Defending Israel
It is Motzei Tisha B’Av and like most Jews I dashed to my computer to read the updates on the Israel situation. On Haaretz.com I came across one of the most moving and disturbing articles I have ever read (see below). It moved me because the article featured the story of an all American boy, Michael Levine, who decided to leave the comforts of home to risk and ultimately give his life for the Jewish Nation. I have never been prouder of an American Jew. This beautiful warrior of Israel is definitely sitting in shomayim next to the Kisai haKavod tonight.
While I was profoundly moved by this article I was also taken aback by the estimate of how many Jewish boys from North America are currently serving in the Israeli army. There are approximately 120 Jewish men who have chosen to leave their families in North America and join the Israeli Army. That is out of a Jewish population of 5.2 million. That is out of an Orthodox Population of approximately 500,000.
As a community we teach our children to be Zionistic, to support Israel, to love Eretz Yisroel. Yet, when it comes to physically defending that same land our community seems to be woefully lacking. Why?
I don’t have any conclusions to put down here tonight. I am just asking the question. A question made all the more powerful after we spent 24 hours talking about all the different ways the nations of the earth have attacked and tried to destroy us. May G-d bless the members of the Israeli Defense Force and keep them safe.
Living the Zionist dream, dying in defense of Israel
By Amiram Barkat and Dafna Berman, Haaretz CorrespondentsThree soldiers with no family in Israel (termed ‘lone soldier’) have been killed since the fighting started in the North and two others have been wounded.
Last Tuesday Staff Sergeant Yonatan Vlasyuk from the Ukraine, who served in an elite unit and lived with an adopted family in Kibbutz Lahav, was killed. A day later, Sergeant Assaf Namer of Australia, of Golani was killed, followed Tuesday by the death of an American, Staff Sergeant Michael Levin, a paratrooper. In the same incident another lone soldier in Levin’s unit, Yonatan Marcus, was wounded. Another lone soldier, Ilan Grapel, of Queens, New York, was among 20 soldiers wounded Tuesday night in the battle of Taibe.
Major Avital Knacht, who deals with lone soldiers in the IDF human resources branch, said the IDF does not give out information about the number of its lone soldiers or those serving in combat units. However, she noted that the rate of volunteering for combat units among lone soldiers is higher than in the general population. Knacht said the lone soldiers “come to Israel ready to give their all, and the best way to do that is through combat duty.”
Aharon Horwitz, a former lone soldier from Cleveland, said that as a teenager, he felt that “Israel is a Jewish state and so I thought that I also had a responsibility to serve.” He said his parents were supportive, but “it was hard for my mother to be so far away and not know where I was. Some of my [lone soldier] friends had parents who were less supportive and so that was difficult.”
According to Horwitz, the American soldiers he came across were some of the most idealistic ones in his IDF service. “They would always volunteer for things like kitchen duty. They were very motivated because they are volunteers, which is a self-selecting group.”
Speaking from his bed at Rambam Medical Center in Haifa, in American-accented Hebrew military slang, Grapel told Haaretz that after he decided to serve in the army during a year of study at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, he thought it should be in a combat unit. Grapel, whose father is Israeli, has a grandfather in Tel Aviv and distant relatives in Hod Hasharon; however, Ruthie, a childhood friend of his father Danny, opened her home to him and became his adopted family. When Grapel told his parents of his desire to serve in a combat unit he said his father took it naturally but his mother Irene was afraid. “But she was afraid before I joined up because I rode the buses,” Grapel said.
Josh Sekenofsky, a lone soldier from England, and a roommate of Michael Levin, admitted that serving so far from family can sometimes be difficult. “It can be lonely when you are on leave and you are by yourself. But for Mikey and me, this was something we always wanted to do. We used to listen to the news outside of Israel, and it got to the point where we couldn’t listen to the news anymore, that we need to do something about it.”
An estimated 2,300 lone soldiers are currently serving in the IDF, most of them coming from the Former Soviet Union. But soldiers from Western countries are serving as well, including an estimated 120 who are North American-born. Some are the sons of Israelis living abroad but most have no prior connection to Israel.
Many come to Israel with the intention to settle here, but some come only to serve in the army.
“On one hand, I feel total pride, since I spent my whole life raising our kids to be Zionists,” Marla Comet-Stark, who lives in Ohio and whose son is now in basic training in Givati, told Haaretz. “But, on the other hand, I feel like saying ‘just kidding, I didn’t really mean the whole Zionism thing there are other ways to help Israel.
“Tziki Aud, who serves as an adopted father for many lone soldiers and is also head of the Jewish Agency’s information center for new immigrants, knew Michael and his friends well. “These are people who came only out of ideology and Zionism,” he said. “They had no economic interests and could have made more money if they stayed in America. Their friends went off to college, but they decided to make aliyah [emigrate to Israel] instead. Sometimes, these soldiers come without the support of their families. Their parents are in the U.S. and once they come here, their friends become their family.”
Yaakov Seligman, 20, joined the army in March of this year, leaving his family and friends behind in South Florida. Raised in an observant family, he attended Jewish and Zionist schools and says he always dreamed about moving to Israel. Most of his former classmates are in the U.S., enjoying the relaxed life of an American college student.
But Seligman says that he is doing something “more meaningful.” His parents, he says, are “proud, but worried."
There are plenty of non-frum Israelis in the army. The frum Americans are more useful in the beis medrash. And there are a lot of those in Israel.
Posted by ML on 08/06 at 02:55 AMThe Torah tells us that the ideal soldier is one with yiras shamayim. I would like to think that we bnei yeshiva are thus. (Food for thought.)
Posted by dsa on 08/17 at 10:57 AMVERY GOOD POST.
Minor quibbles- That is out of a Jewish population of 5.2 million.
Maybe high depending on how one defines Jewish-Halachik Jews probably a little less.That is out of an Orthodox Population of approximately 500,000.
Probably closer to 400,000-of course it depends on operative definition of what is an Orthodox Jew.
Michael Levine A"H was a USY/Conservative background.
Rabbi Burg is raising the issue of how seriously do we take Israel is it really bechol nafshecha?
A gift to the OU Israel Emergency
Fund which I gave to- does not even go to ball park of those who are willing to sacrifice their lives forIsrael. Very few. Aliyah has been very negligible.
I have heard that every month for a long time more passengers have left Israel from BG Airport than have arrived there. The reason is obvious.Posted by SBMH on 08/17 at 11:08 PM
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