The rancher said he feared for his life and the lives of his family and the volunteers working on his ranch. “One of the four was holding a large knife or pruning shears over his head,” Dromi said. “After the first shot, I fired five more shots at the lower parts of their bodies. My life was in danger and I shot in order to chase them away.”
A few weeks ago, a neighbor of mine and one of his sons went down to Sderot to check out the true situation. I asked him for a report, and he said that the most moving thing was their talk with Shai Daromi, the Negev farmer who is being prosecuted under the full weight of the law for defending his life and home.
The newspapers may be ignoring it, and all the enemy-loving-leftists may try to excuse it, but life in the Negev isn't easy for Jews. Burglary is rampant, and personal safety is at a low. The Bedouin and Arabs rule, and as we see in the "Shai Daromi affair," the justice system protects the criminals.
Not only has the "law" prosecuted Shai Daromi, but they have forbidden him from returning to his farm, his livelihood.
Here's a report of his "trial."
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