By Donald H. Harrison
SAN DIEGO, Calif. — Anna Krakovich is a survivor who has turned
her adversity to other people's advantage.
Krakovich
addressed about two dozen United Jewish Federation staff members and guests
yesterday about her role as a volunteer for Selah, the Israel
Crisis Management Center. The night before she had met with board members of
the Jewish Community Foundation about the work of her organization, which is
one of the programs that the United Jewish Communities' $300 million Israel
Emergency Campaign is underwriting.
Claire Ellman, a co-chair with Andrew
Viterbi of the campaign in San Diego County, reported that $3.4
million had been raised in this county alone since the North American effort
began Monday, Aug. 7. In addition to helping Selah help trauma
victims,
Anna Krakovich, left, and Claire Ellman confer at UJF
offices
these emergency funds are, among other uses, helping to relocate children from
areas under rocket attack by Hezbollah; providing amenities for bomb shelters
where some Northern Israel residents are forced to spend almost the entire
day; caring for the particularly vulnerable such as seniors, disabled, and
very recent immigrants to Israel, and rebuilding community infrastructure
destroyed by rocket attacks.
All the funds raised for such purposes in Israel are being distributed without
any of the North American agencies deducting administrative costs, Ellman
reported.
Twelve years after suffering her own tremendous trauma, Krakovich is able to
bring help and hope to a new generation of Israelis wounded by terrorists. In
April 1994, a Hamas-affiliated suicide bomber in Afula detonated his car
next to a bus, killing eight persons and wounding many more. Krakovich, then a
recent immigrant from the Ukraine, was returning home from the school where
she was completing her first term teaching English to Israelis—even as she
previously had taught English in the Ukraine. The blast
incinerated 70 percent of her body. Rescue workers got her to a
hospital, but doctors were pessimistic. They rated her chance for survival at
zero.
But the doctors did not give up, and neither did Krakovich. She informed
me that she is not the "victim" of a terror attack; she is a
"survivor." The difference is not just a matter of semantics:
a "victim" is someone who is passive; someone to whom things
happen. A "survivor" is one who plays an active role in his or
her recovery.
Patients recovering from the effects of suicide bombings and similar trauma
have many different kinds of reactions, she said. Typically, a first
reaction, even through the pain, is one of joy; "I'm alive!
Thank God, I'm alive!" she said. But this elation does not necessarily
last for a long time. Under the pressure of pain, fatigue, depression, and an
overwhelming sense of loss, patients may feel that recovery is just too hard,
that their lives are no longer worth living. Krakovich knows; she went through
such a phase herself.
Selah had organized as a volunteer organization just one year before the Afula
bombing. Selah's leader, Ruth Bar-On, rallied volunteers and financial
contributors to come to the aid of this Ukrainian Jewish
English-teacher, who had no family in Israel and who had been so busy
establishing her life that she and her daughter, Irene, 11, had not yet made
real friends.
Selah purchased airline tickets for Krakovich's mother to come from
Odessa. Volunteers sat by Krakovich's bedside, keeping her company,
chatting about Israel, making her realize from their unremitting presence that
people cared, that Israel cared, and that she was not alone. She had to
get better!
There were times while feeling herself disfigured, and seemingly crippled,
that she would voice her despair. When people asked her, "What do you
want, Anna?" she would respond, "I want only one thing: not to be
anymore."
It got so people avoided asking her the question, so despondent was her
answer. Then one day, when she was finally up and walking in the burn
unit of Rambam Hospital of Haifa—looking like "a phantom" and
wearing a pressure garment, "with only a part of my face exposed, and burnt
hair and ears"—she kept demanding to know where Bar-On was.
It turned out her mentor had been stuck on an elevator. When Bar-On
finally arrived, Krakovich suggested: "Ask me what I want."
Warily, Bar-On evaded the issue. "Ask me what I want,"
Krakovich insisted. Okay, so what do you want? Bar-On
surrendered. "To be a Selah volunteer!" Krakovich
announced. She especially wanted to be able to help other immigrants to
Israel, who, like she had, might feel alone and overwhelmed. That was
the day she stopped being a victim and became a survivor.
Daughter Irene was a second-generation survivor. Even after returning
home, Krakovich was in considerable pain. Rather than scream at night,
and scare Irene awake, Krakovich used to stuff her mouth with food
instead. She gained 30 pounds, making herself feel even more
miserable. Sometimes she would cry, and her child would become her
parent. Irene would say, "you are so good, and a good thing, one
should have as much as possible – so it is good that you are so big
now. I want as much of you as possible."
Krakovich reflected, " I
don’t know how she invented it, she was 12 then. Or, she would kiss my
fingers, and say 'mom, don’t cry, your friends like you as you
are…'" Eventually, Krakovich shed the weight.
While
recuperating at home, there was another terror attack and Krakovich decided to
visit the same burn unit where she had been treated. She was talking to the
families who were sitting by the bedside of their sons, when hospital
personnel gathered around her and excitedly told the patients:
"Look you are in shock, and look at Anna. She had her life like you did,
she had no skin at all, and look she is walking!"
Krakovich said
she looked at the families and "then and there I saw this sparkle in
their eyes. They would rather believe me, whom they saw was going through
something like this, than another person who would say their son would be okay
again.... I did what I could to
demonstrate… I tried my best to walk as well as I possibly could—that gave
me momentum. I was in
pretty bad shape, and yet I could give some of myself to somebody."
Telling the story, a sudden cloud comes
over Krakovich's face. She didn't want me, or anyone else, to think that
one has to overcome some traumatic experience to be empathetic to people
recovering from trauma. Ruth Bar-On and the Selah volunteers who had
comforted her a dozen years before did not have such experiences, and she
could not have asked for more excellent people.
Sometimes, she said, she and other
trauma victims feel what is known as survivor's guilt. Why did I survive
when they died? A variant is when she sees casualties of war, like a
young IDF soldier, who was sitting on a tank that was hit by enemy fire.
Both his arms were severed near the shoulders, so high that prosthetic devices
are all but impossible. Seeing that young man, Krakovich said, she
sometimes thinks that it isn't fair; he is young, with a life ahead of
him, while she has had a life, she had been married, had a child, had
traveled. Why not her instead of him?
Recovery is a long process, she said. She's still doing it, and others
are as well. She knows of three families in which grandparents are raising
their orphaned grandchildren. Those children still will be orphans even
in five years, she noted. And, long after this war subsides, the needs
of the families it impacted will continue.
At the United Jewish Federation meeting, Krakovich reported that her
organization does not only visit patients in their hospital rooms, although
this is an important role.
Since July 12 when two Israeli soldiers were kidnapped by Hezbollah in a
cross-border raid from Lebanon, precipitating the warfare, the organization's
605 volunteers have been kept busy—not only in the north, where Hezbollah
rockets come crashing down daily, but in the south, where other rockets are
fired from Gaza by Hamas.
"What do we do?
We provide practical, financial and emotional help to the immigrants
who need it—food, child care and transportation.
We are in the morgue with the newly bereaved, at funerals comforting
the families, and in their homes—if they still have homes...We
provide life-saving medicines in places where pharmacies do not work. The
doctors on our emergency team prescribe medicines and obtain them from the
drug stores…. Of course, we provide transportation for people from the
north, and we find alternative houses for those in the areas of emergency.
"We don’t do it instead of the government, because... Israel is a welfare
state – and we have a very strong social security system.
But welfare doesn’t sit by the bedside of the wounded, and they do
not pour a cup of tea or a glass of milk for whoever needs it.
Through the years since it was organized, in 1993, Selah has been in
touch with 14,000 families.. And during this war it has been roughly 1,300
people that we took care of."