Terror victims span Israeli society

Within a 48-hour span beginning Saturday night, 12 Israelis were murdered in suicide attacks. Terrorism was back on the scene, as was the awareness that its disappearance in recent months was only an illusion born of the army’s success in preventing attac

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JERUSALEM, May 20 (JTA) — Last Friday, on the way to work from Pisgat Ze’ev, my home neighborhood in Jerusalem, I noticed an armed guard standing by bus stop No. 6. At last, I said to myself, people can board a bus in Jerusalem with a sense of security. Two days later, a suicide bomber managed to board bus No. 6, killing seven and wounding 20. Within a 48-hour span beginning Saturday night, 12 Israelis were murdered in three suicide attacks and dozens were wounded. Terrorism was back on the scene, a sad reminder that its apparent absence in recent months was only an illusion born of the army’s success in preventing attacks. The thing about terror attacks is that you don’t really grasp the horror unless you have witnessed one, or until you hear the stories of the victims’ families. This makes the tragedies more real. Pisgat Ze’ev borders a number of Arab neighborhoods. Most of its residents are new immigrants from the former Soviet Union, young couples who can’t afford to buy apartments closer to downtown Jerusalem. The terrorist who murdered the passengers on bus No. 6 aimed to hit the poorest of them all, those who can’t afford a private car, those who get up early in the morning to make a decent living. Yitzhak Moyal, 63, was on his way to the distribution center at the central post office. His wife, Rina, recalled that before going to sleep Saturday night, they discussed the latest news — the murder of Gadi Levy, 31, and his pregnant wife, Dina, 37, of Kiryat Arba, by a suicide bomber in Hebron. “He was not afraid of anything,” Rina Moyal said of her husband, who had immigrated to Israel from Morocco in 1960 with his nine brothers and sisters. “He was a strong believer that whatever will be, will be.” Moyal left six children and 12 grandchildren. Shimon Ostinsky, 67, used to come to work in a parking lot near the Jaffa Gate in Jerusalem’s Old City, arriving 15 minutes before the lot opened. He never missed a shift, thankful for the opportunity to be employed at his age — even though back home in Kiev he had been a lecturer in economics. “Despite this, he was happy,” his wife said. “He loved Israel very much and was proud of this place.” When his boss heard from a customer that the lot was still closed, he understood that something had happened to Ostinsky. He then heard of the bombing, and understood that Ostinsky had been on board. Ostinsky left a wife, two children and two grandchildren. Some observers noted that, given the terrorists’ propensity to blow up buses because of the high number of casualties, the price of attacks is being paid by a particular socio-economic sector that can’t afford other means of transportation. One bereaved Israeli said this became acutely clear to him during a recent visit to his son’s grave, which is located in a section of the Haifa cemetery for victims of terrorist attacks. “I looked around me, and what did I see? Graves of new immigrants, children and soldiers,” said Yossi Mendelevitch, whose son Yuval, 13, was killed in a bus bombing in Haifa earlier this year. But the terrorists don’t distinguish by age or race; they murder Arabs, too. One of the victims was Ghaleb Tawil, 42, a resident of the Shuafat refugee camp, located within Jerusalem’s municipal boundaries. Tawil was on his way to work at the Hadassah Medical Center in Ein Kerem. Though he had experience as a construction worker, he preferred to work as a cleaning man at the hospital: It made it easier to be close to his 12-year-old daughter, who was often hospitalized due to leukemia. “Many nights he wouldn’t come home, in order to sleep by her,” a family member said. Tawil left two wives and nine children. “The suicide bomber was a merciless killer,” one wife said. “Who will feed the orphans now?” The next day, a bombing at a shopping mall in Afula day took the lives of yet another Arab — Hassan Tawat’ha, 41, of Jisser a Zarka, a fishing village near Zikhron Ya’akov. “After every terrorist attack I hear the families say, ‘Let this be the last victim,’ ” said Tawat’ha’s brother. “Now it is Hassan. The terrorists do not distinguish between an Arab and a Jew.” A long parade of mourners left from the local mosque, heading to the local cemetery to bury yet another victim of terrorism. Other victims included Marina Tsahivershvili, 44; Nelly Perov, 55; Olga Brenner, 52, whose daughter was also seriously wounded; and Roni Yisraeli, 34, all residents of Pisgat Ze’ev. Friends and family of Perov recalled at her funeral how death was so incongruous for a woman so full of life. Just the night before, she had celebrated the third anniversary of her immigration from Kazakhstan. She had come to Israel behind her daughter Lana, a Hebrew University student who immigrated here on the Jewish Agency’s “students before parents” program. Perov also is survived by her son, Andrei, 35. In Monday’s bombing in Afula, the terrorist — believed to be a woman — arrived at the shopping mall shortly after 5 p.m. She ascended the steps leading and approached Kiril Sheremenko, the guard at the entrance. Sheremenko, 23, whisked the woman with a magnometer, which started whistling loudly. He signaled to Hadar Gitlin, a female guard standing behind him, to help him search the woman. But the woman then detonated her bomb, killing Sheremenko in his first day at work — his first hour, in fact. “He replaced me a quarter of an hour before the attack,” his colleague Oleg Pohovitz said. The third victim was a customer, Avi Zarihan, 36. Gitlin, 20, was seriously wounded. Gitlin had lost her job at the shopping center three days ago, after she failed to identify a suspect in a drill in which a person carrying explosives entered the center. On Monday, her employers gave her another chance, and she was beside herself with joy. She was not supposed to be on guard duty at 5 p.m. but had volunteered to stay longer to replace a colleague who had not shown up for work. An hour later she was in the hospital, fighting for her life. Gitlin’s parents, who had heard on the radio that a female guard had been killed, were sure Gitlin had died in the blast. Only later in the evening did they learn that she had survived. “She’s in bad condition,” Gitlin’s father said, “but at least I still have a daughter.”(JTA correspondent Naomi Segal in Jerusalem contributed to this story.)

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