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April 11, 2024
Before going to Israel in March, several people warned me about visiting the sites of the horrific terror attacks of October 7. They worried I might be participating in “trauma tourism,” which some critics oppose, fearing that such trips exploit historical sites of violence to increase charitable giving. As a grantmaker with the Samis Foundation on a trip to visit grantees and attend The Jewish Funders Network conference in Jerusalem, I took this to heart. I did not want our day trip to the South to put potential grantees in traumatic situations through retelling their stories from 10/7.
Being on the ground changed my mind. I am sensitive to the power dynamic of funders coming to visit, but I also learned that for some survivors, the urge to share their stories had nothing to do with whether their visitors were funders or not. For many, they share what happened because their loved ones cannot.
Voices of S’derot
The first stop on our trip to the South was Sderot, a border town that has been under rocket fire from Gaza for years. We met students, teachers and administrators at the Amit School. Most had only just returned from temporary housing in the Dead Sea, where whole families lived in one hotel room each for the past five months. Over 90% of this town of 28,000 were evacuated, and now they were slowly returning. Each resident we spoke with shared their October 7 story. One 16-year-old student attributed her survival to oversleeping that morning. She would have been in synagogue for Simchat Torah with her grandfather had she woken up on time. Instead, she and her grandfather hid in a closet for 24 hours until they were rescued and evacuated.
We learned about Hamas’ attempt to seize the Sderot police station, and their plan to use Israeli police vehicles to infiltrate synagogues that would be packed with worshippers for Simchat Torah and Shabbat. In a now legendary story of incredible courage, the Sderot police and community volunteers held off hundreds of terrorists for several hours – until help from the IDF finally arrived. After an intense battle where the terrorists barricaded themselves inside the police station, the building was destroyed. Today, it is an open lot with wires and remains of rubble still present along with a memorial to the 8 police officers and other residents of Sderot, who were killed in the attack. Two large murals depicting the Simchat Torah battle, and honoring both victims and fighters, adorn the walls outside.
The site at Kibbutz Be’eri
Next we arrived at Kibbutz Be’eri. Founded in 1946, it was strikingly large and industrial. We entered through the main gate and were escorted to a tree-lined square surrounded by a theater and main dining hall. Upon entering the main offices we saw photos of the nearly one hundred residents who were murdered on October 7, as well as pictures of the hostages still in captivity.
Our guide was Astrid*, who is originally from Scotland. Astrid told us how she fell in love with the kibbutz community 30 years ago and never left. She raised three children, now adults, at Beeri. Nearly six months later only about ninety kibbutz members, Astrid and her adult children among them, have been able to return. The kibbutz remains an open crime scene, and no families or elderly are allowed. As we traversed the walkways betweens homes, all of which had been destroyed, forensics teams were collecting soil to test for DNA. Five months later many families are still waiting for definitive news about their loved ones.
If you closed your eyes and replaced the burnt-out scenes of horror with ordinary, neat homes, you could imagine the idyllic community that Be’eri was just six months ago. You could imagine what a safe and loving place this was to raise a family. But the carnage was vast and in every direction. There was not a family left unscathed.
Astrid recounted the morning of October 7, when the rocket sirens screamed first. Initially they felt safe, because it sounded as though they were aimed at cities farther away. They realized all too soon that this was just cover for the ground invasion.
Within minutes they heard and saw terrorists infiltrating their kibbutz. Many ran to their safe rooms, but even when the doors could be locked, terrorists set fire to the homes to smoke out whole families. Some survived by sheer luck, but far too many perished either by fire in the ‘safe’ rooms, or by being shot when they were driven out by smoke and flames.
Scenes of destruction
Numerous signs stand in testimony before burnt out homes, recalling victims and hostages. Not a single house is without such signs. As of this writing 11 members of Kibbutz Be’eri remain hostages in Gaza.
The trauma was palpable and everywhere. Still, for the people that we met, it was very clear that telling their stories was cathartic. Of course, for every person we met, there may be a dozen who don’t want to meet or even speak to anyone. We need to understand that too.
This is a national trauma. An indelibly Jewish trauma. We are there to listen to each story and bear witness. We have a whole world of people trying to downplay the atrocities, some saying they didn’t even happen. The victims and their families know this and it only increases their anguish and pain. That is why coming to these sites, even if it is to look into their tragedy, is so important. Bearing witness provides both emotional and practical support.
Witness and memory
Coming to Israel now, and visiting the South is not tourism. It is Jewish unity. It is a tangible way to stand with our Israeli family and declare: we see you, we hear you, we believe you – and we will carry your stories across the globe so no one can ever deny what happened here. Am Yisrael Chai.
*Names and some details have been changed for privacy purposes.