{"id":7431,"date":"2013-04-09T13:57:40","date_gmt":"2013-04-09T13:57:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/jewishaction.com\/?p=7431"},"modified":"2024-09-17T15:36:21","modified_gmt":"2024-09-17T15:36:21","slug":"the-yom-kippur-war-an-american-volunteer-remembers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jewishaction.com\/yom-hazikoron\/the-yom-kippur-war-an-american-volunteer-remembers\/","title":{"rendered":"The Yom Kippur War: An American Volunteer Remembers"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><!-- [if gte mso 9]&gt;--><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><a href=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-7447\"><img width=\"400\" height=\"221\" data-public-id=\"Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft wp-post-7431 wp-image-7447\" src=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_400,h_221,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA\" alt=\"\" data-crop=\"1.82\" data-format=\"jpg\" data-transformations=\"f_auto,q_auto\" data-version=\"1679412625\" data-seo=\"1\" data-responsive=\"1\" srcset=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_400,h_221,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 1850w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1848,h_1020,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 1848w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1648,h_910,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 1648w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1448,h_799,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 1448w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1248,h_689,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 1248w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1048,h_578,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 1048w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_848,h_468,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 848w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_648,h_357,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 648w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_448,h_247,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 448w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_248,h_137,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679412625\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-warr-\/yom-kippu-warr-.jpg?_i=AA 248w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1850px) 100vw, 1850px\" \/><\/a><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">It was Yom Kippur, October 6th, 1973, when we first heard the news:\u00a0 Egypt and Syria had attacked Israel, unprovoked and without warning.\u00a0 Before we even broke our fast, we tuned in to the news on TV that night.\u00a0 We learned that Egypt had crossed the Suez Canal on makeshift bridges and had attacked the Bar-Lev lines.\u00a0 Syria had pushed into the Golan Heights with masses of tanks, and both forces were taking a fierce toll in Israeli lives.\u00a0 Planes had flown over the Sinai and Golan Heights and had met no resistance.<\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">Many Israeli generals had warned that the Arabs were planning an attack, recommending that the country mobilize for war and not to permit soldiers to return home for the holidays.\u00a0 Prime Minister Golda Meir and Defense Minister Moshe Dayan were not convinced, saying that Cairo and Damascus \u201csaber rattle\u201d to aggravate Israel, and that an invasion was unlikely; and their opinion prevailed.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">Accordingly, many Israeli soldiers, pilots and other essential military personnel were permitted home for <em>yom tov<\/em>.\u00a0 Only a skeleton crew was left manning the Bar-Lev line along the Suez Canal, and only a few tank crews were left on the Golan Heights.\u00a0 A great number of these soldiers were <i>hesder<\/i> boys\u2014yeshivah students who volunteer to serve in the army for five years instead of three, combining army service with Talmud study.\u00a0 Because of their religious dedication, many had volunteered to stay \u201cin the field\u201d on Yom Kippur to conduct services for their comrades.\u00a0 When the attack occurred, this small defense force was rapidly overrun and killed.\u00a0 <\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">That night all soldiers were mobilized, the hospitals were emptied of all but critically ill patients, all trucks were requisitioned and all Israelis abroad were asked to return to Israel as soon as possible to rejoin their units.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">I was a practicing doctor, living in Forest Hills, New York, at the time.\u00a0 My decision was made quickly.\u00a0 I told my family and two medical partners that I would try to go to Israel to help take care of the wounded.\u00a0 When word came that a seat on a 707 to Israel had been reserved for me, I went to Mt. Sinai Hospital.\u00a0 As chief of pediatric surgery at that facility, I received permission to take surgical needs with me to Israel.\u00a0 I gathered a few dermatomes (for skin grafts), cantor tubes, gallons of betadine solution, scrub brushes and ointment, as well as a few boxes of cadaver skin and pigskin sent from Walter Reed Army Hospital.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The scene at JFK Airport was bedlam.\u00a0 Young Israeli men waving $100 bills begged for seats on the last plane to Israel, to be able to join their units.\u00a0 I thought, \u201cWhat a difference from the scenes Americans witnessed, of people rushing to get on the last helicopter leaving Saigon, to <i>leave<\/i> a country at war.\u00a0 Here, our boys are begging to be allowed to<i> return<\/i> to their country at war.\u201d\u00a0 Even as they clamored, deep-down everyone knew that not all those who would leave on that 707 would ever return.\u00a0 And yet they begged to go.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The plane was full and there wasn\u2019t much conversation, just quiet and deep thought.\u00a0 What would the country look like when we arrived?\u00a0 Will the center of the country be bombed?\u00a0 Would the civilian population be spared?<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">As it turned out, all the casualties were at the northern and southern fronts, and the civilian populations of all three countries were spared.\u00a0 On the plane, I met Dr. Chaim Boichus, a senior pediatric nephrologist of Tel Hashomer Hospital, the main military (and civilian) hospital in the Tel Aviv area.\u00a0 It is comprised of Quonset huts of a pre-1948 British military camp.\u00a0 Not knowing where I would volunteer, he suggested that I go with him to Tel Hashomer, where they would surely be able to put my surgical talents to good use.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The hospital director went over my resume, saw that I served in the U.S. Air Force in 1956\u20131958 during the Sinai War, and decided that I was a trained military surgeon.\u00a0 After receiving a <i>chaluk<\/i> [white coat], a pair of scrubs, a military ID, a meal ticket and a dormitory room assignment, I started working in the operating room.\u00a0 The chief of plastic surgery was Dr. Borenstein, a Bellevue-trained surgeon, who joined the hospital as a plastic surgeon in 1948.\u00a0 His second-in-command was Dr. Haggai Tzur, a superb Israeli, trained locally, and a very organized person.\u00a0 Two other plastic surgeons, from Tel Aviv and Netanya, were drafted to the unit.\u00a0 All male interns and residents were gone, at the front with their combat units. Batya, a Russian intern, and Miki, an Israeli, served with us.\u00a0 Both women worked day and night without complaining.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">In truth, I had never before worked as a physician during war time.\u00a0 I had to adjust to war casualties, massive burns, dying young men, helicopters coming in hourly and busloads of non-critical wounded.\u00a0 Most of the burns were tank casualties.\u00a0 It became rapidly apparent that the lubricants used in the Israeli and American tanks were flammable, and everyone in a tank hit by a missile would be immediately incinerated.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">It was very hot in the Middle East during October 1973, and the Israeli soldiers in the tanks stripped down to their undershorts and goggles.\u00a0 The flash after the tank was hit was rapid and burnt off all the skin of the exposed areas.\u00a0 The eyes and shorts areas were protected from the immediate flash.\u00a0 If they got out of that tank rapidly, they would sustain first and second degree burns.\u00a0 If they did not, they sustained pulmonary burns and third degree burns.\u00a0 The tank battles in the Sinai were described as the biggest tank battles in the history of war.\u00a0 From seeing the Israeli casualties, I can believe that.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">All the wounded received first aid in the field or in a MASH unit in the Sinai or in the Golan Heights.\u00a0 When they arrived at the hospital, they were triaged in the large receiving units, run by Trauma Chief Dr. Wolfstein, who had relinquished his additional position as chief of pediatric surgery since my arrival.\u00a0 Many who were sent to us were terminal\u2014advanced total body third degree burns.\u00a0 These boys were sent to a private room in a special building, with IVs and respirators, to spend their last hours with their families. <\/span><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_7448\" style=\"width: 410px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/v1679420889\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippur-war-2\/yom-kippur-war-2.jpg?_i=AA\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-7448\"><img width=\"400\" height=\"278\" data-public-id=\"Jewishaction\/yom-kippur-war-2\/yom-kippur-war-2.jpg\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7448\" class=\"wp-post-7431 wp-image-7448\" src=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_400,h_278,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420889\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippur-war-2\/yom-kippur-war-2.jpg?_i=AA\" alt=\"\" data-format=\"jpg\" data-transformations=\"f_auto,q_auto\" data-version=\"1679420889\" data-seo=\"1\" data-responsive=\"1\" srcset=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_400,h_278,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420889\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippur-war-2\/yom-kippur-war-2.jpg?_i=AA 803w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_648,h_450,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420889\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippur-war-2\/yom-kippur-war-2.jpg?_i=AA 648w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_448,h_311,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420889\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippur-war-2\/yom-kippur-war-2.jpg?_i=AA 448w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_248,h_172,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420889\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippur-war-2\/yom-kippur-war-2.jpg?_i=AA 248w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 803px) 100vw, 803px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-7448\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>Four young burn patients, and two of the nurses.<\/em><\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">Those considered operable would all arrive in the operating room with chest x-rays, extremity x-rays (if indicated), and a tag describing the injuries and what needed to be done.\u00a0 There was no second-guessing nor detailed physicals: since there were so many casualties, we had to work fast.\u00a0 There were only ten ORs, and the patients sometimes were lined up for hours.\u00a0 We took them in the order that they were triaged.\u00a0 Of all the casualties that arrived at Tel Hashomer and were treated, I would say that over 90% survived.\u00a0 Many survived with severe handicaps and severe scarring and disfigurement, but unlike so many others, they lived.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">I was in charge of one of five surgical teams.\u00a0 Dr. Borenstein, Dr. Tzur, two plastic surgeons from private practice and I were each in charge of an operating room.\u00a0 We were assisted by Batya and Miki, one surgical resident and some nurses.\u00a0 We would bring the soldiers into the operating room, cut off their burned uniforms or underwear, catheterize them, start another IV and, using betadine scrub brushes, scrub off all dead and burnt tissue.\u00a0 If the burns were extensive, we would cover them with pigskin, or vaseline gauze for the smaller areas.\u00a0 We would estimate their body surface area burned, for fluid calculations, and send them to the recovery room.\u00a0 From there, they would go to the plastic surgery Quonset hut.\u00a0 We never did skin grafts on the first trip to the OR because the incoming casualties needed the room for surgery.\u00a0 We would often operate twelve to twenty-four hours without let up; then make rounds, and sleep for a few hours, until we heard the helicopters arriving again.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The lady who was in charge of the dormitory building gave up her room for a volunteer doctor and slept on a blanket in the hall.\u00a0 She would knock on my door at all hours of the night and say, \u201cProfessor, there are new wounded.\u201d\u00a0 I would go to the operating room and set up.\u00a0 When it was quiet for a few hours, we would electively take the patients back to the ORs for redressing of wounds or skin grafts.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The first week was very hectic, with new casualties coming in three to four times a day.\u00a0 Ninety percent of the casualties were burns, with a few bullet wounds or orthopedic wounds.\u00a0 <\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The spirit in the wards was serious, with parents or wives always at the bedside.\u00a0 Dr. Borenstein (the chief) would speak to each family himself.\u00a0 We had a young pilot whose jet had been hit by a Russian SAM III, and he ejected while his uniform was in flames.\u00a0 He had many extensive burns over his entire torso.\u00a0 Although his face was spared, his body would have extensive scarring.\u00a0 His wife never left his side.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">When the soldiers awoke and were told that pigskin covered their burns, they all wanted to know if the Chief Rabbinate had approved the use of pigskin, since it is not permitted to raise pigs in Israel.\u00a0 We assured them that use of the pigs was absolutely approved in this case.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">Israel was losing the war after the first seven to ten days.\u00a0 Hundreds of tanks were lost, the Egyptian army was nearing Eilat and the Syrian army was recapturing the Golan Heights.\u00a0 Supplies were diminishing and things looked very bad.\u00a0 One morning while looking out of my window in my room toward Ben Gurion airport, I saw the largest plane I had ever seen land at Ben Gurion.\u00a0 It was an American Galaxy jet, loaded with tanks and bombs.\u00a0 Five minutes later, another one with an American flag landed, and they kept on coming for the next two days.\u00a0 Secretary of State Kissinger and President Nixon had come through.\u00a0 Everyone in Israel, and especially at Tel Hashomer, was elated; and the war did indeed turn around after the resupplying of war material.\u00a0 I will never forget the airlifts that came from the U.S. that prevented Israel from being overrun.<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p style=\"font-weight: 400;\"><strong>When you are having a cup of coffee at midnight in the ward, and you hear an adult male voice cry\u00a0 \u201c<em>Imma<\/em>\u201d\u2014that is a voice that lives with you forever.<\/strong><\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">After about ten days, we had more time to do reconstruction on our patients.\u00a0 We used mesh grafts for most grafting because most wounds were extensive.\u00a0 These were lengthy, bloody procedures, and tiring to perform.\u00a0 We usually had two or three sessions a day, and often worked in the wee hours of the morning, if new casualties arrived.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The chief of surgery decided to place all the volunteers on eight-hour shifts.\u00a0 My name can be spelled many different ways in Hebrew, and when the roster was made up, I saw my name on three daily shifts; as Krasna, Krafna and Krasner.\u00a0 I took all three shifts.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">I was the only pediatric surgeon in the hospital.\u00a0 Dr. Borenstein called me one day to see a child with abdominal pain who had been brought in.\u00a0 I told the parents that the boy had appendicitis and the parents were upset with him for \u201cdoing this in the middle of the war.\u201d\u00a0 Another child was brought in with a puncture wound of the abdomen, inflicted by a playmate.\u00a0 They were playing \u201cwar\u201d and he was the \u201cbad Syrian.\u201d\u00a0 As I was operating on him, I heard the nurse say to another nurse, in Hebrew, \u201cThese American surgeons are all so slow,\u201d not knowing that I understood the language.\u00a0 I told her, in Hebrew, that I am not slow, I am careful.\u00a0 Sheepishly she apologized for what she said.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">Although I had a meal ticket for three meals a day, I used it only a few times.\u00a0 The OR always had coffee, cookies, salami and soup, because most of the surgeons did not have the leisure to leave the operating room for a quiet meal.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">I did not have any opportunity to attend services during Sukkot or to rest in a <i>sukkah<\/i> during the entire holiday.\u00a0 Children sent get well cards to all the soldiers, with pictures of <i>sukkot<\/i>, <i>lulavim<\/i> and <i>etrogim<\/i>.\u00a0 These cards were hung next to the beds, and the soldiers were very proud of them.\u00a0 I had an opportunity to make the <i>berachah<\/i> on the <i>lulav<\/i> and <i>etrog<\/i> once, because Lubavitch young men went around to the wards, to enable everyone to make this special blessing.\u00a0 Except for this one occasion, and the get well cards from the school children, there was no evidence to me that it was <em>yom tov<\/em>.\u00a0 To this day, I always have an uncomfortable feeling on Sukkot as I remember the one that I \u201clost\u201d in 1973.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">Towards the end of my stay, I went to all the patients to say goodbye and wish them well.\u00a0 They asked me to remember them and I photographed as many as I could, along with photos of the nurses and other doctors.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">As a cease fire was declared, reporters and television crews appeared at the hospital.\u00a0 How they got there is a mystery to me, but these brave people do find a way to get into the midst of trouble all the time.\u00a0 Dr. Borenstein called me into his office and asked me to show a reporter around the wards and let her speak to the wounded.\u00a0 She was a reporter from <i>New York<\/i> magazine and when she heard I was a New Yorker, she wanted to interview me.\u00a0 Her name was Nora Efron, and I did not know at that time that she would someday be very successful and famous. <\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">They also permitted a TV crew into the OR suite and x-ray area, and since I spoke English and was a US volunteer, I was interviewed.\u00a0 The segment appeared in New York on a Friday night so my family did not see it; but others did, and said I looked tired and skinny, but it was definitely me on screen.<\/span><\/p>\n<div id=\"attachment_7449\" style=\"width: 410px\" class=\"wp-caption alignleft\"><a href=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA\" rel=\"attachment wp-att-7449\"><img width=\"400\" height=\"273\" data-public-id=\"Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg\" loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-7449\" class=\"wp-post-7431 wp-image-7449\" src=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_400,h_273,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA\" alt=\"\" data-format=\"jpg\" data-transformations=\"f_auto,q_auto\" data-version=\"1679420886\" data-seo=\"1\" data-responsive=\"1\" srcset=\"https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_400,h_273,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 1833w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1648,h_1124,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 1648w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1448,h_988,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 1448w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1248,h_851,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 1248w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_1048,h_715,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 1048w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_848,h_578,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 848w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_648,h_442,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 648w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_448,h_305,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 448w, https:\/\/res.cloudinary.com\/ouwp\/images\/w_248,h_169,c_scale\/f_auto,q_auto\/v1679420886\/Jewishaction\/yom-kippu-war3-\/yom-kippu-war3-.jpg?_i=AA 248w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1833px) 100vw, 1833px\" \/><\/a><p id=\"caption-attachment-7449\" class=\"wp-caption-text\"><em>The Burn Unit Staff, after the hostilities ended. Seated: Dr. Krasna; Batya, the intern; Professor Borenstein; Dr. Haggai Tzur. Back Row: Third from left: Danny Katznelson, Chief of Pediatrics A; sixth from left (with glasses): Chaim Boichus, Chief of Pediatrics B; second from right: volunteer physician from Australia; the remainder are housestaff and one private plastic surgeon (middle in back row).<\/em><\/p><\/div>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">I left after sixteen days, when civilian El Al flights resumed.\u00a0 Some friends picked me up the afternoon before the flight, and while driving, we stopped at a red light.\u00a0 In front of us, an army gasoline truck made a rapid left turn, and turned on its side.\u00a0 Everyone who saw it happen was momentarily immobilized in shock.\u00a0 Before I knew it, I was out of the car, climbing on the truck and pulling the driver out to safety.\u00a0 When I had him safely away, I realized that the ignition was still on.\u00a0 I ran to the truck again and shut off the ignition, while my friends were yelling for me to \u201cget out of there!\u201d\u00a0 I was still in a \u201chigh-action\u201d mode.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">Any man in Israel in his forties or fifties who has visible burn scars can safely be assumed to be a Yom Kippur War veteran: know, when you look at him, and remember what he contributed to Israel\u2019s survival.\u00a0 Even those of us who volunteered felt humbled at the time by these self-sacrificing citizens.\u00a0 What do you say to the Israeli patients and doctors when you leave to go back to your safe, quiet country?\u00a0 How do you overcome the feeling of guilt\u2014that these young men almost died protecting the Jewish state for us all, while you returned to the safety of your home?<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">When I arrived at Ben Gurion airport on Friday morning, there were no civilian planes on the tarmac.\u00a0 All I saw were Galaxy jets and hospital planes, and I met many of the young men whom I had met on the way to Israel, who were now returning to the States.\u00a0 Needless to say, not everyone was returning.\u00a0 \u201cYou remember the heavy guy who sat near the window?\u00a0 He was killed at the Suez Canal . . .\u00a0 The red-headed, skinny guy\u2014he\u2019s still in the hospital . . .\u201d\u00a0 Others not returning were kept in their units for many months\u2014and missed their schooling or lost their jobs.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">I considered myself fortunate to have been in a position where I was able to contribute something during this crisis in Israel\u2019s history.\u00a0 Imagine my pride in 1982 when my son, Mark, was one of the few interns in Tel Hashomer Hospital during the Lebanon war, since the other interns, Israeli citizens, had been drafted to serve in the infantry.<\/span><\/p>\n<p style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\"><span style=\"font-size: 12.0pt;\">The dark days of October, 1973, are long gone.\u00a0 Yet the latent, eternal valor of the Jewish nation is a resource and uniting force for Jews the world over.\u00a0 We have a tendency to view our history on a grand scale, yet it is the personal experiences that fuel our resolve.\u00a0 Why are all these memories so fresh to me?\u00a0 The experiences of war become an unforgettable fact of your being.\u00a0 When you are having a cup of coffee at midnight in the ward, and you hear an adult male voice cry\u00a0 \u201c<i>Imma<\/i>\u201d\u2014that is a voice that lives with you forever.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\"><!-- [if gte mso 9]&gt;--><\/p>\n<p class=\"MsoNormal\"><!-- [if gte mso 9]&gt;--><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>It was Yom Kippur, October 6th, 1973, when we first heard the news:  Egypt and Syria had attacked Israel, unprovoked and without warning.  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