HAPPY 60TH BIRTHDAY TO ISRAEL9 Iyar 5768, Wednesday, May 14, 2008 IN HER ADDRESS, Avraham-Balila noted that many of the people born together with Israel were given names such as Tikva, Yisrael and Zion - and indeed one of the proofs of this was Tikva Sasson, a Ness Ziona kindergarten teacher who is the mother of three and grandmother of six. She was born in Iraq. During April-May 1948, Jews were being beaten up in the streets because it was thought that they were Zionist sympathizers. A neighbor came to tell her father, who had a shortwave radio, that news had come through that the flag of the Jewish people was being waved in the streets of Eretz Yisrael (whole land of Israel) . That must mean something of great import was about to happen. The neighbor went and got some other friends who, dressed in Arab garb, made their way to her father's house. They were stopped en route and questioned, but because of their apparel, were able to convince their interrogators they were Arabs. Meanwhile Sasson's father took her pregnant mother to the roof for safety. When the guests arrived, they too were ushered to the roof, where they all listened eagerly to the radio. They heard Ben-Gurion, and then when they heard "Hatikva"(The Hope,) the baby was born and gave her first cry. The symbolism could not escape any of those present and she was given the name Tikva(hope) in the hope that the family would soon leave for Israel. They made aliya ( immigration to the Land of Israel) in 1951. In his address, Peres remarked that while his guests had already reached midlife, the state, which runs at a different pace, was still young. The theme of the 60th anniversary celebrations is the Children of Israel, and under those circumstances, Israelis born on the same day as the state could hardly be ignored. Ruhama Avraham-Balila, the minister responsible for coordinating 60th anniversary events, has been given credit for bringing the 5 Iyar babies together. "It was a long process," said Noga Bondi, who works in her office. "We advertised asking people to send a photo and a copy of their ID card. We had a notice on the Internet. We did a lot of research and we also coordinated with the Interior Ministry to check that details sent to us were correct." The crowd gathered on the lawns of Beit Hanassi represented a large swathe of the Israel mosaic - European, North African and Middle Eastern parentage; sabras and foreign born; religious and secular; affluent and non-affluent; retirees and workaholics; people who will remain eternally young and people who were old before their time. Some of those who were born in other countries came to the nascent state as babies or young children. Among those born here was the very first Israeli, Ben-Zion Saar, who came into the world only minutes after Ben-Gurion's declaration.