OUTLOOK imm•••''''"" „gf.PA: N inklA.ft, \*&.•4 • 4 NI 4 ,t) Two terrorists were near Rosh Hanikra on Israel's northern border. Border Residents: Life On The Edge AVA CARMEL Special to The Jewish News e took a direct hit in July of 1981, at the community center," says Marsha Brown of Kiryat Shmona. "The peace negotia- tions with Lebanon, the United States and Israel then took place in that same building, and a year and a half later, the peace treaty was signed in the very room that had been shelled." Brown is activities coor- dinator of the Kiryat Shmona Community Center. With a heavy set of keys jangling from a belt at her waist, she shows me around the center. "I came in 1970 as a volun- teer on the Sherut Le'Am pro- gram," she says. "Nobody , wanted to stay here because of the security situation, but being from New York, I felt safer here!" Conflict and tranquility — the settlers along Israel's nor- thern border have known both. Realistic yet optimistic, they pray for miracles. Ella Gafeen, originally from Mon- treal, moved with her famly to a Kibbutz Kfar Giladi. "We came to Israel with five children, so the kibbutz wanted to give us the biggest house possible. It was a se- cond story apartment with a narrow stairwell. There was no way to get the piano we had shipped from Canada up. I refused to give up, thinking Israel is the land of miracles, after all. In 1979, during one of many katyusha attacks, one fell on our new home and blew open a huge hole in the wall. The next day the piano was mov- ed in through the hole and then the wall was repaired?' Ella Gafeen is typical of the W AtitaSISCIIK AMENSIONisfisMiniata&andieliti, JULES R. SCHUBOT EM8 ' ' ' jewellers — gemologists ' 9/CAN GEM tP(' 3001 West Big Beaver Road • Suite 112 • Troy, Michigan 48084 • (313) 649-1122 hillside furniture clearance center 0 t 1.7 contemporary for less o LOTS OF LEATHER STYLES & COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM! PLUS... WALL UNITS, DINING RMS., DINETTES, BEDROOMS, LAMPS, PAINTINGS AND MUCH MORE! Oriental Rugs Today's Pleasure Tomorrow's Treasure 251 Merrill Birmingham (313) 644-7311 We are winning. AMERICAN CAN CER HOURS: MON, THURS, FRI 1O-9& TUES, WED, SAT '10-6 ORCHARD MALL Maple at Orchard Lk. Rd. 855-4065 14 FRIDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1989 a stubborn settleri along Israel's northern border with Lebanon. These people have learned to live with constant tension despite the fact that there has been a long interval of relative calm. It has been seven years since the IDF's invasion of Lebanon, but the people of the border set- tlements live with the cons- tant fear that the situation could deteriorate at any time. Clari Leshansky of Metula talks about the many securi- ty problems and the psychological effects they have on residents. Before the war we spent long periods in the shelters. Once we were there for twelve consecutive days. Many katyushas fell and there was a lot of shell- ing. It caused problems for the children so that now we have 12-year-olds who wet their beds at night. We have to bring in a psychologist whenever things get tense. Although this has been a relatively quiet year, there has been a new wave of shell- ing and katyushas. This past year alone there have been about 77 inflitration attempts by terrorists aing the border." Although there have been no civilian casulaties, 49 soldiers have been killed in this region in the past four years alone. In a recent incident, a katyusha fell near a house on the outskirts of Metulla. Because the lawn had been watered that evening, the soggy earth absorbed much of the shock, but fragments hit the bedroom window of the Sorotsky home. Thipi Sorot- sky, a delicate young woman with short, blond hair related her story. On May 29th, 1:15 a.m., a katyusha exploded near my children's bedroom