Tamar Fogel (left) – ‘Strong like her mother’ Photo: Gabi Newman, Samaria Regional Council. This interview of Tamar Fogel speaks volumes about who her family was, who she is and how she perceives of our lives as Jews and Israelis.
I want to thank JewishMom.com for the following:
A week ago Tamar Fogel* was just another 12 year old whose greatest worry was what to dress up as for Purim this year.
But that was 8 days and a lifetime ago… This moving video below is of an interview conducted last week with Tamar Fogel, the oldest child of the Fogel family of Itamar. There is an English translation of the interview and news report in bold below:
The following Interview was conducted by reporter Sivan Rahav Meir with Tamar Fogel for the 2nd Israeli TV channel:Tamar Fogel, the girl from Itamar who in one moment lost both of her parents and three of her siblings has now requested to speak– about her murdered family, about the difficult emotions, and she also has some messages that she has requested to share. Sivan Rahav Meir met today with a 12 year old girl who grew up overnight.
Sivan Rahav Meir: What kind of mother and father were they?
Tamar Fogel: The most important thing for them was Jewish unity. That there wouldn’t be divisions within the Jewish people, that there would be oneness. They wanted for everyone to be together, that there wouldn’t be fighting, that there wouldn’t be violence, that there
wouldn’t be arguments…
SRM (voiceover): Sometimes it’s hard to believe that Tamar Fogel is only 12 years old. She is the girl who returned to the site of the terror attack in Itamar and is currently sitting shiva for both of her parents and three of her siblings. Today she requested to speak.
SRM: When did you arrive in Itamar?
TF: A year and a half ago.
SRM: Was it a frightening place to live?
TF: No, no, no. Maybe there was a period that was, but now it’s been 6 years that nothing’s
happened.
SRM: You didn’t feel like you were living underneath a shadow of…
TF: No, not at all…This whole thing, and all of the things that happen to the Jewish people, they don’t break us, and we are going to keep on settling the Land of Israel. That’s what they want, the truth is…to break us. But they are not succeeding.
SRM (voiceover): She doesn’t talk at all about those moments on Friday night when she returned to her home, and discovered that it had been transformed into the site of a terror attack. She doesn’t talk at all about herself on a personal level. Even the teddy bear that sits beside her has an ideological opinion. She received it from Esther Pollard.
TF: The wife of Jonathan Pollard was here yesterday, and she told me that Jonathan asked her to buy teddy bears and to bring a big hug from him. This teddy bear, Esther Pollard said, “This one is feminine, this is yours. This one is sparkly, this is for Yishai. And this is for Roee because it’s masculine. With the ribbon.
SRM: Have you been concerned about Pollard’s imprisonment for a long time?
TF: Yes.
SRM: Why?
TF: Not that I did anything about it though…But because Pollard has been sitting there for 28 years, and nobody even pays any attention to him. The State of Israel has neglected him, and the truth is he helped Israel. He is a Tsaddik that he doesn’t hate Israel.
SRM (voiceover): 10s of 1000s of people came to the funeral. And thousands more have been crowding into the shiva of Udi’s parents in Neve Tsuf, and at the shiva of Ruti’s parents in Jerusalem. Friends from school, from the army, from the settlement, and from Gush Katif, from where the Fogel family was expelled when Tamar was 7 years old.
TF: Also during the expulsion from Gush Katif, we didn’t fight. My parents said, “We will leave. We don’t want to fight with our brothers and sisters.
SRM: During the expulsion? Do you mean that they left their home? You remember that?
TF: Yes. Before the expulsion, my mother wanted to make a big sign that read, “Shake off the dust, arise, put on the clothing of your glory, my people.” (from Lecha Dodi). That means that the Jewish people…this won’t break us. We will continue. We will get up. We
will blossom, we will continue to grow. We will continue to build, to expand…
Yochai Ben Yishai (Tamar’s uncle) during his eulogy at the funeral: “Shake off the dust, arise, put on the clothing of your glory, my people!”
SRM: During the funerals, this sentence from the eulogy by Ruti’s brother echoed on and on from Netzarim to Itamar to the Jerusalem Cemetery Har HaMenuchot.
Yochai ben Yishai: “Shake it off already! Wake up! Put on the clothing of your glory, my people! We’re not asking for too much! We want You to bring Moshiach, David the son of Yishai! Why is that so complicated?! We don’t want any confusion on this matter!
SRM: During the funerals, Tamar remained in a car nearby, and didn’t come out. Soon afterwards, Prime Minister Netanyahu came to comfort the mourners at the shiva. And Tamar had something she wanted to tell him personally…
Prime Minister Netanyahu: We understand with whom we are dealing.
TF: And what would happen if you did something? Would America do something to you?
Netanyahu: They murder and we build. We will build. We will build our Land.
TF: (Sobbing)
TF to Interviewer: The Prime Minister said, “They murder us and they try to…and we build. We build. We build. We…just continue on. So I told him, “And then afterwards you expell people [from their homes].” Because, come on, OK, at the funeral, at the shiva, you say, “We will keep on buiding and expanding” and all that. But the fact is that in reality they are expelling people from their homes all the time. And during the expulsions, it’s not just expelling people from their homes, there is also a war between brothers
going on.
SRM (voiceover): Tamar Fogel still doesn’t know where she and her two younger siblings will grow up, apparently with one set of grandparents. In the meantime, family and friends from Itamar surround her. And they remind her that after all her important messages to the Jewish people and the world, she is still just a young girl.