"When G-d will return the captivity of Zion, we will be like dreamers. Then our mouths will be filled with laughter and our tongues with glad song." Psalm 126
I’m really not that good at math. But I can do simple addition. And there are just way too many things that are not adding up. That are just not making sense or are way out of the ordinary capabilities of my thinking.
Last Sunday, all of Israel sat tensely, gnawing their fingernails as the ceasefire with Gaza was to go into effect. A list of names of the hostages to be released was delayed for over 18 hours. No one knew who the captives would be or whether they would be alive or dead. It wasn’t until just before that the names of the three girls was released.
What has come to be known as “Hostage Square” in downtown TelAviv was packed with people watching the live footage on the big screens of the hand off. The rest of us were glued to the televisions. Nervous. Anxious to see in what shape the girls would be. Why did AlJazeera get the exclusive news coverage? Why was no other news agency allowed in to film the events in Gaza?
First take (by everyone): if there was a true genocide taking place in Gaza, then why were the streets crammed full of hundreds of thousands of people? All angry men and young boys chanting ‘Khaybar Khaybar, yo Yahud….” basically ‘Death to the Jews(remember the Khaybar massacre)” How could there be that many people?
If there were only civilians, innocent civilians, then why were all these men in Hamas uniforms? Why did they all carry guns? Where did all those white trucks come from carrying all these militants? This was an entire army. There seemed to be very few if any ‘civilians.’ This doesn’t add up to all those narratives we’ve been told.
The Red Cross was unavailable to the hostages. They never once saw the hostages while in captivity. No assessments of conditions, no humanitarian aid given, no medications sent by Israel delivered to the captives. Nothing. Nada. Zilch. So why was the Red Cross involved in checking the girls beforehand, handing them officially from Hamas to waiting IDF helicopters, taking credit for their impeccable care of Romi, Emily and Doron?
If there was a famine, a complete crisis where people were actually starving to death, then why did all these people jumping around on the tops of cars, chanting in the streets, waving guns and Hamas flags for the cameras…why did everyone look so well fed? How could they have that much energy? Last I heard, a starving person is quite lethargic, having to conserve vital energy in order to live. How come???
O.K. I understand that these Gazans would want to make their hostages appear to look good, but swag bags were given to each of the girls as they were put into the Red Cross SUV’s. Each bag had a cute little Hamas sticker on it. Each bag contained a Palestinian flag lanyard, photos of the girls in captivity (as a remembrance of those good times they had???), a map of Gaza (in case they wanted to return?). Is this some kind of a perverted trick or what? It just doesn’t add up.
Certificates of participation? Good behavior certificates?
To make things even more surreal, each hostage had to pose with a smile (look at their faces as they run to the car – sheer terror) as they received a certificate from their Hamas captors!! No this is not a joke! It was the weirdest, sickest thing ever! Each certificate was signed by…. a Red Cross official. Just so weird…. Can anyone make sense of this for me?
Back to these innocent Gazans. Why were their uniforms pristine if they had been fighting in tunnels and on land in the choking Gazan dust for 484 days? Could it be that when they are walking about the streets of the city, they wear civvies? Could they disguise themselves as civilians, not terrorist Hamas operatives so they won’t get shot? The math does not work.
When you begin to add everything up, the thing that just does not compute is three innocent girls who had been taken captive as they were in their apartments or at a dance festival were traded for 100. 100 caught in the act, tried and convicted felons. Convicted for murder, attempted murder, planning a terrorist attack, attempted terrorism, illegal entry into a sovereign nation, kidnapping, rape. Nothing works out here if you do the math, no matter how hard you try to rearrange the columns or make those numbers fit. I think we’re dealing with exponents now?
We all know there is absolutely no water and no electricity in Gaza. It’s what we’ve been told for years. Israel controls the utilities. Israel withholds basic food, water, medicine and power. We know this. Right? So can someone please explain to me just why all these men were filming the hostage release on their cell phones, because they all had cell phones, and they were all charged. How did they obtain such luxuries? How could they find enough electricity to charge all those phones? I cannot for the life of me make these figures add up-
So. Now. We wait. Once again. This time more anxiously than the last. Tomorrow Hamas is supposed to release the names of the next four women to be released. Saturday. Or maybe Sunday(these guys just don’t seem to want to follow any of the set rules of the game)? Tomorrow is the day the list of the remaining 26 captives is handed over… with their state of beingness. Who is alive and who is dead? The four members of the Bibas family will be included on that list. Those are the two babaies taken, now ages 1 1/2 and 5. We hope. We pray. We wish. We “please, G-d.” We steel ourselves and brace for the worst. Please, G-d, let them be alive!
“Mr Fafo” is a well known Palywood actor. You can see him in many photos of dead or wounded Gazans. He has 13,593 lives it seems. Here he is an AlJazeera press agentHmmmmm… nope. It doesn’t add up-
Midnight addendum: Friday 23 Jan
Hamas has refused to give a list of names of who is alive and who is dead. They will only give numbers of live bodies and corpses to be released. This was not part of the plan, it is just more psychological warfare on their part. How long can this go on?????
Another incredibly difficult day here, and it’s only just after one in the afternoon. John and I just came from the house of mourning of another IDF soldier, Aviel Wiseman, just 20 years old, who fell in Gaza when a building he was in exploded. His parents, Mordy and Mira are the nicest people and very active in the Poriyya community. They are American Israelis. We have been friends with several American families in that beautiful little village overlooking the Sea of Galilee. They are hurting really badly, but have tremendous faith that the L-rd will see them through this. The father spoke at Aviel’s funeral. It was heartbreaking. Please, dear readers, I invite you to write the Wiseman family by sending me directly your letters of sympathy and support or by posting them in the comments section. I will see that they get them by next week.
Aviel (Weissman)Wiseman
In other news, the saga with the hostage deal continues. Over Shabbat, the Houthis fired two ICBMs towards the Jerusalem area. Thank goodness they were both shot down. It caused hundreds of thousands of people to run for shelter on an otherwise edgy Shabbat.
Hamas, as usual by playing psychological games, would not release the names of the three hostages that would be released back to Israel today. They were supposed to give the names of the captives 24 hours before the trade-off (4:00pm Israel time).
Israel on the other hand released the names of the 150 terrorists behind bars serving life sentences for murder. They will be released shortly by Israel. The ceasefire was supposed to begin at 08:30, but was delayed for over two hours until the hostage list was surrendered. In the meantime, in a last-minute daring operation by an elite IDF unit, the body of fallen soldier, Sha’ul Oren was recovered. He fell in combat during Operation Protective Edge in July, 2014, and his body has been held in Gaza all this time. His parents will hold his funeral this afternoon, giving them some sense of closure, at least.
Also this morning at 06:30, the Israeli Supreme Court denied all requests to halt the release of several convicted terrorists (including Ari Fuld’s murderer). So the “deal with the devil” as many are calling it is still on. The Nahal Brigade has already withdrawn from Gaza after 15 months of fighting Hamas. Most of the people we’ve seen and conversed with today are incredibly sad and afraid of what is to come.
Member of Knesset, the coalition, and head of the Othman Yehudit Party, Itamar Ben Gvir, turned in his resignation from the government just this morning. In a statement, he said, “In light of the approval of the reckless agreement with the terrorist organization Hamas, which includes the release of hundreds of murderers – responsible for the blood of men, women and children – who are being freed to Jerusalem and Judaea and Samaria, along with concessions on the IDF achievements in the war, the withdrawal of IDF forces from Gaza, and a cessation of fighting in Gaza, we consider this agreement a capitulation to Hamas.” Two other Othman Yehudit members, Yitzhak Wasserlauf and Amichai Eliyahu also left the coalition.Three other Knesset members also tendered their resignations. Whether new elections will be called or whether this creates greater instability in the government awaits to be seen.
Itamar Ben Gvir
In other major breaking news as of just an hour ago, Hamas finally gave up the names of the three young ladies set to be handed over this afternoon. They are Doron Steinbrecher, 30; Romi Gonen, 23; and Emily Damari, 28.
Doron Steinbrecher was taken from her Kfar Aza apartment on 7 October, 2023. She was a veterinary nurse whose last voice message to her friends said, “They’ve arrived, they have me.” In a released video, footage of her was seen where she appeared alive. That was in January of 2024.
Romi Gonen was at the Nova Music Festival. She had been shot in the hand. Released hostages recall seeing her and reported that she was alive, but badly needed urgent medical care for her injury.
Emily Damari is a dual Israel/British citizen. She, too, had been abducted from her apartment in Kfar Aza when the Hamas terrorists entered. She was also shot in the hand and arm and had receive massive shrapnel wounds to her leg. Emily was blindfolded, and at gunpoint, led to her own car and driven into Gaza. She had been seen alive by hostage who returned in 2024. She is the last British citizen to have remained in captivity.
We prayerfully and hopefully await their imminent return. Families have just been notified and the IDF has set up a team of doctors and therapists to help with the transition period. The general public has been advised to be patient, and give the returned captives time to process and be with their loved ones for as long as their private time takes.
Israel is in a state of complete mixed emotions and feeling right now ranging from relief that some of our sisters will be home to helplessness and anger over the release of terrorists. From a jihadi perspective, this is not an agreement. They are celebrating and calling it a hudna, a temporary truce until their Islamist umma can regain its strength in numbers, militarily, financially and can rearm. They are currently claiming victory over Israel. Most Israelis we have spoken to, realize that it is an appeasement, and a reward for terrorism. Releasing these murderers will only lead to further attacks and kidnappings for ransom both in Israel and the Western world. The country is (heart)broken.
However, our troops do need a reprieve from all their fighting. They have been battling terrorists on the land, under the land, in the air and at sea for nearly a year and a half. There are multiple fronts: Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, internally here in Israel, the Houthis in Yemen, and Iran. There is a growing Hamas presence in Judaea and Samaria that must be dealt with. Terrorist attacks in the “West Bank” are on the rise. Jewish owned and tended agricultural fields are being set ablaze. Vines and olive trees are being ripped out of the ground. Historical and Biblical archaeological sites are being destroyed and built over. There is a real land grab happening with Arab settlements expanding and cutting off Israeli villages and roads. Car rammings and shootings by terrorists against innocent motorists and pedestrians are on the rise there.
In Gaza, our boys have been fighting urban house-to-house guerilla warfare. We have heard actual stories from soldiers serving there that makes one’s blood cold. Hamas terrorists are controlling the humanitarian aid sent in. They withhold the food from the civilians until they are complicit in fighting. A small child of about ten years old will be given food for his family if he plants an IED in the street and then lures IDF soldiers to drive towards him. The fighting going on there is very dangerous and a large number of soldiers have been killed and injured just in the past week.
There is a possibility that after Trump takes office, we will enter a new phase of this war. Perhaps even some more moderate Arabic nations will sway towards helping Israel in some way. More armaments that the Israeli government has contracted (ordered, bought and paid for) from the US will be delivered. The Houthis must be stopped. Besides firing at Israel almost daily, they have completely disrupted vital shipping routes in the Red Sea.
In Syria, the Assad regime is no more. In its stead is a Sunni ISIS leader, Al Sharaa. His military, “the rebels” has promised peaceful coexistence with the Christians, although we have seen otherwise. They speak of a peaceful border with Israel, yet their fighters have been recorded as chanting for the takeover of all of Israel on their march to recapture Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. They are being supported by y Turkey. Erdogan, the President of Turkey, wants to reestblish the Ottoman Empire, conquering all of Israel and the Levant. The IDF now controls Mt. Hermon and a very small, but very strategic high point and buffer zone along the Syrian border.
Israel (with the aid of the U.S.???) might be planning on attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities now that their regime has been weakened. Iranian opposition by the people to the Ayatollahs is growing stronger daily. We have o watch and pray over that whole situation.
In the meantime, as of the last time I checked Israel news (10 minutes ago), videos have emerged over Hamas driving openly around the streets of Gaza. They are waving their Palestinian flags and firing off guns as they hang off of pickup trucks and dance in the streets. No one has any idea of how this will end. Those of us in the North are relishing our “freedom” and trying to get as much done as possible before the ceasefire with Hizbulla ends on Thursday. I sincerely hope the IDF has destroyed most of their capabilities to launch missiles and drones I our direction.
Until,y next post, I ask you please, please to send me any notes of encouragement to the Wiseman family. They are precious people. I know it will mean a lot to them.
Look carefully at this photo. Look at this beautiful Israeli family from the village of Itamar in Samaria. Shortly before we made our first trip to Israel in 2011, two Palestinian terrorists broke into the village and brutally stabbed, shot and killed five members of the Fogel family in their beds. Udi and Ruth and three of their children, Yoav, 11; Elad, 4; and Hadas, 3 months old. They were murdered as they slept. 11 year old Tamar, who was spending the night at a friend’s house, found her family in pools of blood the next morning. The murderers, Amjad and Hakim Awad received life sentences for stealing weapons, breaking and entering, conspiracy to commit murder, murder. They expressed no remorse at their trial, proudly reenacting the entire scene.
This was my friend, Ari Fuld, 45, the most amazing person. He was always there to help answer questions about life in Israel after we made Aliyah. Many days, you would find him at the Western Wall or in the old city of Jerusalem, proudly giving tours and helping people to pray. He helped steer my son into the Foreign Relations department of the IDF, and was always available to help me adjust to being the mother of a soldier. Whenever I needed something or had a problem, Ari was always there finding a solution. Dubbed ‘The Lion of Zion,’ Ari was a bold advocate for Israel and the Jewish people. A strong reservist in the army. Husband. Father.
In 2018, while out shopping for his wife on a sunny Friday morning just before the High Holy Days, Ari was stabbed in the back, slicing through a main artery. Bleeding out profusely, he jumped up, chased the attacker over a small wall, and shot him moments before he could stab a lady on the sidewalk. Ari fell to the ground and died.
The 17 year old assassin, Khalil Ali Jabarin, was treated for gunshot wounds to the leg. He stood trial and was sentenced to life in prison.The Palestinian Authority pays Jabarin’s family $400/month for his service….its called Pay to Slay. If Jabarin had been killed in the attack, the family could be eligible for up to $3000/month.
The beautiful Dee family moved from London to Efrat, a Judaean city and suburb of Jerusalem. The family was on their way to a Passover vacation in Tiberias on the shores of the Sea of Galilee in 2023. Rabbi Dee was in one car with his son and daughter. Maia, 20 and Rina, 15, were traveling with their mother, Lucy, 48, in the other car. As they were driving through the Jordan Valley, the car was ambushed by terrorists who forced them off the road and into a ditch. The passengers were then shot point blank by gunmen. The girls died immediately. Lucy succumbed to her wounds in Hadassah Hospital three days later. Their assassins received life sentences.
478 days ago, Hamas terrorists by the thousands, followed by civilians of Gaza, broke into Israel – killing in cold blood, raping, looting, burning, taking back young women as sex slaves, kidnapping the youngest babies, elderly, men and women, Jew, Arab, Bedouin, foreign visitors to Israel. It did not matter. Altogether over 250 people were taken hostage. 101 are still held captive. Plus the body of IDF soldier Hadar Goldin taken in 2014; an Ethiopian youth, Avira Mengistu, (bipolar man who crossed over the border) in 2015; and Hisham al-Sayed, an agricultural worker who was abducted in 2016.
Of those 104 people kidnapped, we have no names of those that are still alive. We have no way of knowing exactly how many are still living and how many are dead. Everywhere one travels in Israel, are remembrances of the missing. Yellow chairs in a city square. Stickers plastered all over bus stops. Yellow flags waving from freeway overpasses. Posters on buildings and apartments. Empty table settings at IKEA. Placards with each victim’s name lining the people mover at the airport. And rows and rows of cars. Actual cars that have been bombed out with windows shot out from the Nova Music Festival from which scores of young people were abducted or killed. The cars, spray painted yellow, now line Highway 2, the coastal route, in stark memory of those still missing.
We want each and every hostage returned. Each life is important, from one year old Kfir Bibas to 86 year old Shlomi Mansour. We want them back, please G-d. But at what cost? Israel has just made a deal with the devil. After Hamas actually rejected hostage return deals eight times, Israel and Hamas late last night finally reached a ceasefire agreement.
Phase One of the deal has Hamas releasing 33 people. There will be a 42 day ceasefire. We don’t have a list of names yet. Or know whether they are alive or corpses. Supposedly they are to include the little children, women, elderly, female young women. It will happen over six weeks, with one small group of 3-4 being released a week. Israel will allow 600 more aid trucks into Gaza, plus the beginnings of reconstruction of their electrical grid and water/sewage systems. The IDF will withdraw to agreed upon boundaries. Everyone in Gaza will be allowed free passage back into the northern part of Gaza. There will be a complete dismantling of IDF military sites. In addition, Israel is to release over 1300 Palestinians terrorists. For every Israeli captive swapped, 30-50 prisoners who have beconvicted of terrorism would be set free (depending on whether they were traded for a live or dead body). The morals and ethics of this country state that no Israeli is left behind. Bringing the hostages back is crucial for the healing of our nation. But this is a way of rewarding Hamas and all terrorists around the world that are watching this unfold now. What are the long term consequences? How will Israel be able to prevent future acts of violence? This sets us up for future kidnappings down the road. It’s a dangerous precedent. The Hamas operatives have won and they know it. Already last night there were fireworks coming from some of the neighboring Arab villages. In Nablus, Ramallah, Gaza and in other places throughout the world were celebratory mobs calling for future martyrdom and the taking of all of Palestine at any cost.
Hamas was never pressured by the international community to make a complete surrender. They are still sending over missiles into Israel EVERY DAY. The media is not even mentioning that these released prisoners are actually terrorists with blood on their hands. Those above who were convicted and sentenced to life for brutal acts of murder. Traded for innocent civilians. Babies and grandparents dragged from their homes for over a year. The media is saying that the Gaza death toll is almost 50,000 – not even mentioning that most of them are actual terrorists.
For more than one year, both Palestinians and the international community has been screaming that the Gazan casualties are not proportional to 7 October. If this hostage deal does go through, how is that proportional? The mastermind of Hamas, Yahya Sinwar, was actually traded in a 2015 hostage swap. 1000 convicted prisoners were set free back into Gaza and the West Bank in exchange for Gilad Shalit. Many of these prisoners, now hailed as heroes, rose through the ranks of Hamas and Palestinian Islamic Jihad. They would go on to plan and carry out brutal stabbings, shootings, car rammings and the entirety of 7 October. This deal is a double edged sword for Israel.
What all this actually looks like, still remains to be seen. President elect Trump has vowed to work with Israel to ensure that Gaza “ never becomes a safe haven for terrorism.” Both Knesset members Ben Gvir and Smotrich say this is a bad deal and “dangerous from a national security checkpoint.” Foreign Minister Saar stated that they had to “choose between the bad and the very bad… but we have a commitment to free our brothers and sisters.” Literally, the devil is in the details, and there is still much that remains unresolved. It is being reported that Israeli authorities will not be allowed to re-arrest released prisoners on the same grounds they were originally convicted. Some will be deportees to Qatar, Iran and Turkey.
After a set time (2-3 weeks after the original ceasefire), the terms of Phase 2 will be negotiated. This will include complete cessation of all hostile operations. Another exchange of abductees (soldiers and males), a full IDF withdrawal and talks on reconstruction efforts (by whom and at whose expense?) There will be a following third stage where all bodies held (corpses) will be located and returned to Israel for interment. The fate of the strategic Philadelphi Corridor that runs between Gaza and Egypt.
The details must be finalized. There must be an approval by our Knesset and also our Supreme Court. We can only watch and wait for what is to come – and for who is allowed home. We will welcome our captives with open arms. I pray they and their loved ones will have a complete healing – emotionally, mentally and spiritually as well as physically.
The holiday season is over. Chanukah, Christmas, New Year’s celebrations throughout the western world have concluded. For us here in the North of Israel, it has been relatively quiet and peaceful, albeit rainy and cold. For the people in the center of the country it was another story altogether. It was their turn. Every. Single. Night. Between 11:15pm and 6:00am the Houthis in Yemen would launch an intercontinental ballistic missile at Israel. Red Alert sirens blared over large swaths of the country forcing men, women and children; Jew, Christian and Muslim; elderly and babies in their mothers’ arms into bomb shelters, safe rooms and stairwells. Fortunately most were intercepted by Iron Dome or David’s Sling.
Last month an elementary school in a highly populated central Israel city was demolished. Thankfully, it was during the night and no children were present. A kindergarten and its adjoining playground were also hit last month. Huge chunks of shrapnel fell in Jaffa, Beit Shemesh and on freeways, because what goes up must come down, s. even if it’s in pieces. There have been civilian injuries and casualties. Thank goodness, most injuries were minor and involved accidents running to protected areas.
In the Tel Aviv suburb (actually a large city) of Herzliya, an 83 year old woman was stabbed by a Palestinian terrorist who had crossed into Israel from the West Bank. The woman, a Holocaust survivor with her spider walker, was waiting outside her retirement home to be picked up for her appointment at the clinic. The terrorist was quickly neutralized by armed civilians. Yesterday, three people were killed on a major road in the West Bank (Samaria) that connected two Jewish populated cities. The bus they were on was gunned down by a Palestinian terrorist. Mostly, people here are trying to live as normally as possible.
As the New Year takes shape, there are two conversations that keep recurring. Will any of the hostages that Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad have kept for over a year be released? So far, Hamas has been playing psychological games with Israel and the media, saying they can’t locate all the hostages, refusing to release a list of names of those still alive, and offering to release dead bodies for live terrorists including those serving life sentences for masterminding heinous terror attacks.
Last week a video was released showing proof of life of Liri Albag, a young woman IDF soldier who was taken captive from her military base on the Gaza border on 7 October. Video had surfaced this past summer showing Liri among a group of other girls, all badly beaten and being selected for captivity as sex slaves for Hamas. It shook the nation to its core, and this latest video was supposed to put pressure on the Opposition party to unseat Netanyahu. We pray for her release, but remain resolute that our government is doing everything with8 their power to ensure safe release or rescue of all being held in Gaza.
The other topic of conversation up here in the North is, “What do you think will happen after the ceasefire ends?” The ceasefire between the Hizbulla forces in Lebanon and Israel is due to end on 24 January. It’s on everybody’s mind. In the meantime, the IDF has been rooting out terror tunnels, finding and capturing or destroying major amounts of stockpiled missiles, rocket launchers, guns, mortars, ammo. The IDF has filmed parking lots filled with military equipment from Iran, Russia…..and the US via Afghanistan that they have confiscated from enemy territory.
Have they found all the weapons meant for our destruction? Have the terrorists been routed? Will the UN Forces in Lebanon insure that any Hizbulla operatives will stay over the demarcation line across the Litani River (unlike last time)? Will it be safe enough for families and businesses to move back to the border communities? Over 43,000 are still displaced. Will the missiles start up again forcing us to take cover at all hours of the day and night? Only time will tell.
To our East, the Assad regime collapsed to Rebel Forces last month. Things are very uncertain in that direction now. Israel has been diligently conducting air strikes on all the weapons storage facilities in Syria for the last several weeks. They have discovered and destroyed chemical weapons labs as well as a huge underground facility for manufacturing missiles. Railways and highways used to transport weapons from Iran to Lebanon have been blown up. Israel does NOT want these armaments to fall into the wrong hands, so they are, in fact, making the world a safer place for everyone.
The new leader of Syria (they have not officially formed a government yet) is Ahmad al Sharah. But who is he? Does anyone know anything about him? He claims he wants peace. He says the Rebels harbor no ill will or may intent towards Israel or the Jewish people. They just want to live in peace. But who is this person, really? Can he be trusted? Doing some research, al Sharah joined al-Qaeda in Iraq and fought as an insurgent there from 20003-2006. In 2006, he was captured by 5e US Marines and imprisoned there as an enemy combatant until 2011. He w@s labeled as a “Specially Designated Global Terrorist” by the U.S. in 2013 and put on a no fly list. Under the Trump administration, al Sharah had a $10 million bounty put on his head. He was a vocal opponent of Israel’s control of the Golan Heights and advocated for the 1974 Disengagement Agreement where Israel would relinquish any and all territory won during the Yom Kippur War.
Since the al Nusra Rebel Forces have taken power, the Christian community of Maaloula, one of the oldest extant Christian communities in the world, has come under direct threat. Their Christmas celebrations were stopped, and armed rebels roamed the streets and looted holy sites including the Mar Thecla Monastery, a Melkite Greek religious and historical treasure. Statues of the Virgin Mary were shattered at Mar Sarkis Monastery and calls by the nuns for help from the Syrian army and the Orthodox Church have gone unanswered.
Also under threat are the several Syrian villages on the Northeast ridge/slope of Mt Heron. The southern ridge of Hermon was controlled by Israel until the Syrian army abandoned their posts on that northeast part, allowing the IDF to move in. Mt. Hermon (mentioned numerous times in the Bible) is the tallest point in Israel/Syria and thus, a military strong point from both a defensive and an intelligence gathering position. It forms borders with Lebanon, Syria and Israel and is the home to several Christian (Aramean and Melkite) and Druze villages. These villages of Christians and Druze have been pleading with Israel to be annexed into Israel. We have yet to see how that turns out. The Druze have pledged their allegiance to Israel and will make a strong, United fighting force against mal intended Rebels.
There is much to report from Gaza as well, but I shall save that for later.
This blog, Israel Dreams, started ten years ago to chronicle our lives as adventurers in a new country. Moving from the rather affluent suburbs of Los Angeles to the (then) rather sparsely populated periphery of Israel was an exciting endeavor fraught with joys, challenges and continual mishaps. We learned to laugh at our many mistakes, chalking it up as part of the journey. There were new places to discover; new people to meet; often a clash of cultures as we struggled to understand our new neighbors, both literally (it was a struggle for me to learn conversational Hebrew…. my husband pretty much gave up the battle….and my son grew so proficient that Israelis thought he was a native) and figuratively.
Israel Dreams has taken me on an exploration of archaeology, history, the Bible, the vast Roman Empire, Crusader and Ottoman periods, and modern times. I’ve shared about religions and customs that were new to me – the Druze, Baha’i, Circassians and Bedouins and even the various sects of Judaism, each with their own unique lifestyle. We’ve tried new foods, and my sharing of recipes has become quite popular. We’ve gone to art and music festivals together. Museums. National parks. Forests and beaches.
Together we have walked through my son’s military service and his university studies. Many of you, dear readers, have been with me through my cancer journey and my husband’s more intense cancer efforts journey. Our Hebrew vocabulary expanded with each new corner as I struggled to keep my head afloat understanding life as a soldier’s mom and as I navigated my way through the Israeli health care system.
And then, the worst hit. 7 October, 2023 changed all of Israelis’ lives forever. The Hamas massacre and the subsequent war in Gaza was followed by a more half-hearted attempted by Hizbulla in Lebanon to join the war. Our divided country was united. Together we will prevail became our national slogan. The war effort was in short order fully under way. My blog turned from fun feature articles and interviews with interesting people into full blown war coverage. It was non stop daily reporting, realizing much of the truth of the situation here on the ground was at very best, underreported, if not fully misrepresented by the larger press.
So, now I turn to you, my loyal readers and subscribers, some of you who have become dear friends. WHAT WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ? I could go on giving daily updates on military and political maneuvering? I could resume travels throughout the country to the best of our ability. The latest and more exciting archaeological uncoverings; interesting features on the people and their different cultures in this very diverse land; articles on religions and religious (Judaism, Christianity, Muslim, etc); daily life in a foreign land; nature and sites of exquisite natural beauty; food and recipes? The ins and outs of making Aliyah (becoming an Israeli citizen)? The increase in development and change in demographics in the past decade? The vast technological advances in this ‘Start Up Nation’? The choice is yours as the new year brings me to a crossroads.
Please drop me a quick line as to your preferences. I’d love to hear from you, either in the comments section or personally, for those who have my private contact info.
I appreciate each and every one of you. My audience is worldwide and diverse. You are loyal, supportive and thought provoking in your questions. I look forward to taking you with me through the next decade as I’ve transformed from a “new immigrant” to just “that American lady living in Israel😉.
A brief news recap for those who don’t get accurate coverage. Then Some more uplifting stories for Chanukah.
Last Friday it began with a Houthi missile striking and demolishing an elementary school in the center of Israel. Thank G-d it was around 4am and there was no one present. No injuries. For the past seven nights the Houthis have been firing missiles and launching explosive laden drones into the “Merkaz” – the fairly densely packed area between Beersheva to the south and Herzliya/Netanya to the north. It’s the name for the area all around Tel Aviv. 2:38am; 4:21 am; 3:18am; 2:02am; 1:37am millions of people running to bomb shelters, stairwells, safe rooms in fear of a direct hit or falling shrapnel. Thus far, there has been damage to buildings and 37 people injured, 1 critically. The IDF (with some US air support) have been fiercely striking back at Yemeni military targets, their port, their airport, and missile storage facilities. Two American fighter jets were downed by US friendly fire, but the pilots ejected over the Red Sea.
We are now celebrating the holiday of Chanukah, which commemorates the victory of the Maccabees (true Israeli Jewish freedom fighters) against the Seleucid (Greco-Syrian) army. Despite the Temple Mount being thoroughly trashed, the Jews rededicated it, and the last cruze of oil for the menorah supposed to last one day, burned for eight days until fresh oil could be brought in from the Galilee. Soldiers in Gaza, in Lebanon, on the top of Mount Hermon are lighting their chanukiyyas (lamps) and celebrating the Festival. Of Lights. Their spirits are high.
A soldier lights in GazaThe chanukiyyah atop Mt. HermonSoldiers in rehab kindle the first light An Iron Dome battery lights candle oneSoldiers in Lebanon celebrate the first light
In other IDF news, my American-Israeli friend, Noy Leyb, who is back here serving his fourth tour in Gaza, recently interviewed Shemesh B. Shemesh is a 66 year old reservist in the IDF currently fighting with his unit in Gaza. He has been in 5 wars and is still going strong. His main wish is to be able to defend his country in any way possible. Shemesh is a well-known national hero. His energy is unbounded as he is in for his third term in this war alone. Shemesh is an absolute inspiration to all the troops, decades younger than he. His message and prayer for Israel and the world: ”Am Yisrael Chai,” the People of Israel Live… and happiness peace and light for the whole world.” As an aside, Shemesh in Hebrew means sun, and he truly embodies this for his entire battalion.
Noy and Shemesh
Agam Berger, a 20 year old IDF soldier, was serving on the Nahal Oz base right on the border with Gaza. She was shown in that horrible video of the girls being selected for kidnapping and taken into captivity. They are all bloodied and bruised and still wearing their pajamas. Agam, from an Orthodox family, is an accomplished violinist, who, before her service had won many competitions. She desired to study music and become a concert violist before being taken hostage on 7 October. Agam has a twin sister, who was also in the army. After her sister was kidnapped, she was given the option to leave her service with an honorable discharge but chose to stay. This past week, she became a commanding officer. Kol ha Kavod, way to go! The entire family is praying for her return.
Four of our young IDF heroes who were critically wounded in battle against the Hamas terrorists had to fight to live. Amital, Roee, Ariel and Ari lost both their legs. Ari also lost his right hand and several fingers from his left hand. They have been in rehab together, and have become fast friends. Their spirit is indomitable. All have been fit with prosthetic legs. They enjoy boxing and plan to become paraolympians. Roee is engaged to be married this March.
Tamir Hershkovitz lost both his parents in the massacre at KibbutzBe’eri. The family home was destroyed, a total loss. Sifting through the piles of rubble, only one item remained – the menorah. Two nights ago Tamir returned to his home to light the family menorah in their memory for the first night of Chanukah. Am Yisrael chai.
There was a huge miracle at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem on the first day of. Hanukah. exactly one month before, policewoman Hodaya (Hebrew for giving thanks) Halperin, 26, was shot in the head while on duty in Jerusalem. Part of a rescue team made up of firemen, a SWAT team, and suicide prevention specialists, they were responding to reports of an armed suicidal man who had barricaded himself behind his door. Immediately before responding by breaking the man’s door down, she told her colleague, “You’re getting married in a month, I’ll go upstairs.” Hodaya underwent several head and brain surgeries over the past month. Seconds later, she was down. She remained unconscious and in critical condition until yesterday when she woke up, fully conscious. She is communicating with medical staff and family. The hospital is describing her recovery as nothing short of a miracle.
I just got this next story from Shai Davidai, the Columbia University professor, recently fired for his outspokenness about the pro-Gaza protests on campus. He is here with his family in Israel for Chanukah. Shai shared with us the recipe for a maple cake that was a favorite sweet Hadar Rosenfeld Berdichevski made for her family.Hadar and her husband, Itai, both 30 and new parents of 10 month old twins, were trapped inside their home on Kibbutz Nahal Oz when Hamas invaded on 7 October, 2023. She made the brave decision to hide the babies in their bomb shelter and go out with her husband to fight off the terrorists who had entered their home. Both were killed, and 18 hours later the IDF found the boys. The twins, now 14 months old, are being raised by Hadar’s sister sand brother-in-law, who also have 3 small children of their own.
This Chanukah, in their memory, make Hadar’s recipe. As Shai suggested, make it with your family, with your kids in celebration of everyday heroism. Let’s remember those everyday heroes that have been lost and that are with us today. Let us celebrate this holiday season with light and life. Let us not forget to remember the miracles and give thanks- Shabbat Shalom
Hadar Berdichevski’s Maple Cake
Ingredients:
1 1/4 cup self rising flour
1 1/4 cup sugar
200 g sour cream (4/5 cup)
3 eggs
1/2 cup oil
Maple syrup for pouring over cake
Optional: chocolate chips or chopped walnuts
Preheat oven to 180*C/350*F. Grease a loaf pan and set aside. Mix all the ingredients except syrup together in a large bowl. Pour batter into loaf pan. Bake for 20-30 minutes. Remove pan from oven when cake tester comes out clean. Let cool 10 minutes. Remove from pan. Pour maple syrup all over and around warm cake.
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.
It’s hard to believe that just last week we were running to find safe spots to get out of the range of falling missiles and shrapnel several times a day/night. Last night I slept for 9 hours straight, a record for the past year. Not complaining, but the traffic here is absolutely unbelievable Who’da thought our small highways would ever resemble Southern California’s gridlocked freeways?
It seems that everyone, absolutely everyone, is out and about. I had not realized how much this war has affected people. It reminds me of the days immediately following the lockdowns of 2020/2021. Schools are fully in session in person for the first time this school year. The stores are packed. The movie theatres, restaurants and cafes are full. Hiking trails? Oh my goodness, don’t even think about being alone in nature at this time!
Our friend Romi, an engineer in the northern border town of Shlomi, last week went to work in his office for the first time in almost one year. It had suffered from indirect hits and shrapnel. Windows were shattered, walls spattered with holes. His 3D printer was majorly damaged…. Many people are going to the little towns and villages just to see the damage incurred. Some are viewing homes and communities for the first time, and from what my neighbor told us, security guards must let you through (proof of living/working there required). A few communities right up against the border are still occupied and guarded by the IDF because it’s still technically a dangerous war zone.
In the first four days of the ceasefire, there have been mortars and grenades hurled at Israeli soldiers from Har Dov on the Lebanese side. Hizbulla operatives were seen in a no-go zone on the first day. They had returned to regroup, but were immediately arrested. A drone from Lebanon that entered Israeli territory was shot down by Iron Dome. There have been other major infractions, but the IDF has immediately responded by firing on the perpetrators from the air. And so it goes. Obladee obladah.
Now that things are a little more quiet, I can share with you the recipes so many of you have said you missed. For starters, it has become a tradition that every year when the Jewish people read the part in the Bible where the story of Esau selling his birthright for a bowl of lentil soup/stews, I share a new lentil recipe. This year, it’s amazing!!
I was first introduced to this bowl of deliciousness by our friend, Marc. It’s called SHALVATO (shall VAH’ toe). It is a staple and comfort food throughout the Middle East. Every culture and person seems to have their own version of this dish. It’s basically a grain and tomato recipe, very simple. The Druze add zucchini. The Lebanese use barley. Some Jewish people from Syria and Yemen now add chunks of fatty meat. It’s similar to the Sephardic/Mizrachi Shabbat Hamim, or the Ashkenaz Cholent, but way better, and vegan. Shalvato can be eaten as a side dish or just enjoyed by the bowlful. It’s so easy to make, and is becoming a favorite in this house. This recipe is from Rami Kahan, but I’ve made a few changes…. Try it this winter. Get ready to fall in love-
SHALVATO
serves 6. Vegan
Ingredients:
1/2 cup barley
1 can small red lentils (or 3/4 cup dried red lentils)
2 cups boiling water (more if using dried lentils)
2 large meaty tomatoes chopped (Roma are good)
1 large onion, chopped
4 garlic cloves, chopped
1/2 cup mushrooms, chopped
2 large TBSP (22BX) tomato paste
1 15 oz. can (I use a small bottle of Muti polpa) tomatoes, chunks
Olive oil
1/2 tsp cumin
2 tsp baharat/Rambam spice (see recipe below)
Salt, pepper
Baharat recipe: (makes about 1/4 cup) This is a highly aromatic, warm spice blend popular throughout the MidEast. Great addition to meats, soups and stews as well as veggies…. Mix it all well and store in an airtight jar.
2 TBSP cumin
1 TBSP coriander
1 tsp cardamom
1 1/2 tsp sweet paprika
1/2 tsp black pepper
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1/2 tsp ground cinnamon
1/2 tsp ground cloves
1/4+ tsp ground nutmeg (I always put a bit more)
In a large bowl pour boiling water over barley and let sit for an hour or more until til all liquid is absorbed. In the meantime, in a large skillet, heat oil until shimmery. Add in onions, garlic and mushrooms. Sauté over medium- high heat until transparent. Stir in the Baharat spice blend and stir about 1 minute until fragrance is released. Pour in the tomato chunks with liquid as well as your chopped fresh tomato. Mix together over medium-high heat about 2-3 minutes. Add in the canned lentils (if using dried lentils, they must be rehydrated and softened in boiling water like the barley). Mix well. Add in the barley. Mix well. Stir in salt and pepper and additional cumin to taste. Lower heat to simmer, and cover. Let flavors blend, stirring occasionally, about 1 hour. Serve hot. This can also be made in a crockpot on low for Shabbat. Seriously good enough to trade your birthright for….almost.
This is the basic. I play around and add in what I have on hand
CHOPPED AUTUMN SALAD
Serves 4. Vegetarian (dairyor meat, ifdesired)
With all the heavy winter meals and for some of us who just finished Thanksgiving and are looking to lighten up before the next round of holidays, this is a great meal. Nutritious, filling, easy, versatile and seasonal. You can add the cheese (or not), or add in grilled chicken of steak slices (or not). Adjust to suit your palate and pantry. Another staple in our house-
Ingredients:
Choice of lettuces (try some arugula and leafy reds and dark greens)
2-3 beets, roasted, peeled, cubed
1 sweet potato or pumpkin, peeled, cut into cubes, roasted until tender
1/2 cup cooked, cooled quinoa or bulgur
1 red apple
1 green apple
1 small red onion, sliced
1 large stalk celery, cut up
1/3 cup nuts (walnuts, pecans, pumpkin seeds, toasted)
1/3 cup dried cranberries
1/4 cup blue cheese (optional)
1-2 roasted chicken breasts, sliced (optional)
Leftover steak, sliced (optional)
Vinaigrette:
1 TBSP sherry vinegar
1/4 cup good extra virgin olive oil (EVOO)
1 1/2 tsp Dijon mustard
1 TBSP lemon juice
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 tsp pepper
So, when we were in Venice for 2 1/2 days, we were smart and economical. Instead of spending a couple hours at an expensive sit-down restaurant, we ate like the locals. I’d heard about this, and the experience was so amazing and so absolutely delicious, we ate at cichetti bars (chick EH tee) lunch, afternoon snack, dinner, late night snack and second breakfast. All were incredibly out-of this world gourmet fantabulous…..and incredibly cheap. They are eaten to go. Pick your plate and take out your food to eat at an outdoor table Each cichetto ran 1-2€ a piece, so the whole meal would be about €15 for the two of us.
I had a list of several places I’d wanted to try, so after a museum, we’d find a cichetti bar. They are literally little bars the locals frequent. You can get a glass of very good red or white wine for 2-3€. Go up to the glass vitrina or counter and pick out your cichetti, or little bites. Often open faced sandwiches (baccala/creamed cod, pumpkin and Gorgonzola, herbed creamed cheese with pickled radish, fired rice balls, savor/sardines in a flavorful onion, raisin, pine nut sauce, fried artichoke hearts, tapenades and sun dried tomato pastes and pestos with cheeses on baguettes) the combinations were endless! Some of my favorites were the fig and Gorgonzola on a thick toasted cracker; the roasted beet slice with a dollop of buratta/mozzarella ball and a splash of balsamic on baguette; the toast with a sautéed mushroom and onion reduction; the baccala (now I understand Rosemary Clooney’s “Hey Mambo!”); and give me ANYTHING pumpkin!!
The world of Venetian fast food to-go: an epicurean delight!
We’ve been eating my own version of these tapas like bites since we came home. It’s a great way to be creative with the leftovers. One of my staples is the “pickled” shallots, which can be served as a base for chopped cucumber and tomato drizzled with olive oil, or a slice of cold cut, or a piece of hard cheese. Easy and delicious!
“PICKLED” ONIONS
I found out everyone in Venice used Cippolini onions. They are sweet and mild, but I can’t find them anywhere in Israel, so I use shallots. It works just as well.
Ingredients:
1 cup thinly sliced cippolini onions or shallots
2 TBSP sea salt or 1 1/2 tsp table salt
1/2 tsp oregano
3 TBSP extra virgin olive oil
Mix all together in a bowl. Refrigerate and use within 4-5 days. Serve on sandwiches or as a base for the little bites.
I really do not want to be writing this the day before Thanksgiving with so much else to do. First: thank you all for your blessings and congratulations on our anniversary. May we have another 40! Second: to those who said we could come back to California and have a safe place to stay and for those who have repeatedly urged us to move back to the States, please understand that this is our home. We HAVE decided this is where we will spend our days until/unless the voice of the L-rd deep down inside our spirits tells us otherwise.
Third: this particular blogpost is written mostly for those who have reached out over the past 24 hours to tell us that they are so happy there is finally peace. That the ceasefire is an answer to prayer. That now we can live in relative quiet. I do not want to be patronizing, but the situation is very complex. It is not a peace deal. You are witnessing a game of 4-D chess played out by very cunning world leaders.
Last month, Prime Minister Netanyahu and Defense Minister of Israel, Yoav Gallant, were issued arrest warrants by the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity and for orchestrating a genocide. These two charges are absolutely false. Nevertheless, several world leaders including French President Macron gave statements saying the two would definitely be arrested if they ever set foot on French territory.
President Biden, also, is no fan of Israel, despite what you might read or hear on the news. We have endured numerous ceasefires and pauses in Gaza to our detriment. Arms shipments, contracted for, paid for, promised, have not been delivered to Israel in the middle of a war on seven fronts. Hostages have not been returned. In his last days of the presidency, Biden, in need of a foreign policy win to secure his legacy and to save it from the other disasters his administration has created, has carefully orchestrated a no-win scenario for Netanyahu.
In 2016, in the remaining weeks of the Obama administration, sanctions were passed against Israel. $6 billion was handed over to Iran, the head of the snake in the Middle East, and essentially a green light was given by the United States for Iran to develop its nuclear (weapons) capabilities. It created a very dangerous situation, and led to the arming and build-up as well as the emboldening of all Iranian terror proxies surrounding Israel.
Again, Israel is being held up against a wall, essentially being forced into a ceasefire. If Netanyahu did not agree to the deal, there were many possible scenarios that could have been taken. Biden threatened to introduce a resolution to the UN Security Council to sanction Israel unless they agreed to the ceasefire. The US is the sole veto vote in favor of Israel on the Security Council, so bringing a resolution against Israel would necessarily pass. No arms at all would be given to us. Extreme economic boycott of Israel would result. If it did come to that, the UN would unilaterally agree to create a separate Palestinian state on Israeli territory. The capital, Jerusalem, would be divided up, with the Palestinian capital set up there. These are orders that are irreversible on the world stage, in essence making Israel a pariah among nations. This is no exaggeration, nor is it conjecture. These are themes that have been rehashed over and over on the negotiations tables of the world.
To further ensure this, just this morning, the UN dismissed Alice Nderitu, its special advisor on genocide, for disagreeing that there is an Israeli caused genocide happening in Gaza. “ Beyond Ms. Nderitu’s fate, the damage here includes defining genocide down. The word has become a weapon of political propaganda that will erode its moral authority when it’s needed to describe genuine horrors.” -The Wall Street Journal Editorial Board. Nderitu, an accomplished mediator and negotiator, has served at the UN since 2020. She explained in a paper and address at the UN that while the conflict has caused significant loss of life, Israel’s actions aim to dismantle a terrorist regime, not to exterminate an ethnic group. She noted that the IDF has made great effort to minimize civilian casualties, while Hamas uses civilians as human shields. She clashed with Secretary General Guterres’ narrative and was fired. This puts Israel in an even more precarious situation.
Now to the ceasefire agreement. The carrot on the stick was that the necessary arms… more Iron Dome defensive missiles, ammunition, bulldozers would finally be delivered. Israel, fighting a multi front war, is currently running very low on ammunition. 89% of Israelis polled by the TimesofIsrael yesterday stand United against
this ceasefire agreement . That is an overwhelming majority of the population. Over 19,500 missiles and rockets have been fired at northern Israel from Lebanon since 8 October, 2023. Approximately 190 million square meters of land have been burned due to Hizbulla rockets and drones. Over 200 Israelis have been injured and 115 Israelis have been killed on the northern front, of which 42 were civilians hit by rocket fire and shrapnel. Over 86,000 Israelis have now been displaced from northern Israel due to ongoing Hizbulla missile and drone attacks. Approximately 9,000 buildings and 7,000 cars have sustained some sort of damage, 1,000 of which have sustained serious damage, This is a war that was not started by Israel. Yet Israel was on the cusp of victory with Hizbulla. Perfect timing to declare a ceasefire- when full victory is within reach.
Since the surge by the IDF into Lebanon this past October, numerous terror tunnels have been found deep underground. It was discovered that Hizbulla and the IRGC were planning an imminent invasion of the North very similar to the Gaza invasion of Israel. The plan was up to massacre as many people as possible and overtake all the cities to Haifa. They held the threat of 200,000+ missiles aimed not only at places in the North, but also ICBMs that could reach to Tel Aviv and beyond. The threats were not just perceived, but real.
Israel had been dismantling the entire terror structure within Lebanon. Weapons caches and rocket launchers have been found, photographers, categorized and destroyed. Hideouts and tunnels blown up. In southern Lebanon, once a Maronite Christian area, now taken over by terror groups, whole villages containing armaments, weapons manufacturing facilities, rocket launchers, and terror tunnels, have been demolished. The head of Hizbulla, Nazralla, was elaminated along with scores of top-level operatives. Just yesterday, Israeli troops reached the Litani River, which was where Hizbulla was supposed to be contained according to UN Resolution 1701. The IDF troops conducted extensive raids on Hizbulla strongholds, uncovering and destroying dozens of rocket launchers, hundreds of rockets and weapons depots hidden in the mountains there. Over the past year, many IDF soldiers gave their lives to mitigate the terror that put civilian lives at risk.
All throughout yesterday afternoon and late into the early morning hours, Hizbulla bombarded Israel indiscriminately into the North, into the center of Israel and Tel Aviv, all along the coast, and into the West Bank communities and communities towards Israel’s Eastern border. Sirens were going off constantly as drones and missiles whizzed overhead. Booms rattled the homes and the land putting residents on edge. Most schools in the North had been closed since October, classes being held by Zoom. Residents of the North were warned by Home Front Command to stay indoors in shelters. The terrorists to the North were trying to get off their last payloads before any deal could be agreed upon. Israel responded by striking their weapons depots and headquarters in Beirut suburbs after giving 20 minute evacuation warnings. Myriad of Air Force sorties deep into Lebanon and the Bekaa Valley targeted terrorists and their hideouts.
Yesterday, the Israeli Security Cabinet voted on a joint U.S./French initiated ceasefire agreement with Hizbulla. The deal set a 60 day pause on all hostilities between Israel and Hizbulla. The IDF will remain in southern Lebanon for 60 days gradually pulling back to the Israeli border. The Lebanese army (not Hizbulla or IRGC or terror groups) and UNFIL will take over the IDF sites, patrol and guard. These two entities were put in place in 2006 by resolution 1701 to ensure that Hizbulla operatives would not come near the Israeli border in the 6 mile buffer zone. It was a total failure. Both parties stood idly by as the terror organizations became entrenched in southern Lebanon. So much for lasting security, as it was never enforced. So why trust these peacemakers now?
According to the deal, there will be no border buffer zone in southern Lebanon, meaning the residents of southern Lebanon will be free to return to their homes up to the border with Israel. The real danger here is that Hizbulla and IRGC operatives will take off their uniforms, dress as civilians and enter in to retrench, regather, and rearm. Just five minutes ago I checked my news feeds. Despite IDF warnings advising Lebanese civilians against returning to the villages during the early stages of ceasefire, live television footage shows insurgents and Hizbulla operatives driving in the town of Khiam near an IDF tank. This is less than 1 mile from Israel’s border near the Israeli town of Metulla. Warning shots were fired by IDF and a report has been filed, but so far nothing has been done. Insurgents have been filmed mocking the ceasefire and taking selfies near the manned Israeli tank. This is preposterous!
From their livestream just a few minutes ago-
The Lebanese government (without an elected leader forover two years now) is to oversee all arms purchases and production, meaning terror groups will not be able to have access to new weapons. This is a weak government at best, who, in the past, has succumbed to Iranian bribes and threats and has allowed for a Shi’ite takeover of a once strong Christian government. Israel is to expect them to be able to control the flow or production of arms to their soldiers only? Think about this….
The US will head the international body overseeing the deal’s implementation and France will also sit on this panel.
A side letter between Israel and the United States reads that Israel has the right to act whenever it sees an immediate threat from Lebanon and can enforce the ceasefire if Lebanon and the international forces fail to do so. If Hizbulla violates the agreement by moving south of the Litani River, Israel is to notify the international oversight committee regarding the nature of the violation, The language is quite ambiguous as to who will then do what and when.
There are separate agreements between Israel and the United States; France and Lebanon; Lebanon and Hizbulla and Iran, Hizbulla, France and the US. Worked into this ceasefire deal are also secondary agreements between the Shi’ite Muslims, the Christians and the Druze communities in Lebanon. There are so many parts and little details to uphold, that no way in hell can this be truly monitored.
This war cannot end until Israelis feel safe to return to their homes, businesses and communities near the Lebanese border without the threat of attack, invasion, or missile strikes. Mayors of the border cities as well as the IDF soldiers that are serving in Lebanon are absolutely furious over this agreement for ceasefire. It is a deal that is doomed for failure, at least where Israel is concerned.
There are those that say it is just for 60 days, that Netanyahu and the government are just biding their time until Trump can come on the scene January 20. In the meantime, Turmp is being closely monitored himself. He can have no communication on foreign policy or with foreign leaders according to the provisions of the Logan Act. There can be no prior negotiations before he takes office. His hands are tied until he is inaugurated. I can only hope the team he has assembled, which appears to be very pro-Israel, will let us finish the job of rooting our evil to be able to restore peace to the region for both Israeli and innocent Lebanese civilians.
The only path forward for Israel is to assert national sovereignty. It must not be swayed by nor dependent on foreign entities for approval or for military aid. Israel must learn to develop its own weapons and rely on the strength of its own military and government, fighting its own battles, setting its own borders. For now, we wait cautiously. We pray that by this appeasement we will have at least some favor in our push in Gaza and in negotiations to get the 101 remaining hostages back. It is a tenuous period.
An acknowledgment to Dalya who pointed out my mistake in yesterday’s blog about the antisemitic violence in Chicago. I will issue a full correction in my next blog…until now, my pumpkin pie and sweet potatoes are calling me back into the kitchen.
I figured all was pretty much copacetic, so on Saturday night I took a sleeping pill. It’s been ages since I’d had a really good sleep. And it worked. I was completely knocked out…
Until about 06:00 Sunday morning when our dog, Haggis, and my husband, John, bounded out of the bed almost simultaneously in one huge leap. Whaaaa??? Wwhaaaat iiiis iiitttt?? What’s going on? What the????? Off in the distance, then in all the communities surrounding us, sirens were blaring. Red alerts. Incoming. I didn’t hear it in our neighborhood so I stayed snuggled in bed with the covers pulled up. John and Haggie, followed by our housemate, Marc, ran into the mammad.The loud crashing booms started sounding around us. But it did not come near our house this time.
There had been talks of a ceasefire between Israel and Hizbulla in Lebanon for the past week. Some way to start off a ceasefire, a present to the outgoing American administration for all their hard work. The whole screen on my phone was lighting up red like my over-eager California neighbors who would hang up all their Christmas lights the week before Thanksgiving. It was shortly followed by large volleys of missiles towards central Israel.
Our good friends in Petach Tikvah, Yarden & Vera, were having a Brit Milah (Jewish circumcision ritual) and party for their eight day old son at 11:00. We had talked about making the hour-and-a-half trip outside Tel Aviv, but once the rockets started flying, we quickly decided against it. Besides, John would be taking Marc to the airport for his return flight later that evening. No use making two long runs in the same day. The rest of the day was spent watching Israel dodge bullets… or not.
One 71 year old lady was pulled from her car in Petach Tikvah after shrapnel hit. She was taken to the hospital in serious, but stable condition. Two homes and and apartments sustained direct hits and were totaled. Praise the L-rd Israel invests in bomb shelters. Over 250 missiles were launched into the country by noon.
The remains? of a home in Petach Tikvah after the missile hit
By late afternoon, the number had climbed to nearly 350 rockets fired at Israel. There were no serious injuries from those. An apartment in Haifa across the street from our friend, Elena, was hit badly later in the afternoon. Lots of calls for treating anxiety. Again, no serious injuries. 14 total reported, mostly shock and light shrapnel wounds. John and Marc rather fearlessly headed to Ben Gurion International and I stayed home.
The Haifa view across the street from Elena’s apartment window. Hizbulla missile direct impact.
So far, the war just in the North of Israel has cost 5 billion shekels or approximately $1.35 billion in damages and counting. This includes 1.5 billion shekels in direct property damage and 4 billion from the loss of agriculture and business. The government has already disbursed 2 billion shekels to those suffering losses.
It hasn’t been a very good week for world Jewry. Last week in Chicago, an Orthodox Jewish man was killed as he walked home from synagogue. A young Israeli man, Aviv Broek, 26, from Rehovot completed his army service and moved to Memphis, Tennessee to pursue his dream as a singer/ songwriter. He was working as a locksmith, when he was lured to a job site, then robbed and killed. A hate crime is suspected.
Photo courtesy Israel Hayom
Also last week, a Chabad Rabbi Tsvi Kogan, age 28, working in Dubai, UAE, as an emissary, went missing. He was reported missing by his wife, Rivka, last Wednesday. On Sunday, his body was later found, murdered, in Oman. Iran, the IRGC, at first had taken responsibility for the planning, then retracted a few hours later. It was noted that his car received a speeding ticket on its way to Oman on Thursday. Complaints were made to the Abu Dabi and the Dubai police, but nothing was done until Israeli Foreign Minister, Gideon Saar stepped in to put pressure on the government of UAE.
Three people from Uzbekistan were arrested after they had fled to Turkey. There had been signs of struggle in the car with blood and DNA left behind. The body was flown back to Israel by ZAKA, to receive a proper burial. Ironically, Kogan was the nephew of the rabbi and his wife who were murdered by terrorists in Mumbai a few years ago.
Enough with all the bad news. Proposals and weddings are still taking place throughout Israel, even during wartime, we have been invited to yet another wedding next month. Babies are being born. My next door neighbor is in labor and we just can’t wait to see their little girl. The temperature here has taken a rapid nosedive from into the low 40*sF at night and upper 50*sF during the day. It’s beginning to feel rather autumnal. The down comforter and flannel PJs are now out, and I am free to lounge around all day in my pjs without feeling immodest. YeeeeHah!
Many American Israelis are getting ready to celebrate Thanksgiving. Two of our celebrations were canceled, but then our friends in Tiberias begged us to bring Thanksgiving dinner over to their family on Thursday. Not realizing how much trouble this is (the husband is for the States, the wife from India, and all four kids are Israeli born), I opted for them all to come here. Then on Shabbat, we are having a very quiet Thanksgiving/Shabbat dinner with our neighbors down the street coming over. So it’s been a busy morning chopping, dicing, sautéing. I’m glad I brought back cans of pumpkin ion my suitcase last October. Three pies down, two to go. My neighbors will come home from the hospital and get a complete Thanksgiving dinner of turkey, cranberry sauce and relish and stuffing/dressing with sweet potatoes and all the goodies.
Next week, I will share with you three of my new favorite recipes, so watch out for that. One I learned from Italian friends, and John and I have been enjoying it since we got back. The other, an absolutely magnificent and easy chicken dish, is from the mother of a Lone Soldier. And the last will be my yearly lentil share… from the Middle East. It should be a fun break from turkey.
Until then, have a lovely holiday if you celebrate, and let us pray for the release of those still held captive I. Gaza, all 101 of them. And for a peaceful rest of the week.
John and I have returned from a much-needed vacation and celebration of our 40th anniversary. We left our house for Italy under multiple volleys of missiles and returned to Israel last Wednesday. Our trip, although physically grueling, was glorious. We rented a car in Milan and drove to Lake Como, Mantua (medieval city, Mantegna frescoes), Padua, Venice (museums, opera house, St Mark’s Cathedral, sunset gondola ride, Jewish quarter), Ravenna (4th century mosaics!!!), Florence, Siena, Tuscany, Arezzo, Ptigliano (medieval city carved from rock on a cliff and “little Jerusalem-“ haven to Italy’s persecuted Jews in the 1500s), Lucca (home to Puccini), San Gimignano, Assisi, Pompei, Herculaneum, Paestum (entire Greek city from 500 BC with 3 huge and beautiful Greek temples in the Doric order), the Amalfi Coast (spectacularly gorgeous and makes the Big Sur Drive in California look like chump change) and Rome where I finally gave up the ghost and couldn’t walk no further. All-in-all, we had a fantastic time.
Cortina, ItalyStar Wars reenactment on Lake ComoMantegna frescoes in the Ducal Palace, MantuaSunset gondola ride on the Venice CanalsThe mosaics at Ravenna, a UNESCO world heritage site Empress Theodocia mosaic in RavennaMedieval cities in TuscanyThe old synagogue in PtiglianoBeautiful matzahBotticelli nativity in FlorenceBrancacci Chapel, FlorenceSienaSanta Croce, FlorenceIncredible frescoes in Siena DuomoTime for a beer at the artisan fair in San GimignanoThe peaceful Tuscan countrysideSiena at night Arezzo antiques fair was stupendous (another suitcase!)Puccini House & Museum in LuccaGiotto frescoes in AssisiTraveling off season, we often had whole towns to ourselvesTemple to Poseidon in PaestumPosition on the Amalfi CoastRomantic ItalyAmalfi CoastLa Fenice Opera HouseVenice at nightFunghi!!!The gorgeous produce!Mantua
While in Italy, we traveled on our American passports. When anyone asked, we told them we were from California, outside of Los Angeles. It’s not a lie. Several times we met up with these dear, sweet British sisters. First in Florence at a museum, then in Siena and finally in Lucca. They asked us to join them for tea in Lucca, and we gladly obliged. We shared stories of England and Scotland travel d told them we had two children living there. It was all quite pleasant. After a while, I explained to them that we had moved to the Holy Land and were living in Galilee. They wanted to know about the war, having heard about occupation, Israeli aggression against Christians and basically….you know….the genocide and humanitarian disaster. They really were not at all interested in hearing our side, because…you know…the BBC does not lie.
We decided not to tell anyone else. The last week of the trip, there were extreme anti-Semitic, anti-Israeli pogroms against Israeli football spectators in Amsterdam. Riots. Destruction of Jewish property. ElAl airlines had to charter two special planes to bring the fans back home. Then there were shake-ups against Jewish people in France. We got texts on our phones from the Israeli State Department to not visit certain countries, and if warranted, to not look so visibly Jewish (wear a baseball cap or other hat rather than a kipa. Tuck in Jewish jewelry. Hide tsitsit (men’s prayer fringes). John and I ran into no trouble and continued to enjoy ourselves.
So, was I surprised when I saw the European coverage of the news? Not horribly. Anything concerning the Middle East was decidedly one sided and pro-Palestinian/Hamas /Hezbulla. They were always the victims, and there was no talk of attacks towards Israel. Neither was there mention of any humanitarian efforts in Gaza on behalf of Israel. The only time we saw anything to do with the 101 remaining hostages was when we went to the Venice and Rome Jewish ghetto areas and in Ptigliano, little Jerusalem. The good news: until we got to Rome, there were no pro-Hamas protestors or Palestinian and Hizbulla flags.
We had a lovely welcome home shortly after we returned to Israel. Ben Gurion Airport was shut down temporarily due to heavy missile fire. We just made it to baggage claim and were able to reach a safe space. On the way back to our city in the North, we had three sirens and had to stop: once under a bridge; then beside the road we had to get out of the car (there was no way I was going to lay down on the ground, hands protecting my head); and inside a tunnel.
Since being back, we’ve had a couple more missile barrages here and many in the towns neighboring us, especially towards Akko and Haifa. A kindergarten in Akko suffered a direct hit by rocket yesterday. Thankfully all the children and teachers were safe in their protected areas.
We’ve learned to go about our regular business with a little prayer under our lips unless there is a warning siren in our immediate area. Then we proceed swiftly and calmly to the nearest protected space. Several of our friends are afraid to venture out anywhere and all the local businesses are suffering greatly. We had plans to get together with another couple families for Thanksgiving, but the couple doesn’t have a safe room big enough for everyone, so it was cancelled. We have offered to have our friends from Tiberias over with us, but they are too afraid to drive any ‘far’ distance.
In the past two and a half months, there have been several direct strikes on homes and apartments both in our city and in neighboring communities. Two yesterday alone. Despite the fact that civilian population centers are targeted, there have only been a handful of deaths, but quite a few injuries. This is miraculous. Most missiles on the trajectory to land in populated spaces are intercepted by Iron Dome (right over our house). It’s the falling shrapnel that is so dangerous. After a strike, our mayor has teams that go out to each neighborhood to check on the local population and to pick up any pieces that have fallen from the sky.
I’m hoping that next week I can resume some more upbeat news and features. I’ve collected a few amazing recipes both in Italy and here. I just can’t wait to share them with you…. I took a little cooking class in Tuscany. In the meantime, have a relaxing weekend and our prayer is for cooler heads to prevail among the worlds’ current leaders. Shabbat shalom!