To the Editor,
Imagine: you’re sitting in class when air raid sirens suddenly blare and everyone begins running. You have one minute to find cover before a missile strikes. Upon finding shelter, you spend the remaining seconds wondering if your friends and family have also made it to relative safety. Then you pray to hear the “boom,” because if you hear it, it means you’re still alive.
Reality: Living in Tel Aviv, Israel, this is what I’ve now experienced daily. Hamas and other Gaza-based terrorist groups have spent the last decade launching thousands of rockets and missiles at Israeli cities, causing death, destruction and terror for millions of Israeli civilians. Who could blame a country for defending itself after even one missile is fired on its civilians? Yet Israel has endured the torture of up to 100 rockets a day.
U.S. media coverage has been equating the conflict as two sides trading attacks, yet this couldn’t be further from the truth. While Gazan rockets are indiscriminately fired on civilian towns, Israel responds with precision, surgical strikes used to eliminate weapons caches and terrorist infrastructure, while minimizing civilian casualties. Israel even drops millions of leaflets with life-saving instructions warning Gazan civilians to leave areas ahead of military operations and avoid terrorist locations. Yet here in Tel Aviv, when the sirens go off, I have mere seconds to find cover and wait for the “boom.” Grimly, perhaps Hamas leader Fathi Hammad put it best, saying, “We desire death like you [Israelis] desire life.”
Micah Toll
Pitt Graduate, Class of 2012
The William Pitt Debating Union, Pitt’s speech and debate team, sends students to both in-person…
The visuals desk had an interesting year. In the midst of the 2024 Presidential Election,…
During finals week, departments across campus are offering wellness events to help students manage stress…
After a long and strenuous academic year, many students are excited to take a break.…
Today is the last day I will ever do this, and despite the amount of…
The saddest part of it all is not the fact that I will have to…