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[(Continued from p.11)]

camps.

The Jews of Warsaw had no military training but they held off the Germans longer than the Poles or the French had done. By the time World War II ended in 1945, one of every three Jews in the world had been killed. Mordechai Anielewicz, a hero of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising, wrote: "The dream of my life has become true. Jewish self defense has become a fact. Jewish armed resistance and retaliation became a reality and I have been a witness."


Reflections on Passover

This April, Jewish families throughout the entire free world will gather to celebrate Passover. This lovely holiday celebrates and retells the story of liberation from slavery 3000 years ago. Moses led the Jews from bondage in Egypt to their homeland in Israel. Pharaoh's army chased them through the desert towards the Red Sea and it is told that a miracle occurred. The sea parted and the Israelites were able to cross to the other side. When the Israelites watched the waters of the Red Sea sweep away Pharaoh's army they were finally free.

It is a cruel irony that the aforementioned Warsaw Ghetto uprising occurred during Passover, but it is wonderful to tell the story today, when the Jewish people have returned to their ancient homeland. Israel, in its brief history, has welcomed millions of displaced and persecuted Jews. In the decade following independence, the survivors of the Shoah -- traumatized, injured, dislocated, tortured, sick in soul and body -- came home. More than 800,000 persecuted Jews came from Arab countries where they had lived for generations, leaving behind all they possessed. They were given housing, food, counseling, vocational training, and schooling. There were over one hundred different languages, many with different alphabets, but in a matter of months, the newcomers learned functional Hebrew. What made this epic so special to rescued Jews was the experience of immediate citizenship and the knowledge that in spite of seemingly insurmountable difficulties and enemies, a Jewish army stood ready to defend and shelter them.

The Jews of Ethiopia and the Soviet Union came on a fleet of silver jets emblazoned with the blue Star of David. The Jews trapped in Entebbe were rescued by Israeli top guns wearing uniforms with the Star of David. Today, steel-hulled submarines and ships part the waters of the seas as they patrol and protect the Jewish state. Tanks marked with the Star of David cross deserts and missiles reach toward the heavens. An astronaut on the tragic American space mission proudly wore a jumpsuit embroidered with the Star of David which was found a year later, intact.

These are the stories and celebrations of Passover where past is present and modern day miracles have happened. There is so much to celebrate but there is a black cloud. Israel is in retreat, mesmerized by the hallucination that hardened enemies will make peace. Jewish pioneers in the heartland of the Jewish patrimony are being abandoned, Jerusalem is being forgotten and there are no leaders.  

Ruth King is a member of the executive committee of Americans For a Safe Israel.


Americans For a Safe Israel
1623 Third Ave. (at 92nd St.) - Suite 205
New York, NY 10128

Outpost               - 12 -               April 2004

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