October 7 anniversary header

October 7 Anniversary: Israel Rising from Ashes to Renewed Hope

By David Parsons, ICEJ Senior Vice President & Spokesman

Over recent decades, official visitors to Israel felt obliged to make a pilgrimage to Sderot, near Gaza, to view the rusting heaps of Hamas rockets on display behind the town’s police station.

Obama at Sderot police station
Then US Democratic presidential contender Sen. Barack Obama speaks in front of a display of rockets behind the Sderot police station in 2008, pledging that as president, he would preserve the close ties between the United States and Israel. (AP Photo/David Silverman)

Even presidential candidate Barack Obama stood there in 2008, insisting he would never tolerate his daughters living under the constant rocket threat faced by Israelis in the western Negev.

Today, that police station no longer exists. Hamas terrorists overran it during their mass invasion last October 7. As the one-year anniversary of that dark day approaches, a memorial is being hastily erected on the leveled station to honor the 20 heroic police officers who fell defending their city.

Now, visitors are drawn instead to new pilgrimage sites, such as the “car graveyard” near Tekumah, where the crushed remains of 1,500 burned-out vehicles collected from surrounding roadsides after the October 7 massacre are stacked 30 feet high—each rusted frame testifying to the many innocent lives lost that day. A few miles away at the Nova music festival site, a haunting silence still lingers in the place where 364 civilians were slaughtered and 40 were taken hostage by Hamas on that “Black Shabbat.”

Remembering October 7

One year ago—as the Feast of Tabernacles (Sukkot) was coming to a close, and as Israelis rested on the holy day of Simchat Torah—some 6,000 Hamas and Islamic Jihad militiamen breached the Gaza security fence and poured into Israel to murder, maim, and seize hostages. The so-called “al-Aqsa Storm” was more successful than even Hamas expected. Over 1,200 Israelis were killed, while 251 were abducted into the terror tunnels of Gaza. It took three days for the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) to secure the border area. The mass atrocities shook all of Israel, leaving everyone terrified of home invasions by armed jihadists and an even bigger assault from Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The shocking carnage last October 7 marked the worst pogrom against the Jewish people since the Holocaust. Children were shot in front of their parents, and parents in front of their children. Entire families were burned alive. Women were gang raped. Frail Holocaust Survivors were brutally executed at point-blank range. Babies were bludgeoned and beheaded.

Even so, the resulting death toll could have been worse, as the great secrecy by Hamas over their operation also surprised Hezbollah, which was not ready for all-out war. But by the next day, Hezbollah joined the fray with relentless rocket barrages across the border, and other Iranian proxy militias soon followed. This left Israel facing a seven-front war—with the threat of missile, drone, and terror attacks emanating from Gaza, the West Bank, Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and Iran itself.

Israel’s Response

In response to October 7, the IDF immediately carried out its largest-ever mobilization of 350,000 reservists and evacuated tens of thousands of Israeli civilians from the Gaza and Lebanon borders. These swift actions deterred Hezbollah from invading the North with its elite Radwan forces and allowed the IDF to concentrate first on destroying Hamas in Gaza and returning the hostages. However, the pace of battle was slow due to the complexity of tunnel warfare, the presence of the hostages, and the international community’s insistence that over two million Gazan civilians remain on the battlefield—allowing Hamas to continue using them as human shields.

As the fighting in Gaza lumbered on, Israel also faced widespread condemnation by world leaders, charges of genocide and war crimes in The Hague, and a global wave of antisemitism on a truly appalling scale. Even more concerning has been the often-frosty approach of the Biden administration, which slowed sorely needed US arms shipments—and its repeated criticisms and demands for a ceasefire seemed to help preserve Hamas as a fighting force and ruler of Gaza.

October 2023 Gaza−Israel conflict (credit: Wikipedia Commons)

But perhaps the most troubling aspect of this conflict for Israelis was the failure of the nation’s renowned intelligence services to detect and foil the Hamas invasion plans. An official commission of inquiry has not yet convened. But it is already clear that obvious warning signs were tragically ignored, largely due to the prevailing “group think” among senior Israeli political and military leaders that Hamas was deterred from attacking by the IDF’s superior might and the building boom in Gaza.

Thus, October 7 caused Israelis to lose trust in their leaders. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was singled out for allowing Qatar to pour money into Gaza and his reluctance to accept any blame for the brutal Hamas onslaught.

The edginess and doubts among Israelis started to turn around, however, beginning in mid-April.


Restored Confidence and Hope

At the time, the IDF had successfully targeted two Iranian generals in Damascus, so Tehran retaliated by launching over 350 ballistic and cruise missiles and armed drones in its first-ever direct attack on Israel. Yet Israel and its allies managed to shoot down 99 percent of the missiles and drones. Since then, Israel has begun to find its footing and regain its confidence.

In fact, over the past six months, Israel has managed to carry out incredible feats that have sent its enemies reeling. The costly intelligence failure of October 7 has given way to a series of legendary intelligence successes on par with Israel’s preemptive strikes on the Egyptian Air Force in June 1967 and the Entebbe rescue mission of July 1976.

This includes eliminating Hamas Politburo Chief Ismail Haniyeh during a visit to Tehran, and finally catching up to notorious Hamas terrorist Muhammad Deif inside Gaza. The IDF also has taken out the senior military commander of Hezbollah, Fuad Shukur, along with its deputy commander, Ibrahim Aqil, plus the militia’s rocket chief, drone chief, intelligence chief, finance chief, Radwan force commander, southern front commander, and finally, the supreme leader himself, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah.

Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah, whom Israel eliminated just short of the one-year anniversary of October 7.
The late supreme leader of Hezbollah, Sheikh Hassan Nasrallah

In other remarkable operations, the Israeli air force recently destroyed thousands of rockets just minutes before they were to be launched into Israel. Elite IDF troops also landed inside Syria to blow up an underground guided-missile factory. Soon after, the Mossad pulled off a spellbinding covert operation involving rigged pagers and walkie-talkies that simultaneously exploded in the hands of thousands of Hezbollah operatives all over Lebanon. Just days later, Israel struck a high-priority target list of over 2,000 Hezbollah arms depots and military sites in a mere 48 hours.

And in its latest sensational achievement, Israel’s air defenses disposed of another massive wave of over 180 Iranian ballistic missiles—the largest such barrage ever launched at a nation.

Altogether, these impressive operations have dealt staggering blows to Hezbollah, with its upper command structure and half its rocket arsenal wiped out. Iran’s most lethal, effective, forward threat against Israel is collapsing, and hopes are renewed that Lebanon can work itself free of Hezbollah’s grip one day. Meanwhile, Hamas has been severely weakened in Gaza, and its besieged leader, Yahya Sinwar, may soon be killed or driven into exile. Iran is also now in Israel’s direct line of fire, and the shadow of fear its “axis of resistance” cast over the whole region is surely dissipating.

With the anniversary of October 7 come memorials like this one in Sderot to remember lives lost.
A memorial being erected at the site of the destroyed Sderot police station

October 7 Anniversary—Looking Forward

One year after that dark day of October 7, Israel is settling old scores with radical Islamic terror militias that have the innocent blood of many nations on their hands. They are fighting a just war by moral means and with dazzling precision. Even the Sunni Arab world is cheering Nasrallah’s death and marveling at Israel’s hi-tech wizardry. Alas, there is also renewed hope the region can return to the path of reconciliation via the Abraham Accords.

Still, there are more battles ahead, and Israelis will need time to truly get past the shock of the October 7 massacres. Indeed, the wounds inflicted that dark Saturday will remain open so long as there are hostages still held in Gaza.

Don’t watch from the sidelines—stand with Israel in her greatest time of need.

Was Gaza an Open-air Prison?

Is Israel Using Famine as a Weapon of War?

The 2023 War with Hamas Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Israel and the Church: A Coming Reformation

Replacement Theology and Why It Matters for Christians

What Is Antisemitism? Unpacking History’s Longest Hatred