From:

http://thenewamerican.com/tna/2000/07-17-2000/vo16no15_gun.htm


I Am Alive, No Thanks to Gun Control
by Hillel Goldstein


There are times in our lives when many of our most basic
assumptions come under a barrage from the heavy artillery of
reality. Some of us receive such a wake-up call in the form of a
life-threatening event that literally shatters our lives. It is
then up to us to do our best to take inventory of the damage to
body and soul, pick up the pieces, and start afresh. I would like
to tell you, at the time of the anniversary of a horrible
encounter that almost killed me, of such a time of reckoning. But
first, some background will help.

I was born in Rochester, New York, on the holiest of Jewish
Holidays, Yom Kippur. My parents are American-born children of
Eastern European Orthodox Jewish immigrants. Had my grandparents
chosen to stay in Europe, I would not be around. During World War
II, every member of my paternal and maternal families that stayed
behind in Galicia and Lithuania died a horrible death at the
hands of the Nazis. So we can be counted among the fortunate
ones.

Martial Memories

My family and I moved to Israel in 1973, a month before the Yom
Kippur War. At the time, it seemed strange to see young men and
women toting rifles. I quickly learned the reason for this: These
young conscripts were the first to leap into action if anything
went awry. Almost daily, I heard news accounts — terrifying,
chilling stories — about terrorists who invaded high school
dormitories, or who stormed into the apartments of regular
Israeli citizens. Since most Israelis serve in the Reserves until
well into middle age, many of them were able to fight back,
although the terrorists tended to have the cowardly advantage of
sheer surprise. I was drafted into service in the Israel Defense
Forces in 1983, and served for three years in a combat unit. I
saw two tours of combat duty in Lebanon. By the time I became a
staff sergeant, firearms were a natural extension of my arm,
reserved for what police marksmanship trainer Massad Ayoob would
call the gravest extreme.

At various points in my military career, I carried an M-16, short
M-16, m-203, Galil, and short Galil (Glilon). I was a good shot
and a disciplined soldier. In my specialty in the Israeli Defense
Force, I functioned as a drill sergeant for the 18-year-old
boy-soldiers who were recruited every few months. The many
stereotypes that abound about basic training stem, in part, from
the immensely difficult task that recruits must master within six
months: They must transform themselves from high-school graduates
into soldiers. The extreme psychological stress inherent in
military combat duty left a strong impression on me. I became
fascinated with the amazing adaptability of people to
less-than-ideal situations. I developed an interest in psychology
that has guided my career ever since.

Attacked in the U.S.A.

In the summer of 1986 I returned to the U.S. After acquiring a
bachelor’ s degree and two master’s degrees in psychology, I
settled in Chicago, to raise a family and complete my Doctor of
Psychology degree. I lost contact with the world of firearms —
until Benjamin Smith, a Neo-Nazi from a wealthy home, tried to
kill me as I walked home from synagogue on Friday, July 2, 1999.

I am a Chassidic Jew, and at the time of Benjamin Smith’s attack
I was wearing my traditional Sabbath garb. "Easy target," he must
have thought. Like many complacent Americans, I used to think —
naively — that spree-killings such as Benjamin Smith’s couldn’t
happen in "my neighborhood." Yet there he was, my would-be
assassin, idling at the stop sign on my block. As soon as I came
within a few feet of his vehicle, he opened fire. I didn’t have a
clue what was happening. As it was the Fourth of July weekend,
firecrackers had been going off all day, and this did not sound
any different. I kept walking, but I felt a sudden pain and I
realized that I was bleeding heavily. I had been shot in the
abdomen, shoulder, and arm. And so, on the Fourth of July
weekend, when we proudly celebrate our independence, I almost
died.

What About Gun Control?

I was categorized as seriously wounded, and, thank God, received
emergency treatment at one of Chicago’s best trauma units. As I
convalesced in the hospital I was astounded at the number of
phone calls I received right in my room from the news media,
local and national. Suddenly I was "somebody" to these folks,
because Benjamin Smith was still on the rampage in Illinois and
Indiana, and reporters hungry for a scoop continually pestered me
for an interview. I refused to speak to anyone. Although that
time is somewhat clouded by a painkiller and IV-induced haze, I
recall all too clearly that the vast majority of the media people
wanted to speak with me about the implication of my personal
tragedy for "gun control."

As a result of my experience, I became interested in the issues
pertaining to the so-called panacea called gun control, and
decided to investigate the question with an open mind. I read
about handguns, studied Second Amendment issues, and examined all
sides of the argument. To my dismay I reached the conclusion —
without any help from such groups as the National Rifle
Association, Gun Owners of America, Jews for the Preservation of
Firearms Ownership, or the John Birch Society — that good,
law-abiding people are being systematically disarmed. While some
might contend that my traumatic experience impaired my judgment,
I beg to differ: It seems to me that as a result of my personal
tragedy I can actually see much more clearly than before. All I
want is to have the legal option to have a fighting chance of
surviving if a two-legged animal of any persuasion tries to kill
me again, or if, Heaven forbid, my beloved wife and two small
children are in mortal danger.

Many of the things said in the aftermath of Benjamin Smith’s
rampage, and the shooting spree conducted just weeks later by
neo-Nazi Buford Furrow, were utterly astonishing to me. Both
Smith and Furrow were racist pagans inspired by Hitler’s National
Socialist ideology; Furrow made a point of saying that his attack
on a Jewish day-care center was intended as a "wake-up call for
America to kill Jews." Guardians of "respectable" opinion
properly condemned the murderous bigotry displayed by Smith and
Furrow. However, the "real" problem, Americans were told, was
private gun ownership, and the "solution" was to deprive
law-abiding citizens of the means to protect their families from
violent crime. This was the message of the White
House-orchestrated piece of political theater called the "Million
Mom March."

Lesson of History

Surely, there are clear lessons taught by history, one of which
is that civilian disarmament empowers not only relatively
small-time murderers such as Smith and Furrow, but also paves the
way for major-league mass murderers, such as Adolf Hitler. It
would seem that this lesson would be particularly clear to
American Jews. However, I was to learn, much to my amazement,
that my newfound understanding of this lesson was extremely
unpopular in my very own Orthodox Jewish community.

As I eagerly — and somewhat naively — shared my insights within
my community, I was hit with repeated fusillades of empty
clichés: "The police are here to protect us" (although they were
nowhere to be found when I took three slugs from a neo-Nazi
nutcase); "You’re not in the Army anymore"; and so on. I soon
realized that I had to keep my opinions to myself. I do not mean
to upbraid these good people: My community consists of kind,
pious, God-fearing people who still adhere to traditional values,
and I am proud to be associated with them. They were of great
help and comfort to me and to my family during my long recovery
at home. But I think they were scared by the new fire in my soul.
Like many other good people, their views of the right to bear
arms have been shaped by people who seek the destruction of
liberty.

My painful experience clarified issues for me. Far too many of my
ancestors died under Hitler’s National Socialist reign of terror
for me to defile their memory by indifference. A few months after
I was shot, I walked into the local gun shop with great
trepidation, expecting to meet Jew-hating Neanderthals bedecked
in Nazi regalia. Obviously, my own views had been molded, in
part, by the same omnipresent, anti-gun propaganda that has had
such an impact on the minds of my Orthodox Jewish friends. But of
course, the people I met were genuinely nice guys. They were
sincerely sympathetic and not at all patronizing when I told them
about my experience, and were eager to help — unlike the
"compassionate" media people who pestered me in the hospital out
of a desire to exploit my tragedy to advance the "gun control"
cause. With the help of my new friends in the much-demonized "gun
culture," I was able to the re-learn the art of soldiering,
albeit the civilian version.

Someday, I hope that my friends in the Orthodox Jewish community
will come to understand that it is un-Jewish not to try to defend
oneself. In Vayikra (Leviticus) and elsewhere, the Torah
unequivocally commands the righteous to defend themselves.
Furthermore, Jews, more than most people, should understand the
lethal danger of allowing themselves to be disarmed and therefore
at the mercy of the lawless — whether the criminals are thugs
prowling the streets or despots haunting the halls of government.

This understanding came to me at great personal cost, and I hope
that good people across our nation can learn this lesson in a
less painful way.



=================================================================
             Kadosh, Kadosh, Kadosh, YHVH, TZEVAOT

  FROM THE DESK OF:                    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                      *Mike Spitzer*     <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                         ~~~~~~~~          <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

   The Best Way To Destroy Enemies Is To Change Them To Friends
       Shalom, A Salaam Aleikum, and to all, A Good Day.
=================================================================

<A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">www.ctrl.org</A>
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!  These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
Archives Available at:
http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html
 <A HREF="http://peach.ease.lsoft.com/archives/ctrl.html">Archives of
[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>

http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
 <A HREF="http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/">ctrl</A>
========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to