Can a Leopard Change its Spots??? War Stories. Day 649 already. 16 July, 2025

Can the leopard change its spots? Neither can you do good who are accustomed to doing evil. Jeremiah 13:23

Several months ago Syrian President Bashar alAssad was deposed by Ahmad alSharaa. The new president has been seen in the most prestigious of political circles and recently met with President Trump in Saudi Arabia. President al Sharaa wants to normalize relations with Israel and enter into the Abraham Accords. He seeks full recognition of the new, more peaceful, reformed Syrian government….or so he says.

But who is alSharaa anyway? And why is any of this important? Going back to his youth, alSharaa was born in Syria on the East side of the Golan Heights mountain range, the border of Israel. It is inhabited mostly by Druze, Christians and Bedouins. In 2003, during the war in Iraq, he joined the rebel forces fighting US troops. He successfully implemented and took part in attacks on US military bases. Captured by the Americans as a terrorist, he spent time in the notorious Abu Ghraib Prison where he became even more radicalized upon meeting the notorious alBagdadi.

In the early 2000s, the radical Islamic extremists of the Islamic State of Iraq (ISIS or Daesh)under al Bagdadi (remember these names? they come back to haunt it seems) grew out an alQaeda splinter group (splitters!) In 2011, the popular peoples’ front uprising (this just sounds more and more like Monty Python, but it’s true) against the Alawhite Regime (Assad) deteriorated into Syria’s long civil war.

al Sharaa, who changed his name to Muhammad alJawlani, was chosen by alBagdadi to lead the Nusra Front, a break off of alQaeda. Splitting off from that, he formed an ISIS faction (remember them? The Jayvee Team?). During a BBC interview in 2014, with face completely covered by his kheffiyeh, his stated goals were “to completely cleanse the country (Syria) of all Alawhite, Shiite, Druze and Christian minorities.”

His rebel group split off again (do you see a pattern of tribal infighting, confusion, intolerance and disagreement here?) now calling themselves Jabhat Fateh alSham (the Syrian Conquest Front). al Sharaa tried to consolidate all the splintered- fighting groups into one larger force. One that would be more effective in vanquishing the Alawhite Assad government in Damascus. By this time he was on one of the most wanted terrorist hit lists in the United States.

Fast forward to 2025 because this just gets so confusing. The jihadist forces finally organized and armed to the hilt with Taliban procured American weapons, took Syria city by city until they reached and surrounded the Presidential Palace in Damascus. Bashar Assad and his family fled to Russia. The government was toppled. The rebels were now in charge. But this would not do on the global scene. What to do?

AlJawlani decided to shed the jihadist look and trade out his warlord persona for a more refined, more Westernized version of himself. He underwent a “radical makeover” cutting his hair and donning a suit and tie. Of course, this plus another name change back to alSharaa made him a completely new person. Not only did he change his clothes and his name, but his whole outlook on governance shifted radically. Gone was the terrorist. Gone was the warlord. Gone was the radical jihadist hell bent on massacring infidels.

In recent interviews, he actually renounced some of the more strict Muslim law,s calling for tolerance and peace. He was standing for the people of Syria and for pluralism. He completely disavowed his involvement with any former terror groups and announced a new springtime for his homeland. “Sectarian extremism must be eliminated. No group can cancel another,” alSharaa stated in a May, 2025 interview with Newsweek. “Everyone must have rights protected by law.”

Thank goodness Israel had the foresight to make precision strikes by air on the many weapons storage warehouses and facilities outside Damascus and throughout Syria. The weapons from the fallen Assad regime (rockets, missiles, RPGs along with guns and ammo) were supplied by Iran and Russia. Also, remember all the American weapons left behind in Afghanistan? Much of the equipment and arms were sold to highest bidders after they were confiscated by the Taliban. A lot of those American made weapons went to Syria. Israel could not let all of this fall into the hands of evil terrorists, so they have been taking out the supply hit by hit all through this year. The IDF also blew up all their planes (Syrian Air Force) and their bases and runways along with the air defense/radar systems.

Just one month ago, President alSharaa met with President Trump in an effort to legitimize himself and his new administration. The U.S. removed the bounty on his head and reported that all talks have been productive. All sanctions against Syria were lifted.

But can a leopard change its spots? Does a rose by any other name smell as sweet? Can a radicalized jihadist change into a suit and transform into a justice loving protector of minorities over night? Will the Western world buy off on this charade? What is really going on in Syria this week?

Reports of how it started are conflicting. Three days ago U.S. Ambassador to Syria and Turkey, Thomas Barrack, stated that there should be no separate Kurdish, Druze, Alawhite or Christian entities in the region. In other words, minorities should submit to alJawlani and his forces, in lieu of autonomy. It could be that shortly after that alJawlani/alSharaa’s army took advantage of Barrack’s words. Some say the Bedouins began to cause riots in the al Sueida province of Syria. Others say it was the new Syrian government forces that invaded. Either way the two groups came together to commit ethnic cleansing and genocide in alSueida.

This remote area about 40 miles east of the Israeli border is home to a Druze and Christian minority. They have lived there for hundreds of years. They have lived quietly and peaceably, avoiding conflict during the Syrian Civil Wars.

Yesterday, I began to receive the most severe and barbarous footage since 7 October. The Syrian now called “pro al-jawlani” fighters looted and burned the Greek Orthodox Church of San Michel in alSurah alKabira, in Sueida. Numerous Christians, men, women and children have been slaughtered. So far the count is at least 30 dead and 54 injured. Another Greek Orthodox Church was also looted and burned.

Syrian jihadist forces massacred an estimated 350 Druze in Syria in the past few days. Using the most brutal tactics of tying up the elders and shaving off their mount aches as a degradation; forcing them to crawl like animals and bark like dogs; beating and kicking them; cutting them with shattered glass bottles and other acts of violence. Women have been taken and gang raped. Young girls are being raped in front of their mothers and then killed. They are then shot or stabbed to death.

The main city is alSweida, which is one of the only two places in Syria where Christians and Druze can live free of Sharia law. The other one is smaller, on the eastern slope of Mt. Hermon on the Golan. Daesh or ISIS tactics are being used in Sueida. It is absolute barbarity.

Israel Defense Minister, Yisrael Katz, stated: “ The time for warnings is over. Damascus will now feel the consequences.” Israel immediately responded. Netanyahu and Katz both publicly committed to defending Syria’s Druze. Since yesterday afternoon, the IDF has been relentlessly striking the Syrian army armored vehicles and trucks carrying RPGs, pushing the,pm back, but many jihadists got through. Supposedly the Syrian government called for a ceasefire, but that is yet to be seen. It seems the opposite, that things are rapidly escalating.

On the Israel side, hundreds of Israeli Druze yesterday broke the border fence, rushing it en masse, pouring into Syria to help their brothers and sisters. Israel is home to over 150,000 Druze who feel deep solidarity with their families across the border. Israel’s Druze have called upon the IDF and the Israeli government to intervene. All Israeli Druze men proudly serve in our armed forces. Jews and Druze have an unshakable bond. “They are doing to us what they did to you on October 7,” cried an Israeli Druze elder in Rameh. “A five year old girl was raped and slaughtered. They are burning young children in front of their parents. There is no mercy.” Another Druze preparing to storm the border said to reporters, “Our people are being slaughtered, Israel must help us! I’m going back to fight myself.”

This was the “mildest “ picture I could post without the threat of being removed.

Syria strongly condemned Israeli airstrikes on its territory, calling the attacks “treacherous aggression” and a violation of its sovereignty. A U.S. Syria envoy says active talks with Druze, Bedouin and Syrian government along with Israel are currently taking place. They. Hope to ease tensions and restore peace. Netanyahu has called for all Israeli Druze to return home and stay out of the conflict.

Here in the North of Israel, the Druze are striking (as in work forces) and protesting along all the major highways. Roadblocks have been set up along all intersections and traffic is at a standstill throughout the Galilee.

Also this afternoon, the IDF confirms targeting the gates of the Syrian regime’s chief of staff headquarters in Damascus. This is a warning to stop the killing of the minorities of Sueida. In the meantime, now thousands of Druze have broken through IDF barriers at the border (the IDF soldiers are really doing nothing to stop them by way of force) in order to fight the jihadists.

AlJazeera (what do we expect), France and other countries are now condemning Israeli aggression and Israel starting yet another conflagration in the. Idle East. France and the UK have called for an immediate end to the clashes in Suweida.

Always twisted so Israel is the villain

Just a half an hour ago as I write this (the news is coming in so fast from so many direct sources, it’s hard to keep up), the Israeli Defense Minister told the Syrian regime “ gestures are over, now expect painful blows. Druze can count on the IDF. To protect your brothers in Syria.”

U.S. envoy to Syria, Tom Barrack has condemned “violence against innocent civilians in Suweida” and calls for “dialogue to achieve a lasting ceasefire.” Secretary of State Marco Rubio says “ the U.S. is very concerned about IDF strikes in Syria.” He has called for an immediate ceasefire from all

Tensions are boiling over on the border. The IDF just reported that dozens of suspects from Syria tried to infiltrate Israeli territory near the town of Hader. Troops and Border Police were quickly deployed to stop the attempted breach and disperse those involved. At the same time, chaos erupted on the Israeli side as more Druze civilians breached the border fence at Majdal Shams, crossing into Syria. The IDF is currently working to bring them back. “This is a serious incident that constitutes a criminal act and endangers both civilians and IDF forces,” the military warned.

The 98th division of the IDF (paratrooper brigade) has just been issued notice ahead of an operation in Syria and to expect several days of fighting against regime forces in order to protect the Druze. Just now, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a national address. “The situation in southwestern Syria is very dangerous. The DF is operating. The Air Force is operating. We are operating to save our Druze brothers and to eliminate the regime’s forces. And now I have a request for you. You are citizens of Israel. Do not cross the border. You are endangering your lives; you can be murdered, you can be kidnapped, and you are harming the efforts of the IDF. Therefore, I ask you to return to your homes and let the IDF operate.”

Why does this matter? Two reasons: Druze are a strategic buffer zone between Israel and deeper parts of Syria. If Sueida falls, Jihadi forces could advance towards the Golan Heights, which would pose a direct threat to Israel. This could potentially destabilize the entire region. It is also about protecting the minority groups and standing up for those who stand for us.

BREAKING 🚨: Syrian media says that a ceasefire has been reached in Sueida, with the government promising to stop their ISIS fighters from slaughtering Christians and Druze. It is reported that Syria plans to annex and incorporate the whole territory under their governmental control and that they now occupy 25% of the Northern and Central parts of the city.

My husband was scouting out many different news outlets for news of the events as they unfolded in Syria. Very few of the articles even mentioned the assaults on the Christian minority. Others had Israel as the aggressor. Several Christian (non-denominational and Catholic) reports of the situation did speak about Christian persecution and murders, but never once mentioned that it was being perpetrated at the hands of Muslims, radical Islamic jihadists whose goal is to ethnically cleanse as in WIPE OUT/ELIMINATE anyone who is not Muslim. The truth needs to get out. The world needs to see, to wake up, to take a stand.

The best coverage without any added propaganda was from One India News. https://youtu.be/V_GU4TVq2d8?si=XT-iVUipmkfOyAkX

Feel good? Friday. War Stories. Day 497 14February, 2024

Happy Valentine’s Day to all out there celebrating (in Israel we don’t have this holiday, but celebrate romance and engagements on 15 Av in the midsummer). Totally looking forward to relaxing this evening. We’ve had lots of rain this past week – we ARE in the rainy season, and here in the ‘desert’ climes, we see any rainfall as a sign of blessing.

Israel is an amazing powerhouse when it comes to water conservation. Take note California! Many houses and public buildings have rain storage systems that collect the rainwater in barrels and tanks for later use. We reuse ‘gray water’ for agriculture. Trenches and deep reservoirs are built to channel rainwater for storage and late use during the dry season. Israel pretty much perfected the art of desalination, and now, even during the most severe droughts, we get over 70% of our potable water through desalination plants. The sea water from the Mediterranean is extracted, the salt content minimized, the water purified through the tiniest gauge microfiltration systems, UV lit, and voilà! Fresh water. As an aside, Netanyahu offered to build three desal plants in CA. One north of Marin/Napa Counties, north of San Francisco; one just south or Carmel/Monterey in the center; and one just north of San Diego in the South. The offer was flatly rejected by Gov. Gavin Newsom in 2019.

A few years ago, students at the Technion invented a small 5ft X 5ft cube that extracts the humidity in the air and makes water. It’s called WaterGen, using only a portable generator can make four liters of clean drinking water for every kilowatt hour of electricity generated. This breakthrough has saved countless lives as the WaterGen has been given to many drought-stricken African countries.

In addition, in 2012, Israelis at Kibbutz Lavi up here in the Galil invented HydroSpin. It is the absolute cleanest of energies, a breakthrough in hydroelectric technologies. Using water flow from rivers and dams, water rushes through a hydraulic turbine connected to a generator creating kinetic energy. The system powers a smart water network which continually monitors the flow of water in pipes. Instantly leaks can be detected as well as water pressure in pipes and water quality. It’s a complex system, but saves water, nonetheless.

Israeli innovations in water also include “Miriam’s Well”, a solar powered off-grid water purification system that is lightweight and portable. There is no need for professional maintenance or chlorine, as this device can rid contaminated water of pathogens and chemicals that cause disease. Shared for free with many under developed African communities, “Miriam’s Well” is saving lives. In Jewish Oral Tradition, Miriam, Moses’ sister, led the Children of Israel to springs in the desert that she would miraculously find.

(I really hadn’t even planned on writing about water, but….) Between the raindrops on Thursday, we decided to take a drive. It’s been well over a year since we visited some of our favorite places in Israel on the Lebanese border. We really needed to get out, and I wanted to see the damage that had been caused by the war. Driving up the Hula Valley, everything was emerald green and the orchards were in full bloom. Farmers were out in force planting new trees.

We first drove up to Kiryat Shmona, which had been hard hit by shrapnel and falling rockets as well as suicide drones carrying incendiary devices. We passed many places, once green forested areas, that had been scorched, the trees all brown. But because Israel is quick to remove sick trees and uses goats, scouts, and forest rangers to clear the underbrush (the ground is also extremely rocky), the fires can’t spread like wildfire (sorry for the pun) and get out of control.

Israel does a great job in quickly fixing anything that was damaged. Many homes we saw were under repair, and much had already been reconstructed. Still, there were very few people who have returned to live there, as the ceasefire is a bit shaky and ends in 46 days. There is still lots of new construction going up. As soon as a missile hits a road, the street is repaved and we saw lots of that.

We drove along the Lebanese border. Some kibbutzim like Rechaniyya, Malkiya and Avivim are now closed and inhabited by the IDF reservists who are guarding the communities and using (with full blessing) their dining facilities and community halls where cots have been set up for them. They also use these border communities as a rest area between patrols. We were allowed to drive through Dovev, a poor community on the Lebanese border that sustained quite a bit of damage. From Dovev, you can see the neighboring Lebanese villages on the next mountain ridge over.

In the Druze city of Hurfeish, everyone stayed. The Druze are not going anywhere and will defend their land and their homes to their last breath. They are loyal Israelis, most men serving in the IDF and security after their service. The Christian communities in BarAm and Fassuta, also on the border, chose to stay and defend their land. No one will force them to leave for any reason. John talked with his friend, Musa, the city treasurer of Fassuta. He said they spent lots of time running to their bomb shelters, sleeping in them and staying in them for sometimes a half a day at a time as drones and missiles flew overhead. He credits Iron Dome, Yeshua and the Virgin Mary for protection and the miracle that there was not one structure hit or person wounded. He prays that the war will be over soon and that within the next five years all the north of Israel will be flourishing and prosperous.

In other good and miraculous news: we wish a hearty Mazal tov!!! to Elia and Ariel, the couple (I covered their story early on) who escaped from their burning house with their daughter, Yael, who was just an infant. With severe burns to their bodies, they spent almost a year in Sheba Hospital’s ICU burn unit. Elia’s burns were so severe (they thought her lungs were permanently damaged) that she was comatose for 51 days. A few days ago, Elia gave birth, against all odds, to a healthy baby boy. They named him Yiftach, which means ‘he will open.’ They believe his birth will open the Gates of Hope for all of us. It truly is a miracle and a testimony to the resilience and strength of the Israeli people.

On the grim side, we are getting more narratives from the mothers of the five IDF soldiers released two weeks ago. They have vowed to be strong and a model of hope and victory to the nation, but the stories they are telling of the time in captivity are horrific. They will need years to recover. All the young girls saw their friends raped, and killed right next to them.

Daniella Gilboa’s parents told the media that “the terrorists separated them into groups- those who were alive and those who were dead. They saw executions and other shocking scenes. They witnessed the deaths of their best friends. During the height of the war, there was no water. Daniella and the others were forced to drink filthy groundwater. This caused her to contract a severe stomach infection. She was between life and death for two weeks. There were days when they were given donkey food, something completely inedible and impossible to chew. It was rotting straw mixed with rotten vegetables.‘

“During captivity,” her father continued, “ Hamas released an official video two months ago falsely claiming Daniella had been murdered by the IDF. They made her lie down wrapped in her sheets. They put powder on her face and highlighted the tattoo on her arm. They created a deliberate, manipulative video that devastated us at home. We were completely helpless.”Daniella learned Arabic without letting her captors know she could understand them. She also managed to manipulate them into letting her watch TV. She saw her mother, Orly, one evening, and that gave her incredible strength. She didn’t know if she would survive her ordeal. To this day, Daniella still has bullets in her leg and will need surgery. Her mom revealed that when they were finally reunited the first words from Daniella were to apologize to her family who feared her dead.

All of the girls were beaten regularly. They all have shrapnel wounds all over their bodies which will require surgery. They were never seen by Red Cross officials. Two were ‘treated’ at Shifa Hospital without anesthesia or antibiotics. They were told they would be converted to Islam and be married to a Gazan or be shot. New evidence has come out that the terrorists beat a Thai hostage so badly that they knocked out all of his front teeth and broke his nose.

Karina Ariel’s mother says her daughter is more than certain it will happen again. None of the girls can fully speak about that terrible day that Gaza Hamas soldiers as well as civilians broke into the base and the surrounding kibbutzim and towns. Karina’s mom says her whole body is in pieces. For the first half a year, she could nearly walk and her hands were always tied together. She constantly feared for her survival and was repeatedly told that Israel will not save you. They do not care about you. They do not even want you back now. They were perpetually psychologically tormented.

Liri Albag’s mother stated that “it’s all very confusing. They way they returned strong and smiling. There seemed to be a resilience in them standing proud on that stage knowing they would be returned.” Hamas forced Liri, Daniella, Agam Karina and Naama to watch videos of IDF soldiers, their friends, being tortured. They were held at gunpoint and not allowed to look away. Hamas is playing with the lives of the hostages and their families. They do not have a shred of empathy. Their only goal is to make the families suffer as much as possible. We must not look away!!!

After nearly 500 days, we are now receiving testimonies recovered from the survivors as to the conditions of some of the others who were taken captive. Some of the families want the stories to be told. Others are keeping very private. From Jonny Daniels:

“Anat, Mayan Angrest’s mother, said earlier this week, ‘We received evidence that he is alive and being held in difficult conditions.” His sister added that “after a long time we received a sign of life. My brother is alive!!!! He is badly wounded but alive. Return him now before there is no one to return him to.” Anat said that they heard how Or Levy, whom Hamas insisted on defining as a soldier, was being abused, and their fear of the abuse and torture that Mayan was undergoing grew. “He was kidnapped from the tank, covered in burns. He underwent severe interrogations there, we saw it in his face in a video that we have decided not to publish yet. We do not yet know the long term consequences of his burns and other injuries.”

Alon Ohel’s family received their first sign of life from him since he was taken captive 7October, 2023. According to information provided to the family, Ohel is being held in Hamas’ underground Gaza tunnels, suffering from a severe eye injury and severe malnutrition. “Our Alon is alive. He is injured and not receiving treatment. He is being held without daylight and access to basic human conditions. We are excited to know he is alive, but we are also devastated and shocked by the horrid physical and mental state in which he and the other hostages are undergoing,” a family spokesperson reported to the Israeli media.

These are just a few of the testimonies I share with you today. There are many others. All are heartbreaking as to the extent of Hamas and also the Gazan Palestinian civilians’ cruelty and barbarism. Some of the reports I’ve been reading are almost unimaginable. Absolute atrocities. The world needs to know. The world needs to be made aware. It will take a lifetime for these captives to fully recover. Many do not even know the fate of their closest loved ones. Hostages whose partners have survived are being told of their murders. Some captives who have lost parents and children and spouses are being told they still live. It is sick and twisted. One captive told of how the Gaza City house she was staying in for a while held items from her mother’s home in Be’eri and that the woman was wearing her mother’s jewelry. This was purposely done to psychologically torture the victim, whose mother and father were both killed that day.

This weekend, we hope to see the return of several/many more/all the remaining hostages tomorrow. Please, G-d, hear our prayers. May we have a peaceful Shabbat with lots of good news.

The Changing Face of the MidEast. War Stories. Day 431. 10 December, 2024

Things are changing quickly on the world stage these weeks, the Middle East being no exception. We had heard that “the rebels” had taken over parts of Syria last week. Who were these rebels? How the heck did they pass undetected by Israeli or US intelligence? If they were numerous enough, armed enough, and organized enough to stage a complete overthrow of a government, why did noone suspect or seem to know anything? How were they funded or sponsored? Were they good guys or bad guys? There were so many unanswered questions. And still no one seems to be reporting on any of this.

Sunday morning started off with a surprise for us. President Bashar Assad of Syria and his whole regime had been toppled. The rebels were taking over Damascus. Then we got the news that Assad had left on a plane for parts unknown. That his family had gone ahead of him. That his aircraft had made an abrupt u-turn and disappeared off the radar. His plane was missing. His plane had crashed. He was missing, possibly dead.

By Monday, it was reported that Assad and his family had taken refuge in Russia. The Presidential palace was overrun with people taking dishes!!! Pillows and linens??? Patio furniture??? Statues of Assad were being toppled marking an end to his 24 year rule. Prisoners (many women and little children) were being released from prisons. So are these rebels who liberate captives good? Who are they? And how does it affect Israel? All valid questions.

First, a bit of history: Bashar Assad took over rule of Syria in 2000 from his father, Hafez Al Assad (1971), under the Ba’ath Party. Altogether they held power with an iron fist for 54 years. Part of the Alawite kingdom, a once-persecuted minority splinter group of the Shi’ite branch of Islam, the Assads were responsible for the largest refugee crisis in history. 5.3 million Syrians fled during the recent civil war and 6.8 were internally displaced. They led a full scale genocide (that no one seems to talk about. Hello ICC, UN and the Vatican) in which over 600,000 Syrians and Palestinian refugees in Syria were massacred. Bashar Assad used chemical weapons against his own people in 2015. Thousands were imprisoned and tortured under his rule.

Assad allied himself with both Russia and Iran. He allowed the Russians to set up military bases on the coast and throughout Syria. The Iranian regime for years has been using Syria as a direct route to feed weapons and troops to Hizbulla in Lebanon. As a result, Israel has been doing targeted air strikes against the weapons exchanges, depots, ammunitions shipments, airstrips, and railroads for the past three years in attempts to limit Hizbulla’s threat. Syria also developed weapons for Iran and Hizbulla within its own territory. Among these were chemical weapons. This morning, the Israeli Air Force destroyed all their known chemical weapons development and storage facilities.

Last week, the rebels began their push to overthrow Syria. Funded and backed by Turkey, using weapons partially purchased from the Taliban in Afghanistan, they are Sunni Muslims – actually several different factions. And none of them are ‘good guys.’ They are made up of what is left of a regrouped ISIS; a ‘new’ group, Hayat Tahrir aSham (basically a re-branded Al-Qaeda; and several other jihadi subgroups. Taking over the major cities, they also attacked United Nations Disengagement Observation Forces (UNDOF) in the buffer zone of the Golan Heights (Syria/Israel border). The IDF had to aid the UN forces near Quneitra repel the attack, extracting the UN as the rebels seized control of both Quneitra and Daraa provinces to the north. This is the same UN that demanded that Israel should give up the Golan last week. The ceasefire treaty from 1974 and buffer zones are now no longer valid as the Syrian government no longer exists.

Photo courtesy of IDF

Israel has increased its forces in the Golan Heights as a precautionary effort against the chaos at the northeastern border. Elite paratrooper (Shaldag) and Commando units are now protecting key areas in the Golan. This protects the Israeli citizens there as well as preventing bad actors from Syria from crossing into Israel. As of this morning, the IDF made over 300 air strikes against the Syrian Air Force, targeting their hangars, runways and aircraft on the ground. This was done to insure that the aircraft would not fall into enemy hands or be used against Israel.

Yesterday Prime Minister Netanyahu, IDF Chief of Command Herzi Halevi, and other dignitaries made a trip to the Syrian border. In a speech he said, “This is a historic day in the history of the Middle East. The Assad regime is a central link in Iran’s axis of evil…and this regime has fallen. This is a direct result of the blows we have inflicted on Iran and Hizbulla, the primary supporters of the Assad regime. This has triggered a chain reaction throughout the Middle East among those who seek to break free from this oppressive and tyrannical regime. This, of course creates new and very important opportunities for the State of Israel. But it is not also without risks. Our first priority is to protect our border. For nearly 50 years this area was governed by a buffer zone established under the 1974 Separation of Forces Agreement. That agreement has collapsed, and Syrian soldiers have abandoned their positions.

‘Yesterday, together with the insistence of Defense and with the full backing of the Cabinet, I instructed the IDF to seize the buffer zone and the strategic positions near it. We will not allow any hostile forces to establish a foothold on our border. At the same time, we are pursuing a policy of good neighborliness- the same policy we upheld when we set up a field hospital that treated thousands of Syrians who were injured and harmed during the civil war. Hundreds of Syrian children were born here in Israel.

‘We are therefore extending the same hand of peace to ours Druze neighbors, First and foremost to them, they are the brothers of our Druze brothers in the State of Israel. We also extend a hand of peace to the Kurds, Christians, and Muslims who seek to live in peace with Israel.” (As an aside, Netanyahu is defending himself in court today against allegations of accepting bribes)

IDF special forces very early yesterday morning quietly moved into and secured the summit of Mt. Hermon in the extreme north as the Syrian soldiers abandoned the high ground. It is one of, if not THE, most important strategic asset that Israel could possibly have. Part is in Israel, but the northern high point lies in what was Syrian territory. It has a peak of 2815 meters, Syria’s highest peak. I now quote Naftali Hazony, IDF fighter pilot, turned combat special forces:

“For decades Israel’s northern defenses were overshadowed by Syria’s Mt, Hermon. No longer. The most important natural fortress in the region is now in the hands of Israel. Israel did it quietly, driving into Syria’s abandoned positions and taking them without a fight.

‘In the past, Israel’s radars suffered from a significant blind spot, unable to see beyond Mt. Hermon and parts of Lebanon from their position on Mt. Meron. Iran’s low-flying drones exploited this weakness, infiltrating Israel tome and time again.

‘Once placed on Mt. Hermon, Israel’s radars will see far into both Lebanon and Syria, providing early warning of low-flying jets and drones. Israel’s intelligence can also leverage the peak, placing sensors to conduct surveillance and intercept enemy communications. The mountains also provide the perfect cover for Israel’s special forces and spies, who can now enter Syria more freely, conducting missions under the cover of darkness.

‘As the sun rises, Mt. Hermon casts a shadow over Hizbulla’s stronghold in Southern Lebanon, dominating the main road to their northern stronghold in the Beqaa Valley. Several of Hizbulla’s smuggling routes north of the Hermon have been cut off.

‘Be it ISIS, HTS, Iran or Hizbulla, a hostile force advancing toward Israel will now be exposed- at the mercy of Israel’s drones, surface-to-surface missiles, and laser guided bombs. residents of north Israel will now be able to sleep more soundly knowing that Israel controls this peak.”

At this point, Hamas is all but disempowered in Gaza. Rumors were floated yesterday of an imminent hostage release. This is unequivocally and sadly misinformation. Hizbulla has been cut back, and now Syria as we knew it has fallen. Iranians have been watching all this. Now is a time when they might be able to wrest control from the ayatollah.

Unfortunately, with these rebels being Sunni jihadists, the Christian population which has been indigenous to the Syrian region for two thousand years, is in extreme danger. So are the Kurds and the Druze. The Druze hold their own and will probably be absorbed into Israel as their communities are on the Syrian side of the Hermon. Yesterday, the rebels declared form Damascus,”We are coming for Jerusalem. Patience, people of Gaza. You will be avenged. This is the land of Islam. This is Damascus, the Muslim stronghold. From here to Jerusalem. All Allahu akbar!” This statement alone sums up the intentions of these groups. They are definitely NOT the good guys. We shall have to wait and see how this develops further.

War Stories. Day 296. Pins and Needles

So much happens between my posts. Just here in Israel alone. Last week was a week of bad news. Two of the hostages in Gaza were confirmed dead. Alex Dancyg, 75 and Yawger Buchstav,35, died several months ago. They were being held together by Hamas in Khan Younis. I don’t know how they died. But Alex was the best friend of our family friend, Piotr. Both gentlemen were from Poland. Alex was a son of two Holocaust survivors. He was a professor and lecturer on the atrocities of the Nazis and horrors of the Shoah. He often led groups to Auschwitz and Dachau. We prayed for him nightly and believed that despite his age, if anyone would survive to tell the tale, it would be Alex Dancyg. Their bodies are still being held hostage.

Also last week, the bodies of five other people were located in a side wall of one of the terror tunnels deep underground in Khan Younis. We thank the IDF for rescuing the bodies after captured Hamas terrorists informed the IDF of their location. The families need closure and were able to give proper burial. I hope the hostages knew we didn’t forget them. G-d willing, next time, the IDF will be able to bring back five living hostages.

Clockwise from top left: Kirkland Brodsky, Ravid Katz,Tomer Achimas, Oren Golden, Mia Gorin

This week saw the start of the Paris Olympics. The names and personal information of all 88 Israeli athletes and their coaches were leaked over the internet. Several of the competitors received death threats. Even a member of the French government called for them to be banned from the games (as was Russia). The security in Paris is like nothing anyone has ever seen. And still, four major train lines had explosives detonated on the Chemin de Fer French rail lines last Friday. Anti Israel posters were hung all over Paris. We pray for the safety of the athletes, coaches and audiences.

Yesterday was Shabbat. The red alerts were going off on my phone all afternoon. Kiryat Shmona, Tel Hai, Shneir, Kfar Szold, Neot Mordechai, Kfar Blum…. It wasn’t terribly close by – on the gorgeous Northern border on the way up to the Golan. We are used to the red alerts at this point, and unless there is a local siren or I see on my app that the trajectories of the incoming missiles and drones (קרבם- in Hebrew it’s pronounced ‘cat- bomb’) are close by, I normally don’t do anything. It’s a little alarming how normal all this has become.

Just after Shabbat ended, the news started flowing. A missile with a large payload made a direct hit in the Druze city of Madj al Shams in the Golan. Madj al Shams lies at the foot of Mount Hermon on the Syrian border. It’s a quaint little family town. Beautiful, friendly people. In the winter, it becomes a playground where people stop to eat and have a hot drink at one of the local cafes and stock up on winter gear for skiing and sledding the slopes of Hermon. In the late summer, they have the best apples and carob honey. The Druze set up local farm stands and are very welcoming to visitors.

Yesterday was a lazy, hot summer Saturday afternoon. The kids and their parents wear all gathered on the football/soccer field for a friendly game as was usual. No one was suspecting anything abnormal. It’s what families do here. With very little advance warning, only about five seconds, the missile struck, killing 12 young people between the ages of 2-19. 29 more people were helicoptered to local hospitals, 13 critically wounded. Many were treated for shock. It’s absolutely horrific.

The Druze are Israeli citizens, loyal Arabs who fight in the IDF. They are our security people and police officers. They are our neighbors. They are our friends. It’s a great loss for us.

The death count now stands at 12…

At the time, Prime Minister Netanyahu was out of the country in the US. He is now flying back to Israel. The head of the IDF, Gen. Herzi Halevy and Gen. Gordon of the Northern Command visited the Druze families last night to assure them that the response against Hizbulla will be swift and will be drastic.

Last night was eerily quiet for us. On the mirpesset I could only hear the wind and the gentle rustling of leaves and the occasional jackal yapping in the distance. No drones. No jets. No bombs. No cars or people. It seemed that everyone was just holding their breath.

We scanned the news as the headlines eventually started coming through.

Correction: 12 children killed after a Hizbulla missile fired from Lebanon into Israeli Druze community on the Golan Heights

This morning, we left for a meeting in Tiberias. People were driving on their way to work. The streets of the cities were full of people. On the way, someone had stretched a giant banner across a mountain. It said in Hebrew, “ G-d is the King. There is none other than Him.” (Adonai, hu ha melekh. Ayn ode mil-vah-DOE)

Thank you for the reminder. We sorely need to hear this now. I made John take our ‘bug out bags’ with us in the car, just in case. They are backpacks with some food, change of clothes, flashlight, med kit, water, passports, and essential hygiene. I hated leaving the dog behind, but wanted to be prepared with some important belongings just in case. One never knows. It was fairly quiet as far as planes or any sounds of military activity, yet we all know something very big is about to go down. A huge red line was crossed by Hizbulla yesterday.

After my meeting, a few of the people were trying to guess what would happen next. I heard it said three times,”The government is so careful to try to avoid civilian casualties I Gaza, but what about us? How are we to feel? There’s no way we can be moved out of harm’s way.” We are all waiting with bated breath.

So, more info is coming out. From the pieces collected, the IDF reports that it was a 53 kg (120 lb) warhead on an Iranian Falaq rocket fired by Hizbulla in Lebanon. The Iron Dome failed to intercept the rocket because it was fired at close range (less than 10 km/6miles) and took less than 12 seconds to reach its target. They know the name of the commander (somehow) because of the direction and trajectory.

As can be expected of disobedient children, Hizbulla immediately denied the fact that they shot the missile. Remember, they had been firing scores (over 40) rockets at the border communities throughout the day yesterday. Then, to make matters worse, they said it was actually an Israeli Iron Dome misfire…. sounds like the Gaza hospital strike story in reverse to me.

In other headlines:

Late this morning, tens of thousands of people showed up for the funerals of the 12 children. Druze, Jews, and Christians poured in from many villages and cities in the North. I doubt there will be any military activity until at least early evening to give the mourners a chance to grieve and bury their dead.

Both President Herzog and the Prime Minister have televised speeches of expressing sorrow, solidarity and a “rising of readiness to the next level…we are on war footing….this will not go unanswered.” Now, it’s a waiting game. The country is on pins and needles.

I’m keeping calm and busy. I’m writing…. and canning. I just made lacto-fermented pickles from my cucumber harvest and the tomatoes and peppers are roasting in the oven for pasta sauce. John is fixing broken things around the house; putting on a new garden hose; walking the dog; folding laundry. We are packing for our trip to the States later this week, G-d willing. It will be the first time in ten years that all the siblings will be together in one place. We have rented a beach house and we look forward to the girls meeting the new husbands and all of us seeing and enjoying the new babies. We now have six beautiful grandchildren, thanks be to G-d. Hopefully, we will be reunited with them this time next week.

Day 279

Nine months in. So much is happening on a daily basis it’s hard to keep up here. Since I last posted, early Sunday morning, there was a barrage of over 40 missiles shot from Lebanon into the Galilee and Golan. Red alerts were in the towns all around us, and we were able to see and hear several of the IronDome interceptions from our balcony. Several of my friends in outlying communities spent the morning in bomb shelters. The targets were military bases, but most of the rockets were headed for the myriad Arabic-speaking (Muslim, Christian, Druze) population centers. The Iron Dome anti-missile system, fortunately intercepted all the rockets except for the ones whose trajectories were destined for open fields.

Point: Hizbulla does not discriminate between Jewish and Muslim and Christian population centers. Whether their aim is bad, their weapons substandard, our defense superior, or Divine providence, very few hit their intended targets. Their rockets do more psychological damage than anything else, although I am not trying to minimize the damage to homes and businesses as well as the civilian and IDF casualties.

I’ve learned to time my comings and goings to the latest local news. It seems Hizbulla sends over armed drones and rockets in the early morning, noon, around three in the afternoon, at sunset and later at night. They have a limited reach, which has never directly affected us. When the IDF targets and kills a high level IRGC or Hizbulla official or commander, the intense drone and missile strikes are launched. This is the time we know to stay close to home just in case. Last week there were two of these volleys of 40-60 missiles targeting the Galilee and the Golan. The drones are difficult to intercept because they are mostly plastic and fly quite low avoiding detection. These military grade drones supplied by Iran can carry 88 pounds of explosives and can travel at speeds of upwards of 360 mph.

Yesterday we drove up to the mountain city of Tsfat for a medical appointment. On the way up, we saw the destruction from the missile strikes this week. (We were running really late so I couldn’t get out and photograph) Patches of the Birya Forest on the side of the mountains all the way up to the road’s edge burned out. Vineyards beautifully green with a charred area surrounding a small crater were fairly prevalent. The smell of burnt wood and sulfur still hung heavy in the air. We marveled at how close some of the missile strikes came to structures (farm buildings, a random cafe, the tomb of a holy prophet) yet did not reach them. We took another route down the mountain to try to see any signs of missile strikes, but with the flow of traffic and the steep winding roads, it was nearly impossible to pull to the side and take pictures.

Late Tuesday afternoon, early evening, I received news of a direct hit on a car carrying two passengers in the Golan Heights. The incoming missiles were from Syria and were targeting the many military bases scattered throughout the Golan.

Yesterday the names of the couple were released and their funeral held. Noa and Nir Barnes, both 46, were from Ortal, very much a suburban US style community of young families. Ortal is known for their grapes and magnificent winery as well as their cherries and fruit orchards. We frequent both. The Barnes’ car was hit at the junction which is less than a mile from my son’s base when he serves in the reserves. Nir and Noa left behind three kids, ages 16,14 and 12. Our good friend’s son was best friends with Mattan, the eldest son. So it really hits home. This is a very small country. We are all affected.

On the broader news front: 3000 missiles designated to be used by Israel in defensive ops only (everything is specified, ordered, procured, contracted out, paid for and stipulated in advance in international legal contracts) have been held up by the current US administration. High level meetings between Israel and the US have been ongoing over the past couple months in order to get the weapons delivered. Yesterday an agreement was reached which will see the delivery of 1500 midsize missiles. The larger, long range missiles are still delayed. This piece of common knowledge sends a very strong message to the enemy countries that surround us. Advanced weaponry serves as a deterrent to attack by these malign forces.

In other news: the Israeli Foreign Affairs & Defense Committee has approved three bills to curtail UNRWA. The legislation will ban the organization from operating in Israel, including in East Jerusalem. It will brand it as a terrorist organization complicit with Hamas, thus requiring Israel to cut ties. It will strip staff of UN of their legal immunity ties such as tax exempt status. This is a good thing. UNRWA has been documented explicitly as housing weapons manufacturing, terrorism, terror tunnels in Gaza. Some UNRWA workers (teachers, humanitarian aid suppliers, health care workers) have been found to have definitively harbored some of the rescued Israeli hostages. They are totally complicit.

Upon its clearing Rafah in Southern Gaza, the IDF relocated what was thought to be civilian refugees back to the center of the Strip and the Gaza City area. Neighborhoods that were previously left relatively intact by the IDF because they were Christian neighborhoods, have now been found to harbor terrorists. Whether Hamas operatives have taken over the abandoned homes, schools and some church property or whether they were present from the beginning is not clear, but areas such as the Shejaiya neighborhood have become a hotbed of Hamas fighting. More terror tunnels and weapons storage facilities are being documented in video by the IDF before they are blown up. There are far more tunnels discovered than previously thought to have existed. They serve as underground passages for Hamas to run, hide, store weapons and hide hostages. Thousands of active Hamas terrorists have been captured.

The IDF is still warning civilians in active military zones to leave by dropping leaflets telling them to leave the area. They are warning the people in advance to clear out by loudspeaker and providing military coverage and pathways to safe corridors of passage. All is being carefully filmed and documented for later use. Still, there are reports of civilians who refuse to leave or who are being used under threat as human shields by Hamas.

The Gaza Health Ministry, an arm of Hamas, continually spits out inflated, and ever-changing numbers of civilian casualties and deaths. These numbers are held as Gospel truth by many journalists, leaders and global organizations. There is never a report of Hamas killed. Many of the Hamas soldiers, who once dressed in khakis and balaclavas with their signature green headband (now chic pro-Palestinian protestor fashion) have now traded in their uniforms for civvies. They are carefully disguising themselves as refugees in order to escape detection. Urban guerrilla warfare is now the modus operendi.

Many of the buildings and almost all of the tunnels are extremely booby trapped. Different tactics are used by the terrorists to lure the Israeli soldiers into a trapped building. The IDF has used different tactics in discovering hidden explosives including aerial drones, canine units and other devices to prevent being caught. Unfortunately, they are not always successful. It is intense and difficult operationally. The most extreme caution is being taken to reduce casualties, both for the IDF soldiers and for civilians.

I am currently working on several articles with documented research and interviews. In the weeks upcoming I hope to be able to share some of my investigative work with you. In the meantime, we pray for a peaceful weekend with no action and no bad news.

It’s Getting Hot in Here!

Always such drama. And the temps keep rising. We found out just before we went to Jerusalem on Monday that our “host” was unaware of our even being invited – it was a third party invite – so we had to scramble like the dickens to find anything available on the evening and day of a major holiday. Crazy, no? Pressure, no? Luckily, there were none of the usual tens of thousands of tourists that flood the city during a holy time, and we managed to find a gorgeous room right at the Old City Walls for an incredibly cheap price.

I was smart enough to bring our own food from home as EVERYTHING closes around 2pm from markets to transportation on the evening of a holiday or Sabbath. And to bring my all-white clothes, as is customary to wear on Shavuot, the Feast of Weeks or the Giving of the 10 Commandments to Moses at Mt. Sinai.

The next day we finally met up with our friends at the Hurvah Synagogue to hear the Torah reading of the Ten Commandments. Two of the men and their wives had been up all night studying the book of Ruth, the Torah and other subjects. This is traditional for Shavuot. Something I used to do a few years ago – I am now sorry I didn’t attend the women’s study sessions. But as young as they were, they were pretty exhausted when we met.

Shavuot marks the birth and the death of King David. I did not realize this. So we went to David’s tomb, which was pretty packed. The Upper Room where Jesus celebrated the Last Supper is located in the same building just above David. I also had not realized this. It was locked, but the roof access was open, so we went up there to pray and to chat. There were a few people already up there, including a group from Hong Kong, of all places. So a lady we spoke with was kind enough to take a photo of us.

Max came home for the day to babysit our doggie (a spoiled rotten long-haired dachshund, Haggis). Usually I don’t answer my phone on Shabbat or holidays, but the buzzing wouldn’t stop and was driving me nuts. By 9:30 I must have gotten more than 50 buzzes, so I finally checked, just to see if Max needed something, or if, G-d forbid, there was another attack.

It turns out the IDF hit a really high level Hizbulla commander on Sunday night. This combined with the hostage rescue in Gaza and Hizbulla’s solidarity with Hamas, and they were angry, angry, angry. And wanted to teach us a lesson. From Tuesday night through Wednesday there were over 200 rockets/missiles directed at the Upper and Lower Galilee and the Golan Heights. Our friends’ daughter served as an IDF nurse at the hospital in Tsfat. When David, Jocelyn’s dad, picked her up at 9, they were dodging shrapnel the whole way home. Our friends in Korazin, in Migdal, in Tiberias spent most of the morning in their bomb shelters. All the people in the Sea of Galilee hotels who’ve been displaced by the war since October were even more traumatized. Katsrin and other locations in the Golan received direct hits as did Metulla and Kiryat Shmona. Fires caused by incendiary carrying drones from Lebanon were burning in many places. Even towns far south like Cana, Tura’an, Mughar (all Muslim), Tavor (as in Mt Tabor), and the Jezreel Valley were hit.

So it’s been pretty incessant for the last two days. The jets and copters are once again nonstop strafing the skies here – all day and all night. Don’t know if it’s recon, retaliatory or just to let Hizbulla and proxies know we’re still in the game? And the outdoor temps are reaching a sizzling 99*/39* throughout the weekend. I feel so badly for the firefighters and the troops out there in all their protective gear. And we just heard the rumor that the IDF got Nasralla’s brother (head of Hizbulla) in an air strike in Lebanon early this morning. So we expect “the temperatures to climb” even higher this weekend.

I went out early this morning to do some grocery shopping. Every morning I recite Psalm 121 It’s become one of my favorites (YouTube Omer Adam singing ‘Esa Einai,’ the Psalm in Hebrew!!!). “I lift my eyes to the mountains, from whence comes my help. My help comes from the L-rd…” So these days as we’re driving I lift my eyes continually to the next mountain ridge over. Except I’m looking for drones and missiles and interceptions. And trying to figure out where the next community shelter is. The International Council of Christians and Jews has placed 24person concrete bunkers on every other corner. Thank you US givers!! It’s become an interesting life for us….but we still feel safer here than anywhere else. So far only four people have been mildly injured from shrapnel here. I think there are angels up there watching over us.

So we are now beginning to hear ‘the rest of the story’ of how the actual rescue of the four hostages earlier this week went down. It was like a Fauda episode, only it was real life. Undercover elite Israeli spies who spoke fluent Arabic, including women disguised in burkas and hijabs, posed as wealthy Gazans, Hamas associates escaping the IDF in Rafiah, rented a house in the Nuseirat neighborhood. They were there to gather intelligence, to confirm suspicions that Noa Argamani was being held in the vicinity. Super-cool, nu?

They confirmed not only Noa, but the three men down the street being held by the journalist. The spies vacated in undercover cars and on foot on 5 June, and Yamam elite began the planning and training that night. The mission was executed the next morning. The captives were all safely rescued, but complications arose due to heavy fire from the Hamas terrorists embedded in the neighborhood. It seemed every home in the area had someone with a gun, an RPG or grenade. Cmdr. Arnon Zamora, 36, fathers of 2, was killed in the melee. Gaza Health Ministry first said 197, then amended to 436, later revised down to 274 innocent Palestinian civilians were killed. There was no specification of how many of these innocents were actually terrorists.

It’s getting late and I must start food prep and last minute cleaning before Shabbat, but let me leave you with a few bits from the North this morning. All non-necessary clubs, activities, shops, classes, religious or other are canceled in Tsfat, Ma’alot, Nahariyya, Rosh Pina, Sea of Galilee communities (see map). Sirens have sounded in Northern towns all day, although now it seems quiet. The smoke makes me feel like I’m back in Southern California during brushfires season. We are thoroughly prepared and as the Brits say, we ‘keep calm and carry on.’ Like, what else can one do? We had volunteered to go cherry picking in the Golan with friends next week, it now, it looks like that will be canceled. Again, this harvest season, much of the produce is going unpicked. Hopefully soon-

In the meantime, I wish us all a very peaceful and very quiet, and very relaxing weekend. Until next week💙🇮🇱💪🏼🙏🏻🩵 אם ישראל חי The people of Israel live.

Day 143. War Stories. 26 February, 2024

Many of you asked what life is like here in Israel during wartime. It’s a tightrope walk and interesting juxtaposition between laughter and tears, life and death. This week another resident of our town- the neighbor just below our house- lost their son in Gaza.

John and I were out walking the dog when we saw lots of cars with army markings parked along the street. Soldiers, some highly ranked, were standing outside our neighbor’s gate. As we walked across the street three women came out and started screaming and hugging each other. We knew immediately. It’s a sound you never want to hear. After the funeral (the dead are always buried within 24 hours), I went to their house as the Jewish people sit “shiva” or 7 days in mourning. Everyone comes to pay respects. I’d never met them personally until this afternoon , but it really didn’t matter.

There was a soldier, who was a platoon mate of Eyal Shimonov (of blessed memory), the fallen soldier, explaining to the mother and aunt some of the great memories they shared. It seemed that Eyal was a commander of a small unit. The top level always goes in first and leads the other soldiers in the unit onwards. From what I was hearing, the tunnel they entered was booby trapped and exploded. Eyal was killed immediately.

The juxtaposition: directly across the street from the house of mourning was a house of celebration. A boy celebrating his Bar Mitzvah today was having a huge party. Music. Friends. Laughter. Dancing. It’s all so crazy. A reminder that life goes on.

As the fighting in the South is winding down, the situation in the North seems to be intensifying. There has been a surge in violence from both sides creating new levels of instability in the Northern part of the country. More tanks and heavy artillery can be seen on the highways moving to different positions. Over the past 3-4 days there have been missiles strikes into Israel from Lebanon causing several civilian casualties (deaths), including a 45 year old woman and her 16 year old son. Yesterday over 2 dozen missiles were fired into Israel, one reaching Kfar Tavor/Har Tavor. For you Christians out there reading this, you know it better as Mt Tavor in the Lower Galilee. The wild part is Iron Dome took out the missile, shrapnel raining down, as the Christians were celebrating the Feast of Transfiguration on the mountain.

Over 2000 rockets have been fired (most short range) from Lebanon since 8 October. Tonight Hizbulla fired two surface to air missiles at an Israeli reconnaissance, surveillance and communications drone. Iron Dome loudly took out the first missile, but the second one downed the drone.

The IDF has upped the game, targeting weapons depot and transfers from Iran to Hizbulla forces in the Damascus, Syria area. There have been three pinpoint strike assassinations on top level Hizbulla commandos in Beirut and other places in Lebanon. The elite Radwan unit has been pushed back into southern Lebanon several kilometers. IDF forces have blown up many launchpads and two huge ammunitions, chemical storage facilities in Sidon on the Mediterranean coast. Yesterday they pushed the aerial strikes deeper into Lebanon, going as far as 100 km. New boundaries are being crossed daily by each side.

This last week saw the IDF finding the old communications between Hamas head, Yayha Sinwar and a top Hizbulla commander. Hamas counted on Hizbulla attacking Israel in the North simultaneously. The documented commitment obtained by the IDF stated that Hizbulla was “prepared to occupy the Galilee.” The mullah sun Tehran and Lebanon disappointed Sinwar as the plans for both sides to attack never materialized. This delay bought the IDF 2 days time to mobilize and fortify the defenses and stack troops and reservists all along the Lebanese and Syrian borders.

My brilliant husband, John, has come up with an analysis that I’ve heard no one mention thus far. Iran and Hizbulla are Shi’ite Muslims. Hamas and the PA are Sunni. They do not get along or see eye to eye on many things. John feels that Iran made promises to Hamas they did not keep in order to test the strength and response of Israel’s army. In essence, they used Hamas as their Guinea pig. They were waiting to see global response as well.

Since 7 October, they have been playing tit for tat supplying the Houthi rebels in Yemen with missiles and arms to stymie commerce in the Gulf of Aden at the mouth of the Red Sea and Arabian Sea. They have been supplying weapons to different factions in Syria. Last night we had a whole battery of rockets fired into the Golan from Syria. They are most certainly testing us and our capabilities. They are testing both Israel and the United States.

Friday edition War update 19 January, 2024

It’s Friday. The day for cleaning the house and cooking not only tonight’s festive Shabbat meal, but food that will take us into tomorrow (I do no food prep on Saturday) and have lots of leftovers for the week. As usual, jets are strafing the sky overhead and we’ve been told by the home front Minister of Defense to expect major escalation in the North. Batten down the hatches. Like Scarlett O’Hara I, too, will say “Oh Fiddlesticks! I’ll worry about that tomorrow.”

We took Max back up to his base early this week for a day of training. John & I decided to make a day of it, despite the cold and spotty weather, and beer off into the Golan Heights. We’d make it a day trip. It was just what we needed to clear our heads.

Of course, I took the opportunity to buy fresh picked farm stand produce!!! I picked up a huge bag of apples as well as gourds, citrus, peppers and other things to supplement what I’m pulling from the winter garden. The next day I made apple butter (12 jars) because we can’t find that here. John picked the mandarins off our tree and I put up 8 half pints for my China Coast Chicken Salad (because we don’t have canned mandarins).

In case you haven’t figured out… enough of bad news – it’s recipe day!!!

Our garden is doing well with all the rain. Beets (golden and chioggia), carrots, radishes and lettuces are at peak and I’m still getting tomatoes, beans and broccolini.

Is this gorgeous or what???? Look at all those colors!!!

So I gathered up my beets, including white beets and bull’s blood (deep crimson heritage variety- no blood, I promise) and roasted them in foil with rosemary, olive oil, sea salt and thyme sprigs). Wrapped them up in a cozy foil blanket and roasted them on a sheet pan on 400*F/200*C for about an hour. They came out tender and earthy!

We ate some straight for dinner, but then I blended the rest with a chicken stock to make the most decadent and delicious riff on a hot borscht soup. Simple simple simple recipe (I freeze chicken, beef and vegetables stock for later use. I use all my scraps and don’t let anything go to waste). if you want to keep it vegan, use veggie broth. It works just as well, and if you keep kosher, you can then add a dollop of sour cream or yogurt to your hot soup.

While 2 large packets of beets were in the oven, I also roasted a tray of gourds. We get all kinds of funky gourds I’ve never seen before. These were small grapefruit sized gray pumpkins; something that looked like an enormous acorn squash on steroids, and an orangey-grey lumpy thing that was smaller than a pumpkin but way to big for any other kind of squash. I just cut them up and sprinkled olive oil, coarse sea salt, garlic powder and rosemary and sage on top. Covered the jelly roll pan tightly with foil and let the heat do its magic-

Gourd Salad With Techineh Drizzle

So on a bed of fresh picked lettuce, I put some of the sliced of roasted gourd, half a red onion, sliced, 1/4 cup dried cranberries (no sugar or preservatives), 3 chopped pitted dates, about 1/4 cup chopped almonds aand chopped walnuts (altogether), you can sprinkle fresh pomegranate arils on top.

For the dressing, I mixed 1/4 cup techineh (tahini!?!?), with the juice of 1/2 lemon (about 2 TBSP) and about 2 TBSP honey… I don’t measure. Drizzle on top of the salad. It’s really really delicious!

Usually, this time of year John and I like to go foraging… the Northern forested hills and meadows fill up with wild asparagus and celery and all sorts of greens after the rain. However, most of the roads have been blocked by the army and with Hizbulla launching UAVs and missiles right and left, it’s just not safe, so we’ve found other places closer to home. We take small hikes into the southern hill country.

For Shabbat, I just finished making the most amazing, gluten free, vegan brownies Israeli style. They are rich and chewy and use… techineh!!! For this, if you can find the all natural, unbleached brown Techineh (Ethiopian), it adds another layer of awesomeness.

Gluten Free Israeli Brownies

Prep Time:15 minutes Cook time:25 minutes

Pareve

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup Techineh (unbleached, natural with sesame hills, if possible)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cup coconut sugar (or brown sugar)
  • 1/4 cup maple syrup
  • 1/4 cup freshly squeezed orange juice… sweet navel or Valencia
  • 1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder, good quality
  • 1/3 cup coconut OR almond flour
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1/3 cup dairy-free semisweet chocolate chips

Preheat oven to 360*F/170*C. Grease a 9X9 baking dish. Wash orange well. Cut in half. Remove the peel from one half (eat slices of orange). Juice the other half, removing any seeds. In large bowl, add Techineh, eggs, syrup and sugars, orange juice and combine well (I use a simple wire whisk) until smooth and glossy. Gently fold in cocoa, flor, baking soda and salt. Combine until dry incorporated into wet ingredients. Fold in chocolate chips. Pour into pan and smooth out. Bake for 25 minutes until top is set but brownies are not dried out. Remove from over and let cool 10 minutes. Cut into squares. Cut up orange rind into thin thin sliver bits. Reserve about 3-4 TBSP. For a festive look…edible and delicious…. I scattered the Orange rind along with some dried edible rose petals and chopped pistachios.

Have a lovely Shabbat-weekend. And remember to pray for peace-

Serendipity!

Serendipity: an unplanned fortunate discovery; a common occurrence throughout the history of product invention and scientific discovery; finding valuable or agreeable things not sought for.

Since moving to the beautiful, diverse, completely random Land of Israel 8 years ago, John and I have learned to flow serendipitously. Around every corner we have found the unexpected… a glorious treasure of a tiny moshav (village) that used to be an art center, abandoned but with the ‘goods’ left behind; a little village that sells fresh goat milk products; secret swimming holes; archaeological and historical sites; an Olympic ice skating center on the Lebanese border; friendly and inviting people who grow organic products or make their own beauty products; beekeepers…. and winemakers.

Of course, I called to them in Hebrew… and of course, they answered back in English. They were Stanley Levin and Joey Fisch – grafting new vines onto their rootstock. Stanley, from South Africa; Joey from Chicago. Both had lived right here in the Galilee for ages. They invited us to walk the vineyards and take a look. Marselan, Petit Verdot, Grenache, and other beautiful, green vines. Theirs was a garage winery, Segev Winery, producing under 5000 bottles a year. I had to find out more, so arranged a time when we could go to their yekev, production/tasting cellar.

Both Stanley and Joey started out in the high tech industry. Joey had been growing grapes and making wines “since he was a teen.” Joey worked at Intel in business development, but always kept winemaking in reserve as a hobby. His wife, Gilat, worked at SAP Software with Stanley. On the weekends, Joey and Gilat hosted wine parties in Ya’ad, which is where Stanley and Joey first met. Ya’ad, founded in 1979 as Israel’s first technical moshav, had been allotted some small acreage by KKL/JNF. These were sprinkled throughout the surrounding forested areas and set aside for agricultural use.

In 2010, the JNF saw that much of their land had not been developed. The residents of Ya’ad faced an ultimatum: put the land to use or have it taken back. At the moshav community meeting, Joey and his brother-in-law volunteered to take one parcel or 10 dunam, which is 2 1/2 acres. It was serendipity. They were leased the land and split the property between them, planting olives and grapes. The little mountainside was absolutely perfect for growing grapes. It has deep, rich soil and a great climate. Joey began planting any grape he could find: Petit Verdot, Grenache, Mourvèdre. Because Joey was working full time in high tech, he could only spend vineyard time early mornings and on weekends (which here is just part of Friday and Saturday). He was getting a mere 20-25% yield, throwing away too many unused grapes and lacking in both time and man-power. He needed a partner.

Enter Stanley. He was working in nearby Karmi’el when SAP shut down their branch in 2013, throwing him into early retirement. Serendipity! Stanley decided that “now is the time,” and beside working for a Danish firm part time, he made the switch to winemaking. So he went to Ohalo in the Upper Golan Heights to study the craft for 2 years.

Joey Fisch and Stanley Levin, the two vintners, together began to grow more profusely. In 2014 an entire vineyard of the Marselan grape was planted. They were studying and learning from their mistakes and from experience, gradually becoming more sustainable in their farming. They stopped turning the soil. And they began letting cover crops (weeds) grow, dry out and be cut down but not removed. In this way, a natural type of mulching was established. This led to less drying out of the soil underneath and more nutrients going into the soil. It also added to an increase in good bacteria, resulting in much less use of any chemicals. The first years of production were good ones. All of the processing, the crushing, the aging in stainless steel and the transfer to French Oak barrels was done on site at their small, in-house facility.

Unexpectedly, in 2018, Joey moved to Germany, accepting a full-time position with Deutsche Telecom. He kept his house in Ya’ad, and is still involved in every single operation of the vineyard, just remotely. He returns to Israel for the harvest and at other times during the year. And it was serendipity that we ran into them both a few weeks back.

When John and I returned to find out about Segev Winery, Stanley met us and started the pour with a ‘22 Rosé from Grenache grapes. We finally found the summer wine we had been searching for! A beautiful shade of peachy pink, the Rosé has a nose with citrus and tropical notes, and was fruity, yet crisp and dry. I got a distinct cherry finish on the palette. Only 800 bottles were produced, so at 80 shekel a bottle, we bought 3. It’s a nice wine with salmon or grilled chicken, a great picnic wine or a bottle for just sitting on the porch sipping.

The next wine was their 2019 Vineyard Red Blend. A very deep purple/red wine with a jammy nose, this one was very fruit forward. With overtones of very ripe cherries, it was surprisingly quite light, however had a slightly rough finish… a bit of a sour bite at the end. The Vineyard Blend might become better with a little more age, and was only 70 shekel per bottle. This would be a good one to serve with pasta and mushrooms or lamb.

We moved on to the 2020 Stoney Red. In 2020, Joey and Stanley bought 500 kg of Cabernet Sauvignon grapes from a vineyard near Dalton, on the Lebanese border. Their friend, Gil Schatzberg from Recanati Wines sold them the grapes. Joey was in Germany when the Covid lockdowns went into full force, and Stanley had to isolate due to an exposure to the virus just when harvest was getting under way. So all the picking was done by family and friends while Stanley watched and supervised the entire operation remotely by camera. Schatzberg helped with the fermentation process and production. 40% Cabernet, 40% Marselan and 20% Petite Verdot makes this ruby red gem a well-balanced, very drinkable wine now. With a nose of ripe forest fruits, and a surprising hint of cinnamon at the finish, this is an amazingly good wine. It is absolutely beautifully balanced: 12% alcohol, only 2000 bottles were produced: the price coming in at 100 shekel a bottle. We bought one to add to the collection (but plan to return for more of this one- we have a feeling it will age quite beautifully).

Of course the best is always saved for last. The ‘21 Marselan is a deep crimson, leggy red wine. Redolent of blackberries and a slight bit of chocolate, it is pleasing on the palette leaving a mouth of ripe fruit and slight mint/sage. A great wine with a steak or red meat, it was only 85 shekel a bottle. This wine is sure to get better with age. We bought 2 bottles.

Segev wines are sold locally at their winecellar in Ya’ad (Misgav Regional Council), a few small stores local to Misgav and a few restaurants, including one in Tel Aviv. It was such a pleasure chatting over the wines with Stanley Levin, a great host. We will most definitely go back again!


I jump at any opportunity to make a drive to the wild, pristine Golan Heights. It’s one of our favorite places. Last month we were taking my son to his reserve duty. After we dropped him off we made the short, incredibly scenic drive to Azizo Lavender Farms (see two posts back). As we were leaving Moshav Kanaf, we spotted a large red barnlike structure and a sign for Terra Nova Vineyards. Again, serendipity. It was midweek and still early for Israelis, so when we walked in, we had the entire venue to ourselves.

There was a wide sweeping terrace surrounding the building. The views from the top of the plateau overlooking the Sea of Galilee, the Hula Valley, and mountains to the snow capped Mt. Hermon were reason enough to sit back and relax. What a spectacular place for a party! A wedding, birthday or Bar Mitzvah here would be perfect. Adjacent to the terrace was a large covered pavilion ready to barbecue the fresh Angus beef the Golan is famous for. There was plenty of room for a band and dancing.

Inside were two spacious dining rooms, with rustic, ranch vibes, a large wine bar, and a shop that sells local products: the Terra Nova Wines, olives and olive oils, local honey, soaps, jams and spreads. The menu included wines, cheeses, olives, and all sorts of light fare like quiche. Catering is available for special occasions. It actually felt like we had arrived at a winery in Texas – or California.

John and I got a table and ordered a wine flight and a cheese and olive platter. We asked our server auto tell us about the wines we had ordered and he called Roni to come in from the fields. Completely unasked. Completely unexpected that the vintner himself would take time out of his work to come talk to us. Completely Israeli. So it was a total surprise when a while later, a lovely young girl strided in confidently and pulled up a chair. In perfect American English, she exuberantly welcomed us to her winery. Ah!!! So this was Roni!

We were so taken with it all. And here is where serendipity, those truly chance occurrences steps in. John commented on her completely American accent, and asked if she was from the States. Roni Cohen-Arazia was born in Israel. Her parents were Israeli, but traveled the world and she with them. Roni, age 31, was completely Israeli, grew up outside of TelAviv, but had gone to boarding school in Switzerland. She would visit her parents who lived in Camarillo, California. Her father, Effie Cohen, worked at Amgen in Thousand Oaks!! Oh my goodness, what a small world! We explained that’s where we’re from. My husband worked directly across the barrenca from Amgen. We had many of the same friends it turns out. Who’da guessed??

After high school and IDF service, Roni received her biomedical engineering degree from Tel Aviv University, but found it boring. “I found myself a lot in wine bars and wineries to lift my spirits, and worked through uni in restaurants and wine bars where I learned a lot,” she explained. “I wanted to see the production side, study the fermentation and chemistry of it all. So I went to wine school here in Israel. In Katzrin in the Golan at Tel Hai’s 2 year viticulture program.”

She told us that there were 3 partners at the agricultural co-op in Kanaf. These men, residents of the moshav, had a large dairy farm; grew olives and had berry fields. They had 20 dunams – and in the perfect volcanic Golani soil, with its hot days and cold nights, is perfect for growing grapes. especially Cabernet Sauvignon, Merlot and Shiraz. They later purchased another 11 dunams nearby where Carignon and Vigonier are grown. Roni started working for them at Terra Nova, a boutique winery with a 15,000 bottle a year output, in March of 2021, and in 2022, the original vintner left the entire production line to her! Now that’s serendipity!

Roni poured generously for us as we chatted. We started with their B’reshit, appropriately named… in Hebrew, ‘in the beginning.’ It was a heavy, jammy fruit-forward nose, nice and leggy on the glass. Aged in French oak barrels, B’reshit is a red blend of Shiraz (50%),Merlot (30%)and Cabernet (20%) – 13% alcohol, at 100 shekel a bottle. It had a forest fruit taste with a hint of bell pepper and was surprisingly light and refreshing. It’s a great wine to serve with cheese and olives and would go really well with Italian food. We bought 5 bottles.

The olives, grown and cured right there at the Golan property, were amazing. It was wonderful to be able to sample the different varieties of olives and the olive oils (both a Spanish and a Greek stock). The accompanying cheese and veggie platter was more than generous for all of us to share. Even though it seemed we were drinking a lot, the food and the very long conversation tempered the alcohol. All of the cheeses were made from local goat and cow milk. I am currently working on making the most delicious herbed goat cheese from the recipe Roni got for me. Everything comes from Moshav Kanaf. There was labaneh, humus, and a delicate raspberry jam as well with fresh blueberries and mulberries(tree strawberries) on the side.

We tried a 2020 Terra Nova Winery Special Edition with minty, sage overtones to the nose. I got a nice, subtle smokiness from swirling it and smelling. This wine too, was a leggy red – a blend of Shiraz, Cab, and Merlot. Heavier than the B’reshit with a deep cherry finish, slightly oaky. A great wine with barbecued or smoked meats. We got 4 bottles.

We tried their Barrel 14, another special edition red, very heavy with some intense tannins at the end. The 2020 Carignon smelled of blackberries, but I was also getting hints of peppery spice and olives. It was spicy but with a smoky finish and a bite.

The Noam was absolutely delightful… berries and flowers to the scent. a bright honey taste, but not at all too sweet. For a red, it was bright and flavorful, great with lamb or to serve alongside either a cheese or charcuterie platter. The Noam was a well-balanced very drinkable wine. It is a very different Cabernet, Shiraz blend with a splash of Vigonier (white wine)and we bought 3 bottles.

The wines Roni has blended are all still in barrels aging, so are not ready for tasting yet. This is all fine and good as we can’t wait to go back. The wines do not have Kosher certification. Terra Nova offers a membership club to those who sign up with a very nice discount to members. They sell to private consumers only and will deliver to door in the Golan/Galilee area. This offer includes not only wines, but olives, olive oils and fresh-picked berries.

Lavender Fields Forever

The rains and winds and chilly days are hopefully behind us here in Israel. It’s tiyuulim weather! In Hebrew a tiyuul is best described as a day-trip, and Israelis are crazy about them. I’d heard about Azizo Lavender from a friend who brought us the most heavenly lavender liqueur, so we decided to drive way up in the highest parts of the southern Golan Heights. The mountains were still spring green and the wildflowers were in full bloom making splashes of pinks and purples over the ridges and wadis. On a high plateau overlooking the Kinneret (Sea of Galilee), we finally pulled into Azizo Farms just outside the tiny moshav of Kanaf.


In the center of a field of row upon row of different varieties of blooming lavender is the Azizo visitor center. We were met by the owner, Lilach Assraf, who welcomed us with cups of lavender lemongrass tea and lavender shortbread. Can you say heaven???? John and I sat on the expansive terrace cafe and listened to Lilach tell the history of the farm and business. It started in 1985 with 11 men, all friends who had served in the IDF together. They were going to start a new agricultural community on the wild plateaus of the Golan. Lilach and her husband, Dan, lived on a nearby moshav (village) while they built their homes and plowed the fields around what was to be Kanaf. They started with orchards of plums, pears and grapefruit. One day, another of their army buddies, a lone soldier from France, came to them with a proposal. Norn had just returned from working on a lavender farm in Provence. He was looking for a few daring, open-minded farmers willing to set out on a new course: lavender.

In 1987, 15 acres, about 60 dunams, of French lavender were planted along the Syrian border. The volcanic soil would be perfect as well as the hot days and cool nights. The plants needed little water and drip irrigation was put in. The amount of flowers produced was surprisingly enormous and the quality of the essential oils was the highest on the spectrum. They made and sold the oil and sachets filled with the dried seeds. The venture grew and grew to include the purchase of more dunams and marketing of more products sold within Israel. The original farmers still worked in other fields, holding onto “day jobs” with the lavender being a side business. Then in 1992, everything was “gone with the wind. It was the end of the world, complete heartbreak for us,” recounts Lilach. After severe rains and flooding followed by the most intense heatwave and drought, all the lavender dried up. What to do? Lilach and Dan made the decision to persevere.

They traveled the world – to France, Hungary, Bulgaria, the United States, to visit other lavender growers. The Israeli Volcanic Research Institute was called in to examine the Golan soil. More irrigation was installed and more dunams were planted with heat tolerant, high yield varieties. Now six different types are grown and new cultivars are being tested. The Assrafs used to pay the teenagers on the moshav to harvest the crops, but now they have a special lavender harvester. Lilach took us and two other couples on a guided tour of the farm and explained the process and manufacturing. We went into the drying room. The smell!!!!! The lavender stalks hang for weeks in a special atmospheric controlled room as they dry, preserving the oil content. Dan and Lilach re-engineered a chicken plucking machine into a device that separates the dried seeds from the stalks. All the distillation is done on site, the oil separated from the hydrosols (water), and both used for different products. The distilling machinery was purchased in Bulgaria, famous for the distillation of its famous roses in the manufacture of perfume. The Assrafs called in Professor Nativ Dubai of the Neve Yaar Agricultural Research Center to confer on varieties of lavender suitable for the climate that would produce highest yield of flowers per plant and the highest concentration of essential oil.

There is a classroom on site at Azizo Lavender for demonstrations, experimentation and projects for different ages. Throughout the year schoolchildren visit the farm to learn about the distillation process. They learn about all the different uses of this herby flower from medicinal to cosmetic to culinary. The ‘King of Essential Oils,’ lavender is antiseptic and anti inflammatory, so can aid in burns, headaches, digestive issues, skin problems, insomnia and is an anti-anxiety remedy. Azizo produces the finest soaps, candles, lotions, balms, oils, diffusers and sachets. The list is quite lengthy. Beehives have been placed adjacent to the fields, and now lavender honey is also part of their venture. Lavender fruit jams, lavender liqueur, lavender syrup, lavender chocolate! Azizo Farms has teamed up with DeKarina Chocolates to produce the chocolate and the liqueur. Powdered lavender is jarred for culinary uses. Herbes de Provence, their secret blend of Israeli herbs with lavender, mint, thyme, oregano and other dried spice is also available in the shop, which has been open daily for six years now.

After over 40 years farming lavender, Dan and Lilach have finally given up their secondary jobs. All of their time is now devoted to Azizo Lavender, which has also become part of the eco-tourism industry in the Golan. Everything they do is sustainable and environmentally friendly. No pesticides are used in the growing and no chemicals are added in the production process. All of the labor from fieldworkers to cafe and gift shop employees live on Moshav Kanaf or the surrounding area. The gift shop is, of course, loaded with all things lavender. I bought a case of the liqueur. Now that summer is almost here, it’s amazingly delicious on vanilla ice cream, melon, or in a drink made with a tablespoon of the nectar with a spritz of soda water. I bought some sachets, a candle, and the ground dried seeds to use in cooking. John got a pot of bug balm for insect bites and a little vial of the essential oil for our diffuser. We ended our tour by splitting a small pizza with dried lavender sprinkled on top… it was very different, and very good. And we had the lavender ice cream for dessert. It’s definitely a place we will return to with guests. The views are spectacular and the hospitality “welcoming Israeli.” Admission is free.

Lilach’s Lavender Shortbread

Lilach served her cookies with a pot of lavender lemongrass tea. So easy to make, you just put a teaspoon of lavender and some dried lemongrass in a teapot, pour hot water over and let steep 5 minutes. The result is quite soothing and can be served both hot or over ice on a summer day. The tea stands on its own and needs no sweetener. The cookies were crisp and buttery—

INGREDIENTS:

  • 11/2 cups butter at room temperature
  • 2/3 cup white sugar
  • 1/4 cup sifted powdered sugar
  • 2 Tbsp chopped fresh lavender or 1 Tbsp dried lavender (organic)
  • 1 Tbsp finely chopped lavender leaves
  • 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup cornflour (cornstarch in the US)

Cream together the butter and sugars in a large bowl. Mix in the lavender. In another bowl, stir together the two flours. Add to the ‘wet’ ingredients. Mix together well until all ingredients are combined. On two sheets of waxed paper, form the dough into two logs. Roll up and place in refrigerator at least one hour until quite firm. Preheat oven to 325*F/160*C. Remove dough logs from fridge and slice into coins. Place on parchment lined cookie sheet and bake for 16-18 minutes until just turning slightly golden. Remove from oven. Let cool. Keep in covered tin for about 2 weeks. These also freeze well.

Lavender Honey Glazed Grilled Chicken

We had friends over for the holiday of Lag b’Omer, when it’s traditional to make bonfires and eat grilled food (it’s often the food that goes with these holidays). We celebrate the creation of Light and the Divine Light that entered the world. It also commemorates the death (Feast Day) of the great Rahsbi, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, the 2nd century Talmudist. Anyway, we had a barbecue with friends and I served grilled green beans from my garden and butternut squash and chicken glazed with lavender honey. Rather than buy the honey at Azizo, I made my own. It’s really easy and I use it on/in tea, cooking, over yogurt or ice cream and as a glaze. It imparts a lovely fragrance and flavor.

To make the honey, I steeped whole fresh lavender leaves and flowers in 2 cups of honey. I put it in a saucepan and heated it on medium heat on the stove and just let it gently simmer for about 20 minutes. The kitchen smelled so good!!!After the honey cooled, I strained the liquid back into the jar. No need to refrigerate.

INGREDIENTS:

  • 2 kg (4 lbs) chicken..I used breasts, each one halved (thighs/pargiot) work well too
  • 1/2 cup lavender honey (see instructions above)
  • 1/4 cup good quality balsamic vinegar
  • 1 TBSP fresh rosemary, chopped fine
  • salt & pepper

This is so easy to make. Rinse and pat dry your chicken pieces. Salt and pepper. In a small bowl, combine the honey, vinegar and rosemary. Pour over chicken, reserving a bit for the glaze. Refrigerate the chicken and let marinate about an hour before grilling. Grill each piece over a high flame to sear, then lower to medium high heat. Grill chicken about 6 minutes each side. In least minute of grilling, brush with the honey glaze. You can sprinkle dried lavender or some of the chopped rosemary over the top to serve.

Some of the lavender drinks I’ve been “playing around” with are Lavender Lemonade: freshly squeezed lemon juice, some water and the lavender honey to taste. Last night before bed I made a Lavender MoonMilk: I heated a can of coconut milk and added the lavender honey to flavor. It was a nice end to the day, and I think I’ll try using that same recipe to make an ice cream by putting it in the ice cream maker and then freezing. When I was in England, I discovered their London Fog Tea, which became my go-to drink. It soothed try soul – between the cold, wet weather and everyone driving “on the wrong side,” it kept my nerves in check just to sip and smell.The London Fog was Earl Grey tea, a spot of milk, and lavender simple syrup.