Page Four PERSPECTIVES , _. PEACE IN OUR TIME 0. .. Judith Laikini A',MNON scuffed his bare feet along the path, rousing angry puffs of dust behind him. He had long ago learned to hate the dust that made the settlers work so hard to turn it into the good soil that would finally grow live things. The dust was heavy and gray, and where it had not settled too thickly one could see its brother the sand, heavy also, but more yellow. He paused by the irrigation ditch that followed the path. He longed for a cool drink fror it, for the sun had risen so high as to swallow his whole shadow, and even the shadow of the cedars lining the top of the hill. But he well remem- bered Sara his mother telling him that the water in the canals is for the thirsty fields, and that thirsty men must be brave and drink as little as possible. So he continued along the straight path that was really not much of a path at all, because except for the one hill rising from the desert like a mole on an unshaven face, all the land was flat and one could wander any- where over it and easily lose one's way. Here the irrigation ditch turned abrupt- ly away from the road in order to avoid the place where Shmuel had been shot and now lay buried. Amnon had still ben a part of his mother when that happened, Sara had explained, and that was why he could not remember it. In one fist the boy of seven held clutched a small pot with damp earth in which was a flowering plant that Nurse had said he might take from be- fore the Children's House. They were the only flowers in the village, and were fed on, some suspected, Nurse's own drinking water, and so were to be highly prized. This flower he was bringing to plant by the slab of granite that marked where Yichiel his father lay. The boy was panting by the time he had climbed the hill. The sun was try- ing to beat all life back into the earth, and even the proud and sturdy cedars withered under its attack. Amnon sought what shade he could, and rested to allow his breath to catch up with him. From where he sat he could see all the village and its surrounding fields, with the sleek and gleaming can- als stretched out like lazy serpents warming themselves in the sun. How alive those fields had been only a few days ago with the growing and the growers! The villagers had rejoiced to see the land returning to the fertil- ity it had known long ago, and Sara had told her son that soon, soon, all the land which had not yet been reclaimed and so stood desolate and naked before the angry winds and blistering sun would be planted and fruitful as were their own fields and orchards. And .4mhon remembered how, two nights before they were to begin the harvest -the village's first real harvest, Yichiel returned to his wife and son. He had been three years gone, and all that time been home only twice; and now he was come back to stay. Amnon had wondered what his father would say when he found Sara grown round with child, but Yichiel knew already about Yochanan-that was to be his brother's name-and had laughed his big laugh when the boy confided the secret to him. "Yochanan he shall be," Yichiel laughed to Sara. "And if he be a girl, why, any name you please-save Ta- mar," and Yichiel roared again, al- though Sara had chided him, saying he should not joke about such things. ' But that was when the fields were green, and Yichiel had been in the vil- lage, instead of up here on top of the lonely hill with only old Yankel, and Chana who had given her life to her baby, for company. Now, since the burning, Amnon could scarcely tell where the fields ended and Midbar the desert began. The only brightness to be seen was the'white of the hospital walls. And there he could not look, because he knew that inside lay Sara, her teeth biting her dust-colored mouth, and her eyes tightly closed. No, he would not think of that. He would not think of how it would be if Sara were taken from the village to lie also on the hill, and perhaps Yochanan with her. He would think of . . . think of . . . what else was there to think of but what he had thought of too much al- ready: the day of Yichiel's return, bare- ly a week ago. It was the day of the cutting of the Omer, the first fruit of the fields. All afternoon and on into the night the settlers had danced their wild dances and sung their triumphant songs over the conquest of the desert and of the long-slumbering fields. It would be there they found a kind of cage of wires set up, and in it were all the people of the town. Some of the young- er children began to wail, until Nurse gave each of them into their parents' care. Amnon too sought his mother and father, but Sara and Yichiel seemed to be the only ones not there. He shivered, fearing what unknown thing might have happened to them. But he was the son of a chalutz, one of the pioneers, and so he did not cry. Amnon knew what had caused this invasion. He had heard the adults speaking of just such a thing after the town meeting two nights ago. The government had sent its troops to search the village for recently-arrived immigrants. The boy knew there were none there. The soldiers would find no one. He huddled down into one corner of the barbed-wire cage, as far away his dark corner, saw two of the strange soldiers smoking and talking to one another with their English tongues which he only imperfectly understood, and he saw also how one threw his match, as though carelessly, into the open door of the barn. The boy scream- ed, and the villagers took up the cry when they saw what he pointed to. It was not long before the jackal flames had stripped and hollowed out the barn, and, leaving the unpalatable skeleton, were racing greedily across the heavy- laden fields. And all the while the .sol- diers stood with guns so none might escape and quench the fire. And then, in the midst of their misery the people heard a single rifle shot. And soon two soldiers appeared bearing Sara between them. When the soldiers had gone, Amnon crept to his parents' home, where Yich- iel still lay with the blood black and hard on his bare chest. He knew by then what had happened. His mother was unable to leave her bed when the command came, for the pain which Yochanan gave her, and so Yichiel stayed by her side. When the soldiers had burst into their cottage, he began to explain that his wife was too sick to move. One man, striding over to the bed, started to yank Sara from under the covers. Yichiel leaped to- ward him; one of the other soldiers then raised his rifle and shot Yichiel full in the chest. The shadows of the cedars were growing fuller toward the east, and Amnon began to dig a place for his father's flowers. As he dug the care- fully guarded tears escaped from his eyes, and rolling from his cheeks sank into the still loose earth. Amnon re- membered how all the night through for a week he had sat on the bare floor in his stocking feet near Sara's bed in the hospital, while she read to him, and between each psalm spoke to hm with words which she begged him to keep forever in his heart of hearts. "They are not to blame, Amnon, my little chalutz; remember it is not the soldiers who are to blame, but their leaders. Promise me you will'remem- ber." And Amnon, frightened, had pro- mised. The flower was planted, and Amnon once more looked toward the village. A movement in the dust caught his eye. Off in the distance a line of trucks moved toward the city. The soldiers were through searching this part of the country and were leaving-for a time. But they always came back. Al- ways when the fields turned green and the fences were straightened; when the irrigation canals. were newly repaired and the colonists dared hope again, always the soldiers returned, leaving behind their locust-like descent the broken fences and the broken buildings and the broken lives. And here Yichiel lay dead, and there lay the dead fields. Amnon clambered atop the gleaming new granite, tinged now with the blood of the dying sun. He clenched his small fists and scream- ed at the distant columns, "shaaim! Murderers!" And then, his voice smothered with the hate of ages he had never-known: "You have killed Yichiel my father and perhaps my mother and brother as well, and it is you who are to blame! When I am grown and am a chalutz as was my father, I shall take my gun and shoot you as you did him! It is you whom I hate, you men with no ears to hear nor eyes to see what would sear any hearts but yours. We shall see who will be stronger when I am a man!" But the grinding trucks roared on through the hostile dust, not heeding a child who lay sobbing on a hilltop in Galilee. -Marion Carleton but a few days more, and then they would harvest their first crop in two thousand years. And so the shouts and the laughter did not die down until half the night was done. Only then did the darkness and the desert regain their customary silence, while the settlers slept the deep sleep of those whose labor is with happiness, and the guard atop the water tower dozed over his rifle. For two hours the village slept thus. Then, with the suddenness of thunder bringing rain from a clear summer's sky, a voice which seemed to come from nowhere and yet to fill every- where roared out across the fields. In clipped and flawless language the voice commanded the colonists to leave their beds and come to the barnyard at the end of the village. Nurse had roused the children, and hushing them gently, hastened them out into the heavy night and to the end of the street. She car- ried Rachel, the youngest, in her arms, and urged the rest to hurry. Once as possible from the searching, prying beam of the soldiers' huge beacon. He felt he must not be noticed lest one of them see him and ask where his parents were. Amnon wondered what he would say to these strangers should they ask him "Where are Sara and Yichiel? Are you not their son? Then tell us where they are!" With his mind Amnon knew that the blurred and unknown shapes scattered outside the cage and obscured by the night were men just like the villagers. But with his heart he wondered. Time and again the teacher had told the children, "These men who sometimes come to disturb our peace and interrupt our lives are merely soldiers, taking orders which they must follow. Each one longs to return to his own home, and is sad because half a world lies between him and all he loves. Do not hate these men whom you see, but rather hate the hatred which moves their leaders to send the soldiers here to watch us." But Amnon, squatting unnoticed in