IDF
SOLDIER KILLED IN NABLUS Family
and Country Illustrate Love and Support for the Boys of the IDF 
By
Israel News Agency Staff Jerusalem----September
30......IDF soldier Staff Sgt. Ari Weiss, 21, of Ra'anana who served in the Nahal
Brigade was killed and a second soldier was seriously wounded when fierce gunbattles
erupted between soldiers and Palestinian terrorists in the casbah in Nablus this
afternoon. According
to initial findings, the Palestinian terrorists opened fire at the Israel troops
on a routine patrol in the area. Soldiers returned fire towards the source while
medics treated the wounded, additional forces were deployed in the area and conducted
searches for the terrorists. Weiss
died shortly after from the wounds he sustained. The second soldier, Shai Haim
was shot in the chest and was airlifted to Sheba Tel Hashomer Hospital. 
Israeli soldier
Eli Weiss (C) comforts his young sister (not named) and younger brother Yedai
(L) during the military funeral of their slain brother, Israeli soldier Ari
Weiss, 22, in Raanana, October 1, 2002. Weiss was killed during an exchange
of fire with Palestinian terrorists in the center of the West Bank city of Nablus,
on September 30, 2002, where Israeli troops have been patroling following suicide
bombings in Israel.Photo:
Reuters
Below
is a story that recently appeared in The Jerusalem Post describing how
Weiss's mother sent his unit food:
'Ess, ess, mein kind'
by
Elli Wohlgelernter, The Jerusalem Post, September 12, 2002 Every
Jewish mother worries whether her son has enough to eat, especially when he's
serving in the army. This is the story about one such Jewish mother who did something
about it. It is
also the story of caring strangers she met who didn't hesitate to donate food
for her son and the 35 hungry comrades in arms serving with him in Nablus. The
soldier is St.-Sgt. Ari Weiss, 21, a member of a Nahal unit currently stationed
in a house in downtown Nablus. He's a good soldier, and a good son, who calls
his mom every week and certainly before and after every holiday. So
when he called his mother, Susie, in Ra'anana after Rosh Hashana to relate his
holiday experience, he told of his 25-hour stakeout the first night and day, and
the second day spent praying and sleeping. "He
said he could only take with him for the stakeout what he could put in his pocket,
so he took a halla, a bag of candy, and a mahzor," said Susie. "He said
everything worked out well, but all I kept hearing is 'we're starving, we're starving.'" She
asked what she could do, but her son said there was nothing to do. "I
had one more question: How many are you? He said 35, and with that I hung up." Off
she went walking down Rehov Ahuza, the main drag in Ra'anana, wondering what to
do. Suddenly she came upon Kippa Aduma, the shwarma hangout she knows Ari loves. "I
went to the manager of the store, Roni, and said, 'My son is in Nablus. He's stuck
in some hellhole with no fridge, and he's hungry.' He interrupted my sentence
and asked the same question I did: 'How many are there?' I told him 35, and he
said, 'What time do you need it?' " After arranging for the pickup, Weiss
walked down the street, satisfied she has done her motherly duty. Wandering into
a wholesale grocery, she thought, Why not? "I
gave him the speil, and he said, 'What do you want from me?' I looked around and
I saw candies and chocolate, but I thought they would melt. Then I saw a case
of drinks. He said, 'How many do you need?' I said two, and he gave me 80 drinks." Feeling
empowered, Weiss continued down the street and walked into Balkan Bakery. "I
started giving the shpeil, and he, too, interrupted me and said, 'We close at
8, be here at 7:30 and I'll give you everything I have left.'" Amazed
at the spur-of-the moment CARE package she suddenly found herself organizing,
Weiss ambled farther down the street and into Meatland, a frozen meat and condiments
grocery store. "I gave the same shpeil, though this time in English because
they are South African. I said how about some cookies, and he said, 'OK, three
cases.' I said they don't need so much, and he said, 'Each soldier needs his own.' "All
this took place in the span of a half hour." Was it a Rosh Hashana-Yom
Kippur feeling that was guiding her and the shop owners? Was it another indication
of the rarely written story of the real spirit of Israel, the near unanimous support
for the tired boys in the trenches? "Everyone
made it so easy," said Weiss. "I was gratified, it was a warm feeling.
Israelis are always put down as being rude, and here I didn't even have to finish
my request in my lame language, and they already understood what I wanted to say
and were asking, 'How many.' And they didn't know me from a hole in the wall." Weiss
wife of Jerusalem Post columnist Stewart Weiss wasn't done. Later in the
day she took her younger children to Roladin, a bakery in Kadima, which gives
tours of the facility. "As
they served cookies and cakes to the kids, I said to the girls behind the counter,
'You don't happen to have any extra stuff I can take to my soldier tonight?' And
she said, 'Wait right here.' Five minutes later she comes out with 15 individual
honey cakes, with signs decorating the top saying, "l'chayal tzava, shana
tova." Chatting
with her girlfriends during the day, she told them what was happening, and when
she got home there were more bags of goodies left by the friends, "who by
the way thanked me for the opportunity to do this." There
was one more thing to figure out: this being an army operation, coordinating delivery
to the soldiers required a military maneuver. Weiss spoke to her son, who
said he was a half hour from Ariel, and that if she could get the food there between
11 and 12 that night, he would take care of the rest. "I
told the head of my unit that my mother is getting us some food, and maybe someone
can go to Ariel and she'll bring us food there," said Ari Weiss. So
from downtown Nablus an armored jeep drove to the temporary base outside town,
and there a driver took the unit's car and coordinated with Ari's sister, Penina.
The two of them pulled into the gas station outside Ariel at the same time. "The
driver freaked out, he though he was picking up a couple of bags of shwarma,"
said Susie Weiss. "He drove back to the base, switched the stuff to the jeep,
and then drove to the middle of Nablus to their house, where a couple of guys
in full gear unloaded and brought it in. "An
hour later I got a phone call from Ari, with peals of laughter and screaming in
the background. Not only was he king of the day, but I have 34 new boyfriends,"
she laughed. "Soldiers were grabbing the phone saying, 'Geveret Weiss, at
lo yada'at ma at aseet lanu' (Mrs. Weiss, you have no idea what you have done
for us)." For
Ari, it was all about the pride of a proud son. "Everyone
loved my mom, everyone was really thankful and gobbled it up," he said. "We
didn't even eat it all, there's still some cake, pastries, and drinks left over.
They asked if my mom paid for it, I told them that the stores donated it. I was
smiling because I saw how my mother had organized it, and that meant more than
the food itself." For
Susie, it was all about being a Jewish mother. "My goal was for them to have
enough to last through Yom Kippur," she said. Mission
accomplished. Above
communicated by the IDF, IMRA and the Jerusalem Post |