Terror's raw taste is not new to the Tedgi family. Liora's father-in-law was wounded by a bomb left at a bus station on the way to pray at the grave of a fourth-century sage. His brother was stabbed by an Arab while on duty as a policeman, to the horror of his own Arab friends. Liora's great-uncle Matityahu was fired upon by Arab snipers as he was stranded in a doomed convoy bringing food to a besieged Jerusalem in 1948. His brother, Grandpa David, carried the 23-year old on his back to Shaare Tzedek hospital, and suffered a heart attack there as Matityahu died.
"What can a kid do in a hospital?" he asked. "Everything you can't,” young Liora replied."I was there too," Liora says. Not only in terror, but in the poverty that stalks many of its broken victims. "As a child, we got food from aid organizations. We didn't know the word spoiled. Complaining was not in our universe. When I was a child I decided that I would give food to people in a dignified manner when I grow up." At 12, Liora jutted out her chin at the director of Shaare Tzedek Hospital and insisted she wanted to volunteer there after school. "What can a kid do in a hospital?" he asked. "Everything you can't,” young Liora replied. He pulled out a white apron with the word “volunteer” embroidered on the chest, and she began distributing food every day after school.
What separates the hurt and bitter person from the hurt and helpful? "I grew up with this. When we had a bit more food, my father designated an old wagon his ‘Fiat.’ That was for delivering food to people relatively close to our home. The sturdier wagon was his ‘Mercedes,’ which went longer distances to feed people more hungry than us." When Liora’s father died, puzzled families suddenly found themselves denied credit in the local grocery. Only with his demise did these families - and his own - discover he’d been paying their bills for years.
Her greatest giving is allowing others to share the thrill. Neighbors are invited – repeatedly and graciously – to get into the food-packing party each Thursday. A carnival for victims is extended to the neighborhood children; we all eat cotton candy together. Bar and Bat Mitzvah missions from around the world spend a day volunteering with the Terror Victim’s Fund, injecting additional meaning to their trip to Israel.
Liora’s organization receives no funding from the government; she is the queen of her staff of volunteers. She does respond to desperate mayors and municipalities, begging her to bring their town’s children out of sweltering bomb shelters to Jerusalem for a day of wholesome fun. “It’s good they call,“ she says, “because we can help more people. On the other hand, it’s more money we don’t have.” This summer, she’s scrambling for funds to take bomb-wary children to the Biblical Zoo, to jump on moonwalks and laugh at a clown.
Does all the pressure make Liora weary? “As long as God gave me another day – that’s a gift, and I must be happy. It’s an opportunity to help one more person. There’s a lot to do.”
Visit Ohr Meir U’Bracha’s website at www.terror-victims.org.il
God blesses the victims of terror and Israel!
Shalom!
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