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Live from the Western Wall
By YOSSI RONEN
Television
producer Yossi Ronen recalls broadcasting the liberation of
the Temple Mount and Western Wall. The third of three eye
witness accounts provided to 'Bamahane - IDF Magazine' by
men who took part in the key moments of the Six Day War, which
helped change the course of Jewish, Middle East and world
history.
At the beginning of June 1967, as Israeli forces prepared
to confront the Egyptian army, most Army Radio reporters were
situated in the south of the country. Those in the regular
army and in the reserves were with their units in the field,
and each day phoned in reports. I had started working at Army
Radio two months earlier. As the newest rookie, I was assigned
the "dirty work" of taking dictation from these reporters.
So when the Jordanians began shelling Jerusalem, there was
nobody available to report on what was happening in the capital.
In spite of my inexperience in the field, I asked to leave
for Jerusalem. I envisioned a city under siege, as it had
been during the War of Independence, with nobody there to
report on what was happening. To my great disappointment,
my request was denied, due to a shortage of available vehicles
and tape recorders. It was only toward evening that help arrived
from an unexpected source. A 23-year-old from Holon, by the
name of Yossi Velni, presented himself to Dayan, and announced
that because he had not been drafted, he was requesting to
volunteer for Army Radio. He had a Grundig tape recorder and
a powerful Triumph motorcycle, and so my problem was solved.
On the morning of Tuesday, June 6, we raced over the empty
roads leading to Jerusalem. Around Ramle, we had to evade
a military roadblock, which tried to prevent us from continuing
due to Jordanian shelling along the way. We arrived in Jerusalem,
and found that the streets were almost empty. In the background,
sounds of explosions could be heard. Most of the city's residents
were in bomb shelters. In order to be brought up to date,
and then to join one of the units fighting in the field, we
headed to the Jerusalem regimental headquarters. This was
on a rooftop several stories high - the Histadrut building
on Straus Street. The sight which greeted us could have been
taken from a movie. Jerusalem was spread out below us, and
beyond it Mount Scopus and the Mount of Olives. Israeli Air
Force planes dove relentlessly toward Jordanian posts, and
at concentrations of tanks in the area of what is now Ma'aleh
Adumim. A bit to our north, we could see the shelling around
King Hussein's unfinished palace, next to the police academy.
In the south we could watch the battle of Armon Hanatziv.
Our tape recorder was running nonstop. I described the planes'
dives as though it were an Independence Day parade. We located
an unmanned switchboard a few floors below us, which we used
to pass on the recorded material to the studio in Jaffa. We
spent the night on the roof, from which a giant searchlight
illuminated the combat area across from us.
Throughout the morning of Wednesday, June 7, Velni and I
were glued to walkie-talkies from which emanated various battle
commands. Suddenly we recognized the familiar voice of the
commander of the paratroops brigade, Colonel Mordechai "Motta"
Gur, giving orders to the battalion commanders to occupy the
Old City: "Attention, all battalion commanders! We are sitting
on the mountain range which looks down on the Old City, and
are about to enter it. The Old City of Jerusalem, which all
generations have been dreaming about and striving toward.
We will be the first to enter it!" "Eitan's tanks are progressing
from the left and will enter the Lions Gate. Move! Move to
the gate! The final rendezvous will be on the open square
above." It was clear that Gur was referring to the open square
of the Temple Mount. With us on the roof was General Shlomo
Goren, at that time the chief rabbi of the Israeli army. He
informed Gur over the walkie-talkie that he was on his way
to meet him, so as to be among the first to enter the Old
City. Accompanied by his loyal assistant, Rabbi Menahem Hacohen,
Goren ran down the dozens of steps. Deciding in a split second,
I ran down after him, followed by Velni. It was only in the
car that Goren realized he was not alone.
During a fast drive in the direction of the Mandelbaum Gate,
which had served up until then as a crossing point between
Jewish and Arab Jerusalem, I told him that we were Army Radio
staff members, and that it was our intention to join up with
Gur. Upon our entry into Jordanian territory, we were stopped
by the paratroopers, who were on their way toward the Old
City. We were forbidden to continue by car, since the entire
area was under sniper and shell fire. So we left the vehicle
and continued quickly on foot. As far as I remember, we were
the only ones in the whole area running without helmets or
weapons. Goren was armed only with a shofar and a Bible, and
we carried only a tape recorder and a knapsack filled with
batteries and rolls of recording tape.
We ran, while trying to stay as close as we could to the
Old City wall to our right, but exposed to the sniper fire
coming from the Mount of Olives on our left. Our mad rush
was made even more difficult by the short cord, approximately
two meters long, connecting my microphone to the recorder
carried by Velni. Not knowing better, I continued to describe
into the microphone what was happening in an out-of-breath
rush of broken sentences. Today I know that it was precisely
my lack of professional experience which contributed, more
than anything else, to the authentic documentation of the
breakthrough into the Old City. As we ran, we passed two lines
of paratroopers who were progressing carefully toward the
Lions Gate. Goren was determined to get to the head of the
line as quickly as possible. At the top of the street leading
to the Lions Gate, we passed a still-smoking Jordanian bus.
We stopped only at the gate itself, which was blocked by an
Israeli Sherman tank which had gotten stuck in the entrance.
We climbed over the tank and entered the Old City.
Now the excitement reached its peak. Goren did not stop blowing
the shofar and reciting prayers. His enthusiasm infected the
soldiers, and from every direction came cries of "Amen!" The
paratroopers burst out in song, and I forgot my role as "objective
reporter" and joined them in singing "Jerusalem of Gold."
We reached the Temple Mount. Deputy Chief of General Staff,
General Haim Bar-Lev and head of the Central Command, General
Uzi Narkiss, were also on hand. Dozens of soldiers flowed
onto the square, and the senior commanders gave short, emotional
speeches.
Narkiss recalled the unsuccessful attempt he led during the
War of Independence to liberate the Old City. With great emotion,
he finished with the words: "Never has there been such a thing,
for those standing here right now. I am speechless. We all
kneel before history."
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Jpost Features
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Don't know much about history
The Golan capture
Happy (?) Jerusalem Day
Remembering the war between wars
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Six Day War
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Avihu Bin-Nun:
First Strike
A defender of Jerusalem
Ori Orr: Bloody
Gaza
Yossi Ronnen:
Live from the Western Wall
Follow the cobblestone road
Teddy Kollek: A stroll down memory
lane
Mike Ronen: "They were a different
lot back then..."
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Six Day War
30th Anniversary
by Abraham Rabinovich
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The War Nobody Wanted
View from the Nile
The third day: A personal account
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Photo Tour
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Jerusalem
1948 photo album
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Jerusalem Day
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Jerusalem, Jerusalem
The Moslem Direction
Six Days, Three Brigades, One Jerusalem
Selections on the Return of the Old
City and Kotel to the Jewish People
Some Very Quick Thoughts About
a Very Special Place
Yehuda Amichai:
Four Poems About Jerusalem
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