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Flying to war — and to a fine Israeli wedding

July 6, 2017 10:16
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3 min read

If you’re going to volunteer for a war — make sure it’s a six day one. On Monday June 5 1967 my 20-year-old self was trying to pursuade one of the Zionist Federation staff in Piccadilly Circus that I qualified for a seat on the Marks and Spencer chartered Boeing 707 that was going to take volunteers to Israel. “Sorry, but we’re only taking medics and nurses.” he said.

“I was at Barts Medical School and my dad’s a doctor — we live with the practice — I’m as close to a doctor as you can get,” I said — forgetting to mention I’d been a dental student for only a year and had left because I didn’t like teeth. “OK…you’ re in,” he said.

On hearing the news that I was going off to war my mother leapt into action — she took me to a portrait photographer in Shepherds Bush — clearly she wasn’t optimistic about ever seeing me again.

I flew to Israel — courtesy of M&S — on Thursday June 8, on the same plane as Topol and the late Israeli film actress Daliah Lavi. By the time I arrived Israel had already “won” the war — although the battle for the Golan Heights was yet to come.

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