Both Sides Of The Fence LARRY DERFNER Israel Correspondent L iving a mile from the north- ern border with Lebanon, the homes of both Rachel Keinan and Yisrael Avakrat are vulnerable to katyusha rockets fired periodically in their direction by Hezbollah terrorists. Each is also the parent of sons who, as soldiers in elite units of the Israeli army, go over the border and fight the Lebanese group. Keinan, a jewelry-maker at Kibbutz Elon, and Avakrat, mayor of the devel- opment town of Shlomi, live about four miles from each other. But the way they see the war in Lebanon is worlds apart. They are part of a new debate that has broken out in Israeli society — As their sons go off to battle, Israeli families vigorously debate the army's presence in Lebanon. whether to keep Israel's soldiers in the "security zone" in south Lebanon until formal peace with Syria (Lebanon's de facto ruler), or to get them out as soon as possible. Keinan, a 51-year-old Peace Now supporter, managed not to think about the war until her son, Harel, went there to fight about two years ago. Then the thought began growing in her: "It's the soldiers' job to defend civilians, yes, but you have to balance that against the price we're paying. So many soldiers are being killed. Why aren't their lives as valuable as those of civilians?" Keinan's younger son, Adi, 21, is now in uniform — and fighting in Lebanon. Avakrat, a Likud member, has two sons in their mid-20s who fought in Lebanon in recent years; they're liable W<;..‘‘' Olifl 21 1 2.stte0 1,0 1 D',V4- 11 ri 11.1M1 e r:1 q,a0 t. 31`7°.1 1.it• AMMO 0.1. . • ,99.666.993559 464-0 g • 31.74 101,114 101:24 , to return as reserve soldiers. In family discussions about the war, "It's clear to them that the scales tip in favor of us \ ' staying in the security zone," Avakrat says. This is how they felt before the recent spate of battle deaths in Lebanon, he adds, and this how they - feel now With two soldiers killed in Lebanon last Saturday, and 12 killed on the previous Saturday, the call for unilateral pullout has been spreading. Dina Bosel, whose son, Ophir, was among the recent war dead, said bit- terly on television: "I don't want any- body to tell me it was worth it, because when you add it up, it wasn't - worth it." Gen. Amnon Shahak, chief of staff of the Israeli military, said the move- ment for withdrawal from Lebanon was one of "the clear signs of fatigue" among the Israel public. This is lead- ing many people to demand a quick, decisive solution, but Shahak admitted, "We do not have such a solution." These sorts of frank, trou- bling statements didn't used —\ to be heard. But the 15-year war in Lebanon, which has often been called "Israel's Vietnam," is driving more and more people to speak their hearts. There is a growing division of opinion about Lebanon among the residents of the northern border. The area is 7 dominated by two sharply contrasting kinds of popula- tion centers — left-wing, mainly Ashkenazi kibbutzim like Elon, where the move- ment for withdrawal gets a •'L_,:_it, frisio,40)41.*: fairly receptive hearing, and right-wing, Sephardi moshavim and development towns like Shlomi, where opposition to withdrawal is overwhelming. An Israeli walks past posters put up by the Peace Now movement reading, "Netanyahu is destroying the peace." 9/19 1997 30