Tag Archives: Yom Kippur War

The Yom Kippur War

This Yom Kippur (on Sunday, Sept 24) is the 50th anniversary of the 1973 Yom Kippur War. When Israelis were interrupted in their synagogues and fasts by familiar sirens (not really heard since 1967) announcing Arab attacks: this time in the Sinai Desert on the south by the Egyptians and in the north on the Golan Heights by Syria.

The Israel Defense Force was taken by surprise and things went badly for the first four days, with territory lost and front line troops taking heavy casualties. U.S. airlifted shipments of ammunition and equipment on the fourth day enabled the IDF to go on a full-scale offensive. But Israel had mobilized two armored divisions of mainly M-48 and M-60 tanks in less than 24 hours.

The IDF gradually turned the Syrian advance into a rout to within 35 kilometers of their capital of Damascus. The Egyptians were likewise compelled to retreat close to their capital of Cairo. And then we got the Arab Oil Embargo which turned our economy upside down and lots of diplo back-and-forthing which I won’t bore you with.

My favorite story from the war is that of Zvika Greengold, a 21-year-old captain (or lieutenant depending on the source) who commanded a Centurion tank on the Golan, one of only eight soldiers of the war awarded the Medal of Valor, Israel’s Medal of Honor.  He fought off the advance of a Syrian tank brigade with his single Centurion, which he dubbed on the radio as Zivka Force, until help arrived.

Yom Kippur, forty years ago: Lu Yehi

Whatever it is about decadal anniversaries, they seem to affect everyone. Hence today’s commemoration of Israel’s Yom Kippur War when the Syrians, etc. attacked a few hours after sundown and into the high holy day.

It was a near thing, especially in the Golan Heights, where the relic hulks of a few destroyed Syrian and Israeli tanks remain at strategic points on the landscape as permanent reminders.

Snoopy the Goon’s preferred reminder is Lu Yehi (May it be):  “…written by our late and much beloved Naomi Shemer 40 years ago, during the war, is part of our collective inheritance and is forever associated with that war.”

Go there and listen. Here are the lyrics in English.

 

ALL WE PRAY FOR
There is still a white sail on the horizon
Opposite a heavy black cloud
All that we ask for – may it be 

And if in the evening windows
The light of the holiday candles flickers
All that we seek – may it be

May it be, may it be – Please – may it be
All that we seek – may it be.

What is the sound that I hear
The cry of the shofar and the sound of drums
All that we ask for – may it be

If only there can be heard within all this
One prayer from my lips also
All that we seek – may it be

May it be…

Within a small, shaded neighborhood
Is a small house with a red roof
All that we ask for, may it be

This is the end of summer, the end of the path
Allow them to return safely here
All that we seek, may it be

May it be…

And if suddenly, rising from the darkness
Over our heads, the light of a star shines
All that we ask for, may it be

Then grant tranquility and also grant strength
To all those we love
All that we seek, may it be

May it be…

 

 

May you have an easy fast tonight and tomorrow as you think of these things.

Israeli Centurion MBT

It was chilly up there on the Golan Heights in late March when I posed beside this Israeli Centurion, a mainstay of the IDF Armored Corps on the Golan in the 1973 war. It was parked at a memorial for the 679 Reserve Armored Brigade which lost 98 men and two score tanks fighting a superior force of Syrians.

The Centurions have been replaced by Merkevas, but the old British tanks are remembered for the accuracy of their 105mm main guns and the way shells from Syria’s Russian T-62s ricocheted off the Centurion plate. Which is why, although the Israeli Armored Corps also purchased U.S. M-48s and M-60s, they bought more of the Centurions and preferred them.