As soldiers went door to door to make sure no other terrorist had infiltrated the community, teenagers walked the streets as if it was just any other night. It was eerily quiet. Police cars circled. The road where the stabbing had taken place had been hosed down.As I walked up to the blood-stained driveway where a young man about my age had laid just hours earlier, breathing what was to be some of his final labored breaths, I met Daniel Nadav.Nadav lives a few houses down from the second stabbing victim and ran outside when he heard the screams, thinking he was going to break up a neighborhood feud. Instead, he watched as Ovadia collapsed in the driveway, as his 58-year-old neighbor was stabbed repeatedly, and as a hate-filled 17-year-old boy was shot to death after destroying a family, after creating havoc in a quiet suburban community.It was a while after the attack had happened and not many people were still on the streets, but Nadav hadn’t moved. He circled the location where the attack occurred, fidgeting, dramatically reenacting the stabbing motions of the terrorist. He showed me pictures he had taken of the wounded, he used the light from his phone to reveal the blood stains splattered on the parked cars, on the driveway walls.
We talked about whether he would be able to move on from this experience, whether this quaint little Jerusalem suburb would be able to pick itself up after being so terribly violated.As I was getting ready to leave, Nadav assured me that despite the trauma he had witnessed he was fine, that he would be able to sleep that night.I didn’t believe him. He wasn’t fine. I wasn’t fine.None of this was fine. The author is an editor for The Jerusalem Post