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Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/weather/world/middle_east/article2347909.ece
Close to the Edge: Residents of Israeli Town Have Endured Over 2,000 Palestinian Rocket Attacks
[Times-UK] Philip Jacobson - On a summer morning, the hubbub and bustle of the central market place in Sderot is interrupted by the wailing of sirens and the urgent voice of a woman repeating "Tzeva Adom" (Red Alert) over the public address system. Another Kassam rocket has been launched by Palestinian militants in Gaza and is heading towards the town. Residents of Sderot are only too well aware that the warning gives them a maximum of 15 seconds to take cover. Some shoppers respond instantly, scurrying for the freestanding steel-and-concrete shelters, known as "life shields," dotted around public places. Others panic, running in one direction then another, spilling fruit and vegetables from their shopping bags. Sderot is a town of 24,000, a little more than a mile away from the Palestinian city of Beit Hanoun. In the past five years, more than 2,000 rockets have struck homes, schools, offices, factories and a local synagogue. Eight people have been killed (three of them small children) and dozens more wounded. At Sderot's center for the treatment of shock victims, Dr. Adriana Katz talks about the invisible wounds inflicted on the hundreds of patients in her care by the relentless barrages. She says the Palestinian rockets "have largely destroyed the normal fabric of life in the town. Everyone exists in a state of permanent alert, which is physically and psychologically very destructive....We do our best to prevent people lapsing into full-blown post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)." The most tragic victims of the rockets are Sderot's children, one in three of whom suffers from PTSD, according to a survey published last year. Like their parents, they spend much of their lives "on alert," dreading the next attack, unable to concentrate at school or enjoy the normal pleasures of childhood at home.