Remembrance And Reunification: Realizing A Generation's Dream By UZI NARKISS At 9:00 came Motta's message that Augusta Victoria had been captured and everyone at Binyanei Ha'ooma was seized with its impact. The time had come. We were upon the walls. "Shall we move?" I murmured impatiently. We moved. The forward H.Q. group — two half-tracks and two jeeps — were waiting and in we climbed, with Didi Menussi and Raffi Amir, a Kol-Israel man, whom Didi had graciously invited for "the experience of your life." We passed the east Jerusalem Y.M.C.A., whose smashed windows and besmirched walls gave bleak evidence of battle. The American Consulate on the right was also battle-scarred; a destroyed gas station stood next to the temporary memorial erected by the paratroopers to their fallen comrades. We sped by passing an undamaged mosque and the bullet- riddled buildings in an alley, called "the Alley of Death" by the paratroopers, for the fallen who had attempted to rescue their comrades. Suddenly the wall rose before us, and the battlements of Nablus Gate. The Gate was not yet ours; Legionnaires guarded the parapet and we turned back to Salah e-Din Street, where broken windows, burned automobiles, and derelict electric wires spoke of war. Opposite the Rivoli Hotel was a damaged Egged bus and several paratroopers. I asked what they were doing. "Wounded evacuation point," one replied. Another group of paratroopers halted our advance, warning about shooting at the end of the road, where Salah e-Din Street meets Herod's Gate and the Old City walls. We could travel on it no farther and turned around, Haim Bar-Lev taking the wheel. Back on Nablus Road, we encountered all the terrible and pathetic remnants of war: death and destruction and chaos. Nothing stirred. By 09.45 we were on Mt. Scopus, gazing at the town below, which seemed idle and empty. All at once I saw smoke rising inside the Old City, behind the walls, and contacted Arik: "Are the paratroopers shelling the Old City?" When he said that they were, I ordered him to stop immediately, and at the same moment, I heard the paratroop G. Branch officer commanding his mortar units to stop shooting. "We're going in," he cried. 62 FRIDAY, MAY 1, 1992 Thousands of religious youth march through the Old City to mark Jerusalem Day. "Where are you?" I called. "At the Lion's Gate," and before the last word had been uttered we were back in our vehicles, racing down the mountain, our hearts as loud as the motors. We were going into the Old City! Nineteen years earlier we had broken through the Zion Gate and entered the Jewish Quarter, only to leave it again in despair and bitter disappointment. "Let us not go in if it's just to go out another time," I breathed. "We shall never leave again," said Haim Bar-Lev. Our convoy was on the slope of the hill below Rockefeller, where the road branches toward Gethsemane. From the corner position on the wall opposite, shots were still coming, and beneath, on the traffic island, was a silent Sherman tank and the sunshade of the policeman who was not on duty to use it. The intermittent shots of the snipers could be heard from the walls. I threw a smoke-grenade, under cover of which we crossed to the abandoned tank, which had been hit the night before during the "Battle on the Bridge." Snipers fired on a column of paratroopers, who marched on without changing pace, like men fatigued to the point of trance. One fell, and then another, but forward tramped the rest. Next to the damaged tank, completely exposed, a paratrooper with a bazooka stood, legs apart, fighting a private duel with the snipers on the walls. He silenced the corner position. We went back to the cars, abandoning the slow-moving half- Nineteen years earlier we had broken through the Zion Gate and entered the Jewish Quarter, only to leave it again in despair and bitter disappointment . . . "We shall never leave again." tracks, and sped off in the jeeps. Ahead, on the road from the valley to the Lion's Gate, was a column of paratroopers, led by General Rabbi Shlomo Goren, Chief Army Chaplain, a sefer Torah under his arm, a shofar in his left hand, his beard bristling like the point of a spear, and his face bathed in perspiration. He was panting. "Rabbi," I called out, "come aboard. We're going to the same place." "No," he replied, "to the Temple Mount one goes on foot." "Then we'll meet there." The jeep sprang forward. On the move I contacted Motta to find out where he was. "The Temple Mount is ours!" I couldn't believe it. "I repeat," said Motta. "The Temple Mount is ours. I'm standing near the Mosque el-Omar right now. The Wailing Wall is a minute away." Now was the time for the jeep to sprout wings, but at the moment it lacked not just wings but one of its wheels. Bang, and the jeep veered so sharply that only with all my strength could I stop it before it tumbled off the road. The tire was in shreds. We had no time or inclination to change. We crowded into the second jeep. But more important, we drove up the narrow road toward the Lion's Gate. We drove through, along the road to the Gate of the Tribes and the Temple Mount, and down the Via Dolorosa to the second arch. It was blocked by the lead tank of the paratroops. We climbed over it and continued on foot. Yoel, behind us, picked off a sniper shooting at us from one of the houses. Except for that, the Via Dolorosa was cool and silent, the windows shuttered, the streets empty.