In 1967, General
David Elazar, who commanded the IDF's
Northern Command, appointed Yermiya commander of the regional defense of
Kiryat Shmona, and from then on, he did reserve duty on a voluntary basis. In 1974, one day after the
Ma'alot massacre, he established the
Civil Guard in
Nahariya and served as its commander. Five weeks later, he participated in action against Palestinian infiltrators during the
1974 Nahariya attack. In 1976, when the
Good Fence opened, he served as a reservist in the military government unit. During the
1978 Israeli invasion of Lebanon, he served as an administrative and service officer in the military government unit, which became a unit dealing with assistance for civilians.
1982 Lebanon War During the
1982 Lebanon War, Yermiya, aged 68, volunteered for service. He served in the civilian assistance unit, and was shocked by what he witnessed. He called the war a mistake, and wrote "we've become a nation of savage thugs." He published his war diary in a newspaper. As a result of his public criticisms of the war, he was dismissed from the army. His commanding officer wrote that his words could have been written by a
PLO propagandist. Yermiya also resigned from his job as security coordinator for the Ga'aton Regional Council. The following year he became famous when he released his war diary as a book,
My War Diary: Lebanon June 5 -- July 1, 1982. Published in defiance of censorship laws, it provoked, according to the publishers, 'widespread controversy when it was first published in Israel', but was ignored by Western media. The book criticized Israeli actions during the war, and was first published in
Hebrew with the title "Yoman Hamilchama Sheli" (
My War Diary). In 1984 it was published in English by
South End Press. The book was given some attention by Western intellectuals, such as the US writer
Noam Chomsky. In 1983, Yermiya was the recipient of a Human Rights Award from the Association for Civil Rights for his work in relieving the suffering of Lebanese civilians during hostilities. ==Later activism==