11
THE AFTEREFFECTS Of my experience with Eva were naturally strong.
I couldn't help thinking how nice it would be if Helena and I
could do that. I loved Helena, and it would be wonderful for both
of us. But Helena remained firm, and I was left with a feeling
of wanting to explore more in this exciting new territory. I felt
like the inventor of something, as if no one had ever made love
before. I couldn't have been more proud if I had engineered the
whole thing myself, and I couldn't stop telling the guys at school
about it. Ardash was all excited. He had never had the experience,
and he was determined now to do so.
That's why Lola came up. Everybody knew Lola. She was Greek, with
gorgeous blonde hair, in her mid-thirties, and she drove around
in a red German Taunnus car. She was a prostitute, but she had
class, according to the stories. We had heard that she was licensed,
checked by a doctor, and that sort of thing. I don't know if Lola
had ever had customers arrive at her establishment on bicycles
before, but we pedaled to her house determined to be the most
worldly and sophisticated teenagers in Nicosia. This seemed a
very necessary follow-up on my initiation into the big mystery
of life.
After we parked our bicycles, I began to feel nervous. We rang
the bell and were met by an old lady in black, the costume widows
wear in Cyprus. When she asked us what we wanted, we got the nerve
up to say we wanted to see Lola. That didn't bother her. She led
us upstairs to a little room with four bright-colored chairs and
a little table with flowers on it. A certificate hanging on the
wall reminded me of a doctor's waiting room. The old woman asked
us if we wanted some Turkish coffee. We said yes, and she brought
some immediately. I was so scared now I could hardly keep the
cup from shaking. I kept saying to myself: "What am I doing
here? What the hell am I doing here?"
I couldn't tell how Ardash felt. He didn't show any emotion. In
about ten minutes an older man cane out of another room. He walked
right by us and never looked at us, never looked left or right.
Now my heart was racing so fast I couldn't count the beats. I
said to Ardash, "You go first." He answered, "No,
you go first." And I finally said, "Please go
first, Ardash." All my worldliness seemed to have left me.
Finally the old lady led Ardash out of the room we were in and
I waited another ten minutes. I felt like getting up and running
away. At last Ardash came out, and he was beaming. He said everything
was great, fine. And I finally got up the nerve to go in.
Lola was very blonde and beautiful in her white robe. My knees
began to stop shaking, and for the second time within a few weeks
I learned about life.
The experience cost only ten shillings, but I felt guilty about
it. With the war intensifying very fast, money was hard to come
by. Every hotel was losing money as the fighting went on, and
ours was no exception. My graduation would be coming along in
several months, and my mother and I had begun to think about returning
to Israel. I would have to enter the Israeli Army when I reached
eighteen, and there was no way my mother could run the hotel without
my help. Very few entertainment people were arriving. Even the
number of Israeli visitors had started to diminish. My mother
had many friends back in Israel who would help her get work there,
where she knew the language well and would be on familiar ground.
The decision was made that after my graduation we would return.
My mother made a visit to Tel Aviv, and with the help of friends
who lent her some money bought a little apartment so that we would
have a place to go when we moved back.
Getting ready to close things down was complicated. The furniture
in the hotel was rather old and worn, but we arranged to sell
it for a small sum of money. Whatever was left, we packed up and
got ready to go. I said goodbye to Father Massimino, Father Camillo,
and Brother Bernard, along with all my other friends at school.
They gave me something called a General Certificate of Education.
All our heavy goods, including my motor scooter, were shipped
to the port city of Limassol, and we prepared to go by car with
just our suitcases. A girl named Rose, who was living with us
and was devoted to my mother, went ahead in another car with Joker.
The complications came thick and fast. Although we had checked
the big baggage on the ship, the customs people for some reason
took so long to examine our personal baggage that the ship actually
shoved off without us but with Joker and Rose aboard. My mother
began crying. I tried to comfort her, telling her that Rose would
take care of everything, including Joker, and that we could phone
my father who was going to meet us with a truck to take our luggage
from the port of Haifa to Tel Aviv. I said, "Come on, Mother,
let's laugh about it. Let's go back to Nicosia and get the first
plane, then we'll drive back to Haifa and arrange to pick up the
baggage."
But there was no plane going to Tel Aviv for two days. The new
owner let us camp out in the empty hotel until we could finally
take off for Israel.
Here the complications continued. When we finally arrived at the
docks in Haifa and met my father, we discovered that they had
not let Rose take Joker or any of the baggage from the ship. We
found the baggage, but there was no sign of Joker. No one seemed
to know where he was. They wouldn't allow us on the ship.
I was in a panic. Joker was nowhere on the docks, there was no
sign of him anywhere, no one knew anything. I slipped onto the
ship, which was practically deserted. I finally found an officer
and said to him: "Listen, my dog was left on the ship. Where
would you keep him?" He said to try the upper deck, where
there were cages for animals. Joker wasn't there, and another
sailor said to try the stern. There was no sign of him there either.
On the way back to find the officer, I passed a small metal door,
one of many, and suddenly felt Joker would be inside. There was
no reason to believe this, but I was absolutely sure. I tried
to open the bulkhead door, a thick metal door, but it was locked.
I pounded on it and called "Joker! Joker!" But there
was no answer, no sound, no bark. I hit the door again and called,
"Joker, don't worry. I'm here. I'll get the door open."
But there was still no sound behind the door, none at all.
I found the officer again and said: "Please come and open
the door. I know my dog is in there." He said the
door led down to the engine room, and the dog couldn't be there.
He finally opened it for me. I went down some steps, and there
was Joker, smeared with black oil and tied up with a chain. He
gave me a look that seemed to say, "Look what they did to
me!" I felt so sad for him. I grabbed him in my arms, kissed
him, and hugged him. I was furious, but there was nothing to be
done about it. At least I had found him.
Our new apartment was on the ground floor, opposite a famous cemetery
in Tel Aviv where many well-known Israelis are buried - foreign
ministers, composers, poets, war heroes. The apartment was very
small and cramped after the hotel in Cyprus, but it was the best
we could do. My mother went back to sewing, this time making beautiful
neckties for some of the shops in Tel Aviv. I got ready to go
through the army physical and tests and to wait for induction.
It was kind of dreamlike, returning to Israel, like going back
to the past.
It was a good thing I had brought my scooter, because I got a
job as a messenger for an architects' copy machine service while
I was waiting. I was able to help my mother financially while
I kept busy driving the scooter all over the city. I got 350 pounds
a month and gave most of it to my mother. I ended up doing routine
work inside the architect's office, which I found through Landau,
who had served under my father and who now worked there. Landau
was in his early twenties, and we became friends.
He played on a basketball team in his spare time. I told him how
I used to concentrate on the ball so that it would often go into
the basket. He didn't understand at all what I meant, so to demonstrate
I asked him to concentrate on one of the several architectural
plans he had worked on that day. He did, and I drew it for him
almost exactly as it was. He was astonished but was convinced
it was a trick.
Landau asked me to try out for his basketball team, and I joined
it. In practice and warmups the concentration worked very well,
so well that people talked about my "golden left hand."
In the fast action of the games it didn't work as well, but my
hook shot was very effective, with or without the chance to concentrate
on it.
After the army checkups, X-rays, blood tests, and all that, I
found I had about four months to kill. I was offered a job as
a desk clerk in a vacation hotel on the Red Sea, which I took
for a while. There were hippies and lots of girls at the resort.
It was a wild, swinging time.
As the time for my induction drew near, my father asked if I wanted
him to help me get into any type of service. I asked him not to,
because I wanted to work it out for myself. I tried to make my
mind up between trying to be a frogman, a pilot, or a paratrooper.
I knew that I eventually wanted to get into the Secret Service
because I liked Joav so much. I hadn't heard from him in a long
time. I wondered where he was.
It was a new feeling, getting ready to go into the army, but a
good feeling. There was an excitement about it, an anticipation
of what was going to happen next, a sense of challenge. On the
day of induction I went by bus with a crowd of eighteen-year-olds
to Jaffa, where we would be processed. It was a varied mixture
of recruits. There were Israeli boys from Polish, Hungarian, and
Russian families, along with Moroccan, Egyptian, and Yemenite
groups.
We went through the long, routine classification interviews and
tests and ended up in a boot camp called Tel Hasomer, about a
half-hour's drive out of Tel Aviv. The first thing I saw when
I got there was a platoon running back and forth to a hup, two,
three, four count, yelling out a slogan to the effect that they
were paratroopers. There were tents spread out all over the place,
and every tree was painted white at the base. Every stone was
in place, and the ground was clean enough to eat from. The sergeant
majors, with big mustaches, were running up and down with the
troops. We lined up to get uniforms along a counter, and they
threw the stuff at us: Green shirts and pants, black boots, underwear,
soap, comb, toothpaste, dog tags - all of that. Eight of us were
assigned to a tent, where we began making friends and wondering
where we would all end up.
There were different bunkhouses for the different types of service
you could volunteer for - infantry, air force, navy, paratroopers,
and so forth. I was still trying to make up my mind exactly what
I wanted to do. When I passed the paratrooper office, I stopped
and looked at a poster of a guy stepping out of a plane into midair.
I looked for a minute and said to myself: "Uri, you can't
do that. You can't jump out of a plane. Come on. Forget it."
The another voice inside my head said: "Uri why don't you
try it and see if you can?"
I went back to my tent and thought about it. I was thinking to
myself: "Look, if you sign up there, there's no way out."
Then I thought some more, and said: "Ridiculous. If I don't
want to jump out of a plane, nobody can push me out. I mean, if
I change my mind, I change my mind - and they'll send me back
to boot camp."
So I went back to paratrooper headquarters and signed up. They
put me through more tests. The doctor hit me on the back and on
the head, checked my spine, made me jump three or four times,
things like that. There was a lot of enthusiasm about going into
the paratroopers. You got special boots with thick crepe soles,
a different kind of shirt from the regular army, and a green beret.
These symbols set you apart from the ordinary troops and gave
your morale a boost. If you got through all the required jumping
and training, you would get a red beret.
My father surprised me with a visit the next day, and he asked
me what I finally decided on. When I told him it was the paratroopers'
he said: "Well, Uri, it's going to be very tough."
"I know, Father," I said, "but I've played a lot
of basketball, I've run a lot in my life, done a lot of swimming
and diving. I'm sure it won't be too tough."
"We'll wait and see. And I'm proud that you went there. But
just promise me one thing. I want you to become an officer. I'm
a sergeant major, but I want my son to become an officer."
I told him that I wanted that myself, that I'd do my best to become
one in the paratroops.
They shipped the paratroop recruits by truck to a special camp
an hour out from Tel Aviv, near a place named Natanya.
There were some engineering recruits with us, and we stopped at
another camp to drop them off. One young engineer started flipping
out when they told him to get off. He was shouting, crying, cursing,
and yelling, "I'm not going to get off! I want to go home!
I won't get off!"
We all sat and looked at this terrible scene. They had to push
him and drag him off. It was as if he was going to his death,
as if he was going to be executed. It gave me a bad feeling. I
was saying to myself: "My God, he's just going to the engineering
corps, and here we are volunteering for the paratroops!"
Our camp was about ten minutes farther on. It gave us all a lot
to think about.
When we pulled up to the paratrooper camp eight of us were left
in the truck. I was chewing my gum fast. We jumped down to the
ground, and suddenly we saw a sergeant coming toward us. He was
a mean-looking guy. He shouted: "Get into line!" Then
he came up to us, one by one: "What's your name? Where are
you from?" Right down the line.
When he came to me, he shouted: "Are you chewing gum when
you're talking to me?" I was so scared I swallowed the gum.
I told him no, I wasn't, because by now it was no longer in my
mouth. But he yelled: "Spit it out!" I insisted that
I didn't have any gum in my mouth. He yelled again: "You're
chewing it. Spit it out, dammit! I want to see it on the ground."
Then I told him I couldn't, because I had swallowed it. He seemed
to want to burst out laughing, but he controlled his face. When
he got to our tent, he told us: "Listen, you guys volunteered
for this service, and you don't know what's waiting for you here.
I'm going to tear your asses apart. You're going to work here
like you never dreamed, ever in your life. For a beginning, you're
going to run around camp now, and I'm going to show you where
things are. Now put your kit bags on your backs and follow me."
It's one thing to run, but it's another when you have a forty-pound
bag on your back. We were supposed to follow him in a line, but
we fell all over ourselves. I was thinking to myself that I was
a good runner, but what was he doing to us? He took us all over
camp, to the dining room, to the synagogue, to the place where
they stored the weapons, running every inch of the way. Then we
learned that for the first three months we could never walk anywhere.
We had to run in the camp whether we wanted to or not. If we were
caught walking, they'd wake us up in the middle of the night and
take us for a long run.
We had long runs blocked out for us every day. At first we ran
without guns, then with them, then with helmets. They kept building
it up. If you fell back, they pushed you. Some of the recruits
would faint, and we'd have to carry them, like the wounded. I
gradually became better at it as we went on to the courses where
we had to crawl through obstacles, jump from high places, climb
ropes, go through barrels, and go under barbed wire - all in three
minutes. If you couldn't make it in three minutes you had to do
it again, and again, and again. But as the training got tougher,
your body got tougher. I still hated it, even though I began to
get more used to it. The long marches were the worst, even worse
than the running.
Then the big day came. We were going to make our first jump from
a plane. We were all waiting for that moment, really, because
we didn't know exactly what was going to happen. We had had practice
jumps from a parachute tower and jumps from dummy planes. But
this was going to be it.
We had a big breakfast and then went to the airfield. It was hot,
and I was feeling awful. We buckled on our parachutes. The plane
taxied toward us. I had a funny feeling in the pit of my stomach.
We climbed into the plane and sat parallel to each other, after
they clamped us onto an overhead wire. We were yelling hey yo,
hey yo, hey yo, hey yo to drown out the noise of the plane
and keep up our spirits. The plane took off and headed toward
the fields. It took only a few moments to get there, and the green
signal light went on. That meant to get ready. The commander yelled:
"E call. Get ready." On the command we stood up, as
the red signal went on.
On that first jump I didn't really feel anything. The door opened,
and the wind burst into the plane. The engines roared louder.
I saw the first guy standing in the door, then all of a sudden
he was gone. It all went so fast. I found myself in front
of the door. And bang, I was out. Automatically my eyes closed.
There is about 50 meters of free fall before the chute bursts
open. You have to count in your head, 21, 22, 23. The chute should
open. If it doesn't you're in trouble, and you have to pull the
reserve chute.
Suddenly I felt the pull, and I yelled out: "Yeah, I did
it! I did it! It's easy!" I was telling myself, "It's
not scary, it's nothing." You fall pretty fast, even when
the chute is open. You see the land coming closer, closer, closer,
and you have to get ready for it.
I fell beautifully, I did the right turn, I didn't get hurt, perfect.
I couldn't do a better jump. But that was the only time I fell
correctly.
The next jump was one I'll never forget. I was never so scared
in my life. My stomach was banging in me. A fear was building
up. The feeling of stepping out of a flying plane. "What
am I doing here?" I kept thinking. I started cursing myself.
What the hell did I go into the paratroopers for? And then I got
really scared.
My knees started trembling. I could hardly get up. I had to pull
myself up on the wire. But there was no choice. There were people
behind me, people in front of me. And I jumped. When the chute
opened on this second jump, I saw the ground getting closer and
closer. I panicked. I really smeared myself. I didn't make the
right turn, I landed with a terrible crash, and I got hurt.
We had to make seven jumps before we got our red berets. Another
jump was called for very early in the morning. We were to leave
camp about 4:00 A.M., fly out over the Negev desert, and jump
there. The night before I had a dream in which I jumped out of
the plane and the parachute didn't open. In the dream, I was killed
when I hit the ground. That really scared me until I thought,
well, anybody in the paratroops could have a dream like that.
I was still disturbed by the dream as I jumped into the truck
to go to the airport in the morning. Suddenly, out of the back
of the truck, I saw a white dog run out on the road behind us.
The truck behind us hit the dog and killed it instantly. It was
almost like an omen, and it put me in a deep depression. I thought
of Tzuki, my first dog, who had been killed that way. I thought
of Joker at home, and I thought of my dream again. Then I said
to myself: Something is going to happen to me on the jump. But
I couldn't say anything about it to anybody. For some reason,
I wasn't even afraid. I just knew that something was going to
happen to me.
We boarded the plane. It took off. We flew out over the Negev
to the jumping area. I got up in line and proceeded to the open
door. I pushed myself out. But I guess something made me hesitate
in the doorway for a second before I jumped. I didn't jump strongly
enough. As I left the door of the plane, the wind hit me back
against the side of the plane and made me spin. The cable released
the chute as I was still spinning, and the cords spun with me.
I counted 21-22-23-24-25-26-27, and so on up past 30, which is
about eleven seconds. The chute didn't open. I was in what is
called a candle fall, because that's just what it looks like.
It usually means death if you don't open the small parachute.
In those eleven seconds I had to do many things.
I had to release the sack that held the weapons, because if you
don't, you break your legs. Then I had to press open the reserve
chute. I released only one side. The other side wouldn't release.
And I was falling. I saw the ground coming up, and I knew this
was it. I felt I was still in the air, but suddenly everything
went pitch black. And I thought: This is death. This is what death
is. But I could feel myself. I knew I was alive, but I felt I
was still spinning.
What I didn't reaise was that' as soon as I pulled the reserve
chute, the big chute opened up. The little chute had blown up
over my face, and my eyes were completely blacked out by it. I
grabbed the harness and tried to see the ground, which is very
important to avoid getting hurt. But I couldn't see a thing. I
knew I must be near the ground and was trying to brace myself
for hitting it when suddenly, without warning, I did hit it. I
saw stars. It hurt me terribly. I prayed to God that nothing like
this would ever happen again. It was a terrible experience.
Well, we all got our red berets, but it was no piece of cake.
As soon as they gave us our wings; we had to put them back into
our kit bags and start off on a 110-kilometer march into the Negev.
We were reminded that our training was mostly on the ground and
not in the air.
Meanwhile, not much had been happening in the psychic or ESP part
of my life. I kept it to myself anyway, as I usually did unless
someone I liked was really interested. We were starting out on
a program to get our corporal stripes, which involved a lot of
military maneuvers. My assignment was to be a heavy machine gunner,
using the large Browning machine gun, which is very, very heavy,
something like 80 pounds. There are three parts involved, body,
legs, and ammunition. I was number one on the team, and it was
my job to carry the heavy, main part of the gun. Number two carried
the legs, and number three carried the ammunition. I had never
jumped with the big Browning machine gun before. I had heard stories
that this was the toughest thing in the world to do, because of
its weight. Most of the weight was inside the main part of the
Browning - the barrel, another heavy tube, and the mechanism that
fed the ammunition through.
The plan for the new operation was to go by truck with our kit
bags to a base camp, make a jump with our heavy Browning equipment,
and march back about 10 Kilometers to the camp, carrying it by
hand all the way.
I came up with an idea that was pretty stupid, now that I look
back on it. Since we weren't actually going to use the gun on
the first day, I made the brilliant decision to take out the very
heavy parts of the Browning barrel and stow them in my kit bag
at the base camp, where they'd be ready for use the following
day when we really needed them. After that bad jump, I was really
worried about jumping with all the weight, and I figured this
would give me some practice as a warmup. I was a damned fool for
doing this, because I could be hung up in the stockade for a long
time if I was caught.
I closed the heavy parts up in my bag and left them in my tent.
We went out to the plane. The shell of the Browning machine gun
was strapped to me. Even that was heavy enough. The jump went
well enough. The gun was tied with a cable about 5 meters long
so I wouldn't hit myself with it when I hit the ground.
I landed successfully and immediately got myself organized, packing
up the chute, picking up the machine gun, and getting together
with the others to begin the 10-kilometer march back to the camp.
I slung the Browning, zipped up in its canvas bag, on my back.
Usually you have someone else carry it for you, it's so heavy.
But I knew if I did that I'd give away my secret.
A friend insisted on helping me, because everybody was saying,
Look at Geller, he's carrying that damn thing alone. I let my
friend carry it up the first hill, a long haul. He told me that
this was unusual, he never before could carry the gun more than
a few hundred meters alone without rest. Now, he said, it was
a lot easier. He felt he was getting stronger. I would have thought
that was funny, but right then I saw a jeep pull up to where we
were resting. There was a general in it, and I knew immediately
what was going to happen. I grabbed my forehead and said to myself,
"My God, they're going to put us through a maneuver!"
This happened every once in a while, when high staff officers
arrived for a surprise exercise during a routine practice. We
would then go through an exercise just as if the enemy were really
attacking, using our guns with live ammunition.
They told us to spread out. We were ordered to set up the guns,
ready to fire. There I was with an empty Browning gun, with no
barrel inside it and no firing pin. I didn't know what to do.
I didn't want to take the canvas off, but I did. I could look
through the open tube of the gun, and I could see daylight through
it. The number two man came up with the ammunition belt, and I
fed it into the empty outside casing and cocked the gun, knowing
that nothing would happen. I wanted to bury myself in the ground.
I knew that the penalty for this would be many months in a prison
camp. I knew it would ruin my army career.
The general's jeep came up behind us. We were high on a cliff,
standing by for the order to fire at the imaginary enemy. I opened
the lid of the Browning and looked again. There was the bullet,
just hanging in the belt and flopping there with nothing to fire
it. I heard the sergeant major yell: "Group A, open fire!"
They started firing as we stood by. I was trembling and just about
in shock, with the generals standing behind us, all their insignia
shining in the sun.
I figured that maybe if I took my small gun, called an Oozie,
and put it next to the big one, it would make some kind of noise,
even though it made a sharp, high bang compared to the Browning.
Then the order came for us to fire, and I pulled both triggers.
What happened next is something I can hardly believe to this day,
even with the many things that have happened to me since. I know
anyone will have trouble believing it. All I can say is that it
happened; there is no question in my mind that it did. It is not
a fantasy, not a daydream, not anything that I made up in my imagination.
I would have no reason to make this up, because what I'm about
to tell strains my credibility with anyone reading about it. But
it is a clear, hard fact.
When ~ pulled the triggers both guns started firing. The
Browning was firing, firing, firing. The bullets were flying out.
I couldn't believe it. How could it be? I had looked inside twice
just moments before, and the inside of the gun had been vacant.
I was shooting steadily, and the ammunition box was emptying fast.
There wasn't a bullet left in it. I thought about God immediately.
I said, thank you, God, for doing this for me. One of the officers
behind me tapped me on the helmet and said: "Good shooting,
soldier."
There were no more bullets left when the firing was over. There
was a whole pile of empty cartridges from the Browning lying around.
The gun was dripping black oil from the shooting. I put my hand
on the Browning, and I kissed it. I couldn't understand how it
had happened. I didn't even want to understand. It was a mystery
like the machine gun incident with my father years before. I put
the gun back in the canvas and zipped it up, and we marched back
to the tent area.
When we got there, I rushed to my kit bag and opened it up. The
barrel was still there, and so were the other parts. I ran back
to the Browning and looked at it again. It was still empty. And
now the most shocking part hit me. I drew out the barrel from
the kit bag and looked through it. It had been clean as a whistle
when we started out on the maneuver. Now it was dirty, covered
with grime, exactly the way it would have been after firing. I
mean, I had to clean it. That barrel had been fired. There was
no question about it - yet I had left it in the kit bag and definitely
had not opened it until after our return to camp.
This experience anticipated others that came along when I was
older. I didn't understand it then, and I don't understand it
now. But that is true of many things that have happened since.
As I was cleaning the gun, I was still in shock. I couldn't talk
to anyone. I was thinking back to Cyprus, to my teacher and the
telepathy we had done together, the bending of metal objects,
and the starting up of watches that were broken. I was just thinking
to myself: Was it all just one thing going on here? Or was it
a new phenomenon every time? Because I knew it was a phenomenon.
I didn't blame it on anybody. I knew nobody was tricking me.
I couldn't tell anyone. I had to keep it in my own head, because
who would believe me? I had to accept it as a miracle, and it
scared the hell out of me.
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