But we will not cower. Contrary to our enemy’s desire to create chaos and terror, we aspire to live as normally and fully as we can.
Shabbat Shalom (in the most peaceful sense of the word).
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