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The Pentagon Way
by Meir Wigoder
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I landed in Tel Aviv aboard a plane from Newark airport, exactly nine days after the World Trade Center disaster and after three flight cancellations by an airline that was more eager to reestablish its domestic flights than to tend to its international routes. The cab from the airport drove into Tel Aviv through the "Shalom" highway entrance, slipping past the two tallest business towers in the Middle East, fleetingly recalling the city I had just left, and then entered Kaplan Street, which had been temporarily renamed "The Pentagon Way" to commemorate the disaster. A stream of American flags, alternating along the roadside with the austere blue and white Israeli flags, created ripples of red and white in the midst of the ocher and gray apartment buildings. The cab slowed down by the Kiriya, Israel"s equivalent of the Pentagon, which is strangely situated at the heart of the city, surrounded by high walls and typified by its radio tower that is known as the nerve center of Israeli security. (The last time this place was renamed was after the assassination of the Israeli Prime Minister, six years ago, when the entrance to the complex was changed to "The Yitzchak Rabin Gate.")

At this moment I had no idea of the extent of the emotional involvement Israelis had with the disaster, which caused many of them to leave work on September 11th and rush home to watch television intensely over the next few days. Israel closed its air space for one day and anxious individuals hurried to renew their gas masks, fearful that an American retaliation would bring about a repeat of the traumatic events during the Gulf War, when Iraqi scud missiles landed in Israel, with the accompanying threat of biological warfare. It took a few days of respite after my flight to learn about another interesting phenomenon that reflected the Israeli mood. The attack on America made many Israelis quite delighted that the super power now understood first hand what it was like to live under the constant daily threat of terrorist attacks and have one's personal liberty curtailed. Later, once the American offensive against Afghanistan had begun and the anthrax scare took hold, one could see Israelis almost relieved by this special distraction that enabled the eyes of the world to shift its gaze from them to other regions in the world.


Share your thoughts about this essay with Meir Wigoder at: wigoder@post.tau.ac.il

 
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