���Going into Gaza Has Changed My Life Forever���
Transcription
���Going into Gaza Has Changed My Life Forever���
FRIENDS OF ISRAEL DISABLED VETERANS BEIT HALOCHEM Passover 2015 • 5775 “Going into Gaza Has Changed My Life Forever” Dear Friend of FIDV, Passover is a time to cherish our heritage, and the heroes who have fought so hard to keep it alive. At our Seders, we tell our story as Jewish people, to our children and grandchildren, to ensure that we remember me’dor le’dor, from generation to generation. This story is alive today, and we are part of it. Who are the heroic young soldiers who protect Israel every day? Let me tell you about 20-year-old Reuven Magen, whose leg was seriously damaged in Gaza during Operation Protective Edge. He is just one of the nearly 1,200 Israeli soldiers wounded in that war; at least 500 of those warriors will face disability, and will need Beit Halochem. “I have learned many things,” Reuven says. “I now understand what my father Shlomo has been going through since he was wounded in 1982 while serving in the First Lebanon War…when a mortar … almost severed his head. I remember going to Beit Halochem with him. I saw the other disabled veterans, the adults without legs, and it was a little odd but not scary.” Now it is Reuven’s turn to be part of the community at Beit Halochem. “There is a Reuven Magen lot of love …here at Beit Halochem – from the new as well as from the older, more experienced, Zahal Disabled Veterans. We have all lived through a lot, all of us were hurt. It is a powerful mutual experience. We have an understanding which goes far beyond words.” As you prepare for your Passover Seder, we remember these brave veterans, both the newly wounded and the old timers. Please take the time now to make a special Passover gift to FIDV – whether $54, $72, $180, $360 or another amount – to show them that you care! You can donate now online at www.fidv.org. When Reuven Rivlin, President of the State of Israel, addressed a group of disabled veterans at a Beit Halochem center recently, he mused: When the clouds have dispersed and the bloodstains washed from the streets, so begins your journey. This is the battle after the war… one you fight with your injured body and … aching soul. A battle to breathe, to get up, to stand, to eat unassisted, to speak, to read and write, to do up laces and buttons, to hold a cup without it falling, to hold a child in your arms, to sleep one night in peace and tranquility, free from nightmares and pain. This is a war of independence. This is your war.” “I now understand what my father Shlomo has been going through since he was wounded in 1982...” Because of these heroes, our heroes, there is an Israel for all of us. Their stories are our stories, too. Each time you hear about another casualty in Israel, please know that Beit Halochem is always there to ease the pain. With your help, we will be there to ease each step of the way. This Passover, please give with an open heart at www.fidv.org. Their needs are our top priority. With the assistance of good friends like you, our wounded heroes will know that we care, and that Beit Halochem will help them heal, grow, and overcome the complex challenges of disability. Thank you. Wishing you and yours a sweet Passover, Michael A. Leichtling, Chair Friends of Israel Disabled Veterans-Beit Halochem Please remember FIDV in your will.