Report on the Damage to JNF Forests
We received a report from the Israel Ministry of Environmental Protection detailing the damage to the JNF forests as a result of the devastation. The information is provided by the Nature Reserves and Parks Authority and JNF staff in Israel.
Planted forests (JNF) — During the war, as a result of about 400 fires caused by missiles, more than 3,000 acres of planted forests went up in flames. Of this total, about 1,750 acres were on the Naftali mountain ridge (about 70% of the forest) and 500 acres were in the Biria forest near Tzfat. The direct fire fighting costs exceeded NIS 20 million (use of fire fighting aircraft and fire retarding materials).
Natural forests and open areas — A total of about 50 fires caused by the war were dealt with in nature reservations and national parks. About 10,000 acres were burned, of which about 3,750 acres were in areas of nature reserves and national parks. Of these, about 1,375 acres were in the Golan Heights, about 2,225 acres in Northern Galilee (in the Mount Miron fire about 300 acres were burned, representing about 15% of the area of the forest) and 125 acres in Lower Galilee.
The damage was to a large spectrum of living things, from plants damaged directly, invertebrates, lichen, snails, reptiles, birds (great damage to fledglings that could not yet fly and flee from the fire), mammals' dens, young deer, and sometimes even adult mammals. The damage was systemic to the entire food chain.
The damage to flora, in both the short and long term, is the most conspicuous. The burned forests will recover slowly, and until this happens dense undergrowth will replace the adult forest. There will be a change to the composition of the vegetation, and the hairy cassia and kinds of rockrose will dominate the scene, at the expense of varied kinds of undergrowth. In the burned areas the chances increase of domination by invasive species, such as the blue acacia.
Physical damage — Roads made for the purpose of fire fighting. Such roads were made in the Hulah Reservation. After the fire there will be soil erosion in the first winter, until a layer of undergrowth covers the area.





On Thursday morning, we flew in a plane out of Rosh Pina to view damage from the air. Then we drove by van to witness, up close and personal, the results of four weeks of rocket attacks in the north. 

This morning, Jewish National Fund was discussed in a 
The response from the children and parents is much greater than can be imagined. Taking the children away from the north achieved a great deal of good and the activity is in high demand.



Andy Michelson wore one set of the bulletproof jackets and ceramic helmets we are providing to firefighters in the north. The equipment is both bullet- and shrapnel-proof and has already saved lives. If you'd like to give money to provide these jackets and other emergency equipment to Israeli firefighters you can do so
On Thursday, July 27, 2006, Andy Michelson, Director of the American Desk at KKL in Israel traveled to northern Israel to assess the situation. Together with Paul Ginsburg, director of the Forest Department in the northern region, he surveyed the sites hit by Katyusha rockets and the burnt forests. Here is his diary of the day:
Dr. Stephen Wolnek, a resident of Pt. Washington, NY, is a Vice President of JNF, honorary president of United Synagogue for Conservative Judaism, and on the Board of the Jewish Community Relations Council was in Israel from July 19-25. He traveled there on a Nefesh B'Nefesh flight, which is always a moving experience, but this one was more so given the crisis. Five hundred people greeted them at the airport.


