
Gush Katif
The following was submitted for
publication by a Torah Tidbits reader, and is presented here as is,
unedited.
The Last Miluimnik by Yonatan Sredni
I had never done anything ‘historic’ in my life, but this last week I
believe I set 3 unintentional records in regards to the disengagement from
Gush Katif.
I had just returned home a
couple of days ago after 17 straight days doing guard duty as a reservist in
Rafiach Yam, the southernmost settlement in Gush Katif. Rafiach Yam is a
small settlement established in 1984 composed of 25 mostly secular families.
As in other areas of Gush Katif, many of the residents earn their living
through agriculture. Rafiach Yam, as its name indicates is located right
next to Rafiach and the Mediterranean Sea and also lies near the Egyptian
border and the famous Philadelphi Route.
As Rafiach Yam is not a religious settlement, we reservists didn’t encounter
any of the many obstacles that other settlements had to deal with. We didn’t
have any orange clad teens sneaking into the settlement and camping out on
the lawns, we didn’t have mass demonstrations against the disengagement
plan, and in fact we didn’t even have much press hanging around (they all
bypassed us looking for the ‘hot’ stories in places like Neve Dekalim and
Kfar Darom).
In fact, all the residents of Rafiach Yam seemed to be very pragmatic and
planned to be long gone by the time the final deadline arrived to leave the
Gaza Strip. Most, if not all, had already found other housing, in
“Caravillas” in Nitzan or elsewhere. Of course they all leave with a heavy
heart, many of the residents have been there since the beginning, over 20
years, and for many of them this is the only home they have ever known.
And so it was on the Shabbat morning of August 6th, after what turned out to
be the last Shabbat morning service in the small caravan synagogue of
Rafiach Yam, I was invited to have Shabbat lunch with Shuki and Rachel Atias
and their family. Shuki is known to all residents of Gush Katif as the
school bus driver and Rachel is the ganenet (nursery school teacher) in the
nearby settlement of Morag. Sure enough their children and grandchildren
were there too, but over the course of the meal when all the talk was about
disengagement and where and how they were going to move during the coming
week, it became painfully obvious to me that I had become the last Shabbat
guest (soldier or otherwise) of this family in their home in Rafiach Yam.
After 20 years of hosting guests in this beautiful home overlooking the sand
and the sea, I was the last person on their long guest list.
Three days later on Tuesday
morning I went to pray by myself at the Rafiach Yam synagogue/caravan but I
had to maneuver around boxes stuffed with siddurim and chumashim and other
religious articles as all the shelves were now bare. As I put on my tefillin
and took in the scene, Shuki appeared and quietly went about his business
filling the remaining boxes with holy books. Now I realized that I was the
last person who would ever pray in this synagogue.
As fate would have it, two days later, last Thursday, I was guarding at the
main gate of the settlement in the late afternoon. For years and years,
groups of miluimnikim (reservists) just like myself, had done 3 weeks stints
of guard duty at Rafiach Yam and then would be replaced by another group of
reservists. It was not so this time. In the early evening some young 18 year
old soldiers performing regular mandatory service replaced me and my fellow
reservists at the front gate of Rafiach Yam. Once again I had made the
record books, I had become the last miluimnik to guard Rafiach Yam.
In 1999 my younger brother Yair and I went to a baseball game in San
Francisco to watch our beloved Giants play. 1999 was the last year the
Giants played in frigid, blustery Candlestick Park before they would move to
their sunny, beautiful downtown ballpark in the heart of the city. All
season the Giants promotions department hyped the move and the farewell
season at ‘the Stick’. Their longtime radio announcer Lon Simmons had a
famous home run call “Tell It Goodbye” every time a ball would sail out of
the yard, and that became the Giants slogan as well for their final season
at Candlestick. At the game we attended each fan got a large beach towel
sponsored by Coca Cola and K Mart. The towel had a drawing of the outside of
Candlestick in the background and in the foreground cartoon people
celebrating and dancing in orange t-shirts (the Giant’s team color) with the
words “The Going-Away Party 1999” below it. Not one of the 40,000 Giants
fans questioned the contents on the towel as we all knew well that the
Giants were moving from a dump of a ballpark to a really great stadium, so
why not celebrate.
I reached in my closet and took out that towel this week and thought about
the people of Rafiach Yam. No going-away party for them. They would not be
dancing and celebrating this week. They have already packed up their
belongings and left their homes quietly before the deadline. Their future is
unknown.
As we drove out of Rafiach Yam
last Thursday afternoon, I took one last look back at the sand, and the sea,
and the houses on the hill. “Tell it goodbye!”
YOU can help Gush Katif
Evacuees!
For general information, call: Goldie, Israel Center: 02-5667787 ext. 242
Join the OU International Campaign to assist the children evacuees from Gush
Katif (Gaza) and North Shomron. These funds will be applied to special
spiritual and educational needs of the children and youth.
Send checks to the Israel Center, P.O. Box 37015, Jerusalem 91370
The check should be made out to the Israel Center and marked “Children”
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