Personal encounters with a ‘ball of fire’ in Sderot

The 300th aerial attack from Hamas-ruled Gaza since the last cease-fire .

Rocket remains found at Sderot kindergarten 370 (photo credit: Courtesy Israel Police)
Rocket remains found at Sderot kindergarten 370
(photo credit: Courtesy Israel Police)
Since the end of the IDF’s Operation Pillar of Defense, through June 30, 2014, 300 aerial attacks have been launched from Hamas-ruled Gaza toward southern Israel.
The fact that many terrorist organizations based in Gaza proudly take responsibility for firing rockets and missiles toward the Israeli civilian population, and not necessarily the ruling terrorist group, Hamas – as the media and Israeli officials continue to emphasize – makes no difference to the families and children of one million Israelis.
Once the siren goes off and they run for shelter and for their lives, they have between 15 and 45 seconds to ask which terrorist organization is firing at them. Instead, they wonder where the rocket will explode: inside or outside their town.
“Rocket reality” is still a basic way of life on the Gaza border.
Compared to recent years, this year has been quieter than others (due to Operation Pillar of Defense), but the Gaza threat grows each day. Realistically, the question is not if Israel will have to take action in Gaza, but rather when.
However, the Russian-roulette reality finally exploded on Saturday night, just after 8 p.m., when an entire factory in Sderot went up in flames that were visible from miles away.
Why are there still those who claim Hamas is interested in maintaining calm? Have they forgotten the Hamas charter, which openly calls for genocide of the Jews in Israel? And what about the statement issued by Izzadin Kassam, the Hamas “military wing” in Gaza, one week before the first cease-fire in November 2006: “We are not going to stop firing the Zionist settlement Sderot, until the last citizen of Sderot leaves.”
Over 20,000 aerial attacks have been launched from Gaza toward Israel after Israel pulled all of its troops and civilians out of Gaza in August 2005.
EYEWITNESS ENCOUNTERS
“The Ambassadors of Tomorrow” firsthand accounts were sent to the Sderot Media Center by local residents of Sderot on Saturday night.
Dov Tartchman, Sderot resident, reported: “The strangest thing was seeing this ball of fire with this thick smoke... it felt like out of a scene from Lebanon, Syria or Iraq. Not like something that could happen here.”
Daniel Madmoni
“Before the end of Shabbat, we sat outside for coffee....The scent of the new week is in the air... and then suddenly the ‘red alert’ siren went off.... This is my home, this is my life, and this is how I start the fresh new week... Rockets will continue to fly and explode, the Israeli flag will continue to wave.”
Daniel Ohana
“Saturday, a bit after 8 p.m. on my way back from a fun and sunny day at the beach, a bit of freshening up after the exam period, my mom calls me in hysterics: ‘Get home quickly and drive with your windows open, so you can hear the siren going off.’ And it starts again. Yes, it’s started again. I’m a 10-minute drive away from home and I can already see what mom is talking about.... On top of me a huge black cloud, and the closer I got to Sderot, the bigger and more threatening the flames seemed.”
Anat Ben-Ami
“Shabbat has arrived, and the excitement is very high in our family home on Kibbutz Mefalsim, overlooking the Gaza strip. The whole family arrived, excited about Saturday night. It’s my 12-year-old daughter Rony’s 6th grade graduation party, and next year off to junior high in the rocket-proof school in Sha’ar Hanegev. From one protected school to another.... The whole day went by very quietly, the family guests didn’t feel a thing, or just didn’t want to talk about it. I was very troubled and restless.
“The night before, I had problems sleeping, having nightmares of buildings collapsing and a world that is washing away and I’m in this dreaming always trying to find shelter, and hope for quiet and peace, exactly like in my reality.... The evening came, the heat wave continued into the evening, but the house was closed with the air-conditioning on, letting us prepare calmly for the night’s celebration.
“We got into the car, and the phones started going off... Rony’s friend, her age, calls, screaming with tears, telling Rony that the party was canceled....
Rony tries to calm her down, but loses faith in what she’s telling her. Her friend’s mom was scared to leave the house with her kids. She stayed at home and decided that her daughter, Rony’s friend, would not to go the graduation party.
“At that moment we called the teacher, and she told us that for now, the roads are still open and it is possible to get to the party, it’s not really in the area of the rockets....We are on our way, couldn’t imagine another scenario that once again my daughter wouldn’t experience something so normal and natural for her age. The Kassam rocket has been part of her entire life “On our way, there’s an explosion. Now I’m thinking maybe the party has been canceled...
maybe no children will arrive... we’re on our way in any case.... As we started to drive, we can’t believe the huge black smoke cloud. ...Even if this abnormal reality has become normal for us... every time this happens, something inside breaks.... I pray that the summer vacation will be peaceful, and that we won’t need to find different places around Israel to host us, far away from our families.
Sderot Media Center.