by IDF Blog
They are among the few women who entered the Gaza Strip during Operation Protective Edge. Amid the clashes and mortar fire, three combat soldiers tell us of the days they spent fighting to save the lives of their comrades on the battlefield.
Before entering Gaza during
Operation Protective Edge, IDF combat paramedics experienced intensive
training and some of the military’s most demanding courses. For a year
and a half, they underwent training in the IDF Paramedic-Combat course,
acquiring advanced expertise in emergency medical care.
Cpl. Maor Nativ, 20 years old
When she enlisted into the IDF’s 188th Armored Brigade, Maor felt like she had joined a whole new family. “I was the only girl in our tank when we entered Gaza,” she said. “I slept with a fear that’s only natural when you’re in battle, but I knew that being there would allow me to protect other soldiers.”
While Maor was in Gaza, a mortar hit the border and caused
several casualties among IDF soldiers. “We were called in urgently to
take care of them,” she said. “The situation was very complicated, but
each of us knew what to do. We worked quickly and saved many soldiers’
lives.”
In one case, she cared for a seriously wounded soldier who
appeared close to death. “His breathing was labored and irregular and I
had to make an incision in the trachea to allow him to breathe.”
According to Maor, the injured soldiers were evacuated by
helicopter to hospitals across Israel. “I went to Ichilov hospital in
Tel Aviv to visit one of the wounded soldiers,” she says. “I was so
busy, but he was okay.”
Staff Sgt. Yonat Daskal, 23 years old
After finishing three and a half years of military service as an assistant combat-medic in the Nahal Brigade, Yonat was enjoying a four-month trip in South America. In July, just after her arrival in Mexico, Yonat’s friends sent her a message telling her that Operation Protective Edge was starting. She felt that her place was with her fellow soldiers, and decided to return to Israel and join them in reserves.
Shortly after Yonat reached the battlefield, she received a
soldier who was screaming in pain. “His hand was very badly wounded and
he shouted ‘my hand is gone!’” Yonat said. “To give him strength I told
him, ‘my name is Yonat and I promise you that everything is going to be
okay.’ He looked me in the eye and I said, ‘I know that everything will
be fine and that we’ll do this successfully’.”
“I had just wrapped a bandage around his wrist when a
second wounded soldier arrived with shrapnel in his chest, followed by a
third with a severe injury to his leg, and then a fourth with shrapnel
in his eye,” she recounted.
The paramedics were exhausted by the time their commander
arrived with doctors and other medical reinforcements. “At that moment, I
felt that God was with me in Gaza,” Yonat said. “In total, I treated
dozens of injured soldiers that night.”
Cpl. Tamar Bar-Ilan, 21 years old
Tamar entered Gaza with the Armored Corps and stayed there
for 12 days inside of a tank. “I was the only female in the tank, but it
wasn’t a problem,” she says. “The only thing that troubled me is that
we could be the target of anti-tank missiles in enemy territory.”
“Initially, I didn’t leave the tank for five consecutive
days. My greatest fear was that something would happen to the soldiers.
Just the thought that I wouldn’t be able to help a wounded soldier was
driving me crazy. When morale was low, I remembered that I had to stay
strong for them no matter what.”
“On my last night in Gaza, we suddenly, we heard gunshots
and shouting on the radio,” she recounts. “We rushed to the tank and
drove a few meters until I saw a wounded soldier on a stretcher. He had
been hit by a sniper and his legs were badly wounded. I quickly made a
tourniquet and treated his wounds. Within minutes he was taken to
hospital by helicopter. I cared for him so professionally and I can
never forget it.”
Maor, Yonat and Tamar represent the important roles that
women play in Israel’s military – even in the most dangerous situations.
These women and others like them were an indispensable part of
Operation Protective Edge and the IDF’s effort to defend Israel.
IDF Blog
Source: http://www.idfblog.com/blog/2014/08/30/fighting-life-female-paramedics-operation-protective-edge/
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
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