When I made myself think about the upsurge in Jew hate rather than just responding emotionally, everything changed
styofa doing anything

Discoholic đȘ©

No title available
noise dept.

oozey mess

â
TVSTRANGERTHINGS
hello vonnie

blake kathryn
art blog(derogatory)
Sweet Seals For You, Always
i don't do bad sauce passes

pixel skylines

No title available

JBB: An Artblog!

shark vs the universe
DEAR READER
I'd rather be in outer space đž
Aqua Utopiaïœæ”·ăźćșă§èšæ¶ă玥ă

#extradirty
seen from TĂŒrkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
@frisrael
When I made myself think about the upsurge in Jew hate rather than just responding emotionally, everything changed
Our minds are being weaponized in the war against the Jews. This is a look behind the curtain of the propaganda machine â how it operates, how it manipulates perception, and how repeated narratives are transformed into accepted reality. Once you understand the mechanism, it begins to lose its power over you.
Ceasefire: that word doesn't mean what you think it does
Weâre not speaking the same language. When Westerners say âceasefire,â they imagine the cessation of violence as the beginning of peace and goodwill. In Arabic, the word âhudnaâ is translated to English as âceasefire,â but the meaning is very different. Hudna is a temporary pause in fighting, to rest, rearm, and regroup so that fighting can continue later more successfully. A hudna can lastâŠ
What Israelis usually donât say about the bomb shelter experienceâŠ
hia missiles don't differentiate between Sunni and Jew - but shared suffering does not create shared loyalty, goals or ideals. The subject of Arab Israelis in Israel's war for survival is a very touchy one most people prefer to pretend isn't an issue. But it is.
You have no idea how long it takes to put on socks
How long does it take you to get dressed in the morning? When you are fast asleep, and the air raid siren goes off, you have to detach from your dream, gain your bearings, and hit the ground running to get to safety as fast as possible. How long does that take? In this war, we sometimes have the âprivilegeâ of advanced warning. About 10 minutes. Thatâs for the horrifyingly enormous missilesâŠ
Jews have a habit of apologizing for things we shouldn't. This is my response to the haters on the left and the right who accuse Israel of dragging America into this war.
Before we win: surviving the war
Just because we arenât on the floor crying and screaming, donât imagine this is easy for us. It isnât After writing about Purim as a guide for Jewish survival, I realized there are things harder to explain â what survival feels like in real time. There are things I donât want to write about. Like being exhausted after sleepless nights of air-raid sirens sending us racing to the shelter.âŠ
And now, as I was preparing to publish this article, the first siren went off â not because there are incoming missiles, but because the attack has begun on Iran and we are to be ready for whatever might come next. Happy Purim. There will be no celebrations now but hopefully, when this is over, there will be.
Hanukah, hostages and heroes: in those days, in this time
Jewish texts are profound. Nothing is random. And yet, I am still surprised by how relevant the ancient texts are, as if they were written for modern-day events. It shouldnât be a surprise. Ancient texts that remain intact over hundreds and thousands of years are those that remain relevantâthose that people in every generation decided mattered enough to pass on to the next. And that makes itâŠ
Last one out turns off the darkness
âDonât worry Ma. See, my arm is fine!â He knew his arm wasnât fine. She knew it too. They both knew there was no way he was staying home. Not after the videos he had seen, not after the emergency message he received, the message all policemen in the area received, the message they thought they would never hear: a call to respond to an invasion. It didnât matter that he had a broken shoulderâŠ
"I hope you don't die this year."
Jews are unique. Even our New Year greeting is different â a harsh reflection of our experiences as a nation apart. Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur are called the High Holy Days. They are more holy days than holidays: a time for introspection rather than celebration. Jewish tradition teaches that every year God reviews the lives of all humanity and decides what will happen in each life in the yearâŠ
The âGood Boyâ Who Slaughtered Jews
Many of us are screaming in our heads at how long it is taking to finish the job in Gaza (I know I am). The frustration is intense â which makes it all the more important to remember that, slowly and methodically, NILI is at work. NILI is the Israeli task force charged with ensuring that every single October 7th monster who invaded, raped, tortured, burned, kidnapped, and held hostages is wipedâŠ
Private Pain, Public Lesson: The October 7th Video the World Must See
I think this important presentation was very poorly done â an unusual and disappointing result for Prime Minister Netanyahu, who is recognized by those who love him and those who hate him as a master at public speaking and use of media platforms. The 47-minute documentary of the October 7th horrors taken from Hamas go-pros and Israeli CCTV and car cameras was not released to the general publicâŠ
How the Jews became more Jew-y
On October 7th, the invaders came, intent on destroying Jewish life.Killing wasnât enough. They wanted to torture and humiliate. To steal our joy and our future. They thought that if they brought the Holocaust to Israel, they could break us.And they did bring the Holocaust to Israel â with fire, slaughter, and even plans to gas Jews. But instead of breaking us, they made the Jews moreâŠ
We can't shut the window on October 7th
What could feel more home-like? A perfect tableau: a freshly baked pie, charming knick-knacks, and the peaceful greenery outside the kitchen window⊠an incomprehensible contrast to what my mind knows happened here. Kibbutz Reâeim. Peaceful. Lovely. 97% heaven. An older couple invited us in for coffee. They told us about their children and grandchildren. About a teenager from their kibbutz whoâŠ
âMy son will remain a hostage in Gaza until we decide.â
Ditza Or makes many secular people uncomfortable.Her clothing marks her as a religious Jew, which, for some, is unsettling in itself. But it isnât her appearance that disturbsâitâs her words. Ditzaâs son, Avinatan, is being held hostage in Gaza. To most of the world, he is known as Noa Argamaniâs boyfriendâthe handsome man who, though bigger than his captors, chose to walk into captivity besideâŠ