The attack on Israeli tourists in Burgas was also an
attack on Israeli-Bulgarian friendship.
“They didn’t give me aspirin and wouldn’t let me go to the
bathroom.” These were the words of one of the Israelis sequestered in the Burgas
airport terminal on July 18th in the hours after a terrorist bomb exploded on a
bus of tourists killing 7 people, including 5 Israelis.
Overnight, a team of Israeli doctors and Magen David Adom
paramedics arrived in Bulgaria to check the medical condition of the more than
30 Israelis injured in the terror attack, some of whom suffered serious,
life-threatening injuries.
The Israeli tourists welcomed the arrival of the team from
home with a warm round of applause. What other country cares so much for its
citizens that it sends an aircraft to transport them home as soon as possible after
such a tragedy?
Bulgaria’s president was quick to state that his country
hadn’t received any concrete warnings from the Mossad that a terrorist attack
on Bulgarian soil was imminent. Israeli officials responded by stating that
although the Bulgarian security forces had failed to fully secure the airport
terminal in Burgas, there were no indications that Bulgaria was a terrorist
target at this time.
Israeli-Bulgarian friendship and cooperation has never
been higher. Israeli medics said that the Bulgarian doctors and nurses
provided the best medical care they could to the injured tourists. Israeli
police and army officers are due to arrive in Bulgaria to help investigate the
attack.
Having lived and worked in Bulgaria for two years, I know
that the country’s citizens have a high regard for Israel and the Jewish
People. This strong friendship goes back many generations. After all, despite
siding with the Nazis in World War Two, Bulgaria was the only country that
refused to hand over its Jewish citizens and its entire population of 50,000
Jews was spared the horrors of the Holocaust.
Talking with the average Bulgarian one learns that everyone
seems to have an uncle living in Jaffa, or a friend who went to Jerusalem. The
names Peres and Netanyahu are well-known in Bulgaria. A team of Bulgarian
fire-fighters came to Israel to help fight the Carmel forest fire in December
2010.
Terrorists don’t attack where security is tight and where
attacks are expected, they go for the jugular where security is weak.
Unfortunately, Bulgaria has learned a lesson that it, like other
nations, must beef up its security. Israeli-Bulgarian cooperation and
friendship should grow as a result of this terrorism, and if that happens, the
terrorists will fail to achieve their ultimate goals.
Originally published on The Times of Israel.
The image, originally posted to Flickr, is licensed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 Generic license.
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