Gaza rockets continued to pound Israel, with over 100 rockets striking residential communities and cities throughout Sunday, November 18, wounding nine people including a rescue service worker, who sustained moderate head injuries from a mortar fired from Gaza at Sha’ar HaNegev Regional Council. Five others were wounded when a Grad rocket struck a vehicle in Ofakim including a couple and their two-year-old daughter. Cars, homes and buildings were damaged in the rocket strikes and countless people experienced shock and trauma from the attacks.
The coastal city of Ashkelon, Baltimore’s sister city, with a population of 130,000 people, was hit particularly hard on Sunday. In one attack, a rocket slammed into a four-story building, penetrating through the roof of the stairwell, and continuing on, leaving a large gaping hole in the floor of one apartment, and in the ceiling of the apartment below. Two people sustained injuries from the attack and five suffered shock. The run-down apartment building is home to Russians and Ethiopian immigrants as well as native Israelis.
For Alex Leibowitz and his wife Olga, parents of four, the rocket attack could have had much more serious consequences had it not been for their dog, Louisa.
Alex was home not feeling well on Sunday, while his wife had left to work in the morning. At one point, their dog began barking incessantly.
“Louisa just kept on nervously barking non-stop and I could not listen to it any longer, so l went back to the bedroom,” explained Alex.
Because of the barking, Alex did not hear the rocket warning siren and remained in his bedroom. Shortly after, a rocket fired from Gaza struck his apartment building, slicing into his apartment door and penetrating his floor, leaving a trail of debris, shrapnel and shattered glass in its path.
“It was a miracle. Had I gone done the stairwell if I had heard the siren, the rocket would have caught me,” said Alex. Residents of Ashkelon have only 30 seconds to get to shelter once the sirens sound.
“It was as if our dog had some kind of sixth sense to know that a rocket was on its way,” noted Olga. “Louisa’s barking kept my husband alive.”
Although the Leibovitz’s front end of their apartment has been badly devastated, the couple feels very fortunate.
“We have such a good dog,” said Olga, patting Louisa’s head as she now sits calmly on the porch. “We are lucky people today,” she adds as she surveys the large hole in the floor of her living room. “This could have been a much worse situation.”

