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FRIENDS OF IDF
Chief Of Staff Drums Up Support
For Recreational Needs of Troops
Story by Nina Boxer
Photos by
Tim Boxer
HIGHLIGHT of the annual Friends of the Israel Defense Forces
benefit was a live satellite feed of troops on the front lines.
Some 1200 guests at the Waldorf-Astoria viewed a video of soldiers
serving on the Philadelphia Corridor, a bleak stretch of sand
separating the Gaza Strip from Egypt.
“Our job,” said one soldier, “is to
find the tunnels through which the terrorists smuggle weapons from
Egypt
. We find them mainly from good intelligence.”
Recently a terrorist was digging in the
tunnel toward an Israeli base with intent to blow it up. Suddenly
the tunnel collapsed.
“The Palestinians called us for help,”
the soldier said. “We rescued the digger from the debris and
saved his life. That’s the difference between them and us.”
That difference was brought home to Osnat
Vishinsky, a famous Israeli actress and comedienne.
She related how her son, Lior, was so
determined and committed to joining the IDF in 2001 that he wanted
to serve only in a high-risk position. On
May 12, 2004
, his unit was sent to the Philadelphia Corridor to destroy a
gun-smuggling tunnel. His
personnel carrier took a direct hit from a grenade that killed him
and four comrades.
“Our heartbreak was unbearable,” Osnat
sighed. “Our home was so full, and now so empty.”
Last Rosh Hashana Osnat visited the corridor
to see for herself “this accursed place.” She felt how “any
minute could be your last.”
Dinner chairman Benny Shabtai noted,
“The life of an Israeli soldier is very difficult – and
that’s on a good day.”
The gala, attended by 1200 supporters, raised
$8.5 million for the recreational, spiritual and educational needs
of IDF personnel.
Among the guests were Lt. Gen. Moshe Ya’alon,
who retired in June as chief of general staff; Rear Admiral Eli
Marum, liaison officer to the U.S. Joint Forces Command, who
intercepted the Karin A weapons smuggling ship; Marvin
Josephson, president emeritus of Friends of the IDF; Gabriel
Erem, publisher of Lifestyles; hotel owner Harry
Wittlin; Monica Crowley, anchor on MSNBC; and Jason
Schwalbe, grandson of the late John Klein, founder of
Friends of the IDF in the U.S.
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