September 7, 1999
ISRAELI MIAS CAPTURED JUNE 11, 1982
17TH ANNIVERSARY OF CAPTIVITY
Information on how you can help
As we celebrate Rosh Hashanah 5760 and look forward to the upcoming Yamim Noraim,
we should recall that four Israeli young men will not be with their families to enjoy
these holidays with us. While fighting for their people and the security of the State of
Israel, four soldiers in the IDF were captured in Lebanon and taken prisoner. Since 1982
they remain MIAs.
On June 11, 1982 Sgt. Zachary Baumel, Sgt. Zvi Feldman, and Sgt. Yehuda Katz were
reported missing in action in Syria having fought in the battle of Sultan Yaqub during the
war in Lebanon. This year marked the seventeenth anniversary of their capture. Their
families have struggled long and hard to obtain information about the conditions in which
they are being held. Arab countries have consistently refused to divulge this information.
In spite of Israels aid in securing the release of the other Western hostages,
including American hostages, that were being held in Lebanon, these Israeli hostages were
not included in the release of the others. The pain and anxiety that their family and
friends have been undergoing for the past seventeen years is immeasurable.
The fourth soldier, Captain Ron Arad, a navigator in the Israeli Air Force, has been
held since he was captured in Lebanon on October 16, 1986. His family has also been in
great pain in trying to attain reliable information about his condition and whereabouts.
Today we remember these Israeli MIAs particularly as we celebrate Rosh Hashanah.
Rosh Hashanah, as Chazal tell us, is the time that Yosef Hatzaddik was released from
prison. This sends us the message that this Yom Tov has the capacity to facilitate the
release and redemption of the Tzaddik that is part and parcel of the essential being of
every Jew. In effect, Rosh Hashanah is the Yom Tov of pidyon shvuyim. May the Holy One
Blessed be He reward your efforts to redeem our missing sons, and open for you all the
gates of blessing.
Shanah Tovah