Love, Neighbour and being Jew

I take seriously the repeated exhortation in our Torah to love one’s neighbor so that there is no difference between loving oneself and loving one’s neighbor. The question is not only why this is so important, but also „Who is my neighbor?“ He is a Jew!

Therefore, it is important to fill this love with life, in our interactions with one another and also in the loving acceptance we show ourselves. For only those who know and accept themselves well can truly connect with others. We all encounter many people in our lives. Some are acquaintances, some friends, and most often they are Jewish people who do us the most good. We strengthen, inspire, encourage, help, teach, and protect each other from negative influences and the hatred propagated by the media from our enemies. Therefore, nothing can replace direct contact and the courage to say, „I am your brother“ or „I am your sister.“

Let us acknowledge one another, with all the differences that are God’s will, and let us also recognize that it is up to us if we focus on what divides us. Let us rebuild the unity we desire each day and grow together.

This is my personal goal and mission, for the Torah demands it. It is God’s revelation to humankind, but it is the Jewish people alone who take it seriously.

Shalom

Poem as Prayer

Complete Kindness

In every day I Love YOU
In every day I need YOU
In every day I depend on YOU
In every day you complete me

In every day Hashem
Thats the clue

YOU are my shield and saviour
YOU are my liberation
YOU are my inner and outer world
YOU are giving me kindness
YOU are my everything

Thanks to our G-d
His Mercy ist great

Thanks to our G-d
His wisdom can’t be thought

Thanks to our G-d
His renewal of Life ist unlimited

Thanks to our G-d
You never left us

(Free Poem by Marcus Günther Michael Gundlach

Explaining my Soul…

I am simply grateful for a good, loving relationship with my true self. This is the prerequisite for recognizing the light within myself and in the people around me. Sometimes—actually, almost always—I am respected as a Jew when I remain true to myself and can say, as I have always:

Yes, I am Jewish.

Yes, I am a Torah-observant.

Yes, I love Hashem.

Yes, I enjoy working.

Yes, I am loved.

Yes, I prefer writing to talking.

Yes, I talk more than I used to, and that makes me happy.

Yes, I am happy.

Yes, I think positively.

Yes, life is beautiful.

Yes, I miss my Jewish friends and family who still remember me from my time in Stuttgart.

Yes, my path leads back to Stuttgart, even though I spent my most important years in Esslingen.
… And yes, I will never give up on my dreams, because they lead me to Israel.

Truth and Peace

Truth is always subjectively colored and varies depending on the source from which we derive it. This is not the case with the Torah—our Torah.

It is God’s revelation to the Jewish people, and it is the Jewish people alone who take it seriously. The ethics of the Torah can be understood universally and are the starting point for a world that bases its lives and decisions on values, not opinions.

Furthermore, truth also depends on access to and engagement with sources of Jewish wisdom, because Judaism is not an ideology or a political program.

Truth also depends on our daily, general state of mind—affective-emotional, cognitive, and social. Our state of mind filters and focuses the information that affects us. Conversely, the information available to us affects our consciousness and perception.

The list of factors that create and influence our truth is therefore long. We must always be aware that there are many truths!

I am reminded of the saying, „Two Jews, three opinions.“ What I mean to say is that truth always emerges through dialogue and with consideration for all involved.

Therefore, when in doubt, I always choose peace. For it is peace that never delays. But first, order is needed so that peace can be established.

The first Kohen haGadol, Ahiaron, coined the phrase:

„Seek peace and pursue it.“

We should all take this more to heart.

News by Hillel Fuld; 29.09.2025

Hamas and other factions agree to not have any role in the governance of Gaza, directly, indirectly, or in any form.

All military, terror, and offensive infrastructure, including tunnels and weapon production facilities, will be destroyed and not rebuilt.

There will be a process of demilitarization of Gaza under the supervision of independent monitors, which will include placing weapons permanently beyond use through an agreed process of decommissioning, and supported by an internationally funded buy back and reintegration program all verified by the independent monitors.

New Gaza will be fully committed to building a prosperous economy and to peaceful coexistence with their neighbors.

A guarantee will be provided by regional partners to ensure that Hamas, and the factions, comply with their obligations and that New Gaza poses no threat to its neighbors or its people.

The United States will work with Arab and international partners to develop a temporary International Stabilization Force (ISF) to immediately deploy in Gaza.

The ISF will train and provide support to vetted Palestinian police forces in Gaza, and will consult with Jordan and Egypt who have extensive experience in this field.

This force will be the long-term internal security solution. The ISF will work with Israel and Egypt to help secure border areas, along with newly trained Palestinian police forces.

It is critical to prevent munitions from entering Gaza and to facilitate the rapid and secure flow of goods to rebuild and revitalize Gaza. A deconfliction mechanism will be agreed upon by the parties.

Israel will not occupy or annex Gaza. As the ISF establishes control and stability, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) will withdraw based on standards, milestones, and timeframes linked to demilitarization that will be agreed upon between the IDF, ISF, the guarantors, and the Unites States, with the objective of a secure Gaza that no longer poses a threat to Israel, Egypt, or its citizens.

Practically, the IDF will progressively hand over the Gaza territory it occupies to the ISF according to an agreement they will make with the transitional authority until they are withdrawn completely from Gaza, save for a security perimeter presence that will remain until Gaza is properly secure from any resurgent terror threat.

In the event Hamas delays or rejects this proposal, the above, including the scaled-up aid operation, will proceed in the terror-free areas handed over from the IDF to the ISF.

An interfaith dialogue process will be established based on the values of tolerance and peaceful co-existence to try and change mindsets and narratives of Palestinians and Israelis by emphasizing the benefits that can be derived from peace.

While Gaza re-development advances and when the PA reform program is faithfully carried out, the conditions may finally be in place for a credible pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood, which we recognize as the aspiration of the Palestinian people.

The United States will establish a dialogue between Israel and the Palestinians to agree on a political horizon for peaceful and prosperous co-existence.

To the anti-semites of the world

To the anti-semites of the world:

You say we run the banks.
You say we control Hollywood.
You say we dominate the media.
You say we have too much influence, too much power, too much pride.
But you never ask how — or why.
So, let me tell you.

We were banned from owning land,
so we learned to live by our minds.
We were blocked from trade guilds
so we became merchants, scholars, doctors, and lawyers.

Our commitment to education didn’t come from privilege —
it came from necessity.
From exclusion. From survival.
When we were barred from universities, we built our own yeshivot.
The Torah became our moral anchor. When we were mocked for being “bookish,” we made knowledge our defense. The insult became our armor.

In medieval Europe, Christians were forbidden by the Church to lend money with interest. But kings still needed loans, and someone had to do the collecting. So they turned to the Jews — already despised, already othered. We became moneylenders not by ambition, but by force. Then we were hated for it.

In America, we were shut out of “respectable” jobs. So we went west and helped invent Hollywood — not to brainwash, but to dream. To tell stories. To make magic.

When Ivy League schools capped Jewish admissions, we founded Brandeis.

When hospitals wouldn’t hire Jewish doctors, we built Cedars-Sinai.

When law firms closed their doors, we opened Skadden and Wachtell.

We weren’t trying to dominate — we were just trying to live.

We were expelled from Spain. Massacred in Poland.
Hanged in Iran. Lynched in Georgia. Bombed in Germany. And yet, we survived.

We learned. We remembered.

In 1948, the world watched as nearly a million Jews were expelled or fled from Arab lands. Their homes, businesses, and synagogues were seized or burned. There were no refugee camps, no UN agencies, no worldwide calls for justice. No “right of return” for the Jews of Baghdad, Aleppo, or Tripoli.

You say we’re tribal. But we tried to integrate. We changed our names. But every time we tried to disappear, you reminded us who we were. So, we turned inward. We leaned on each other. We built hospitals when we weren’t welcomed in yours. We built advocacy groups to defend ourselves when no one else would.

And when no country would have us — we built our own.

Then Came October 7, 2023.

You say you hate Israel because of its policies. Because of land. Because of borders. But on October 7, 2023, Hamas didn’t target soldiers. They didn’t storm checkpoints or military outposts. They raped women. They beheaded babies. They burned families alive. They slaughtered civilians in their homes, bombed shelters, and slaughtered young people at a music festival. It was the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust. And as our dead lay unburied, the world didn’t mourn with us — it rallied against us.

College students held “Glory to the Martyrs” signs. Protesters waved swastikas in Sydney. “Gas the Jews” was graffitied in Berlin. Jewish students were barricaded inside libraries in New York. MIT students were blocked from class. At Harvard, they were told to remove their Stars of David for safety. All while our hostages were still bleeding in tunnels.

So, no — this isn’t about borders.
You hated us before 1948. Before the State of Israel existed. Before a single border was drawn.

What you hate is that the Jew now has power. A flag. A standing army.
A government. A home. You preferred us weak. Wandering. Apologizing. Dependent on your pity or permission to live.

Israel Is Not a Gift. It Is a Necessity.
We didn’t colonize the land — we returned to it. Jews have lived in Jerusalem, Hebron, Safed, and Tiberias for over 3,000 years. We prayed toward Zion for centuries. We spoke Hebrew while the world told us to forget.

We made the desert bloom.
We built a nation while surrounded by enemies, embargoed by the world, and haunted by the ashes of Auschwitz.

Israel was not built because of the Holocaust. It was built because of 2,000 years of exile, genocide, and betrayal — and it is the only insurance policy against the next one.

Never Again is not a slogan.
It’s the Iron Dome.
It’s the F-35.
It’s the 18-year-old girl in olive green standing guard so toddlers in Sderot can sleep.

Why the Double Standard?

When Russia invaded Ukraine, the world cried out. Blue and yellow flags adorned every profile. Weapons, refugee aid, solidarity — all rightly offered. But when Hamas burned Israeli children alive, we were told to “de-escalate.” When we defend our cities, we’re called monsters. When we bury our dead, you protest our grief. Why?

Peace Is Possible. We’ve Tried.

You say Jews are foreigners in the Middle East. But the UAE, Bahrain, Morocco, and Sudan disagree. The Abraham Accords proved peace isn’t just possible — it’s real.

We seek coexistence. You chant “From the river to the sea.” We chose life. You chant death.

So yes — Israel is strong now.
Baruch Hashem.
Because a powerless Jew is a dead Jew.
And history taught us: no king, no pope, no president will save us.

We don’t want to dominate. We just want to live. Freely. Proudly. Unapologetically.

You don’t have to like us. You don’t have to agree with us. But never again will you decide whether we’re allowed to exist.

Credit: Carl Ginsberg

Never forget, Never forgive!

I remember and never will forget and forgive! Every day, not only at Special Events of remembrance.

The World have forgotten you all – but we Jews are having a collective mind and taking now consequences. Its all about the root causes of death, lies, ignorance and Moral Corruption…

For this Gaza takes the results of today by its own. Free Gaza means the complete destruction of Hamas Infrastructure without Weapons at all and a complete surrender. At this day the war will end.

It needs Military Action to reach this Goal. And nobody else
than IDF can provide a better present and future. Those who survived the Hamas-Massacre and survived until this day must be liberated.

There is no other way!

Bet haMikdash!

Ich werde nicht fasten (aus gesundheitlichen Gründen) weil alle diese Tage Tage der Freude werden – bald wird die Realität diejenigen einholen, die an seinen Wiederaufbau nicht mehr glauben oder sich selbstzufrieden mit der Zerstörung (bis auf einen erhaltenen Rest) arrangieren. Die einen, weil sie ihn nicht wollen, die anderen, weil sie an dessen Zerstörung aktiv in der Vergangenheit beteiligt waren und jetzt diesen euphemistisch als nicht mehr notwendig erachten.

Shavua Tov!

Ich bin mit meiner Seele und in Gedanken ganz in Jerushalajim und dem Bet haMikdash.

Macron’s Dreamtheater

Text: Avi Grin

Der französische Botschafter in Israel besuchte die Muqataa in Ramallah und überreichte Mahmud Abbas eine Verpflichtungserklärung zur Gründung eines palästinensischen Staates.

Was sicher ist: Der französische Botschafter konnte auf den Fotos die Karten von „Palästina“ sehen, die an den Wänden jedes Raumes und jeder Halle in der Muqataa hängen.
Das ist die einzige Karte, die sie besitzen –
in Schulbüchern, auf öffentlichen Plätzen in arabischen Städten in Judäa und Samaria, in jeder diplomatischen Vertretung der palästinensischen Autonomiebehörde, die Israel ihnen überhaupt erst ermöglicht hat.

Der einzige Staat, der ihnen je irgendeine Form von Unabhängigkeit gegeben hat, ist der Staat Israel.

Es gibt keinen Führer dieses erfundenen Volkes – eines Volkes mit einem lächerlichen Namen, der nicht einmal wirklich arabisch klingt – „die Palästinenser“ –
der sich vor seiner gesamten Diaspora hinstellen und sagen könnte:
„Nie wieder werden wir nach Haifa, Jaffa, Akko, Safed, Lod, Nazareth oder Zippori zurückkehren.
Wir werden in einem Zwergstaat leben, den die israelische Linke und Macron uns im Westjordanland und Gaza anbieten.
Wir werden auf ‚Palästina vom Fluss bis zum Meer‘ verzichten.
Wir werden in Frieden leben, Seite an Seite mit Israel.
Unser großes Volk – das größtenteils in der Diaspora lebt – wird sich mit diesem kleinen Zwergstaat zufriedengeben.“

Dabei handelt es sich um ein Gebiet, das bis 1967 unter arabischer Kontrolle stand –
doch kein einziger arabischer Führer träumte jemals davon, den Palästinensern dort einen Staat zu geben.
Die Arabische Liga hat niemals ihr „Recht“ auf einen Staat anerkannt – weder in Jordanien noch in Ägypten.
Keine einzige arabische Nation sah in den Palästinensern ein unabhängiges Volk mit Anspruch auf ein eigenes Staatsgebiet.
Die Palästinenser waren ein Vorwand, um den arabisch-israelischen Konflikt aufrechtzuerhalten, dessen Ziel die Zerstörung Israels war.

Jerusalem war zu keinem Zeitpunkt der Geschichte Hauptstadt eines arabischen Staates.
Für uns Juden gab es niemals eine andere Hauptstadt als Jerusalem.

Und doch will Macron den Arabern Ostjerusalem geben. 🤔
Das wird ihm nicht helfen.
Paris wird islamisch – ob er Palästina anerkennt oder nicht.

Text :Tamir Morag

Ein bisschen Perspektive – angesichts der Hysterie rund um die französische Anerkennung eines „palästinensischen Staates“, der in Wirklichkeit gar nicht existiert:

Schon lange vor dem dramaliebenden und heuchlerischen Macron haben etwa 139 von 193 UN-Mitgliedsstaaten (also über 70 %) den „palästinensischen Staat“ anerkannt – darunter auch einige westliche Länder wie Spanien, Irland, Norwegen und andere.
Was hat das den Palästinensern gebracht? Unklar.

Macron ist gelangweilt, weil er innenpolitisch gelähmt ist und nichts bewegen kann – also sucht er sich Abenteuer im Ausland und drückt uns diesen Baguette ins Gesicht.

Der Sturm wird vorübergehen – und die Realität wird sich nicht ändern, so wie sie sich auch bisher nicht geändert hat, obwohl die Mehrheit der Staaten weltweit diesen imaginären Staat längst anerkannt hat.

—–

Text: Avi Grin

The French ambassador to Israel visited the Muqataa in Ramallah and presented Mahmoud Abbas with a declaration of commitment to the establishment of a Palestinian state.

What is certain is that the French ambassador could see in the photos the maps of „Palestine“ hanging on the walls of every room and hall in the Muqataa.

This is the only map they have – in schoolbooks, in public squares in Arab towns in Judea and Samaria, in every diplomatic mission of the Palestinian Authority, which Israel made possible in the first place.

The only state that has ever given them any form of independence is the State of Israel.

There is no leader of this fictitious people—a people with a ridiculous name that doesn’t even sound particularly Arabic—“the Palestinians“—who could stand before their entire diaspora and say:
„Never again will we return to Haifa, Jaffa, Acre, Safed, Lod, Nazareth, or Zippori.
We will live in a dwarf state that the Israeli left and Macron are offering us in the West Bank and Gaza.
We will renounce ‚Palestine from the River to the Sea.‘
We will live in peace, side by side with Israel.
Our great people—most of whom live in the diaspora—will be content with this small dwarf state.“

This is territory that was under Arab control until 1967—yet not a single Arab leader ever dreamed of giving the Palestinians a state there.
The Arab League has never recognized their „right“ to a state—neither in Jordan nor in Egypt.
No Arab nation saw the Palestinians as an independent people entitled to their own territory.
The Palestinians were a pretext for perpetuating the Arab-Israeli conflict, whose goal was the destruction of Israel.

Jerusalem has never been the capital of an Arab state at any point in history.
For us Jews, there has never been a capital other than Jerusalem.

And yet Macron wants to give East Jerusalem to the Arabs. 🤔
That won’t help him.
Paris is becoming Islamic – whether he recognizes Palestine or not.

Text: Tamir Morag

A bit of perspective – in light of the hysteria surrounding the French recognition of a „Palestinian state“ that doesn’t actually exist:

Long before the drama-loving and hypocritical Macron, approximately 139 of 193 UN member states (over 70%) recognized the „Palestinian state“ – including some Western countries like Spain, Ireland, Norway, and others.
What has this done for the Palestinians? Unclear.

Macron is bored because he is paralyzed domestically and can’t get anything done – so he seeks adventures abroad and shoves this baguette in our faces.

The storm will pass – and reality will not change, just as it has not changed so far, even though the majority of countries worldwide have long since recognized this imaginary state.

‚Gideon’s Chariots‘

🇮🇱🇵🇸- The IDF has chosen a name for the upcoming military operation:
‘Gideon’s Chariots“

MORE DETAILS ON ISRAEL’S WAR ESCALATION IN GAZA

In essence, Israel is telling Hamas: either agree to a deal within the next ten days to free all the remaining hostages or face total destruction.

In a dramatic and long-overdue decision, the Israeli cabinet has unanimously approved Operation “Gideon’s Chariots”, a plan of maximum pressure aimed at the full defeat of Hamas and the release of all hostages.

As revealed by Minister Bezalel Smotrich, the IDF will no longer withdraw from territories it liberates in Gaza, even in exchange for hostages. Instead, Israel will continue its military campaign until Hamas is decisively defeated and the hostages are freed as a result of that pressure, not through concessions.

This marks a major strategic shift. For the first time, Israel is publicly aligning itself with the standard military strategy, where no country surrenders strategic gains in trying to defeat an enemy and free hostages.

Key points of the plan:

  • Massive reinforcement of IDF forces and decisive action to dismantle Hamas’s military and governing capabilities.
  • Ongoing military presence in cleared areas—unlike past operations, to prevent the return of terror.
  • Evacuation of Gazans from combat zones to the south, separating them from Hamas fighters.
  • A security buffer zone around Gaza will be maintained permanently to protect Israeli communities.
  • Limited humanitarian aid, only after combat begins, will be delivered by the IDF under tight military control to prevent Hamas exploitation.

A senior defense official clarified: the IDF is now acting to crush Hamas and bring home the hostages—not through negotiations, but through force. If Hamas does not agree to a deal in the coming days, the operation will move forward with full force.

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