海角大神

海角大神 / Text

Israelis were accustomed to missiles. This was 鈥榚ntirely different.鈥

After 20 months of war in Gaza, Israelis had become somewhat accustomed to missile attacks. The barrage from Iran is causing vastly more death and destruction in Israeli cities, but is raising both stress and resilience among civilians.

By Shoshanna Solomon , Contributor
Tel Aviv, Israel

When an alarm warning of a missile attack from Iran sounded Friday, Haim Teichholtz, the CEO of a high-tech company, and his partner entered the safe room of their apartment on the 27th floor of a modern Tel Aviv high-rise.

Soon after, there was a massive explosion.

鈥淭he whole building shook, much more than during an earthquake,鈥 Mr. Teichholtz says. 鈥淚t was unlike anything we鈥檝e ever experienced. After a while, we calmed down, but then smoke started coming into the room, and we realized there was a fire in the building.鈥

When they left the safe room, they found their apartment in chaos: shelves toppled, books strewn everywhere. Mr. Teichholtz grabbed his work bag, laptop, wallet, and car keys, and together they began descending the stairwell. Neighbors 鈥 some injured 鈥 were also making their way down, helping each other as they went.

鈥淭he fire alarm was blaring; the sprinklers had activated; pipes had burst,鈥 he recounts.

As they descended, the damage worsened. 鈥淭here was a 9/11 vibe,鈥 he says.

They got stuck on the 13th floor but remembered a second stairwell, which eventually led them to awaiting rescue services. The whole ordeal took half an hour, he says.

鈥淲e know the drill鈥

Having endured some 20 months of war in Gaza, Israelis have become somewhat accustomed to missile attacks, Mr. Teichholtz says. Israel鈥檚 air defenses largely kept the country safe from missiles fired from the north, the south, and even Yemen.

鈥淚t鈥檚 horrible to say, but we know the drill by now,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut this was ... something entirely different. When the adrenaline wore off, we realized how miraculous it was.鈥 The 10th floor had taken a direct hit.

He and his partner are staying with her sister, and he鈥檚 searching for a place to live for at least the next six months. 鈥淣ow we鈥檙e back to normal,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檓 already back at work.鈥

While Mr. Teichholtz is and has been critical of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu鈥檚 right-wing government and the civilian devastation in Gaza, he says the war with Iran 鈥渋s justified鈥 because Tehran posed a threat by racing toward a nuclear weapon. The broad consensus around the war will only strengthen Israelis, he adds.

Citing Iran鈥檚 nuclear program, Israel, which has been waging a multiborder war since Oct. 7, 2023, launched what it called a preemptive attack in the early hours Friday.

Israel has targeted leading Iranian officials and scientists, nuclear sites, missiles, launchers, and infrastructure. Iran has fired more than 370 ballistic missiles 鈥 as of early June 16. While most have been intercepted by Israel鈥檚 multitiered defense systems, 30 have struck, causing unprecedented damage to buildings and their surroundings in densely populated centers. Hundreds of Iranian drones have also been launched.

Since Friday, Israel says, 24 people have been killed and 592 wounded.

Iran鈥檚 missiles more powerful

Iran鈥檚 ballistic missiles carry a heavier warhead and fly much faster than the rockets shot from Gaza and Lebanon, said Uri Shacham, chief of staff at the Magen David Adom emergency service, briefing reporters Monday.

Although over 95% of the missiles are intercepted, he said, those that land do massive damage not only to buildings they hit, but to the whole street. When first responders reach the sites, he said, they find collapsed buildings, raging fires, and blast injuries in numbers far higher than Israel has seen in many years.

On Monday, Israeli military spokesperson Effie Defrin said Israel had achieved 鈥渇ull aerial superiority over Tehran鈥檚 skies,鈥 but that the barrages from Iran 鈥渃ome at a heavy cost.鈥

鈥淲hile we target military and nuclear capabilities intended to destroy the state of Israel, they fire at population centers with the aim of harming civilians,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e will eliminate this threat,鈥 he added, warning that 鈥淒ifficult days still lie ahead.鈥

Schools, offices, and entertainment facilities in Israel have shut down, with supermarkets and essential services still functioning.

In a quiet neighborhood of North Tel Aviv Monday, streets were largely empty. In a grassy area by a residential complex, parents sipped coffee while their children ran around in the sunshine. Others topped up supplies, knowing that more missiles would likely be on their way by nighttime.

Eitan Levy, who runs a neighborhood corner shop, was restocking the shelves with dairy products. On Friday, people stocked up on bottled water, toilet paper, eggs, milk, and pasta.

鈥淪ome items are missing because factories are working fewer hours and many workers are home,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut meantime, there are no real shortages.鈥

The war with Iran differs from what Israel has experienced until now, he says. 鈥淲e are fighting another nation, not terror organizations.鈥

鈥淓ventually, they will run out of missiles,鈥 he adds. 鈥淲e will be OK if the U.S. joins us to finish up the nuclear capabilities of Iran, and then, maybe, they will get to their knees.鈥

Rise and fall of stress and resilience

Both people鈥檚 stress levels and the population鈥檚 resilience are likely to have spiked since the start of the war with Iran, says Professor Bruria Adini, of Tel Aviv University鈥檚 emergency and disaster management department, basing her assessment on studies of Israelis over the past 20 months.

The bombs鈥 destructive power makes it 鈥渧ery logical and natural鈥 that fear levels are higher than before. But societal resilience, or the ability to recover quickly from a crisis and even grow from it, will most probably also rise 鈥渂ecause of the much more severe and much more existential threat from Iran.鈥

Yet both stress and resilience are likely to slide over time, she says.

Stress generally declines as 鈥渞outinization of the new normal sets in,鈥 Professor Adini says. Resilience is also likely to decrease as people start questioning policies and strategies and seeking answers.

What can boost resilience, however, is hope, she says, 鈥渢he hope that there is going to be a better future.鈥

Pilates instructor Or Halevy, who is a reserve combat soldier in an artillery unit, says she is not more stressed than usual by the war with Iran. 鈥淲e have been in this loop for so long that we have sort of normalized the situation.鈥

Nothing can be worse than what happened on Oct. 7, she explains, referring to the Hamas attack that precipitated the war in Gaza. 鈥淗ere we are dealing with the threat of random missiles,鈥 whereas then, people were dragged out of their homes, killed, burned, or abducted.

On the morning after Friday鈥檚 rocket attack, her father, who lives in Haifa, went surfing, Ms. Halevy recounts. She says that made her mother 鈥渉ysterical,鈥 even moreso than previous times.

That is probably because 鈥渢here is much more uncertainty now, and the enemy is more threatening. We knew Hezbollah; this is different territory.鈥