Captivity survivors Sasha Troufanov and Sapir Cohen got married tonight!! Mazal Tov 🤍. Heartwarming 🫶🏼
Hamas captivity survivor Emilia Aloni , 6 years old , was kidnapped with Sasha and Sapir to Gaza on OCT 7 and drew a painting in the tunnels of the two getting married and her wish came true this evening 🐻🤍
@N12News
I have ZERO patience with Christians who hate Jewish people, or make up crazy conspiracy theories about Jews.
As a Christian it makes me so sad and angry. I don't understand how they can call themselves Christian.
In recent years I have lost a couple of friends that turned out to be antisemites… and that's perfectly ok. After October 7, a lot of people have shown their true colours.
I want NOTHING to do with such wicked people.
Haunting and heartbreaking.
The last photo taken of the six hostages that were brutally executed with a bullet to the head in Rafah including American hostage Hersh Goldberg-Polin
They were starved and tortured in tunnels and then all shot by Palestinian terrorists.
Hersh, Carmel, Alex, Ori, Almog, Eden.
May your memories all be blessings.
"There is no two-state solution on the table anymore. The Palestinians were given a de facto state in 2005 when every Jew was removed from Gaza. They had 18 years. What did they do with it? Rockets, war, October 7th."
- Douglas Murray
The constant, uncomfortable shifting, the tight-lipped, disgusted look on her face, could the U.N. Rapporteur on Violence against Women look like she wants the survivor sitting in front of her to shut up any more?
Is this how someone whose entire job is to advocate for women against violence should be acting when faced with a woman who suffered verifiable violence?
Should a plea from a victim for an apology be met with hateful silence?
The UN should be ashamed, but I have a sinking feeling they're proud instead.
I got really emotional yesterday thinking about how, in one of the first entries in her diary, Anne Frank wrote adoringly that her dad was ‘the most adorable father I’ve ever seen’.
Otto Frank, the sole member of the Frank family to survive the Shoah, spent the rest of his life ensuring that the world knew his daughter’s story. A true exemplar of fatherly devotion if ever there was one.
I often wonder.. How can people be so blind? How can they be so easily fooled when it comes to Israel?
They assume that because most of the world stands against Israel, that means Israel must be in the wrong.
Yet the Bible clearly warns that in the end times, all nations will turn against Israel. And if you read Scripture, it’s evident that the world—not Israel—is on the wrong side. God is clearly on Israel's side.
So my question to everyone is: Don't you want to be on God's side? I would never in a million years stand against God. That is foolish to say the least.
On Kristallnacht, November 9, 1938, Aracy de Carvalho watched Hamburg burn.
The next morning she hid a Jewish family in her apartment.
Aracy was 30 — a Brazilian clerk at the Hamburg consulate. A divorced single mother from a small town who spoke German, French, and English. Not a diplomat. Just chief of the Passport Section.
Brazil’s dictator had secretly ordered consulates to reject Jewish visas. Most obeyed. Aracy refused.
She processed Jewish applications, walked them personally to the consul, and got them approved. She worked around the Nazis’ red “J” stamps and sheltered families before they sailed.
In 1938 she partnered with João Guimarães Rosa, the assistant consul. Together they ran a quiet rescue operation for four years. Hundreds of Jews — including the Bertel-Levy, Tuch, and Kazenstein families — reached safety in Brazil.
Aracy never sought credit.
She married Rosa in 1940 and stayed in the background while he became a literary giant.
For decades almost no one knew.
Then survivors spoke.
In 1982 Yad Vashem named her Righteous Among the Nations — the only Brazilian woman ever honored, and the only woman featured in their “Visas for Life” exhibit alongside Wallenberg and Sugihara.
Aracy de Carvalho, the Angel of Hamburg, died in 2011 at 102. A small-town clerk who used a stamp, a signature, and quiet courage to save hundreds of lives and thousands of descendants.
She simply did what her heart demanded when most did not.
I wonder how many people would do the same today?
My heart goes out to Iranians and Jews who for similar and different reasons feel a multitude of emotions.
Just know that you have friends and are loved.
Israel will always have it's freedom and strength.
Hope those with morals find a way to empower Iranians.