The war had been raging for
40 days when Eli reported to the orchards. Seven in the morning and he was the
first one. The only one. Was he in the right place? Was he in his right mind to
have driven an hour and a half from his relatively safe home in Tel Aviv to
this remote orchard in the relatively unsafe south? All was quiet at this
hour—no rockets, artillery, or jets overhead—but everything could change
without a moment’s notice, and he was a bit nervous.
“It’s completely safe
there,” he had reassured Batya the previous night when he announced his
intention to volunteer at the kibbutz. “There have been no rocket alerts or
incidents in that area.”
“Still, you’ll be very
close to Gaza,” she replied, a worried look on her face. “You should go to some
farm near Netanya instead.”
“I’m going where I’m most
needed,” he insisted.
And that was that. He woke
up before his alarm rang, put on the hiking boots he hadn’t worn since his
hiking trip in the Bulgarian mountains ten years earlier. He took two pitot out
of the freezer and made cheese sandwiches for his lunch. After packing a bottle
of mineral water in his bag, he was ready to go.
“I should be back in the
early afternoon,” he whispered to Batya as he kissed her on the forehead.
“As long as you come back
in one piece,” she replied without opening her eyes.
They needed him; he told
himself repeatedly as he drove south. Thai and Nepalese workers had fled from
the country in the aftermath of that horrific Saturday the previous month. Who
would work in the fields? Who would pick the crops? Volunteers, that’s who! And
he had stepped up to the plate. He was sixty-five years old, but damn if he
couldn’t help save Israeli agriculture.
Now he stood at the highway
intersection which Waze indicated was his destination, and he was alone. He
watched the heavy traffic passing by—the delivery trucks and the Gaza-bound
army jeeps—waiting for someone, anyone, who would direct him to the orchard. He
looked at his watch once again. They would soon show up as promised, he told
himself, and he would play his role in the war effort, as insignificant as it
might be.
A white pickup pulled off
the highway and came to a stop next to Eli’s Kia sedan. The driver signaled him
to follow, so he started the motor and eased his foot off the brake.
Clouds of dust kicked up on
the unpaved road. Eli kept a tight grip on the steering wheel, swerving around
the countless potholes. He drove alongside rows of newly planted trees, too
young to bear fruit. He wondered if they were orange trees, or maybe lemon. Surely
citrus. That was what the Facebook ad had mentioned, leading him to sign up at
this southern kibbutz.
The pickup turned left,
onto another dirt road, and Eli followed. The trees were bigger here, and he
could clearly see the fruit on their branches. Green spheres, some of them hanging
low, nearly touching the ground. The pickup stopped; Eli pulled up behind it.
He got out of the car to meet its driver for the first time.
“I’m Gershon,” the
white-haired man said, reaching forward to shake his hand. “Welcome to our
pomelo orchards. Pomelit, actually, a smaller variety of pomelo.
Sweeter, also.”
“Am I the only one?”
“You’re the only one at
this hour. Others will arrive, hopefully. Are you ready to get your hands
dirty?”
As they walked between the rows
of pomelo trees, Gershon provided background about the orchard. “It’s a
cooperative between a business entity and the kibbutz. I’m a kibbutznik, but
not from around here. Some 70% of the produce is for export; the rest is for
the local market. Before the war, we employed Thai workers, some daily workers
from Gaza. Now, they’re all gone. We’re weeks behind with the harvest. If it
wasn’t for volunteers like you…”
Gershon didn’t need to
finish the sentence. Eli felt he had landed in the right place at the right
time.
Gerson directed him to the
start of a row. The trees here were bursting with fruit. Pomelos. Thick-skinned
pomelos.
“Pick everything,” Gershon
instructed him.
“Even when they’re green?”
“They’re not grapefruits.
This fruit is ready for market.”
Minutes later, Eli was all
alone. His hands searched among the leaves for the ripe fruit. Much larger than
expected, they easily snapped off the branches with a twist of his wrist. He
quickly filled the bag strapped over his shoulder. In the sandy space between
the rows, he carefully emptied the pomelos into a large container, making sure
not to damage the fruit, which would lower its value. He returned to the tree
and resumed picking.
The thorny branches
scratched his arms, despite his having worn a long-sleeved shirt. Some of the
fruit hung low, and he dropped to his knees to reach it. The sand was soft, but
an old leg injury made the effort a bit discomforting. He pulled another pomelo
out from its hiding place amidst the greenery.
Pomelos. Branch after
branch, tree after tree. The citrus smell was heavenly, the quiet serene. He
was alone in the orchard, with no signs or sounds of the war that had brought
him here. Alone, and he felt wonderful.
The sound of approaching
voices made him stand up, adjust the bag on his shoulder. It was Gershon,
leading a small group of volunteers. Most of them appeared to be his age,
although there was a young couple as well. Gershon nodded to Eli and then
introduced the new arrivals to the work. They divided themselves among the rows
and began picking. Pomelos piled up in the square container on the sandy path.
Eli continued to work,
smiling at the thought of Batya just waking up to the empty quiet of their Tel
Aviv apartment. They had been living alone for so many years—their two sons
were in the States with their growing families. There had been frequent
telephones of concern since the war began, but the rocket attacks on Tel Aviv
were nothing to worry about. Most of them were shot down by the Iron Dome
defense system.
Eli was too old to serve in
the army reserves—his days as a combat medic had ended long before—but at least
he could do this. He looked up at the bright blue expanse of sky. So close to
the Gaza Strip, so close to the war, but he felt completely at ease. Safe.
The sound of a woman crying
interrupted his thoughts. It was coming from the next row. He walked around the
tree where he was working and onto the sandy path. It took a moment until he
spotted her. She was sitting with her back against a tree trunk, her head held
low and her face half-hidden by a large-brimmed sun hat. Her shirt and pants
were khaki-colored. Removing a pair of work gloves seemed a task too difficult
for her to handle, and she was crying.
“Are you alright?” Eli
asked as he approached, but it was clear that something was wrong.
The woman looked up and
wiped the tears from her face with her still-gloved hand. “I’m OK,” she said,
and he was about to turn away. “No, I’m not OK. How can any of us be OK?”
He didn’t know how to reply
to that. What she said was true, of course. The war had been raging for forty
days and no one in Israel was OK. Everyone was struggling to deal with the
aftermath of the horrific Hamas terror attack, some more than others. Perhaps
this woman had a personal connection to the war?
“Is there anything…?” He
wondered what words of comfort he could offer. Had a loved one of hers been
killed? Had someone she knew been taken captive? Perhaps a family member had
been called up for emergency reserve duty in the army. There were so many ways
that this war affected Israelis. Too many ways.
“No, thank you,” she said,
struggling to her feet.
“Do you want to talk about
it?” he asked, surprising himself with the boldness of his offer.
She forced a smile and turned
back to her tree, back to the pomelos in her row.
He continued to pick the
heavy fruit, pulling them one by one from the thick thorny branches. He worked
in silence, comforted by the simple physical task he was performing. Simple and
repetitive, his bag filled quickly. He went to the container to empty it and she
was standing there, not moving, gazing at the cloudless blue sky. When she
heard him approach, she smiled. A genuine smile this time.
“I’m Eli,” he said in a
friendly greeting.
A sense of calm eased her
features, and she introduced herself. “Nava. Where are you from, Eli?”
“Tel Aviv. You?”
“Holon. So do you often
come to the pomelos?”
He laughed. “No, this is my
first chance to volunteer.”
“Mine, too. I needed to get
away from everything. From the television newscasts, the horrid headlines. I
needed to clear my head,” she said.
“We all need to clear our
heads,” he agreed.
“Please excuse me for what
you witnessed earlier. I rarely get emotional or teary, but these days… Well,
you know.”
“I understand.”
“It’s normal, isn’t it? To
feel this way?”
“Of course,” he said. “It’s
the situation.”
“Yes, exactly. The situation.
What a fucked-up situation!”
This caused him to laugh.
He waited for her to say more, but she adjusted the bag on her shoulders and
returned to her pomelo trees.
Later, when he took a break
and rested in the shade, when he ate one of his now-soggy pita sandwiches, she
sat down next to him on the sand and took off her sun hat. She had light brown
hair, styled much like Batya’s. But that was the only resemblance to his wife.
Nava was younger, maybe in her forties. She was slim, her features pleasant.
The kind of woman who would have attracted him twenty years ago.
“I had to do this,” she
said, raising her hand to point at the trees. “To do something, anything, to
make me forget.”
“Are you…? Do you…?” Eli
wasn’t sure how to phrase the question he wanted to ask.
“If you’re wondering if
I’ve suffered a personal loss in this conflict, the answer is no. That would be
horrible, of course, but we all feel like we know someone who was murdered.
We’re all mourning.”
“Exactly,” he agreed.
“That day. Everything
changed on that horrific day. So many lives lost—men, women, and children, all
of them innocent. So many taken by Hamas into the horrors of Gaza. So much
property destroyed. And it’s all our fault.”
“Our fault?” He put the unfinished
part of his pita back into its plastic bag and took a long sip of lukewarm
water.
“They failed us. Our incompetent
government, our army. Our intelligence agencies, and they say we have the best
in the world. We have tanks, fighter jets, Iron Dome, and even nuclear weapons,
and yet we allowed this to happen on our border. They drove in on motorcycles,
dammit!”
“There will be inquiries
after the war,” he said, wiping crumbs off his pants.
“After the war? They say
we’re going to destroy Hamas, rescue all the hostages, but it’s a war we have
no chance of winning. The world is against us, and we lose no matter what we
do. Such terror, and the world says that it’s our fault.”
“We didn’t bring this upon
ourselves.”
“You think that? It’s our
arrogance, our feeling of invincibility, our refusal to accept the dangers at
our doorstep. They were planning this attack for years. They tricked us, and we
looked the other way, saying it could never happen. Well, it did. And look at
the shithole we’re in. There is no winning this war, that’s for sure.”
She was saying aloud exactly
what he was thinking. Exactly what everyone was thinking. If there was anything
that this war had done, it had brought Israelis together like never before. The
country had been on the brink of civil war, combatting the misguided reforms of
its extremist right-wing government, but now the citizens were united. Destroy
Hamas. Bring back the hostages. But maybe what Nava said was true. There was no
winning this war.
“My therapist says I
shouldn’t take this personally,” she said. “But how can I not? If I had been
living in those communities, I would be dead now. If the terrorists hadn’t been
stopped, they would have driven all the way to Holon. Hell, we’d all be dead!”
He understood her pain, as
it was everyone’s pain. Her tears were his tears. Her crying had taken him by
surprise, but these last few weeks had taken an emotional toll on everyone.
“Shouldn’t we get back to
work?” he suggested.
“Yes, back to work. That’s
what my therapist told me. I’m a travel agent, but there are no tourists these
days. I needed to get away. I needed to do something positive amidst this
negative life we’re living. And that’s why I’m here. Picking pomelos. And I
don’t even like pomelos! They’re sour, they’re impossible to peel. The skin so
thick, so much pulp to throw away. Pomelos! Who would have thought!”
He laughed at that. Pomelos
were certainly not his favorite fruit either, but here he was, in the south,
not far from the combat in Gaza. She had mentioned her therapist. These were
days when there was a need for national therapy. Maybe the only thing to do,
the only way to heal oneself, was exactly what he was doing. Coming here to
pick the pomelit fruit.
Later, when the strain on
his muscles was more than he could bear, and when his arms were scratched to
the point of bleeding, Eli nodded farewell to a grateful Gershon and got back
into his Kia sedan for the drive north to his home in Tel Aviv. Realizing he
hadn’t said goodbye to Nava, he considered getting out to look for her among
the trees, but Batya would get worried if he returned too late. And who was he
to Nava, anyway? He had learned little about her, other than that she lived in
Holon, was currently unemployed, and that she frequented a therapist. Even so,
he felt like he knew her. They were going through this together, along with
every Israeli.
There was no winning this
way, but hopefully, they would soon emerge from this painful period. The
country’s volunteering spirit was strong, and it didn’t matter whether you were
cooking meals for soldiers, donating clothes to the displaced residents of the
Gaza-area communities, or working on the farms, like him. Didn’t this show what
Israelis felt about their country? Picking pomelos—a symbol of Israeli
resilience. He’d come next week to pick some more. Yes, they would get through
this together, he again thought, as he eased the car into the northbound
traffic.
# # #
Originally published on Esoterica.
Oh Ellis . . . I don’t know YOU, but you know ME, and I’m not even Israel!!!
ReplyDeleteJoan Rosen (member of Adas Emuno, Barry reaffirmed our Israeli granddaughters marriage in front of 70 friends and family . . . On OCTOBER 8th!!!!
One grandson, an IDF major got out that night with Embassy help. One reservist got out the next. 8 more scrambled to get home over the next 2 weeks.
A very big thank you! I would love to share this with some friends and family - with y our permission.
We are members of Adas Emuno and your brother-in-law shared this with us.
Thanks for reading and your comments - feel free to share!
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