{4F805597-AC32-42F4-9EE2-BAD88CE3B8B2} Playing for Peace and Hope
Search Advanced
Home Aliyah & Absorption Partnerships with Israel Jewish Zionist Education Regions 
You are here :   Home Resources Personal Stories Archive 2008 Playing for Peace and Hope
About Us
Information Center
Resources
Highlights
e-blast
Personal Stories
Archive
Marketing Portfolio / Donor Opportunities
Speakers Bureau
Downloads
IQ
JAFI / WZO Related Sites
Picture Galleries
The Best Bar /Bat Mitzvah Gift
Summer Camps Blog
Georgian Diary
War Diaries

Playing for Peace and Hope

November 6, 2008 / 8 Chesvan 5769

“I grew up in Sderot when it was a peaceful city, and it gave me everything I have in life: friends, education, values and a beautiful environment until the Kassam rockets started hitting, and haven’t stopped. It is difficult to understand the depth of the long-term damage on every aspect of our lives.”

Tamir Erez, 26, was 18 when the deadly Kassam rockets starting falling on Sderot. The son of Argentinean-born parents, he and his four siblings had an idyllic childhood. Tamir was a young soccer star, and still plays on Sderot’s semi-professional team. But all this changed when Sderot became a city on the frontline in 2000; Tamir's reality was changed forever.

“I was working in a supermarket to earn money after the army,” explains Tamir. “At this time, there were no sirens to warn us of a rocket attack. My brother and I were hanging out at the entrance to the supermarket when all of a sudden we heard a tremendous ‘boom’. The ground shook underneath us. There was so much smoke that I couldn’t find my brother, and I panicked. A Kassam rocket fell on a car 30 feet from us.”

Tamir and his brother were taken to the hospital. Tamir suffered short-term hearing loss, and his brother still has hearing problems. Both boys received psychological assistance, and until this day, they, like many people in Sderot, jump when they hear a loud noise. “Thank God we are alive,” reflects Tamir.

Today, Tamir helps the youngsters in Sderot deal with terror and trauma through a sports enrichment program, implemented by Hapoel Keter Tel Aviv together with the Jewish Agency, which gives kids life and education skills through sports. These enrichment activities are funded by the United Jewish Communities’ Israel Emergency Campaign (IEC), and have been successful in combating trauma by providing a structured and nurturing environment for children after the school day ends. “We are trying to give these children a little bit of hope and some moments of happiness in – and despite of – this impossible situation,” explains Tamir.

Tamir is currently completing his BA degree at Sapir College, majoring in technology marketing. He looks forward to the day when Sderot children can enjoy a game of soccer outdoors, free of terror and fear.

Photo Credit: Azri Samin

*Only low resolution photos available.


Send to A Friend
  
Print
Back to Top
Info Center Resources Ask us Issues that matter
Home Site Map Privacy
Saturday 10 January, 2009 (c) All rights reserved to the Jewish Agency שבת י"ד טבת תשס"ט