Part III: AFSI and Israelis in Yesha are Brothers
Part III: AFSI and Israelis in Yesha are Brothers

For parts I and II, click here and here.

As AFSI members spent Shabbat in Tiberias, they were joined by settlement leader Israel Danziger, the director of Mishmeret Yesha, an organization that trains rapid response teams to counter terrorist attacks in settlements and yeshivos throughout Judea and Samaria.

Enlightening AFSI members to the current state of affairs that the settlement movement finds itself in, in relation to the Israeli government's plans to demolish what they perceive to be "illegal outposts", Mr. Danziger called for unity among residents of Judea and Samaria and exhorted them to chose representatives that will protect their interests.

While in the Golan Heights on the following day, AFSI members made a stop at a most special museum dedicated to those forcibly expelled from Gush Katif at Avnei Eitan, a settlement where Gush Katif families have relocated to. The moving exhibit also included a most powerful and eomtionally wrenching film of the birth, expansive growth and ultimate demise of the once thriving Gush Katif communities.

Addressing the AFSI contingent was a therapist working with children from Gush Katif who are still suffering from horrific and sustaining trauma.

After spending their last night of the AFSI tour at the Midreshet Golan guest house in the Golan Heights, the tour members concluded their trip with visits to Elon Moreh, where they were given a most spectacular and informative tour of the region of Schechem by community leader Pinchas Fuchs.

From there, AFSI visited the 777 Hilltop community near Itamar, where they met with the courageous shepherd Tomer Pnini. With only two families living in the same house, these shepherds have been consistently and brutally attacked by local Arabs who have stolen their sheep. Pointing to a scar on his forehead, Mr. Pnini said, "Each day we encounter a struggle between us and Arabs from the town of Awarta who come with sticks and iron bars. Just two weeks ago we saw two tractors of terrorists. We sent our children back with the flocks and our wives do guard duty. If you try to defend yourself by shooting at these attackers, your arms will be confiscated by the army of the Israeli government," he said.

In the year 2000, the Bet El Development Company paid $79,000 to a grandson of the original property owner of the Beit Ulpana land, according to Jordanian land records.
The settlement of Havat Gilad was AFSI's next stop as the glowing faces of the community's children lit up as they enjoyed the brand new state-of-the-art playground that had been built with help of AFSI members and funds from the Israel Independence Fund. Standing with the children on Havat Gilad, AFSI executive director, Helen Freedman said, "We've seen and heard the pain of our people who live in this region; these amazing people who wage a battle for a Jewish presence in the land of Israel, each and every day. Now, we are with the next generation.

"These wonderful and precious children who will follow in the footsteps of their parents; who will grow and flourish in these communities and we are very proud to be in a position to provide them with a playground just like other children have." 

From there AFSI members visited the Bet El/Ulpana community and were guests in the home of  American-born, Alex Traiman, the writer and director of the powerful documentary "Iranium" which explores the menacing threat of a nuclear powered Iran.

Speaking of recent controversy surrounding the Israeli Supreme Court's pending order to demolish five of the 14 buildings comprising the Ulpana neighborhood of Bet El, Mr. Traiman said, "Yesterday, the international media was here and they made us feel that we were thieves on our own land. They accuse us of building our homes on private Palestinian land and nothing could be further from the truth.

In the year 2000, the Bet El Development Company paid $79,000 to a grandson of the original property owner, according to Jordanian land records. In 2007, an affiliate of Peace Now made bogus claims that the land was purchased from the wrong grandson of the original property owner and it was his cousin who was the rightful owner of the land. After getting a ruling in favor of the petitioner from a Palestinian Authority court, the Peace Now people then took that ruling to the Israeli Supreme Court to petition for demolition."

The next stop on the AFSI tour was to the embattled settlement of Migron where tour members were greeted by Aviella Deitch, a Milwaukee native who now serves as spokesperson for the community. Founded in 1999, subsequent to the presentation of facts by an archeological team that the area contained a significant Jewish historical presence, the Israeli government stepped in to help when several dozen Jewish families moved there.

Now, says Ms. Deitch, "A suit was filed in the Israeli Supreme Court which claims that Migron was built on privately owned Arab land. The plaintiff in the suit was not listed as an Arab or Arabs but as Peace Now on the complainants' behalf...even though the Arabs eventually dropped their case against us because they could not produce the necessary documentation proving that the land belonged to them, the Israeli Supreme Court's ruling still stands and Migron is slated to be demolished this coming August.'

The final stop on the AFSI tour was to the thriving town on Kedumim in the northwestern Shomron. It was there that AFSI members met Raphaella Segal, the exuberant Assistant Mayor of the community. Leading AFSI members on a tour of Kedumim, she pointed to the very place that the late Prime Minister Menachem Begin addressed the community and affirmed his complete support for the growth of Kedumim and other communities like it in the region. 

Showing the tour participants the various satellite communities of Kedumim, located on hilltops surrounding it, Ms. Segal said, "It was with the incredibly generous support of people such as yourself and the generosity of Irving and Charna Moskowitz that we were able to build the synagogue that you see. We have also installed high-tech security systems."

She added that, "Today Kedumim has a school for Ethiopian girls and a school for boys with ADD and ADHD. We also have a music school that was donated by Cleveland philanthropist Dennis Seaman in memory of his father. For this and much more, we are very thankful.

Hosting the AFSI group for their farewell dinner at their home, Ms. Segal and her husband beseeched the AFSI group to make Kedumim their first stop on their next trip. "Tonight, we are enjoying your last evening in Israel with you, but please the next time you come, please make us your first stop so we may enjoy the future developments of this community together with great joy, said Ms. Segal.

On the way to the airport, AFSI members voiced their thoughts and feelings about the Spring 2012 Chizuk Mission.

"I am very blessed to be a part of this holy mission to Israel. AFSI is so unique, because unlike other tours, they truly reach out in so many tangible ways to those Jews struggling to maintain a Jewish life in our biblical homeland. AFSI members are always giving; be it through monetary contributions or emotional and psychological support to their brothers and sisters. You can see that AFSI members really care as the  the pain of Israel's reality is etched on their faces.

"May G-d continue to bless all those people in every community that we've visited with strength to carry on and may He bless AFSI for their constant devotion and dedication", said Nancy, a nurse from the New York area.

Arutz Sheva adds: "Amen"