Hamas War

Showing posts with label bomb shelters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bomb shelters. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2026

War Musings #71 Real Life Under Attack

 

My simple battery alarm clock

I first posted this as a "rant" on my Facebook page and then realized that it needs wider exposure. I know that some people won't agree with me. I want to make it clear that we don't have a "safe room" certified shelter in our house, but our house was built relatively well, double outer walls and a ceiling prepared for a second floor. My husband and I are both "elderly" and don't run out of the house when there's a siren. We go to inner walls away from windows, but when sleeping in bed... we rarely do more than cover ourselves. Sorry that's the truth and the situation with many people I know, even if their homes are more fragile than ours.

Another important point is that the alerts, which come by cellphone, are 5-10 minutes before a missile may reach our area. Most of the time, even when followed by a siren 5-10 minutes later, the missile was destroyed by the Iron Dome. And many of the missiles would have landed miles and miles away. 

"Last night's "alerts" were the last straw for me. I had gone to sleep early because of total physical and emotional exhaustion, but a couple of hours later I was awaken by a serial of alerts via my cellphone. Except for Shabbat and Jewish holidays, it's kept on -not just during the war- and within grabbing distance of my bed. It's also set with an alarm for those super rare nights I sleep late.

The alerts we get are supposed to give us time to get to a "safe" location, just in case the "sighted" missile may land nearby; if there actually is a missile close by the siren will shrill. A very high percentage of the warnings are NEVER followed by a siren. So last night I was woken for no reason at all. None of the sensed missiles ended up near Shiloh. We weren't actually in danger.
That's it for me. I plan on turning off my phone at night and turning on my simple battery alarm clock. When I wake in the morning, I'll turn on my phone."

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Bibi Moral Eunuch, Israel Disgusted!!

Prior to the announcement of Israel's signing an Egyptian brokered "ceasefire" I kept on hearing ordinary Israelis from Israel's south saying that that they're willing to hunker down and let the IDF destroy the Hamas Gazan terrorist infrastructure.
Israel accepts ceasefire, vows to respond with force if it is brokenBy HERB KEINON
LAST UPDATED: 07/15/2014 09:13
Then:
Hamas Fires Rockets on Israel After Egyptian 'Truce'
Israel has accepted a cease-fire - but Hamas has not, lobbing rockets at Israel less than one hour after announcement.
Share on facebookShare on twitterShare on emailShare on printMore Sharing Services36By Tova Dvorin
First Publish: 7/15/2014, 10:01 AM / Last Update: 7/15/2014, 11:22 AM
Hamas terrorists fire rockets at Israel
Hamas terrorists fire rockets at Israel
Flash 90
Rockets have fired once again, in a large volley from Hamas in Gaza.
Sirens are sounding in Sderot, Sha'ar HaNegev, Ashkelon, Ashdod, Hof Ashkelon, Beit Raban, Gan Yavne, Kannot, Kiryat Malachi, Be'er Tuvia, and the Eshkol region, shortly after 11:15 am.
Sirens are sounding again at 10:36 am throughout the Eshkol region...

Nu, what are we waiting for?

How many times must the Israeli public watch the reruns? Ordinary people and municipal workers interviewed on Israeli television are disappointed to put it mildly.
"Now we have to clean up and get prepared for the next war/round."
"When are we going to destroy them?"
This is not good. Israelis are no longer falling for the usual line that "the Arabs won't dare attack us."

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu can't claim, as did the Biblical King Saul, that "the people made me," because it's very clear that not even the unabashedly Leftist Israeli media could find Israelis who wanted a ceasefire. Bibi has lost the support of the people.

A year and a half ago, after our previous useless "mini-war" I met up with friends to visit the southern city of Netivot. We saw the few downtown "shelters," which certainly can't protect too many people.

Let's finish them off already!! Destroy the Hamas Gazan Arab terrorists now!!

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Countdown: 40 Years Since the 1973 Yom Kippur War

As a mother, I must admit that when it comes to that "The 40th Anniversary of the Yom Kippur War: A Global Conversation" (a facebook page to promote Yossi Klein's latest book) there's an element not everyone takes into account.  Those who were babies during the war are now forty years old.  My second daughter is one of them, meaning that I had two very young children to care for during the war.  We lived in Bayit V'Gan, Jerusalem at the time.  Here's the memory I posted to the site/page:

We were in Bayit v'Gan, Jerusalem. The shul was close enough to Har Herzl to hear the assembling buses. The siren went off just as my husband was about to go to shul for Mincha. Then we rushed down to the crowded miklat, shelter with our two very young daughters, and I had to find a way to explain to the elderly American neighbor, without panicking her that she needed to join us.


Memories get confused over the decades; remember that forty years is 4/5 of half a century.  So it's pretty accurate to say that the war took place almost half a century ago.  That must really sound like "ancient history" to many people.

Today Israel is an advanced high tech country, but forty years ago, we were much different.  Having a phone in one's apartment wasn't something one took for granted.  We were lucky, since we did have a phone.  My husband hadn't yet done his required army service.  He was scheduled to be drafted a few months later, so being contacted to go to the army wasn't a problem with us. 

Divisional commander Ariel Sharon  consulting with
Lt. Gen. Chaim Bar-Lev and other officers on the southern front
 (Photo credit: GPO/ Flash 90)
The standard call-up system of the time was coded messages on the radio, during the weather reports if I remember correctly.  Now, that wasn't a problem on weekdays, or even on Shabbat for the non-religious, but once the security experts in the Israeli Government finally realized that war was expected, how could they send out the messages when there was no radio on Yom Kippur, and nobody would even think about turning it on?

Somehow via the few phone calls that were made and answered, buses began to gather at central parking lots in towns and cities throughout Israel.  And when ordinary Israeli reservists heard the rumbling of the buses, they understood that there was a major emergency.  Life was in danger, Pikuach Nefesh, and radios were turned on as reservists awaited instructions.

In our apartment building, we heard the siren and began rushing down the stairs to the miklat, shelter.  I had never been in it before.  I had my infant in either a carriage or playpen and had the very difficult job of trying to get a very elderly English-speaking neighbor to join us.  The absolute quiet, as typical of Yom Kippur in that religious neighborhood made it hard to explain that we needed to be in  the shelter but reinforced that, at least at that moment, we were safe.

As details began to be revealed, Jerusalemites were amazed to find themselves in one of the safest parts of the country.  Prior to the 1967 Six Days War, Jerusalem had always been on the frontline, one awful exposed to enemy-fire border.  Sniper and terror attacks were an expected part of Jerusalem life until the Six Days War ended and the IDF liberated the rest of Jerusalem, plus Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley aka "the west bank*," sic.


One of the great miracles of the Yom Kippur War was the fact that Jordan's King Hussein opted out.   Our forces were spread so thin that we may never had survived if we had to fight on three fronts.  Among the stories I heard from my neighbors, whose husbands were serving in the army, in the playground, while we cared for our young children, was that we had garbage trucks draped with camouflage fabric "patrolling" the Jordan border.  The muffler was adjusted to make as much noise and fumes as possible to give the impression that they were dangerous fighting vehicles.  You can call them the "Davidkas" of Yom Kippur 1973.
The Davidka (Yiddish: דוידקה, "Little David") was a homemade Israeli mortar used in Safed and Jerusalem during the early stages of the 1948 Israeli War of Independence. Its bombs were reported to be extremely loud, but very inaccurate and otherwise of little value beyond terrifying opponents; they proved particularly useful in scaring away Arab forces. It is nominally classified as a 3 inch (76.2 mm) mortar, although the bomb was considerably larger.[1][2]
Bli neder, no oath, more memories to come.
*When the late Morty Dolinsky was in charge of the Government Press Office in the 1980s, he once famously replied to a reporter, who asked for information about the West Bank, that he knew no West Bank as he banked at Leumi. Arutz 7

Monday, January 19, 2009

Update: Nitzan caravilla bomb shelters

Update: Nitzan caravilla bomb shelters

by Sara Layah Shomron

Last week the government brought in more make shift sewer pipe bomb shelters. They're smaller and placed in the middle of each cul-de-sac. This makes it much easier for the neighbors to make the 30 second dash – especially if one is toting young children, pregnant, old…



Painted by neighborhood youth
The message translates: secure for Mahadarin (strictest kosher supervision) under Army homefront supervision



benches

They also installed benches. It sure beats sitting on the cold cement. Hmmm, I wonder which creature comfort the government will think of installing next.