The Boston Globe

In the rural Israeli village of Kfar Azza, ‘It’s a massacre’

Bodies lie amid the wreckage of destroyed homes

- By Sam McNeil

KFAR AZZA, Israel — On the road approachin­g this rural village, the bodies of militants lie scattered between the shells of burned-out cars. Walls and doors of what used to be neatly kept stucco homes are blasted wide open. As bags holding the bodies of slain residents await identifica­tion, the smell of death hangs thick in the hot afternoon air.

This is the scene confrontin­g Israel’s military as it battles to beat back a sweeping assault launched by Hamas from the Gaza Strip, in fighting that has killed hundreds in this country left reeling and the adjoining Palestinia­n enclave under heavy Israeli bombardmen­t.

“You see the babies, the mothers, the fathers in their bedrooms and how the terrorists killed,” Major General Itai Veruv, a 39-year veteran of the Israeli army who led forces that reclaimed the village from militants, said Tuesday as he stood amid the wreckage. “It’s not a battlefiel­d. It’s a massacre.”

The Israeli military led a group of journalist­s, including an Associated Press reporter, on a tour of the village Tuesday, a day after retaking it from what they said was a group of about 70 Hamas fighters.

Kfar Azza, surrounded by farms and just a few minutes down a country road from the heavily fortified fence Israel erected around Gaza, is one of more than 20 towns and villages attacked by Palestinia­n fighters early Saturday. Before the attack, the kibbutz, whose name means “Gaza village” in English, was a modestly prosperous place with a school, a synagogue, and a population of more than 700.

Walking through what is left provides chilling evidence of its destructio­n.

On the town’s perimeter, the gate that once protected residents had been blasted open. Inside the settlement, the doors of many homes had been blown from their hinges by militants using rocket-propelled grenades. Throughout the town, walls and torched cars are riddled with bullet holes, tracing a path of violence that continues inside to bedrooms with mattresses spattered in blood, safe rooms that could not withstand the attack, even bathrooms.

Inside one partially destroyed home, a framed quotation from a popular television theme song hinted at what Kfar Azza meant to its residents: “I’ll be there for you, because you’re there for me, too,” it read. “In this house, we are friends.”

Outside, unexploded hand grenades were scattered on the ground. A few minutes away, a Hamas flag lay crumpled in the dirt near a paraglider.

By the time journalist­s were escorted into the town Tuesday, rescuers had already removed the bodies of most of the villagers killed in the attack. But reporters watched as crews carried several more bags containing bodies to a truck and then to a lot in front of the synagogue, where workers attached name tags.

An AP reporter saw the bodies of about 20 militants, many of them badly bloated and disfigured. Hundreds of Israeli soldiers, in helmets and body armor, patrolled the town Tuesday, as the sounds of explosions and gunfire echoed in the distance.

Veruv, retired from the military for eight years before he was recalled Saturday, said the scene was unlike anything he had ever witnessed. A military spokesman, Major Doron Spielman, agreed, comparing the toll in Kfar Azza and nearby villages he visited to scenes he witnessed as a New Yorker after the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

“I remember going through 9/11 and waking up the next day, the next week, and everything had changed,” he said. “It’s the same thing again. But worse because we’re such a small country.”

 ?? OHAD ZWIGENBERG/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A soldier walked amid the rubble of Kfar Azza on Tuesday, after Israeli forces retook the rural village from the Hamas terrorists who overran it on Saturday.
OHAD ZWIGENBERG/ASSOCIATED PRESS A soldier walked amid the rubble of Kfar Azza on Tuesday, after Israeli forces retook the rural village from the Hamas terrorists who overran it on Saturday.

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