Australia/Israel Review
Life under a rocket barrage
Sep 4, 2018 | Times of Israel staff
Residents of the southern Israeli town of Sderot described on August 9 the desperate dash to safety as 150 rockets, fired overnight from the Gaza Strip rained down, including one barrage that slammed into the city injuring several people.
There are no more than 15 seconds from the moment the rocket warning siren sounds until a projectile impacts on the city, during which residents have to get themselves – and their families – into bomb shelters or reinforced rooms in their homes.
Volleys of rockets and mortar shells were fired at southern Israeli communities from the Gaza Strip on Aug. 8 and 9, prompting the Israeli Air Force to bomb at least 12 Hamas positions across the Gaza Strip, the military said.
Sderot resident Etti Kramer told Hadashot TV news how she and her husband dashed to get their seven children into their family’s reinforced room as they heard explosions around them.
“I ran and grabbed the baby,” she said. “The rest of the children ran [to the reinforced room] but didn’t arrive in time. We started to hear explosions and we continued getting the children into the reinforced room. You have to choose which of your children you save. I grabbed the baby and the two-year old and ran to the shelter.”
Another resident, Yossi Lok, recounted how his neighbour was injured by a rocket which hit their apartment building.
Lok said he had retreated to his reinforced room after the rocket siren alert went off.
“I heard a huge explosion and saw a flash of fire,” he said. “The neighbour cried out that he’d been hit. I came downstairs and saw him really badly hurt, covered in blood. His home was on fire because his gas canister had been hit.”
“We were afraid that there would be more explosions,” he said. “We all got away from there.”
Lok said his home was also hit, a rocket landing on his roof.
“It was lucky there were no residents in the unit,” he said.
“We were with the kids,” resident Asher Pizam told Hadashot. “There was hysteria and pandemonium. We heard a whistle and a hit after several sirens. There was a lot of stress and panic, especially with the children… We hope the government does all it can so we have quiet here.”
In a video shared on social media, dozens of parents and children in a Sderot playground could be seen running for bomb shelters as a rocket exploded in the city sending smoke billowing into the air.
One mother can be heard desperately seeking her son, while at the same time trying to calm a young girl by assuring her that there would no more rockets. Children and parents crammed into overcrowded shelters, with some crouching on the ground outside, as they tried to find safety.
Hanita Kohanik, a resident of the city which has suffered rocket fire from Gaza since 2001, spoke to the Hebrew-language Ynet website about the traumatic day-to-day life in the south.
“It is terrible,” Kohanik said. “There is nothing more I can say. It isn’t easy. We are a family of four and a dog, which gets more confused than we do.”
“As far as we are concerned each time the security situation deteriorates – the anxieties resurface,” she continued
Her son, she said, suffers from post traumatic stress disorder, and doesn’t leave home.
“The intermittent and sporadic fire are a daily war,” Kohanik said.
One rocket – or possibly shrapnel from an Iron Dome interceptor – damaged a home in Sderot late on the night of Aug. 8, police said. At least two rockets struck the city earlier in the day, injuring three people. Two more were injured in attacks on the morning of Aug. 9. At least eight others were treated for panic attacks, including two pregnant women who went into labour.
Wave after wave of rocket attacks set off sirens throughout the night in the Hof Ashkelon, Sha’ar Hanegev, Sdot Negev and Eshkol regions outside Gaza, sending thousands of Israelis into bomb shelters, where many bedded down with their families.
The rocket attacks came amid a period of heightened tensions along the Gaza border, following months of clashes and exchanges of fire. Hamas had vowed to avenge the deaths of two of its members killed by IDF tank fire on Aug. 7 after the army mistakenly thought a military exercise had been a cross-border attack.
At least 11 rockets or mortar shells were intercepted by the Iron Dome missile defence system, the army said.
Adam Rasgon and Times of Israel staff contributed to this report © Times of Israel (www.timesofisrael.com), reprinted by permission, all rights reserved.