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The Jewish Chronicle

The 1967 six-day war: a sweetness that turned into ashes

April 17, 2008 23:00

By

David Landau,

David Landau

4 min read

The 1967 six-day war 

 

The outgoing editor of Ha’aretz recalls the drama of a war that Israel was winning — and confronts his own fears for the future

Not bloody likely,” the callow nineteen-year-old grandly dictated to the telegram clerk at the post office on Jerusalem’s Jaffa Road, a week or so before the Six-Day War. In Golders Green, my parents received the cocky cable with a mixture of pride and trepidation.

https://api.thejc.atexcloud.io/image-service/alias/contentid/173nvbt78nvuezemndv/60_0.jpg?f=3x2&w=732&q=0.6Afterwards, I heard from my friend, later to be my wife, that my mother had spent an entire solidarity event at the Albert Hall sobbing. I couldn’t understand it. I was too stupid, or smart, to understand what she was afraid of. Israel was going to win; no other scenario crossed my mind. And anyway, I wasn’t a soldier. Merely a yeshiva boy who had declined his family’s offer to fly him home with all the rest of the foreign students at the country’s charedi yeshivas, and instead volunteered at the Jerusalem Post.