The Jerusalem Post

Survivor, granddaugh­ter activate remembranc­e siren

- • By ANNA AHRONHEIM

The Holocaust Remembranc­e Day siren was activated on Thursday by a Holocaust survivor and former senior IDF officer, along with his granddaugh­ter.

The siren – which sounded for two minutes across the country, bringing it to a standstill to remember the victims of the Holocaust – was activated by Brig.-Gen. (res.) Reuven Eyal and Private Shani Eyal who serves as an alert operator at the Home Front Command Headquarte­rs.

Reuven Eyal was born in 1935 in Transylvan­ia, Romania. His father was taken to a forced labor camp during the Holocaust and in 1948, Eyal and his brother immigrated to Israel. He enlisted in the IDF in 1953 and completed the pilot’s course in 1955. During his time in the military, he held a number of positions in the air force, including heading the enemy weapons research branch, head of the intelligen­ce research department, commander of the Sde Dov air base and more.

He served as a pilot and commander during Operation Kadesh, the Six Day War, Yom Kippur War, and the First Lebanon War.

His last recent role in Israel’s military was head of the Intelligen­ce Corps in the Air Force, during which he was also involved in Operation Opera which destroyed Iraq’s nuclear reactor in Iraq in 1981.

On Thursday morning, Eyal arrived at the Home Front Command’s alert center where his granddaugh­ter serves, and with her, pressed the button that activated the siren all over the country.

“The Holocaust period is a groundbrea­king event, following which many decided to immigrate to Eretz Israel, to a country where they feel safe,” Eyal said. “It is important for me to pass on to the younger generation that the future of the country is in their hands.

“My heart is full of joy to see my granddaugh­ter, holding the torch and continuing to pass on the feeling to future generation­s, supporting the safe existence of the state and warning against threats,” he said.

“I am proud of her and the unit in which she serves – and today I had a historic moment, a moment of victory.”

His granddaugh­ter, Shani, also shared that it was a privilege to activate the siren along with her grandfathe­r.

“I am proud of the path my grandfathe­r went through during his life and the person he became” she said. “I am excited to activate the siren in memory of millions of Holocaust victims with him on behalf of all the residents of the State of Israel. For me, it is a great privilege that takes on additional significan­ce today thanks to the role in which I serve.”

On Wednesday evening, speaking at a Holocaust Remembranc­e Day ceremony, Defense Minister Benny Gantz said that the stories of survivors showed the power of the Jewish people.

“With the establishm­ent of the state, there was a silence of the survivors – so that the story of the strong Jewish people, who do not go like sheep to the slaughter, can be rewritten,” he said.

“For me, their story is not a story of weakness, but power within – which is a promise. Out of difficulti­es, they establishe­d settlement­s and created new identities. Out of horror grew children who continued to realize the Zionist vision; out of the horror grew children who enlisted in the IDF and became commanders.”

In the name of Zionism, Gantz said, Holocaust survivors immigrated to Israel and fought “to be masters of their own destiny, to ensure on their own: ‘Never Again.’”

Speaking at the ceremony which focused on Jewish children who survived the Holocaust, Israel Air Force head Maj.-Gen. Tomer Bar saluted the heroism of Jewish youth who, during the war “for the sake of their families, for the courage of boys and girls, fought in the forests alongside the partisans until their last drop of blood.”

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? ALL MOVEMENT freezes at Jerusalem’s Mamilla Mall yesterday, as shoppers stand at attention during the two-minute siren marking Holocaust Remembranc­e Day.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ALL MOVEMENT freezes at Jerusalem’s Mamilla Mall yesterday, as shoppers stand at attention during the two-minute siren marking Holocaust Remembranc­e Day.

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