Soldiers looking into the Arab village of Nablus. A Soldier's Story Israel Defense Force soldiers discuss their ideas for the peace process. Carthy and Edward Tracy, a native of Vermont, U.S. offi- cials have pressured Israel to unilaterally release some of the Lebanese Shi'ites it is holding in prison for security reasons. AMY J. MEHLER Staff Writer Z vulun Hadad knew what to do if he was captured his first day in the Israel Defense Forces. Rules for survival are outlin- ed in a handbook, the Pinkas Shevi. Pinkasim include names, ranks, personal identifica- tion numbers and blood types. "That's all you're allowed to tell them," said Mr. Hadad, a reservist in Israel's cheyl ha'avir, air force. "More than that, you can't open your mouth." Mr. Hadad, 24, said he didn't worry about being taken hostage while in the army. "It doesn't happen very often because it really depends on where you Zvulun Hadad: "We don't abandon a wounded soldier on the field of battle." serve," said Mr. Hadad, who married a Detroiter and now lives in Southfield. "Soldiers who guard Israel's borders are potentially at greater risk." Since news of the release of British hostagb John Mc- Israel has stood by its offer to enter negotiations for a prisoner swap, but the government is insisting that such a deal must include either the release of seven Israeli soldiers missing in Lebanon or a ftill accounting of what happened to them. Israeli Prime Minister Yitzchak Shamir has pointed to the speedy freedom of Jerome Leyraud, a French medical worker held three days this summer, as proof that Syria and Iran have the power to release all hostages held in Lebanon. Mr. Hadad said it is IDF policy not to rest until every one of its soldiers is return- ed. "We follow a simple motto in the army," Mr. Hadad said. "Ein ozvim chayal pat- sua ba'shetach — we don't abandon a wounded soldier on the field of battle. And if you are taken hostage, Israel will do its best to get you back — dead or alive. You know this with your whole heart. Even if it takes years." Mr. Hadad said Westerners and even Israelis don't realize how much is done to free Israeli prisoners of war. He said much of the work takes place behind the scenes. "The government is just quiet about what it does to get back its soldiers. Peo- ple are deliberately kept in the dark. Sometimes it's safer that way." Mr. Hadad remembers hearing little about what was done to release one of his air force commanders captured in 1973. "He was a pilot taken by Syria or Egypt," Mr. Hadad said. "I was told he had a wife and kids. He never talked about it (capture and repatriation), but we (air force cadets) could see the scars on his face. He had these wide spaces between the hairs on his head. It looked as though they had been yanked or burned out." Despite his commander's safe return, Mr. Hadad doesn't believe the Israeli government should negotiate the release of Western hostages without first securing the release of Israel's missing in action and POWs. "Israel has the first responsibility to its soldiers and to its families," he said. "If the government finds a way to get its seven POWs back that demands the release of 400 Arab ter- rorists — fine. But to pressure Israel into helping release the other Western hostages for Palestinians, I don't see the point." "When a close friend or a member of your family is taken hostage, you don't care about anything except getting your friend, or brother or sister back," Mr. Hadad said. "Israel is one big family. Everybody feels the pain of those families as if it were their own. "Ideally, life should be more important than any principle of non-negotiation. But Israel has to consider its security." A Fantasy World Rachelle Lichtenstein, 27, said the hardest thing to do in the Israeli army is face the death of a fellow soldier. Mrs. Lichtenstein, raised in Oak Park, was a chayelet, a female soldier, from 1982 to 1984. One of her last jobs was taking care of wounded soldiers at an army clinic in Tel Aviv. "Once, a chayal, who'd lost an arm, was wheeled in and was so badly burned, I vomited," said Mrs. Lichtenstein, who was born in Israel. Rachelle Lichtenstein: "The Arabs aren't going to stop until they get what they want." Mrs. Lichtenstein and her husband, Moshe, a Califor- nia native, left Israel in April and now live in Southfield. Two weeks ago, Mrs. Lichtenstein gave birth to her second son. "Violence against Israelis and chayalim occurs more often than the Western media reports it," Mrs. Lichtenstein said. "There are daily murders, kidnapp- ings and molestations that continually go unnoticed." Mrs. Lichtenstein said Arab terrorists have been known to dress like Chasidim and knock on the doors of homes in Har Nof, a Jertitsalem neighborhood. "I don't think these kinds of actions will stop just be- cause of a possible Middle East peace conference," she said. "I think it's blowing a lot of hot air into the wind." Israel has practically agreed to participate in a peace conference set for some time in October. In an unprecedented move, Jordan joined Syria, Lebanon, Egypt and Saudi Arabia in THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS 31