Friday, October 30, 2020

IDU News: Israel Dog Unit receives awards, and continues to find missing people and to defend the people of Israel

Since our last news brief, the last few weeks have been majorly successful ones for the Israel Dog Unit.
 
IDU Recieves award from Bnai Brak Police Chief Oct 27 Lminyanam
For finding missing person Chaim Weizman Levi (alive) in Tel Aviv Oct 7.



IDU briefs and directs IDF soldiers and police during Carmiel search Oct 26.

After more than 24 hours of searching for 24 yr old Doron Reichsveld in The Hilazone Valley, Carmiel, police called in the IDU to run the search. Carmiel Police Commander of Operations called Mike Ben-Yaakov, the head of the IDU asking for him for help saying: "Mike, we have tried everything and Doron is nowhere to be found, we even sent in police canines, we need your help." Mike immediately headed out from the Tapuach base to Carmiel. 

Upon arrival, the police chief of Carmiel requested that the IDU take over the search and put at the IDU's disposal dozens of IDF troops from the Home Front Command who were also sent in to assist. Mike sent out several search teams, each with a IDU tracking dog and handler at the head. Within 40 minutes of their deployment, the missing person's body was recovered dead in the valley.






Unit continues expanding at unprecedented speed
The building in the Tapuach base is continuing to facilitate the rapid growth of the unit. And the purchase of an additional drone brings our drone fleet to four, two of which have sophisticated thermal imaging cameras enabling night-time searches.

IDU now officially receives recognition to enlist volunteers into National Service
Sherut Leumi - the government branch responsible for all national service volunteers, now offers thousands of youth, age 18 to 23, the option to fulfil their national service in the IDU - Israel Dog Unit. Our first three national-service volunteers joined hundreds of non-commisioned volunteers among the ranks of the IDU. Dozens more have applied for the next National Service September draft date.




To donate: 

https://israeldogs.blogspot.com/2020/08/emergency-crowd-funding-campaign-for.html




Friday, October 9, 2020

IDU News: From responding to Arab terror arson, to finding missing people and a doggy acrobatic show for special needs children...action packed week

 The week of Sukkot in review:

A week to remember for the IDU and all of those who benefited from our unique life-saving services

                                                                  IDU Finds Chaim Weizman Levy

Thursday evening, after searching for Chaim Weizman Levy, and after all of the other units had given up hope, we had a major breakthrough and we were able to find Chaim. IDU volunteers then brought Chaim to Ichilov Hospital after sharing some kosher pizza and cola with him. It appears that this was the first meal Chaim had for quite a while. 



The IDU took the case very seriously; especially in view of the fact that all of Chaim's relatives live abroad, and we feared that Chaim, 67, had suffered from memory loss and was in need of help. Immediately after we found Chaim, we phoned his children and brother in Ohio and put them back in touch.



                                    IDU responds to terror arson attack in Gush Etzyon

Matan, Chief of security for Kibbutz Nahal Oz with Zayid the dog he received from the IDU responding to Arab arson attack in forest near the kibbutz, located in Gush Etzyon



IDU cheers up special needs children with an acrobatic dog show in Jerusalem




Thursday, September 24, 2020

Only in Israel. Young Oleh from The Lower East Side of Manhattan saves an elderly missing oleh from Ethiopia

 A Rosh Hashanah that changed Bram and his friend's lives and the lives of those who they helped rescue              
        From the Lower East Side of Manhattan to Israel
The following is a short diary of events depicting the life-saving journey of Bram a Jewish kid who hails from the Lower East Side of New York City, and who succeeded in saving a life of an Ethiopian Jew in Israel, Rosh Hashanah, marking his 4th successful mission and find with the IDU, Israel's lead civilian canine security and SAR unit.
 Just as they were settling down for dinner, the rest of their Chag and their plans were changed completely. Known as the busiest day of the week, Friday, September 18th 2020 –coupled with Erev Rosh Hashanah- was no exception. Especially for the volunteers at the Israel Dog Unit HQ, located in Kfar Tappuach of the Shomron. After cooking, cleaning, organizing, shopping, taking care of the dogs, conducting basic maintenance, along with a whole horde of other chores and errands – including dealing with 2 high risk missing person cases – the members of the IDU's 24-hour emergency response team had a collective sigh of relief as they were finally able to wish their families a final "shanah tova" and head up to the synagogue for Shabbat/Rosh Hashanah prayers. Finally, after a tough, hectic, hardworking day, these special volunteers who devote their every spare minute to the lifesaving activities of the IDU would be able to enjoy a nice and peaceful holiday meal and welcome in the new year. However, what they did not know, was that this vision of a serene, peaceful non-eventful holiday 
was not to be.

Called out to a rescue operation during Rosh Hashanah Dinner.
Just as they were settling down for dinner, the rest of their Chag was changed completely. All of the jovial conversation quickly went silent as the volunteers heard the emergency phone line ring from the other room. On the other end was policeman Guy of the Lod Police Department informing them of the disappearance of Avraham Gitnekh, a 65-year-old dementia patient who left his house Thursday at 12:00 PM (almost 2 days earlier) not to be seen since! The volunteers present looked to Mike Ben-Yaakov, Commander and Founder of the IDU, for the next steps. Ben-Yaakov quickly identified the case as a high risk and proceeded to deploy David and Yosef, 2 experienced IDU volunteers, equipped with a SAR dog and a thermal camera mounted on a drone. At about 5:00 AM Shabbat morning, David and Yosef returned after covering their assigned areas; unfortunately, without any news on Avraham, the missing person. As per the plan, David and Yosef woke the second shift of volunteers, including Commander Ben-Yaakov, who packed the van with the necessary dogs, food and equipment in order to be able to independently set up a complete search HQ for an indefinite amount of time.
A few hours later, Ben-Yaakov and the volunteers with him arrived at the Lod Police Station where the local police chief allocated the precinct conference room to the IDU team from which to conduct the search for Avraham. IDU navigators immediately started examining maps and identifying the relevant areas.  Martin and Joseph two local Tel Aviv dog- handlers were sent to do a couple of relevant areas north of Avraham's house while 2 more volunteers, Bram and Yitzy, were sent with SAR dog Yenta to cover the south.




Guy asked Mike to deploy additional dog-handlers and drones in Kiryat Gat, Avraham's likely destination, as he lived in Kiryat Gat from the moment he made Aliya from Ethiopia in the mid-1980s. He had only moved to Lod three weeks prior to his disappearance.
Zev and Bnaya from the IDU's Gush Etzyon branch, were sent to meet Guy at a bus stop on Kiryat Gat, where clothing had been spotted that resembled the clothing that Avraham was seen in on the security cameras outside of his home. The Gush Etzyon team search nearby orchards, without any sign of Avraham, and then moved on to join the Tapuach and Tel Aviv IDU teams at the IDU command center in the Lod police station.




Missing for two days, the clock was ticking, not in Avraham's favor, in the boiling heat
 At this point it was a full 2 days after Avraham's disappearance and he was considered to be in very grave danger. As Bram, Yitzy and SAR dog Yenta approached their assigned area, they realized that from the attempted point of entry the area was mostly fenced off. They logically decided to split up and go along the perimeter of the area in different directions searching all entry points on the way. As Yitzy and SAR dog Yenta headed east, Bram headed south and soon found a suitable entry point to a very interesting abandoned parking lot, overgrown and unmaintained: a perfect example of where a missing dementia patient, such as Avraham, could be slowly dehydrating in and waiting for help. However, after searching the area very efficiently, making sure to check every possible rock and tree where Avraham could be, Bram left the area convinced that Avraham was not there. Another 200 yards down, now heading east, Bram happened upon another entry point: an unkempt trail going around a small hill with a very steep drop into a jungle of thick thorns and brush. Fearing that Avraham could have fallen into the unfriendly plants, Bram quickly started battling his way through the valley, searching every possible plant.




The missing person was found alive.
After about 50 yards of this, Bram exited the thorns and proceeded to return to the trail only to be pleasantly surprised by a man with Avraham's description lying on the ground just a few feet away! After sending his findings to the search HQ, Bram realized that the man, presumed to be Avraham, was extremely dehydrated from lying in the sun for so long without water. He gently carried him to a shady spot not too far away and proceeded to give him to drink from his own water supply. Soon after, the police came with a family member who confirmed that the man found was indeed Avraham and quickly rushed him to an ambulance from where he was then taken to the hospital.
Bram and the other volunteers who were then searching proceeded to return to the police station where the search was headquartered to celebrate the happy ending of this intense episode as well as the remainder of Shabbat and the Chag.  G-d works in mysterious ways. Amir Ohana, Israel's minister of Internal Security, came to visit the Corona check points in Lod and to meet with Lod's Chief of Police, who congratulated the police and the IDU volunteers on the impressive find and for saving Avraham's life. However, the story does not end here!




This was only the beginning of an adventurous Rosh Hashanah
After the celebrating, the IDU team packed up all the dogs and equipment to head back to base in case of another search. They didn’t have to wait long. About 20 minutes into the drive home, the phone rang once again. This time the call came from Dudi Mayblum, Head of the IDU's northern branch, informing the carload of volunteers about a missing Alzheimer's patient, Moshe Senior, in the Neve Chof neighborhood of Rishon Letzion. Without missing a beat, Commander Mike Ben-Yaakov along with the eager volunteers, turned around the van, and headed out to the area of the search. Once arriving, Ben-Yaakov got ahold of the policeman in charge of the search who then relayed the relevant information. After learning all that he needed to know, Ben-Yaakov then deployed the volunteers in the car with him along with others who arrived on their own. After about an hour of searching, Commander Ben-Yaakov received the good news that Mr. Senior was found alive.
After receiving the good news, it seemed that the IDU team, exhausted from a long day, would finally be able to return home. Once the IDU team returned to their base in Kfar Tappuach of the Shomron, they quickly took care of the dogs who were also exhausted, before finally sitting down to make Kiddush, eat something and enjoy the rest of the Chag. This was already long after midnight. However, just as they were making Kiddush, the phone rang for the third time. Calling from Nahariya in the north, a young lady informed Commander Ben-Yaakov of the disappearance of her grandfather Vladimir Freifeld, an 85-year-old Alzheimer's patient, who rode off on his bicycle and hadn't been seen for 18 hours. Ben-Yaakov quickly dialed IDU North who proceeded to search the relevant areas until Vladimir was ultimately found alive. We say many times in the Rosh Hashana prayers, the books of life and death are open before G-d and he judges each creature individually and inscribes them for life or sadly, sometimes the alternative. With 3 high risk cases within 24-hours of each other all found alive thanks to G-d as well as His messengers in the IDU, we can say that this year, cannot be off to a better start. G-d has smiled on the respective missing people and He has smiled on the volunteers of the IDU to whom He gave the privilege of having a hand in the rescue of all three.




Where else can a Lower East Side kid join a unit, adopt a dog and start saving lives?
The IDU is more than just a national unit that saves lives with security and SAR dogs in Israel. For Bram and the other young IDU volunteers, it is a unique opportunity of a life-time to be a part of an operational unit that engages in security and search and rescue missions every day. For Bram this was his fourth find. Not bad for a 19-year-old immigrant from the Lower East side who moved to Passaic before making his journey to Israel. Bram has had no shortage of adventure and adversary since he moved to Israel almost two years ago, studying in the pre-military academy at Keshet in the Golan. He was one of Israel's first Corona patients, labeled patient 260. He beat Corona, with G-d's help and now he continues to save the lives of others in Israel.


Israeli Police Thank The I.D.U. For Saving a Missing Person's Life

 Incredible footage from the award ceremony at the Lod police station Sept 24, 2020 LMinyanam

https://youtu.be/fUMebgsV8u0


 IDU Spokesman: 

Despite the spectre of COVID-19, an emotionally charged ceremony was held this morning at the Lod Police Station where the family of a missing person met the IDU dog handlers who saved him. 

Lod Police Chief, Superintendent Shimon Dahan, together with Superintendent Guy Bacchar, Cheif of Operations, presented certificates of appreciation and esteem to Israel Dog Unit volunteers for their resourcefulness and success in locating the missing Darba Avraham Gatenach, age 65, after he became disoriented and found himself lost in deep brush on Rosh Hashana Eve. 

Two days after Avraham went missing, the family and the forces whom had been searching for him had resigned themselves to the conclusion that they would no longer find their dear Avraham alive due to the harsh heat wave at the time. The Israel Dog Unit refused to surrender and pushed on with the search.

After deploying many volunteers for hours in the intense heat, Avraham was finally found alive, by Bram Settenbrino of the IDU. Bram found him lying on the ground, dehydrated and exposed to the blaring sun for more than two days. Bram then proceeded to carry him to a shady spot and called emergency services who quickly came and gave him medical attention before whisking him off to the hospital where he is currently rehabilitating.

In a rare display of gratitude, IDU commander Mike Ben-Yaakov fastened the IDU's pin to both Chief Superintendant Dahan and Superintendant Bachar to thank them for their cooperation, saying "You too deserve recognition for being a precinct that knows the value of the life of a missing person, and for taking the initiative to call on professionals with the ability to succeed in that task and provide them the required environment - which in this case included the use of the station's command center. It would have been very difficult to continue the search otherwise."




Chief Superintendant Dahan thanked the IDU, saying: "What sets the IDU apart from all other forces is the motivation and perseverance of its volunteers as well as it’s cutting edge technology that even the police have such as the special mobile application developed by the IDU Technology Department which helps effectively manage search operations and document all troop movement” 

Esti, Avraham’s niece, presented certificates to the station commander, as well as the IDU, and United Hatzalah, adding: "We would never have dreamed to look for Avraham in that place; without the intervention of the IDU he would have died, G-d forbid.”


To donate:

https://israeldogs.blogspot.com/2020/08/emergency-crowd-funding-campaign-for.html



Friday, September 18, 2020

IDU Pre-Rosh HaShanah Update

July 8th, 2020: IDU Security Dog in Hebron stops Terror Attack and IDU SAR Team "refinds" missing person

July 8th "liminyanam" was an active day for the Israel Dog Unit, for both the security and search and rescue departments. The day started with a call from an IDF reserve combat platoon which spotted a person that strongly resembled Zusha Brandwein, a missing person sought after by the IDU for several months. Barak, the soldier who called in the missing person, recalled seeing Zusha's picture on an IDU flier. The IDU immediately dispatched a search team to the area and found the "missing person". However, the missing person was actually a different missing person who had been found and rescued by the IDU several years ago who had strongly resembled Zusha. After the rendezvous with T.S., our "refound" missing person, the IDU SAR team was invited for coffee by Barak and the other soldiers on their nearby base. Just as the IDU volunteers were about to perform an impromptu dog show for the IDF soldiers, a call came in from Dr. Ben-Tarya who gave us the good news that Ayeshala the IDU security dog that was stationed in his home scared away an arab terrorist squad who attempted to penetrate into the Avraham Avinu neighborhood in Hebron. Ben-Tarya thanked profusely the IDU, recalling that there have been multiple attempts to break into his home prior to receiving Ayeshala.


July 12th, 2020: Amos Netzer, the Mayor of the Zevulun Region and Nir Yonah, the Chief of                                                         Zevulun Police Visit IDU Command Center

During the 4 day search for Roni Waller, of blessed memory, the IDU lead hundreds of volunteers, including Amos Netzer (Mayor) and Nir Yonah (Chief of Police). 65-year-old Waller disappeared on July 12th, during a hike in a wilderness near his home. Waller, who had earlier suffered from a stroke,  fell into a ditch under heavy brush and was found dead by Danna, an IDU cadaver dog working with IDU volunteers.






July 18th, 2020: IDU Assists IDF in Pursuit of Arab Car Thieves

A ring of arab thieves who stole a car in Ariel and ditched it alongside highway 5 fled on foot. IDU dog handlers and drones assisted in the pursuit of the thieves.

July 21st, 2020: IDU performs dog show for lone soldiers in Gush Etzion




July 22nd, 2020: IDU holds important exercise at earthquake rubble site

                                       

                                 July 23rd, 2020: IDU receives award from Zevulun Police Department                                                     

August 3rd, 2020: IDU holds dog show for special needs children in Jerusalem



August 10th, 2020: IDU holds another dog show for special needs children in Jerusalem



August 13th, 2020: IDU Gush Etzion Commander, Michah Katz, receives award from Kibbutz Migdal Oz Security Chief.


August 25th, 2020: Dudi Mayblum, IDU Commander of Northern Operations, receives award from Israeli Police for aiding in the finding and rescuing of Yvgeny Kolyaba who went missing 4 days earlier from Kiryat Yam.




September 3rd, 2020: IDU SAR team finds Ronah Hilo of blessed memory

The IDU command center which was donated by Harel Insurance Company, managed more than 400 volunteers, including the deputy mayor of Petach Tikva, Moshe Ben-Sadok, as well as dogs, horses, kayaks, drones and jeeps in a race against the clock to save the life of 52-year-old Ronah Hilo. After 9 days of searching, Ronah's body was recovered -unfortunately deceased- by an IDU SAR team.




The IDU wishes all of its volunteers and supporters a great new year; a year of happiness, health, wealth, spiritually and physically.

Shanah tovah!

To join the IDU or to donate to the emergency crowdfunding campaign to raise urgently needed funds to keep the unit 
afloat please visit and forward the link to the emergency crowd funding campaign.


Tuesday, August 18, 2020

From Maariv Magazine--A Unique Unit: The Israel Dog Unit (IDU) is in danger of closing after twenty years of activity

 

A Unique Unit: The Israel Dog Unit (IDU) is in danger of closing after twenty years of activity


Twenty years after its establishment, the Israel Dog Unit, which deals with finding and rescuing missing persons and is funded exclusively by donations, is in danger of closing down, just when COVID-19 has caused more missing person cases than ever. 

The dog unit 

The IDU in action (Photo: IDU PR)


“The second you find someone alive - it's a feeling that's hard to describe, like you’re in  a different league, "describes Moshe Binyamini, IDU volunteer. He and his friends' harbor a deep sense of commitment to the IDU’s mission to find and rescue missing persons. “That one moment justifies all the days and days without sleep, the sweating and physical exertion,  sleeping in the field or on the street, the weeks of  suffering from mosquito and tick bites. All the suffering of the search is dwarfed by that one second of the find.” 

 

After twenty years in operation, the unit is in danger of closing due to lack of funding. Despite its successes, no government body has adopted the IDU as a full-fledged organization - it remains registered as a civilian NPO. A few months since the COVID-19 outbreak, the demand for their services is skyrocketing, and financial resources have dwindled; members of the unit have recently launched an emergency crowdfunding campaign, "Four-Legged Lifesavers", visible on their website. They hope to reach a goal of NIS 520,000 to cover their debts and continue their current activities.

Training in the dog unit (Photo: Aharon Streicher)Training in the dog unit (Photo: IDU PR)

 

 "Not a day goes by without a call for help," explains Mike Ben Yaakov, founder and commander of the IDU. Mike immigrated from the United States at the age of eighteen as an ardent Zionist. “It could be a lost Alzheimer's patient, children with special needs, a person with suicidal tendencies or a severe mental background, and even a regularly healthy person who got dehydrated on a long hike. We are always ready to go out into the field with our dogs. From time to time other emergency services will work alongside us: the police, the army, the Magen David Adom and other volunteer rescue organizations. We work with everyone. We were even called for cases of senior officials, who had gone missing for all sorts of reasons. The state understands our capabilities and needs them, but refuses to officially recognize and fund us."

 

The IDU was established in 2000 against the background of the many terrorist attacks during the days of the second intifada, Ben-Yaakov dreamed of a unit of volunteer dog handlers from Israel and abroad assisting in ongoing security activities. After a decade, though, search and rescue has become the unit’s primary activity. "There are police, fire brigades and rescue units, so why do they need us?", says Ben Yaakov. “Because we realized that there is a severe shortage of knowledge and manpower and a lack of understanding of the field. A decade ago I was called to help improve that situation, and we helped out a bit on a fully volunteer basis. One day we were called to look for a young man. I arrived at the scene and saw police and Oketz (the IDF’s canine unit); there was a large map set up and lots of people looking, but there was no tidy command center, and the professionals searched for just a few hours before packing up and going home. In the field, a cadaver dog was used to search for a person who was supposed to be alive; each dog has a different specialization, and that search should have been conducted with a searching or tracking dog instead. I realized that something needed to change. The next day at five in the morning we arrived with a suitable dog and found the missing person, deep in the brush." Today, the unit employs about three hundred volunteers and fifty rescue dogs in eight branches around the country. Another three hundred dogs have been trained by them and stationed as guard dogs in various localities. The volunteers come from different backgrounds and are scattered throughout the country. Their "hard core" contains about fifty people who work mainly in the Judea and Samaria area and at the unit's base in Kfar Tapuach. Rescue dog in the kennel unit (Photo: Dovrat Yachal)Rescue dog in the IDU (Photo: IDU PR)

Binyamini, 22, who has been volunteering at the unit for six years, gets excited before every deployment. "I came to the unit after hearing about a guy who was missing in the Jerusalem forest, and they were looking for him for a week," he says. "I decided to join at first for the action and the chance to help people.  After a while, I already knew the people and the kennel, so I stayed around. I get to go out for many calls and exhibitions, and I’ve been in hundreds of rescues. There are periods with multiple calls a day, and there are periods where there are no calls at all. The search that moved me the most was that of a missing woman from Ashdod, a woman we had been looking for for several months.Our initial search  found nothing, so we returned  every few weeks to search another sector. After six months, we received a call on Saturday evening about another missing person from Ashdod, a young man who went for a walk and hadn’t returned.  We searched on Friday all night, and in the morning we suddenly found a skull that later turned out to be that woman's. At that very moment we received information from the police that the guy was healthy and intact. We came looking for him and found the answer to our unsolved mystery instead. It was very exciting." Binyamini lives in Jerusalem and comes to the kennel about four times a week on average. The volunteers in the kennel live there in dormitory conditions and go out to events in between dog training. "I’ve participated in hundreds of rescues, but unfortunately I have yet to find anyone alive," says Binyamini. "It’s frustrating, for the most part, but we take comfort in the knowledge that we will at least bring the victim to a proper burial. A search begins with a lot of action - all the units arrive and set up their command centers, but then it starts to get discouraging and unpleasant. There are no words to describe the moment when you find someone.  You experience a sense of transcendence - someone is alive thanks to you. You burn with joy; there is insane energy and immense satisfaction among the other volunteers. In my opinion, even if the organization reaches a state financially and physically that it will not be able to respond to events, that spirit will still remain; if there is no money for vehicles, we will walk, but there will be no situation where a call for help is heard and ignored. We will respond to any alert, even if it means taking public transit."Training at the ruins site of the dog unit (Photo: Dovrat Yachal)Training to rescue victims from rubble. (Photo: IDU PR)

Ravid, 27, immigrated from Canada about seven years ago as a lone soldier and lives at the base of the unit in Tapuah, experienced the transcendent moment of locating a living person and rescuing him. "I found two people, one alive and one not," he says. “I found a man a year and a half ago. He was fired from his job and left home. We received a report that there was a chance of suicide. We started looking in the field. One dog from the unit identified a small grove with an abandoned house and signalled to me to go check it. I went in and found the man lying on the floor in complete unconsciousness, next to bags of pills and a bottle of vodka. Luckily, he vomited both up and thus survived. I did not notice that building at first, but the dog dragged me there in a fit of excitement. The man was a little bit overweight , and the paramedics were unable to lift him, so we called our strongest volunteers and they carried him to the road on a stretcher. After saving a person, you can feel like you’re on a ‘high’; I felt moved to the depths of my soul. I had found someone after three days of searching; our general rule is that a person survives for up to three days in the field. I found him at the last possible moment, just before we packed up. Not everyone gets to save lives. "The dog unit (Photo: Dovrat Yachal)The IDU working alongside the INP (Photo: IDU PR)

 

A Better Country

In the absence of an ordinary budget, unit members are in continual demand. The organization's call center phone number is none other than Mike's own private phone, and when there is no vehicle to go out into the field, he must find one himself. "Looking for a person takes a lot of time," says Ben Yaakov. “A search sometimes takes a long time. We have a big heart and are willing to stay in the field until the missing person is found. The rest go home after a few hours, but our volunteers are the crazy people who sleep in the field for a few days and will do anything to complete a rescue. Legally, the police are responsible for missing persons, but all they do is open a case and send a flyer online with a photo and description; they never actually go searching in the field. The Israel National Police (INP) is not built for it, either in terms of professional capabilities or resources. I do not see policemen sleeping in the woods for several days. There are a lot of cases where the police ask us to leave as well, but we refuse; they may say ‘we’ve searched there already’, but we end up finding the person in that same area. This was the case a few years ago with Meir Levy, a money changer from Bat Yam, who was murdered by a man who shot him and threw the body near the factories in Bat Yam. We sat down with the murdered man's family; we wanted to search in a certain area, but the cops said they had already searched there and asked us to stay clear of it. I  went there  despite them and  we found him within seconds. The family did not understand how we knew where to look. "

            

                The coronavirus crisis, as mentioned, only exacerbated the situation, and the demand for rescues increased drastically; fears of suicide are on the rise due to the strains of quarantine, and economic pressures are felt by both rescuers and victims alike. The donations that had flowed from foundations and organizations in Israel and abroad have stopped coming. "If I need twenty dogs with handlers, and I have a budget for three, that is the difference between life and death, between bringing someone’s bones to burial and leaving them in the field forever.” Bram Milo (Photo: Private Photography)Bram S. (Photo: IDU PR)

 

“We have subsisted on donations so far,” says Ben-Yaakov, “But recently those donations have stopped, and right when I need to invest more in dogs, vehicles and fuel for our missions. We work in full cooperation with everyone - army, fire brigade, rescue units. Everyone helps us because they know we are the leading operational arm in the field of missing people; only the state ignores us. We may not be a national institution, but we are the most effective operators in the field, combining dogs, drones, and our proprietary incident management application. We are always the first to respond, although we have no governmental budget; indeed, other services with budgets of millions seek our help. It does not make sense that we do not receive even a minimal budget. " 

 

"Without the IDU, I do not think I would have stayed in Israel," says Bram Settenbrino 19, who immigrated to Israel two years ago. In his very first search, he found a missing person. "It strengthened my resolve to stay in the unit and the country," he says. "The unit is like a family for me,  helping me in the Ministry of the Interior, providing housing, and taking care of everything I need. During one of the searches, the son of the missing person, who was the father of five children, joined me and it was sad to see him shouting: 'Dad, Dad'. To this day we have not found his father, but we occasionally continue the search because we’ve made it a mission of ours to do so. When one sees the mental upheaval of a family with a member missing, it is impossible to do otherwise. I am ready to sleep in the field for a month and a half and make any other sacrifices necessary to find someone. Israel is a better country because of the IDU." 


        To join the IDU or to donate to the emergency crowdfunding campaign to raise urgently needed funds to keep the unit 
afloat please visit and forward the link to the emergency crowd funding campaign.


IDU Headquarters welcomes special needs camp, "Alei Siyach" , at the IDU base in Kfar Tappuach

IDU Headquarters welcomes special needs camp, "Alei Siyach" , at the IDU base in Kfar Tapuach


  This morning (Tuesday) a special dog show was held at the IDU base for dozens of people with special needs.

 The dogs and handlers that performed, are used to helping missing people and their families, when going out to search every day or two.Today, they have managed to put smiles on the faces of children and adults with special needs who suffer doubly during the Corona which imposes on them long days without activity that they are used to experiencing every year during the summer vacation.


 IDU Commander Mike Ben Yaakov said:
 "We treat such events with reverence no less than operations to locate missing persons or prevent terrorist attacks with the four-legged lifesavers. What an inspiration to see the interaction between the dogs and the guys, and the joy that breaks boundaries in its wake."
 

A particularly moving moment occurred when one of the trainees asked for the right to speak from the host of the show, and showered greetings on the IDU, its volunteers and its staff.

To join the IDU or to donate to the emergency crowdfunding campaign to raise urgently needed funds to keep the unit 
afloat please visit and forward the link to the emergency crowd funding campaign.