He’s a young man. His name is Zak and, like most other young Israelis, he has seen active duty as a soldier in the IDF.
Zak’s story, though, takes a sharp turn after he returns from serving in the First Lebanon War. It seems that the only way he can "tune out" the sounds and the images of the war is to surround himself with loud music. And that is how he arrived at the Israel National Therapeutic Riding Association a mere ten weeks ago to begin his therapeutic riding sessions. Anita Shkedi, INTRA’s founder, sent us this picture about an hour ago – she had taken it just as the sun was going down at INTRA’s site along the Mediterranean.
Zak’s war experiences left him with severe PTSD. For nearly ten years he rarely slept, his brain was always running, medications left him disoriented and some medical treatments actually put him in an even worse state. When he came to Anita not even three months ago, the only way they could get him up on a horse was to surround him with music blaring from the arena’s loudspeakers. Time – time was what Zak needed and slowly, after three weeks, he began to appear regularly for his sessions and the loud music no longer accompanied him. The horse became his friend and calmed him. When Anita sent this morning’s email and picture she was in awe of the changes she was seeing right in front of her eyes. Zak was laughing, sitting around INTRA’s grounds chatting with others, lighting up his cigarette. She felt that she was looking at another person and again marveled at the miracles that man and animal can foster.
What better way to approach the lighting of the first Hanukkah candle?
Postscript:
A few hours after posting this and sharing it with Anita, she wrote back:
Tonight I gave him the pictures of him smiling while on the phone. He said it’s all because of the horse. He asked me if he could come in a week on another day,