In 1989, yeshiva student Yehuda Meshi Zahav and his colleagues were startled
into reality by a thunderous boom, followed by an eerie silence and scores of bloodcurdling
screams. Meshi Zahav and his fellow students rushed to the scene to find the number
405 bus, which had exploded after being steered over the mountain by a terrorist.
They began to care for the wounded and the dead: "It was chilling and horrifying
chaos," recalls Meshi Zahav, who today serves as the ZAKA Chairman.
For six years after that attack, in which 17 people died and scores were injured,
Meshi Zahav and a dedicated group of volunteers selflessly overcame the horror of
terror attacks to recover human remains and ensure a proper Jewish burial. Chesed
Shel Emet (true virtue) refers to the act of honouring the dead. In Judaism, this
is considered the highest form of altruism, for the dead have no way of repaying
the kindness.
ZAKA (the Hebrew acronym for Disaster Victim Identification) became an official
volunteer organisation in 1995. ZAKA is the only organisation authorized by the
Israel Police to handle the recovery and identification of body parts. The organisation
has since developed the scope of its operations to include emergency response, search
and rescue, accident prevention and assistance in international disasters. |