Please Gd, this is over. Yesterday, a cease fire with Iran was announced to start at seven in the morning. Starting at 5:13 a.m., we got five pre-warnings that missiles were on the way. B''H they skipped over our section of the country, but unfortunately, four people were killed in Be'er Sheva.....
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
After Twelve Days....
Monday, June 23, 2025
Update on the Rest of the Family
It's really weird to have all of our immediate family members who are in Israel in our house and the sum total is....three: Penina, Menashe and me. (Well, four if we're including Percy, but he's not a big traveler)
Shalom Shachne left two weeks ago to go visit his mother and brothers in Los Angeles and then go to NY to visit our kids there. And there he remains. There are something like 100,000 Israelis who are out of the country and trying to come back now. First spots are filled with humanitarian needs (although even our friend who is an MD did not get on a flight yet), soldiers returning for reserve duty and unaccompanied minors (geesh--get those kids home NOW!). El Al keeps sending him emails like, "Sorry, today's not your day, buddy".
Ilana was on a school trip to Poland when things heated up with Iran. She was supposed to come back home for a few days, pack her stuff and then head to NY to work in a summer camp. When it became clear that she was not going to be able to come home, Penina played travel agent and switched her tickets around to get her to New York without coming home. Except Ilana only had her Israeli passport with her, since she had flown directly from school and we keep her US passport here (it is not necessary to send me messages about always traveling with both passport #WeKnowThatNow). So she missed the last day of the trip and spent the day at the US Embassy in Warsaw getting an emergency passport (thankfully. It was unclear if they would even see her that day, but she was persistent when they tried to send her away).
Just to add to the fun, Israel is now saying that anyone who leaves the country cannot return until 30 days or more have passed. While I understand the reasoning, I hope that changes by the time my next tickets to the US roll around in a month....
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
After Six Nights of This....
I'm tired. Much/most/all of the country is tired....
Various posts from my Whatsapp status over the past few days (always a good way to keep track of what's going on with me, for those who know me in real life/have my Whatsapp number). Also good to do it this way because I'm too darn tired to write a whole thing at the moment:
From the night before last:
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"Okay, I showered (quickly), took melatonin and ready for lights out. Please Gd: peace, safety and a normal night's sleep" |
6:29 am: "I just woke up. We didn't have to go back into the mamad again! Thank you, Hashem!
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What time is it? Who am I? Why did I wake up? Did I even sleep? Did we win already? |
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Who are we? The Israelis What do we want? Sleep! And what will we do? Wait for the azazka |
'Night all!
Monday, June 16, 2025
A Day In Our Lives, During These Crazy Times....
Everyone woke up late due to the late-night azakot last night. I was exercising in my room (running outside would be folly) when I suddenly realized it was 9:20 and Percy usually goes for a walk at 8. I took him from the mamad, where he was with Penina and Menashe (they had given up moving back after the second siren and decided to stay there the rest of the night. I figured that the azaka was going to wake me wherever I was, so I might as well be comfortable in my own bed).
Heartfelt davening.
I had told the Yeshiva that I would not be coming in person (as a nurse, I could technically have gone #CovidFlashbacks, but, again : FOLLY!), but would do clinic virtually if students needed me. Most were scheduled to fly out tonight, but that will not be happening since the airport is closed for the foreseeable future.
Penina, Menashe and I went grocery shopping. Limit of two cartons of eggs and two milks per person (and most stores were running low on milk). We got lots of goodies to tide us over: "If we have to live through war, we're not going to be concerned about the grocery budget. Buy whatever you want".
The woman who organizes gluten-free meals for soldiers thought she had both a need and a driver, so I made 5 meals of GF falafel with quiona-brown rice pilaf, salad, GF pita and homemade GF cookies (from the freezer).
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mamad hand-holding chain between me, her and her husband |
Sunday, June 15, 2025
Iran
It's Saturday night and I'm writing this from our mamad. Shalom Shachne is in Los Angeles, visiting his Mom and brothers, and Ilana is on a school trip to Poland.
Thursday night, after Israel carried out targeted attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities and leaders (feel free to PM me if you need any convincing that reducing Iran's nuclear capabilities is anything but a huge chesed to the world), Israel sent out an alert to everyone's phones. It was a different alert sound than normal; while I jump from the regular tone, this one made me jump practically out of my skin, partially because I had no idea what the tone meant, but it clearly was nothing good given how it sounded and the fact they it was sent at three in the morning. I grabbed Percy and headed to the mamad. It took quite a while to figure it out, but it was basically a warning by the country that it had done these attacks and Iran might respond ASAP.
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In my opinion, the best comment out of the many rawther-snarky memes and videos that came out after this: "This warning could have been an email" |
Thursday evening, before anything started, Penina and Menashe had said that if things started getting sticky with Iran they would come for Shabbos, but late in the afternoon on Friday, after Penina's online classes ended at two. They have no mamad in their apartment and no miklat (communal shelter) in either their building or their neighborhood (the recommended safe spaces are underground parking garages). After they had to twice sprint to a nearby hotel and hang out with the rest of the neighborhood in the underground stairwells Thursday night, I was lamenting that they hadn't come earlier. Now, who knew if travel was safe? All buses had been canceled.
And then the news that 100 drones had been sent towards Israel and prepare to batten down the hatches when they arrived, around 11 Friday morning. Two different friends had invited me to come stay with them over Shabbos so it wouldn't be here alone with Percy. I had planned to stay home until late in the afternoon and then head over to Julie's house (closer than Michal's). With news of 100 drones, however, I decided to head over as soon as I could get myself together: I changed into Shabbat clothes that were comfortable enough to sleep in, packed six liters of water (which had been sold out in the mercaz that morning, so, basically, I was bringing the ultimate hostess gift), 3 dozen cookies out of the eight dozen chesed cookies I had made Thursday evening, most of which had not been delivered yet, 1/2 a watermelon, Percy and his travel house.....Basically, by the time I was done packing I could barely get down the stairs! Thankfully, Aliza (the flower girl at Penina and Menashe's wedding) came to help me get to their house. Gd bless the 12 year-olds!!!
It was very calming to be with others and even more calming that Israel was able to shoot down the drones. Then: decision time. Should I just stay there until Shabbat was over? Go home and hope to be able to come back in the afternoon? B''H the decision became clear (go home and stay there) once Penina and Menashe were able to book a taxi here. I was expecting price gouging (and would have been fine to pay it), but the price was only about $10 over normal (don't worry, we gave the guy a healthy tip).
It was such a relief knowing that they would have a mamad available and that we were together. We cooked more (I had planned to go to Michal's for Friday night so hadn't made anything for dinner) and I made another 8 dozen chocolate chip cookies for a group of soldiers that had ended up in our city and without food for Shabbat. Someone from our neighborhood who took over the cookies (and lots of other things from lots of other people) sent this video. Never tell a Jewish mother (or father!) that people might be hungry, and especially not over Shabbos!
https://youtube.com/shorts/
Friday night, just as we were finishing lighting Shabbos candles, the first siren happened. And then the whole night was this.....
https://youtube.com/shorts/
HUGE thanks to the Rabinowitz family for the interlinear tehilim they gave Penina as a bat mitzvah gift a decade ago. While we've had a number of sirens on Shabbat/Holidays (when we don't use phones), this was the first all-nighter we've had when we got the giant reminder that IT'S ALL HASHEM. For the first time ever, I finished the entire Sefer Tehilim in one day, and got tremendous comfort from it.
Evidently today was some kind of holiday in Iran and and it was quiet during the day. My friend Sharon and her adult son walked over for lunch (they are up the stairs and over one building so they said they felt safe that they could either get back home or get to us if a siren started). Her husband is also away in the US and we had planned "Feminocentric Shabbos Lunch" with a single mom who lives nearby, but not 90 seconds-to-get-to-shelter nearby, so we weren't surprised that she didn't show up (we set lunch to start at 12-12:15 so assumed they weren't coming as soon as it was 12:15).
And so the day passed. And here we are again, in the mamad with huge booms overhead.
Before signing off, I'd like to share a beautiful prayer that my dear friend Kelly wrote while texting with me:
Wednesday, May 21, 2025
Omer Shem Tov in Boston (!)
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photo by Sheila :) |
With thanks to Cousin Loren and Morah Sheila who tipped me off, I have enjoyed reading about Omer Shem Tov's recent trip to Boston. Combined Jewish Philanthropies paid for him and his parents to come to Boston. He was met by day school students at the airport, spoke at a synagogue, toured Gillette stadium and threw out the first pitch at Fenway Park on Monday night, at Jewish Heritage Night.
The Boston Herald had a write-up and this photo, of Omer surrounded on the pitcher's mound by Jewish Red Sox staff members:
I had been wondering how hard it was for an Israeli (aka "someone with zero baseball background") to learn to throw a pitch. The Herald reports that he practiced a few times in Israel but wasn't nervous because, "after all the things I've been through" there are very few things "that can affect me".
As we learn more about the horrific conditions of his captivity (CBS News, reporting on his visit, writes that he was fed "one biscuit a day with salty water"), I'm glad he was able to get some extra support and love from Boston.
Here is a video of Omer describing some of his captivity:
https://youtu.be/pok1RqlduVI?
Sunday, May 18, 2025
Eurovision 2025
Some interesting background that I wanted to share:
Israel's contestant this year, 24 year-old Yuval Rafael, is a survivor of the Nova massacre. I saw a video that overlaid her singing at Eurovision with a recording of her phone call to her father on October 7. Chilling. He likely saved her life by telling her to hang up and pretend to be dead (like most of the people around her). For eight hours she lay covered in corpses.....And survived.
Wednesday, April 30, 2025
Yom HaZikaron 2025
Today is Yom HaZikaron, Memorial Day.
"Tzfira" siren last night and one again this morning. These sirens start the same as a run-to-a-bomb-shelter azaka, but the tone of a tzfira is steady, whereas the "danger sound" goes up and down. And how sad that the official recommendations say something like, "in the event of a rocket attack at the same time as the tzfira, the sound will change to rising and falling".
The numbers are so hard to fathom.....
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I don't know who drew this, but it captures the feeling.... |
Friday, April 11, 2025
Pesach 2025
Well, we're almost ready!
The supermarket looks like this:
Friday, March 28, 2025
A Week With a LOT of Cooking
I had a rather rare two afternoons off of work this week, and used my time to start getting our house in order for Pesach (did I mention my cleaning lady decided to go back to the Philippines? Baaaaad timing) and cook for chesed. As more (and more) men have been called back to reserve duty, there is a huge need to assist their families. Some of these men have been "in" for more than 400 days......
I reached out to the local contact person for HaOgen for Drafted Families and told her I could make two meals for families. They used to keep a spreadsheet that was accessible by volunteers; the last time I checked, there were 34 families. She told me that, in our city alone, there are now 270 families asking for help from the organization.
I was so happy to be able to help a woman with 7 year-old twins. She likes to eat healthy, and when I offered her some dinner choices she jumped at tofu with brown rice. She they got that, spring rolls and a fruit salad.
The other family has 9 (!!) kids and ate gluten-free. That was quite a challenge as I really have no idea of what are appropriate quantities for that number of people (and I also thought the mom was telling me that there were only three at home. Gd bless my lousy Hebrew.....She was saying that three people would NOT be home that night. Eek. Good thing I put in my "regular meal" plus a deli platter and baguettes, assuming that I was not understanding something)
And then the woman who organizes meals for families in my little neighborhood asked if I could cook for two families this week as well. While I'm not really friendly with either woman, these are (English-speaking) people who live right me. In for a penny, in for a pound, I decided. I bought a LOT of chopped meat, woke up early before work and rolled over 4 dozen meatballs and made oatmeal-chocolate chip bar cookies.
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everyone got meatballs, rice, fresh vegetables with hummus and cookies |
(Lucky for Shalom Shachne and me, we had lots of leftovers from Shabbos so, aside from making a soup and some salads, I didn't cook much for us!)
Then last night, Thursday, I did my usual baking for families with a medical crisis and then looked at the lists going around for what food was needed for soldiers. Having had a big food chesed week already, I did not sign up for anything until Thursday night, in case I was "done". Ended up making a vegan main (there are lots of vegan soldiers. Actually, just lots of vegans in general) of quinoa brown rice pilaf with chick peas. Then two trays of oatmeal chocolate chip bars (I think I've got the recipe memorized by now!)
Woke up this morning to do my Shabbos cooking and felt it was no problem to do a little more: one of the lists going around had only one blank on it: gluten-free cookies. As Henry V says, "Once more: into the breach!". Or, in this case, to the oatmeal-chocolate chip bars but this time with GF oats and GF flour. (PS: in this vein, the organization WheatFree Warriors could use a little financial help. 100% of donations goes to getting GF food soldiers and displaced families with celiac disease)
This post is not to get nice comments from people, it's to encourage ALL OF US to do more to help others and stretch ourselves to make the world a better place.
Shabbat Shalom. May it be peaceful.
Monday, March 24, 2025
Shabbat (with 13 people plus a dog in the mamad)
As Penina and Menashe were heading up to bed in the guest room/mamad she said something like, "I hope not to, but I'm fairly sure I'll see you all later. Good night!".
The timing of Friday night's ballistic missile was much more "civilized" (likely the only time I will use that word in relation to the #$^&^! Houthis) and the air raid siren went off at 10:30 pm. In we all trooped, and, boy, we were quite a crowd. Cousin Coby's yeshiva was having their school-wide Shabbaton in our city, so he and three friends were staying on the third floor just for sleeping, with their meals elsewhere (and YAY for Coby for running a blazing fast 10K in the Ashkelon Road Race Friday morning: 44.43!!!). Ilana was staying with three friends from seminary in her room (squeezed in like sardines!) and Philly's own Eitan GS was in the den (and YAY for Eitan who ran 15K in Ashkelon that morning and had an amazing race!!! [So impressed with both of them because it was very cold and pouring rain Friday morning. Eek!]). So we did, indeed, fit 13 people plus a dog in our mamad (Ilana, her friends and I sat with Penina on her bed and everyone else was on/around/standing near Menashe's). Extra points to Coby's friend who, when the siren went off, thought to grab the candy platter off the dining room table where they had been hanging out and playing games. Since everyone had only briefly met upon arrival, this was our "ice breaker" time. Sheesh.....Quite convivial, though! And the rest of Shabbat was "quiet" (that's the code word everyone uses for "missile-free") and wonderful in every way, b''H.
Sunday morning, I went for a gentle, relaxing, lovely 4K run before work. I pulled a leg muscle in December and I'm still working on my rehab. And it was, indeed, gentle, relaxing and lovely until km 3.5. I was near enough to home that I could see my block and also at the uphill part at the end where I was thinking of just walking the last 1/2 km since it was uphill and I'm trying not to push my body too much. And then I had the very weird experience on CLEARLY hearing the azaka siren, but in the distance. Pulled out my phone: nothing on the app (kind of funny that I pulled out my phone; believe me, you do not need to look at your phone to hear it when the Homefont Command app goes off). Maybe I was wrong and I was hearing an ambulance or something? No, ambulances don't have that kind of sustained WHOOOOOOOOOOO. So maybe it was too far away for me to need to do anything about. Meanwhile I was slogging up the hill. Then I heard the BOOM BOOM of the missile being intercepted and decided that I would *really* rather not be outside during this. The thought of possibly needing to lie down on the sidewalk with my hands over my head for ten minutes while I can SEE my house was just so unpleasant that I ran almost the whole way home (one walking break when my lungs were in total rebellion) and shaved an entire minute off my per kilometer time for that last bit 😂
Turns out that much of the country had an azaka and our city was juuuuust outside the zone that got the alert. For those of you know the area, the moshav where Shalom Shachne goes horseback riding had a siren. The part of our city that is literally across the street from the moshav did not. But people in that part of the city were every more confused than I was because they heard the siren quite loudly.
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my Whatsapp status |
Today, I'm taking "before work" off to write this. My body is still recovering from that last 1/2 km!
Thursday, March 20, 2025
Aaaaaaand: We're Back
To incoming missiles from the #$&^%^ Houthis, that is....
They're back to their malevolent schemes between 3-4 in the morning (I'll give them this: they were very punctual this morning 🙄
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three cakes for soldiers and one for the weekly drop off for families with a medical crisis. One for late-night munching by Cousin Coby and his yeshiva buddies who will be staying here |
Monday, March 17, 2025
Purim 2025
Purim this year was Thursday night and Friday day, which led to the rather unusual "Purim Meshulash", which doesn't mean a lot to most people, unless you live near a walled city, like: JERUSALEM (of which we are a suburb). As the OU Orthodox Union says: "some of the mitzvos of Purim cannot be fulfilled on Shabbos, and they are observed instead on Friday and Sunday. In such instances, Purim in Yerushalayim spans three days, and that is why it is called Purim Meshulash (the three day Purim)". The next Purim Meshulash won't be for 20 years (!)
We in the burbs (like most people around the world) had the unusual situation of having our Purim seduah meal and ASAP after getting ready for Shabbos. Large numbers of Jerusalemites came to our city on Thursday/Friday and vice versa on Sunday. Ilana came with four friends on Friday morning and then went back to spend Shabbat in Jersualem. (I will just say that it was blissfully boring being here on Sunday and the lack of traffic was fabulous!)
It was lovely to host Menashe's family for the festive meal
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Iosi is in the middle, in the Pink Panther costume. We were a very colorful crowd! |
and fun to dress up
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Percy as a very tired cowboy with sparkly hat and bandana |
Monday, February 24, 2025
Omer Shem Tov is Home!
b''H, he was released from captivity on Shabbat. In all, six hostages were released that day (Omer, Tal Shocham, Eliya Cohen, Omer Wenkert, Avera Mengitsu and Hisham al-Sayed).
Yet another disgusting handover ceremony by Hamas, with Omer being required to kiss two of his captors on the forehead and "wave to the crowd" before going with the Red Cross (who continue to stun me with their absolute uselessness; two other hostages, Evyatar David and Guy Gilboa-Dalal, were brought in a van and made to watch these six hostages get freed. And then taken back into captivity. The Red Cross [aside from that they have visited NO hostages AT ALL in over 500 days] have been reported to have seen these two hostages and did.....NOTHING.
Omer lost 37 pounds while in captivity, and was kept alone for 450 days in a tunnel.
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https://www.gov.il/en/pages/ |
In an interview with the "Meaningful Minute", Shelly Shem Tov said that she began keeping Shabbat exactly a year ago, on Shabbat Mishpatim, and has kept Shabbat ever since. "She claims it's not coincidence he was released on exactly the same Shabbat. She says that just as she kept Shabbat, Shabbat saved them"
May Omer regain his physical- and mental health soon. If the prayers of a nation can help, he's certainly got them.Friday, February 21, 2025
Omer Shem Tov
Wednesday, February 19, 2025
From Sam Kramer, who started the "Good News Israel" Whatsapp group
From Sam Kramer, who started the "Good News Israel" Whatsapp group:
*I struggle with what to write to all of you…but I can’t just be quiet.*


My mind is saying, “Shut it all off. Stop scrolling. It won’t bring them back and it won’t help anyone to keep scrolling.

The eternal optimist here, that’s my role…we must believe with all of our hearts and our souls, without allowing a
Tomorrow. Tomorrow…
The next 24 hours…let us love, unite, empathize and be one - for the kidnapped, for their families, for our fallen who
Someone suggested … Perhaps don’t broadcast the images of horror tomorrow, don't spread anything on the networks.
G-d save us, comfort us and renew our strength so that we may serve You with joy and love. Please bring us peace
We will rise up from the darkness - strong. proud. better…somehow…we always do



Raise the Israeli flag tomorrow, everywhere. They are coming home.





*Join Israel Good News Only WhatsApp Group:* https://chat.whatsapp.com/
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