Timestamp: 16 October 2023 @ 0445 Pacific
How a Young Israeli Woman Saved Her Community
We’ve heard a lot of horrific stories coming out of Israel and Gaza over the past few days. The shocking Hamas-led massacre has all eyes on that part of the world and the violence is far from over. The tragedy of this is the real people – families, elders, and children – who are in harm’s way, targets whether they personally have ever done anything to the enemy or not.
There are many lessons for those of us who want to be prepared for such events. In these stories, you can find hope, resilience, and strategies that could help you learn more about survival. None of these lessons are political, though many seem determined to make it so. What we’re learning from are the stories of real people who experienced something shocking and devastating. Remember, survival is just about surviving.
From what we can see on the news, it seems that most kibbutzes were caught unaware that this attack was different and didn’t have time to launch a proper defense. The extreme brutality and rapid onset of the fast-moving attacks resulted in shock and confusion.
This is something we’ve talked about on this website before. The faster you can process and accept what is happening, the faster you can respond.
How one community survived due to fast thinking and good leadership
One young woman showed remarkable courage and resourcefulness in the face of the attacks. Inbal Lieberman is a 25-year-old woman who has been in charge of security for the Nir Am Kibbutz since last December. Like all young Israelis, she served in the military. (Some reports have spelled her name Inbar, but I’m going with the spelling on her social media accounts.)
When Lieberman heard the explosions early that fateful Saturday morning, she quickly realized this was very different than the usual rocket sounds. The key to this story – and how she saved her community – is her complete lack of hesitation.
Lieberman didn’t wait for official orders or instructions from higher-ranking officials. She immediately took action. She roused the twelve members of her community who were her standby squad and rushed to the armory to distribute weapons to them. She dispersed them to strategic positions around the kibbutz to set up ambush points for the attackers she expected, though none had arrived.
According to her father, “The electricity went out because of the rockets, and she ordered that the power not be restored so nobody could open the gates to the kibbutz.”
Then they waited.
Over the course of a four-hour battle, the attackers were repelled by the defenders. Inbar killed five attackers, and her team killed another twenty. Nobody in Nir Am died that day, and it is one of the only communities in that area that survived unscathed.
The most important thing to note is that it was all because their leader didn’t wait.
One member of the standby team, Sa’ar Paz, told reporters that Lieberman took immediate action to “give us weapons and send us to different sectors, even though the official instruction she received was to prepare the standby class only.”
His wife, Ilit Paz, told reporters, “They heard the shots and made contact on their own with other members of the standby unit and with Inbal — and they understood that they were told to be on standby. But Inbal made a decision not to wait and be jumped operationally. In fact, the fact that they did it early prevented dozens of casualties.”
A social media post from a member of the kibbutz translates:
“When it’s all over, this woman will receive the Israel Prize. The story of her heroism is a story that will go down in Israeli myth for generations. Inbal is the reason there is one kibbutz in the entire surrounding area that remains unharmed – Nir Am. Lieberman is the first kibbutz woman to understand in the entire State of Israel what’s going on, ran like crazy from house to house, organized the emergency squad, and prepared a work plan to protect the kibbutz and set men in ambush on the kibbutz’s fence. All the terrorists who came to the kibbutz were killed on the fence, 25 terrorists. Hero of Israel,”
I cannot express enough the key to the survival of this community. Inbar Lieberman didn’t wait for orders. She immediately made the choice to fight back and she and her team were prepared to face the attackers before they infiltrated the kibbutz.
It reminds me a little of the survivors of Maui who disobeyed officials and evacuated down a road they were told not to enter.
You are responsible for your own survival. Nobody is coming to save you. Nobody is in your situation, and you must take decisive actions based on what you see for yourself.
What do you think of Lieberman’s actions?
In my opinion, Inbal Lieberman is a hero. Her quick thinking and willingness to act outside of official orders saved her community. I can only hope that word of her actions spreads and others are inspired to do the same.
What do you think of Lieberman’s decision not to wait and to set up ambush points for potential attackers before they arrived? What lessons have you learned about survival from these stories? Are there any other stories of survival you can share?
Keywords: Fortuna Humboldt California US STEM MGTOW Ziosphere kibbutz stockade fortress castle defensive position armory perimeter concentrated rifle fire feminist hasbara
Source: https://www.theorganicprepper.com/israeli-woman/
Comment: We are sorry to see that The Organic Prepper supports Israel. We thought better of her.
So, let's see. The 'kibbutz', IE, stockade, has one full-time employee on site who is paid to do nothing but monitor the security systems, 24 hours a day. This implies either a wireless system such as a pager and a comprehensive infrastructure of radio or WiFi repeaters that are all provided with backup battery power so they continue working during blackouts ... a special apartment that is prewired with the camera feeds, for this special full-time employee with free housing ... or, probably, both.
This infrastructure is probably paid for by grants from the United States government, the same way the US government pays for Jewish synagogues to be hardened against "terrorists", in the United States.
The 'kibbutz', IE, stockade, has a staff of 12 other people, IE, two squads of ex-military who receive a stipend to allow them to remain on site and on call, 24 hours a day, to support the full-time employee.
The 'kibbutz', IE, stockade, has an armory, where weapons for at least a dozen military personnel are kept, along with ammunition. We infer that the full-time employee has their own gun safe where they keep at least one long arm and ammunition, as well.
The 'kibbutz', IE, stockade, has an unscaleable perimeter and has been designed so that a dozen people can occupy strategic and probably armored points and control all entrances and approaches.
What the Israelis refer to as a 'kibbutz' is actually better described as a castle.
Wikipedia describes the 'kibbutz' as 'an agricultural community'. This 'kibbutz' is literally a fortified residence for a people who literally see themselves as THE nobility, who have returned to claim their land, granted to them by God, Himself. The 'kibbutz' incoporates predesigned positions from which flanking fire can be delivered to all approaches by just a few people. Obviously the 'kibbutz' does not incorporate any fields or orchards - although it is sure to have multiple wells.
How is this NOT a castle? Y'all need to wake up and smell the coffee.
We think a kibbutz with unscaleable walls and an armory is not a kibbutz and the time has come to call this a lie and to call these people invaders. Look at the fucking architecture.
Study the semiotics, or, if you prefer, the nonverbal cues that architecture can provide - like a prospective landlord telling you how peaceful the neighborhood is, just after she sets her car alarm and unlocks the first of two bolt locks on the front gate so she can get inside to disable the house alarm before it goes off, lol.
We admire competence as much as the next person but we don't think this woman is a military genius - we think she just followed instructions, IE, deploy sharpshooters to predetermined points in the defensive architecture and power down the external access points. The rest is just 'hasbara' - Hebrew for 'bullshit'.
The so-called 'hero' had nothing to do with designing the overall perimeter, the defensive architecture, the strong points from which rifle fire can be concentrated on approaches and entrances, or the procedural manual that she followed so carefully. That's more hasbara, but this time, it's Jewish, feminist hasbara.
We question the body count as well. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is too good to be true - that's as true for news articles as it is for used cars, or job descriptions.
We are sorry to see that "Daisy Luther", or whatever her real name is, shills for the Jews. But her worshipful tone is unmistakable.