Amanda 🇮🇱🇬🇧
23.7K posts

Amanda 🇮🇱🇬🇧
@AmandaBKyle
“I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the water to create many ripples”. (NO DMs)
Gateshead, England Katılım Ağustos 2024
2.8K Takip Edilen3.4K Takipçiler

Heartbreaking 💔
This morning, right after President Trump’s speech, the Iranian regime moved fast and hanged 18-year-old protester.
Yes, Mr. President @realDonaldTrump, there are no “less radical” leaders in Iran.
From the courtroom to the prison cell, from the interrogator to the judge, this is a unified system of terror. So this is the Islamic Republic: a system with a Stone Age approach to dissent, executing its own young people to stay in power.
This is not about left or right.
This is about life, dignity, and the future of a nation.
His name is Amirhossein Hatami. 18 years old. His “crime”? Demanding Freedom, dignity, and a normal life.
No lawyer. No independent media to be his voice, No fair trial. No final goodbye to his family. But of course a forced confession on State TV after being tortured to admit a crime that he has committed never committed.
And his friends may be next.
By the way, where are the anti-war activists?
Why don’t we hear you campaigning against mass arrests, and executions in Iran ? Would you demand that the Iranian regime stop its war on unarmed people?
Stop the executions.
Stop the torture.
End the total #DigitalBlackOut imposed on Iran.
This is about standing with the people of Iran against a regime that has massacred more than 40,000 of its own citizens and is now killing those arrested in the same uprising

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@EliAfriatISR @RichardRich021 Wishing your wife a very happy birthday 💐
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Today is my wife's birthday and I will be a little less active.
I would appreciate it if you would wish her a happy birthday.
I will show this to her.
Thank you. 🤍🥳
Eli Afriat 🇮🇱@EliAfriatISR
Today is my wife's birthday and I will be a little less active. I would appreciate it if you would wish her a happy birthday. I will show this to her. Thank you. 🤍🥳
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Lots of people have asked me what Pesach is, so here’s a really brief explanation & I hope it helps.
Pesach, or Passover sits right at the heart of Jewish life. It lasts seven or eight days each spring and remembers the moment our ancestors walked out of slavery in Egypt.
Think about it like this. You know how some family stories get told year after year until they feel part of who you are? That is Pesach.
The Book of Exodus tells how Moses stood up to Pharaoh, how ten plagues came down, and how G-d finally said enough. The last plague took the firstborn sons of Egypt, yet the Israelites were spared because they marked their doors with lamb’s blood. Those marked homes were passed over. That’s where the name comes from, plain and simple.
For us Jews it matters so much because it is not just ancient history. It is our birth story as a free people. Freedom is not something we take for granted. Every spring we pause, look around the table at the faces we love, and feel grateful that we can choose our own path. It reminds us to keep teaching the next generation that liberty is precious and that we carry responsibility for one another. There is a quiet warmth in that, like a hug from the past that still fits perfectly.
We mark it in ways that pull everyone in. The big one is the Seder, the special meal on the first 2 nights.
Families gather, open the Haggadah, and retell the whole story together. Kids ask the four questions.
Actually my favourite part is Ma Nishtana, It’s sung at the beginning of the Maggid section of the Haggadah, shortly after the appetiser (Karpas) is eaten.
Traditionally, it is sung or recited by the youngest person at the Seder table who is capable of asking.
"Ma Nishtana" translates to "Why is this night different?" It asks four questions highlighting the unique acts done at the Seder (eating matzah, eating bitter herbs, dipping food, and reclining) compared to all other nights.
The questions act as a prompt for the head of the household to begin telling the story of the Exodus from Egypt
We drink four cups of wine, we taste bitter herbs to remember the hardship and we eat matzah, that simple flat bread.
Matzah stands for the rush, the moment they left so fast the dough never had time to rise.
For the whole week we keep the house clear of chametz, anything made from leavened grain. No bread, no biscuits, no cereal. Many of us give the place a proper deep clean first, which, let me tell you, turns into quite the family project. It is not just about the rules. It is a fresh start, a way of sweeping out the old so we can step into something new with clearer hearts.
In the end Pesach brings us close. We laugh, we argue over the best charoset recipe, we remember the tough bits and the hopeful ones. And somehow, in the middle of it all, freedom feels real again, right there in the room with us.
Chag Pesach Semeach
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