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Behind the Headlines: a Year Without Purim; No Parades, Only Funerals

March 5, 1996
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Many Israeli schoolchildren will remember 1996 as the year without Purim. In deference to the victims of this week’s suicide bombings in Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, schools and synagogues canceled their annual Purim spiels and parties.

Usually brimming with little Queen Esthers, Power Rangers and Ninja Turtles, downtown Jerusalem this year was nearly devoid of youngsters.

Fearing more terrorist attacks, most parents decided to keep their kids at home. Those children who did venture out appeared sad and bewildered at the lack of festivities.

For the adults, the horrible cycle of suffering has been even more traumatic. For the second week in a row, Israelis have rushed to newsstands to check whether someone they know has been killed or injured.

Even people with no actual ties to the victims were deeply affected by the front-page photos of soldiers, schoolchildren and grandparents who were killed in the blasts.

Among the victims of this week’s attacks: * On their first outing without parental supervision, Kobi Zaharon and Yovav Levi, both 13, had the time of their lives roaming the Dizengoff Center shopping mall in Tel Aviv.

They never made it home.

After walking around the mall on Purim, the two boys were about to board a bus when the blast occurred. Kobi, who was preparing to celebrate his Bar Mitzvah next month, was killed immediately. Yovav died soon after in the hospital. * Last week, Gavriel Shamashvili heard the terrible news that a close relative, Simon Tarakashvilli, had been killed in the first No. 18 bus bombing in Jerusalem. Exactly one week later, Shamashvili himself was killed when another No. 18 bus was blown up in the heart of Jerusalem.

A Soviet immigrant who arrived in Israel four years ago, Shamashvili worked in an factory that produced medical supplies.

Just a week earlier, his fellow employees had given him a bouquet of flowers for his 43rd birthday. “His Hebrew wasn’t good enough to read the card, so I translated,” said co-worker. “He seemed really touched.”

A grieving relative noted that “the family has just gotten up from one shiva, and now we are once again in mourning.” He leaves a wife and two children, ages 14 and 16. * Anna Shingeloff, another immigrant from the former Soviet Union, could not believe her luck last week when she barely missed boarding the first ill-fated No. 18 bus.

“After the first attack, she spent the whole week in shock,” said a close friend.

The mother of two young daughters, ages 2 and 9 months, Shingeloff, 36, was again on her way to work on a No. 18 when it exploded in the heart of Jerusalem.

“She is like a flower who was cut down,” said a friend. “Now, who will raise her children?” * When Shoshana Wax asked her tow children, Assaf, 21, and Mital, 27, to join her on Dizengoff Street, she had no way of foreseeing the tragedy that would soon befall her family.

After a day spent shopping, Shoshana departed for home. Just five minutes later the bomb went off. For the next several hours, she and her husband, Dov, ran from one place to another, frantically searching for their children. It was only hours later that they located Mital, her foot amputated, hospitalized in very critical condition.

About midnight, the learned that Assaf’s body had been identified at the morgue. * Gidi Taspanish, a 23-year-old from Ethiopia who was living in Israel on a tourist visa, was in a rush Sunday morning. Hurrying to her job as a many in the Givat Ze’ev neighborhood of Jerusalem, she boarded the No 18 bus and was killed instantly.

“When she didn’t arrive at work we decided to try to find her, and we did – in the forensics institute at Abu Kabir,” said Ronen Vinogard, her employer.

“I don’t know how to tell my children what happened to Gidi. They loved her so much.” * As tight as four teen-age girls could be, ninth-graders Bat-Hen Shahak, Dana Gutman, Hadas Dror and Nili Zeltzer traveled Monday to Tel Aviv for a day of sun and shopping. Due home in the late afternoon, they telephoned their parents to ask whether could stay just a little longer.

When the bomb on Dizengoff went off, Bat-Chen and Hadas, both 15 and Dana, 14 were killed on the spot. Nili was badly injured and is now hospitalized.

Shortly after hearing the news, one of the girls’ friends said through tears, “We have to do something to protect ourselves. We really want peace, but it has to be a real peace.”

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