The death of Dror Hanin, the first Israeli
killed in Operation Protective Edge, left an enormous void • "Daddy is
gone, so I won't be happy," says Dror's daughter, two weeks before her
birthday • "Dror had a huge heart, full of giving," says his friend.
Dror Hanin poses with
soldiers moments before his death
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Racheli Hanin was in the middle of making
pancakes in her kitchen in Beit Aryeh when she heard on the news that an
Israeli had been wounded in a mortar shell attack at the Erez border
crossing. She immediately sensed that the man in question was Dror, her
husband and the father of her three children. When Dror did not answer
his phone, she called the head of the local council, Avi Naim, and the
Beit Aryeh chief security officer, Sharon Alfasi. When both Naim and
Alfasi kept hanging up on her, she became even more worried. She knew
something terrible had happened, but she didn't know quite how terrible
yet.
A short while later, when Naim arrived at the
family home and told her that Dror had been critically wounded and that
he was hospitalized, she still believed that he would survive.
When evening came, Racheli and Naim were
called in to identify the body. "He was so peaceful," Naim recalls. "I
looked at him and said, 'Get up, Dror.' I actually waited for him to get
up. I have lost a lot of friends, but Dror was like a brother."
Later, at around 11 p.m., Naim returned from
the hospital to the Hanin home, escorting Racheli as she prepared to
tell her children that their father was gone. "His 11-year-old daughter,
Shaked, asked, 'Avi, what is the date today?' I said, 'It is the 15th
of June.' She told me that her birthday was two weeks away but added,
with the innocence of a little girl, 'but daddy is gone, so I won't be
happy.' She ripped all of our hearts out."
When the seven-day mourning period ends,
Racheli and the children will face a new reality. "Nothing will be the
same ever again," says Dorit, Racheli's close friend. "He was a rare
human being."
Hanin, 37, the father of three young children,
resident of Beit Aryeh in Samaria, was the first Israeli killed in
Operation Protective Edge. After news of his death emerged, news sites
began reporting that he had been handing out gift packages to soldiers
at the border at the time of his death. None of his relatives were
surprised to learn that the last thing he did before his death was an
act of altruism and giving while risking his own life.
This was not the first time that he had faced
danger, his relatives recounted while mourning his death. Only last
week, a Molotov cocktail was hurled at his vehicle. With great
resourcefulness, he accelerated and avoided injury. Only his car
sustained light damage. "He loved action. Anywhere where there was
danger, he was there. Without fear. We warned him that it could be
dangerous to go there, but that's Dror," says one of his friends, who
came to comfort the family.
Naim also attests to Dror's affection for
action and people. "All I heard him talk about for three days was
collecting sweets and gifts for the soldiers at the crossing. He was so
happy to have the opportunity," Naim says with great pain. "Dror had a
huge heart, full of giving."
Six-year-old Yoav is in the yard, playing with
friends and riding his bicycle. Suddenly he lets out a peal of
laughter, the way children do. One of the neighbors remarks, "He is
going to start first grade without a father."
A family member also hears the boy's laughter,
and recalls how Dror was supposed to take his daughter Shaken with him
to hand out candy at the border. "Apparently something inside him told
him that it wasn't safe," he says.
Even though people tend to exaggerate the good
qualities of the dead, it seems that nothing defines Dror better than
his generosity. His father in law, Shaltiel Shmuel, says that "Dror was a
man of grace who loved to help everyone. He could not see someone in
need without lending a hand."
Aviv Katz, a neighbor and friend of the family, adds that "even when he slept, he was doing something."
"He was always active, always thinking about
where he could contribute just a little more. God picked him out with
tweezers," he says.
Something to remember him by
Dror's cousin, Gilad Eliad, also wants to
share: "Dror was the salt of the earth. Witty, funny, he had a free
spirit. He was always giving, and sadly, he ended up giving his life.
The day he died was a difficult day. My sister told me the news. She
knew he was going someplace dangerous so she warned him, but he said to
her, 'If I look out only for myself, who will look out for the rest of
the world?'"
Maozia Segal, the director of social services
at the Hof Ashkelon Regional Council, ran into Dror about five minutes
before his tragic death. Segal says that Dror had enthusiastically asked
him to photograph him. "As part of my job, I was touring the Gaza
envelope with one of the (council) employees. When we got to Netiv
Haasara, I noticed two young guys, happy and effervescent, in a vehicle
filled with food and snacks. One of them, who later turned out to be
Dror, said that they were going to the Erez crossing to give the food to
soldiers. We explained to them how to get there and suggested that they
travel with the Netiv Haasara security chief because it was dangerous
there. They said that it was okay because their vehicle was fortified.
We parted ways."
"When I got back to the situation room, I got a
call telling me that the two had been hurt. Now I can at least take
comfort in the knowledge that when I took his picture he was happy and
filled with joy. It will be something for his family to remember him
by," he says.
The mixed communal town of Beit Aryeh was
built in the early 1980s, and is home to about 1,400 families. "This is
the safest community to live in," Naim claims. "Since the start of the
operation, we haven't heard a single siren."
"Unfortunately, this is the second tragedy
here in the community," he adds. "The boy Gil-ad Shaer, may he rest in
peace, was a counselor at the Bnei Akiva youth group chapter here, and
now Dror." Shaer was kidnapped on his way home from school on June 12,
along with his two friends Naftali Frenkel and Eyal Yifrach. The three
were subsequently murdered by Hamas terrorists.
Katz, a father of three, moved with his
parents from Petach Tikva to the picturesque town in Samaria. For him,
the last few days have been a kind of wake up call. "It is customary to
think of people who live in Judea and Samaria as a certain type," he
argues. "'Oh, you're settlers, sitting on the hills with Uzis and
sandals.' But the fact is that the people here are the salt of the
earth. People here volunteer and serve in combat units in the IDF."
The Arab neighbors from the adjacent village call and
visit the family as well. "Jews, Arabs, we all live here in peace," says
Abed, a resident of the village. "The life of another human being, it
is a loss for all of us."
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