Somehow, life as usual doesn’t feel right…but what do we do? While we go through the motions of life, we need to be searching for ways to stay connected.
Several of us on the Between Carpools team have close family living in Israel. We have friends in the military. We know people living in the area that was attacked.
We’ve been living and breathing this calamity since the news started trickling in. Not nearly the same way as our family members and friends who are there, but we’re in a constant state of tension and anxiety. There’s a cloud that’s literally on our heads and doing anything other than the bare minimum just doesn’t make sense. Grocery shopping? Bread, milk, some chicken cutlets and call it a day. Laundry? Everyone has what to wear tomorrow? The rest will wait.
When I went to shul on Simchas Torah morning for hakafos, some of the women came to ask me for updates. (Because my husband is involved in the medical community in Israel, he’d been on several phone calls with people in Israel making medical arrangements in cases of pikuach nefesh.) While we didn’t know the full situation, we knew it was grim. And when I shared a bit of what I’d heard, some of the women exclaimed over the tragedy, but a couple minutes later the conversations were back to normal. And that’s the way it should be on Yom Tov. But I couldn’t just join the regular chatter and went home.
Of course, when Yom Tov was over, the heaviness was much greater. We knew too much – without even knowing it all. Jews around the world were in shock, and many of us still are.
My daughter came home from work today and asked why so much of the American Jewish world seems to be functioning as usual. Why are they not feeling what we are?
We had a conversation about it and came to the conclusion that it’s not apathy. Everyone cares and is sad and horrified. But for many people here there is no personal connection. They don’t have family there. They don’t know anyone called up to serve in the military. So they daven, and they donate, take on a mitzvah – but they’re not living with a jaw clenched so tight you have to remind yourself to relax. Don’t have that constant almost vibration running through them. They can breathe. They can sleep more than 2 hours at a time. They can carry on with life.
And as Jews we are supposed to carry on. It’s not wrong. We need to live our lives with the emunah and knowledge that Hashem is in charge. We need to lend our strength to those who need it, and be there for our children.
But. We should feel connected. We should be trying to relate to what our BCP sisters in Eretz Yisrael are dealing with. Collectively, we can support these women simply by showing we care.
We want to share with you some of what we’ve been hearing from our family and friends that can give us all something to relate to. And we invite you to do the same in the comments. If you’re there, share how you’re feeling right now. Share a bit of your struggle. And if you’re here but have loved ones living in Israel, tell us how you’re doing. Tell us what you’re hearing from across the ocean. Let’s all try to help carry the burden while we go about our daily life.
(The following lines are combined from all the members of the team.)
We have friends whose sons all serve. One was called up for combat. This is not his first battle. Another son is in the army rabbinate. He is now dealing with kavod hameis during a war. He’s 22.
A volunteer at one of our medical organizations has a son who was captured.
Our friend is a medic who is now off the grid in Gaza. But before he went in, he asked us to arrange for some specific items his unit needs. Including tourniquets.
The Next Step has 20+ new members who’ve lost a limb in the last couple of days. These are just the ones we already know about.
We were so excited when a close friend of ours got engaged on Chol Hamoed. The vort was scheduled for Monday night. Obviously, that was canceled.
Our family is celebrating a wedding in the US, and many siblings planned to come without their children. Obviously, now, those with little children simply can’t leave them behind during a war. Others are scrambling to find new tickets to come to the wedding.
Family members living in Israel are struggling to stay calm for their children who are all off from school. There have been over 10 alarms in Yerushalayim. The streets are eerily quiet and there’s a feeling of fear all around. “It’s like COVID days plus the element of Terror,” they tell us.
Large families are stuck in small apartments with no yards. Should they risk going down to the park?
Siblings checking in one after the other on family WhastApp chat. “Safe in miklat (bomb shelter/room) at home,” “safe in stairway,” “crouching next to car on highway on the way to an appointment…”
Cousin telling you she lied to her worried mother that she’s in a safe spot during a siren. She couldn’t manage to get her 3 kids alone into a safe area.
My great aunt, an elderly disabled woman – has moved into her basement’s shelter – too afraid to be home.
Discussions in family chat on those injured running to safe areas during a siren. Discussion moves on to reminders to walk calmly to a safe area to stay safe and to keep the kids calm. A calm adult is a calmer child.
Please share you or your family’s experiences below…
Being in shul in simchas Torah, hearing horrific rumors that I know wish were true (“only” 40 people killed), seeing people I know show up in uniform talking on the phone during hakafos calling guys up, my father asking the Rav a question and getting interrupted by another person asking if he can drive his brother in law who was just called up, walking home from shul and seeing our neighbor’s
son getting into a car with his family watching. Spending the last hours of the chag singing and trying so hard to be besimcha d in spite of everything. Hearing on the news about people I know who were seriously injured, hearing of friends who were in a shelter and a piece of shrapnel got in and miraculously no one got hurt. And this is just from the first hours of the war. Am yisrael is strong! The motivation and morale is high and we can’t let them break our spirit!
Sleeping fully dressed in case a siren goes off at night and we have to get our 4 kids down 5 flights of stairs to our building’s shelter.
Knowing dozens and dozens of men and women called up to duty. Including a newly married woman baalas teshuva.
Having everyone home for an indefinite amount of time and trying to maintain a sense of normalcy.
Stores running out of basics before everyone is buying in a panic.
Literally hearing booms day and night from explosions in Gaza. Planes flying overhead constantly.
Up all night with kids waking up ( in shifts of course). On the other hand it’s beautiful to see the women in the makolet stop shopping for a moment when the siren goes off. They say a kapitel tehillim and continue to shop! A lot like Covid but on constant alert.
My husband just came back from doing security around the yeshuv from 2-4 am. Running to cover my baby in pillows when we hear a siren because we don’t have a bomb shelter near us. Feeling completely naked under the sky and our emuna being tested like we’ve never before experienced. Hashem we need mashiach
I’m writing from America to let those in EY know that all of Klal Yisrael are in our Tefillos. I went to a big gathering in Monsey tonight to say Tehillim and to daven together for the situation in Eretz Yisrael. There must have been thousands of people there. The men said Tehillim so loudly. I also went to the Ribnetzer’s kever last night to daven for the situation. We’re saying so much Tehillim here and there’s a lot of achdus. Those in Eretz Yisrael aren’t forgotten by us!!
Thank you
My son is learning in Eretz Yisroel- so I’m worrying from afar but know that so many of us here in America are not going about normally. There’s no music playing because how can i be happy when there are families who have children trapped in gaza? Some idea’s we’ve implemented: putting charts up at work with all the chapters of tehillim so that instead of gossiping in our free time we keep finishing rounds of tehillim. Posting names of soldiers to daven for, donating to countless tzedakah organizations that are helping out. My sons in Lakewood went tonight to a atzeres tefillah that was packed beyond imagination. The shuls and yeshivos are packed with people davening and learning. We are with you in heart and spirit waiting for the yeshua.
Feeling like I am falling apart with my kids home 24/7 and having to work full time whiie hearing booms and living with the thought that we can have a siren any minute. Having to entertain, cook, clean, comfort and stay sane, while worrying so much.
Yes, I’m with you in that, in the same boat…. Hashem should have mercy on everyone!
I’m here in Eretz Yisrael and it’s definitely petrifying. I’m trying not to look at the media because I need to be calm for my family, being paralyzed and anxious won’t help. I so badly want to know what’s going on because the unknown is terrifying…
I wanted to share a small thought with all of you, that although horrible, terrible things are going on and we must must must all daven and be noseh b’ol, there are also incredible stories of hashgacha pratis going on. In my community, one of the women started an email thread titled “V’al nisecha” where women share the incredible stories of hashgacha pratis taking place.
These are some of the stories that were shared:
A rocket fell in the Gilo neighborhood on Rechov Rosmarin- usually a very busy street, but was miraculously empty then!
A missile fell in Ramat Beit Shemesh Daled 2. It fell right near a whole bunch of Shul caravans with people going to and from shul, but it didn’t explode or hurt anyone!
I was shocked to see the weather headline that 2,000 Afganistans were killed in a tremendous earthquake just yesterday (this was written on Monday). Afghanistan promised to join in the fight against Israel. Hashem is amazing!!!. Let us daven that they and all.the other countries will be unsuccessful!
A Chassidish man was driving his car, when he heard a siren. He ran out of his car and a rocket hit it then, and exploded, while he watched this happen- from safety!
There is a woman in Yerushalayim ordering tons of camouflage tzitzis, and many soldiers are ordering them, possibly putting on tzitzis for the first time!
Israelis in America are flying back to Israel, voluntarily, to join the fighting. (Can you imagine Ukrainians who were somehow lucky enough to be out of Ukraine when the war broke out, voluntarily flying back into Ukraine to join the fighting??)
A rocket exploded on a bus in Beitar yesterday, but Baruch Hashem, no one was killed, everyone had left the bus shortly before it landed from the siren.
There is a hesder Yeshiva in Sderot that was not touched. The terrorists just passed right by without even entering the building.
Here’s another story heard this morning from my Rav in america (whos actually here now), a Talmud of his sent him a message- he has a secular son who was sent to gaza. he didnt hear from this son until this morning- the son sent a message to the parents and said how his group of soldiers were BH successful in exterminating a terrorist,and released hostages!!! and minutes after there was a bomb that fell right where they had been- they had to run through fire, and BH they all came out safely!!! Thank you Hashem!! and at the end of his message he said please continue to daven for me. he also sent a photo of himself wrapping tefilin. the father said to The Rav- if anyone asks you “whats the point of the brachos and tehilim, please remember this” may we continue to share in bsoros tovos!!
On Monday, one of the rockets that was directed towards Yerushalayim fell on a mosque in Abu Ghosh!
Just a little chizuk in these terrible times and a reminder that everything is from Hashem. We must continue to daven, strengthen our emunah and bitachon and ask Hashem to save all of klal yisroel and bring the geulah shelaima very soon.
So beautiful! Thank you for sharing ❤️
I also live in EY, can you please share how I can sign up to receive the “val Nisecha” newsletter?
Would also love to sign up for this email series. Please share details on how to do so. TIA
Wow! Thank you for sharing! So beautiful!! A nice idea I’d like to share- We say tehillim together as a family after supper.. Hashem should watch over everyone!
Just want to mention that perhaps a kabala in tznius may be a very big zechus for all our brothers and sisters the world over, especially in Israel. That being said, I hope I am not coming across as critical, but I’m bothered by the picture accompanying this post. We, as frum women, know that the ideal head covering for jewish married women is not a wig. Although there may be certain sources that allow, we all know the truth that it is not ideal. The picture above shows five women holding hands, none of them wearing a tichel. Perhaps the omission of this points to a general complacency with our tznius standards in our head coverings. I personally don’t wear a tichel either, although I have been contemplating this for years. I noticed the omission and by my interpretation what may be a lack of knowledge/complacency/lack of sensitivity to this very holy mitzva. It is my hope that by bringing this to the attention of the holy women here, we can perhaps start educating ourselves in the halachos involved in this mitzva and thereby increasing our much needed zechusim.
Hi, thank you for making your comment in a sensitive manner. Perhaps to be melamed zechus, these women could be from the Lubavitch community. Their rebbe requested that women specifically wear sheitals, as it completely covers the head/hair. I am davening that in the zechus of our kabalos we will merit to see the speedy, peaceful end of this conflict and Moshiach bmeheira byameinu, amen.
I make dinner and have done shopping for Gaza area families who were sent out of their homes. Their husband’s are fighting so its just the mothers and kids. They are in a yishuv by the dead sea. Yesterday I bought a set of pillows, blankets and sheets. I thought it would be for a family. They said it would go for a soldier who would be sleeping on the ground otherwise. I am awed to realize that some soldier has a pillow and blanket tonight because of me. I make dinner for these families and write that it is mehadrin hechshers. The organizers told me that the women call them up crying when they see that the food is from chareidim. With everything they read in the news, about chareidim being parasites, all they are seeing are the letters, the toys, the gifts, the food, and the prayers. They are so moved by the chessed. But when I leave the house, only for a few minutes at a time, I tell my kids, “you know what to do if there’s a siren, and I know too. So I will be safe”. Theyre afraid for me to leave even for a few minutes. Being at home feels ominous because who knows what will be but leaving is having a minor panic attack until I get home.
Thank you for taking the time to share these experiences and thoughts. It hits home and helps us connect in a way that no news broadcast can ever accomplish. Our thoughts, Tefillos, and tears are with you!
Which Tehillim should we be praying at a time like this? Please forgive my ignorance.
My shul sent out an email with perakim 20, 83, 121, 130, 142.
Thank you so much! Getting my family focused on those now!
As a mom of a few young children living in Yerushalyim, we’re in the house most of the day. Every time we walk out we do a briefing of how to respond if there is a siren. I’m afraid to shower or go to the bathroom if my husband isn’t home because I won’t have enough time to get my children into the miklat. Every revving engine on the nearby highway, ambulance siren (we live near hatzla and made), sends our hearts pounding and adrenaline rushing. The normally busy streets are eery and silent.
Similar to corona, we now have school on the phone, kids home all day while holding down a job.
I go to sleep dressed. (On simchas Torah morning I was in the communal bomb shelter in pajamas).
After I finally get my kids to sleep, and the baby, and worked, and took care of my house, and had time to daven and cry, the next round of children are up and crying that they can’t sleep.
My young children are asking me very heavy questions that no mother wants her child to have to think about. They want to know details about techiyas hameisim, death, and yemos hamashiach. They want to know why Hashem lets such horrible things happen if He loves us, and how Hashem could make them feel so scared.
On the flip side, I have witnessed the most beautiful chassadim. People have been opening up their homes to displaced families, emptying out the groceries to send food and basics to soldiers and families. I have friends and family giving up their work breaks to do school work with my kids on zoom, sharing their yards, and sending their love, concern and tefilos.
We are an American family who was here for sukkos and have not been able to get home yet due to our flights being canceled repeatedly. We’re now scheduled to go home next Thursday. In the meantime; we are experiencing everything happening in Israel firsthand, and it’s been truly eye opening. Everything feels very real here… there’s nowhere to go! But as scary as it all is, it feels so meaningful too. The first few days, we were really fearful, much like the other posters described. Today bh we got out of the house a bit, took a walk, went to the park… my kids signed up to volunteer to help make packages for chayalim tomorrow, and my husband and I plan to donate blood. So even though we very much did not plan to be here now, and my kids are missing school and we’re missing work, we are seeing the meaning behind being here, and feeling so connected to am Yisroel during this difficult time.
Sharing the hashgacha pratis stories and monumental chassadim that klal yisroel is doing for the Yiddish of Eretz Yisroel is so beautiful and inspiring. Something to add: there are two famous and well known restaurants in Tel Aviv that wanted to send food to the chayalim however they are not kosher restaurants and many soldiers keep kosher and would not eat the food. These two restaurants kashered their kitchens, did hafrashas challa to be able to accommodate the kosher eating soldiers! Wow! What a beautiful moment! (אייל שני is the chef)
What is extremely saddening is reading the fear mongering comments on how scary the situation. How high the anxiety levels are. This is not what Hashem wants from us. Hashem does not want us to live in fear. I understand and empathize with everything the women and mother living there are going thru – however sharing that in a public forum is sadly not the right way. It is passing on fear and that is not what we as yiddin are supposed to do…
I haven’t read any comments here that are fear mongering. I have read comments by real women sharing their personal experiences. That’s a very different thing. Please be sensitive to those living through a tremendously stressful event and don’t shut down their comments and experiences as fear mongering. Yes, we all need emunah, and believe me, everyone here in Eretz Yisroel is working on emunah tremendously. Thanks for understanding
Chas v’shalom I would not want to invalidate anyones feelings. I am very sensitive to people living there – I have siblings with large families living in EY as well as 3 family members called up for duty. I am very aware and a part of what is going. I still feel that people sharing scary thoughts should not be posted on a public forum. That should be shared with a mentor or rav for Chizzuk. However I see that not everyone feels this way and I can accept that. Diff things work for diff people.
The whole point of this idea is for people to be real. Bravo to them for sharing their real experiences. Everyone should listen and give them strength during these difficult times – we are their support – they don’t need to go anywhere else.
If you don’t live in israel then please don’t tell us how to feel. You don’t hear rumbling all day in the skies. You don’t keep your ears open all day so that you can grab your kids and run in case there’s a siren. You have not seen a missile land from the window of your house. We are strong, but we also have to go shopping knowing that there are terrorists in the street and we are the target. It’s not fear mongering. This is actually what we are living with. If you can’t read it then don’t.
I agree with you, Sarah. I had the same thought when I saw some of the things written here. Hashem should watch over all of klal yisroel. May this terrible matzav end speedily and bring Moshiach’s arrival with it.
Allowing people to express very real feelings and raw emotion is not fear mongering. It is ok to feel and share anxiety, the point is to grow from it. Hashem wants our tefilos! and to be nisei b’ol! and this forum is accomplishing that in a beautiful way especially for those that are in chutz laaretz. We are not robots. It’s a fearful time. And we are Maaminim.
I live in EY,in Jerusalem and I would like to share with all of you some words of chizuk that I try to keep in mind all of the time. I try to tell it over and over to my children so that we won’t be afraid.
#1 WE ARE IN GOOD HANDS. HASHEM CONTROLS EVERYTHING, NOT THE ARABS. THE ARABS HAVE NO CONTROL. IT’S ALL HAKODOSH BARUCH HU.
#2 WE CAN’T ASK QUESTIONS LIKE HOW DID THIS HAPPENS,AND WHY DID THIS HAPPEN. WE ARE ONLY HUMANS .WE ONLY SEE A SMALL PART OF THE PICTURE. WE DON’T UNDERSTAND ANYTHING.
#3 EVERY JEW HAS TREMENDOUS HASHGACHA PRATIS(PERSONAL DIVINE INTERVENTION) NO MATTER WHO HE IS OR WHERE HE IS.
#4 YISMAEL IS CALLED YISHMAEL BECAUSE HASHEM WILL HEAR OUR TEFILLOS BECAUSE OF THEIR CRUEL BARBARIC WAYS.
TESHUVAH TEFILLAH UTZEDAKA MAAVIRIM ES ROAH HAGEZERA…
BE STRONG. KEEP ON DAVENING LIKE YOUR LIFE DEPENDS ON IT FOR REAL. DAVEN FOR REAL THAT HASHEM SHOULD SEND US MOSHIACH BCHESED UBRACHAMIM.say tehillim twice a day for 15 min. A AND TRY AS MUCH AS POSSIBLE TO SHOw EACH AND EVERY JEW AHAVAS CHINAM.
WISHING ALL OF US BESOROS TOVOS,YESHUOS AND NECHAMOS WITH THE SPEEDY COMING OF Mashiach.
I’m listening to plane overhead right now. That and the booms from Gaza are the new background noise that we hear all day and night.
My cousin brought her family here for Sukkos, they got stuck here. I also had the pleasure of explaining to them that the loud noise wasn’t an ambulance, but an air raid siren and how to take cover and run for shelter if you’re not near your safe room.
With all this, it’s “relatively” quiet where we are, but the playgrounds are empty and everyone is just staying inside unless it’s an essential outing.
Yeshivos are cutting Bein Hazmanim short and calling the bochrim back. To get to my son’s yeshiva, he would need to take the train, but there are no trains because of security, so the yeshiva arranged for minibuses to bring the boys back. An hour after getting back to Yeshiva, Hamas threw him and his friends a “welcome back party” and they had to take cover, but their yeshiva building is so old that there is no safe room nearby, so they’re running to the stairwell to take cover.
And now another plane is going by, and like I said earlier, we BH have is easy where we are.
I found so many of the comments here cathartic. It’s so validating to hear that others are feeling the same way as me and so reassuring, heartening and inspirational to hear about the nissim. Please continue to post such stories! and may we soon witness the ultimate nes of the geula sheleima.
Hi Sarah,
I think it’s important that people in the USA etc understand what’s happening. I am not talking about sharing images or details of the atrocities in the South chas veshalom, or even discussing them. Those were put out by Hamas to instill fear in our hearts and degrade the victims, and to that we can not give in (how much to know in order to be nosei b’ol is an individual decision I think, made with Daas Torah)
But beyond that, the day to day life that nearly the whole country is facing – the very calculated decisions of when to shower, leave the house, go to sleep dressed etc and the toll it takes on young children and everyone really… I think that’s something we need to know and hear. The fear that these children and families are facing is real. Their stress (and strength!) is beyond. The point is not to get depressed and dysfunctional, but to appreciate the tremendous tzaar and mesirus nefesh – so that we can feel for them, daven and channel our pain into positive ways.
To close our eyes to what’s happening in the name of simcha feels somewhat callous and / or simply uninformed. I realize that is totally not what you meant, and thank you for clarifying in your comment! In the zchus of us coming together to feel for each other, and act on those feelings in positive ways, may we see yeshuos and nechamos b’karov.
hi, i live in beit shemesh, BH we didn’t have a lot of sirens recently (only 1 today) and i have been with my children the whole day and tried to put in whatever hours i could do at work- this is a difficult time BUT… I wanted to publicly Thank Hashem for all the amazing miracles happening- there are soo soo many stories!! I also wanted to thank the author of this post, the women who contributed, all klal yisrael world wide for their tefillos, mitzvos and thoughts! It is such a mi keamcha yisroel time! everyone is doing whatever they can- there is a woman from USA who offered free recorded art classes for children, the creator of Mali4 had given out 2000 free links, doulas are offering free services to wives of soldiers, the food that we all are sending to soldiers and their families, the letters…. its incredible how creative our fellow jews are in their aid!! i am so proud to be a jew!!! With all the miraculous stories emerging, I feel like Hashem is so clearly running the show and I am looking forward to all the good news yet to come (with mashiach bkarov!) As a mommy with 4 little kids in israel, i have had a few things that helped me and i hope will help others as well.
1. there is a book called michal asks ima about sirens for kids written by a mental health professional- it has such wonderful tips and the story line is great- my kids really liked it
2. if your kids are hebrew speaking there is a song- fun with motions for when the siren rings -what you do and it has some calming techniques in the song- its really great-
(BCP- am I allowed to post the links to these?)
3. singing emunah songs and TYH and focusing on the positive
4. there is a book (free) of ideas to do with your kids with things you have at home from the nshei of Sanhedria Murchevet (put together during covid)
5. Think about today- how will entertain the kids just for today? do i have food for today? disregard worries for tomorrow- it doesn’t serve you!
i would love ideas on how people are actually working- someone posted she’s working full time?! How? i could barely let my husband get his hours in… forget about mine!
also if there is someone in america who is a MUA or something that women would appreciate-( i am sure i am not the only one 🙂 ) who would be willing to make a zoom meeting for people living here or a recording to help the mommies continue after another looonng day it would be such a chessed.
THANK YOU TO MY WONDERFUL JEWISH SISTERS WORLDWIDE! ASHREICHEM!!!
Its so great to be a jew!
Thank you for sharing! Yes, please post the links that you do have.
Here is the link for a free book about sirens in english -https://www.thecbtdbtcenter.com/product-page/michal-asks-ima-about-sirens
here is the link for a hebrew song about what to do for when there is a siren – it has a few calming techniques (made by a teacher years ago in sderot) https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=SoB1AjVCueU
here is a link to a booklet with ideas of activities with things you have @ home by Nshei SM – https://drive.google.com/file/d/1ccq7LsB4OK5j3jO2whMXrPlTQTFNqE46/view?usp=sharing
Thank you for sharing this meaningful article and for those sharing your experiences. There is a beautiful whatsapp chat for those who would like to see positive media at this time: https://chat.whatsapp.com/GltEGMKUAxIB3xfNFOhGuE
To our dear sisters in Eretz Yisroel,
We understand that life may appear to be continuing as usual, in the states but we know that things are far from normal. As we hold onto our tehillims, waiting for the doctor or doing yet another load of laundry, we are acutely aware of the pain and suffering of those in EY.
Our hearts are heavy with the weight of extra teffilos for all the chayalim, wounded, and hostages who need our tefillos. Even the simplest tasks, like washing dishes or preparing supper, are infused with extra kavana and gratitude for the safety of our loved ones.
As we lay our heads down at night, we feel the weight of guilt and worry, mostly not for ourselves, but for the brave soldiers who are fighting for our people and their families who wait anxiously at home.
We stand with you in spirit, dear sisters, and we Daven that Hashem will keep all of our fellow yidden safe. We should all gather together soon with the coming of Moshiach!
Please don’t tell yourself that American Jews do not care or understand. Our souls are torn apart. We’ve been charged to bring light to a dark situation with Tefilla & Tzedakah. I offered to come help traumatized children tho they are looking for help from well known medical clinics.
Personally, the people in my world are all devastated, nauseated, unable to fathom the reality of the current situation.
We/I am also in fervent prayer & support.
What else would you have us do?
I have a dear friend just called up to serve in the North.
We are One Family and I send all those in Israel
a message to be fervent, connected and to breathe.
We never know “why” but Hamas must be
removed immediately and our fear is
what will be the casualties, cost to all the
families and consequences as a result of.
With prayers that the mission is successful and
speedily in our days.
Faith. Faith.Faith.
hi dear sisters around the globe there are beautiful shiurim for chizuk on inspire by wire 7189066451 prompt 5 then 5 we are thinking of you dear strong sisters keep on going its not easy stay strong!!