
Rabbi Steven Burg
41.5K posts

Rabbi Steven Burg
@stevenburg
CEO of Aish. Addressing global challenges w/ Jewish wisdom, ethical clarity, & respect for history, faith & human dignity. Proud Husband & Dad of 6 Amazing Kids









🚨 UPDATE: The man who rammed a pickup truck into a Detroit-area synagogue last week had been described as suicidal in a 911 call made by his ex-wife earlier that day, according to WXYZ-TV. Ayman Ghazali later waited outside Temple Israel in West Bloomfield for about two hours before crashing his vehicle into the building, where dozens of children were inside. An armed guard exchanged gunfire with him before he killed himself; the vehicle also caught fire. No children were injured. His ex-wife told police he was “really upset” and “suicidal,” noting he had recently lost relatives in an Israeli airstrike in Lebanon. Israel later identified one of those relatives, Ibrahim Ghazali, as a Hezbollah commander. The FBI is investigating the incident and has declined to comment on that claim. Stay connected, follow @MOSSADil.






Israeli Channel 12 reports at least three buildings have been completely destroyed in Tel Aviv. One missile directly struck the area, Israeli authorities stated.

Iran released footage of what it claims is its 75th wave of attacks, featuring imagery of Spain’s Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez on the missiles.

I keep hearing the same thing from Israeli officers, and it tells you something real about this war. Over the past few days, I’ve spoken with officers at different levels. Some are very senior. Some are much younger. The same point keeps coming up: their relationship with their American counterparts is unusually close. They are talking about day-to-day work. Calls. Assessments. Fast decisions. Trust built over time and tested now under pressure. In more rooms than people realize, the working language is English. As an Israeli and an American, I notice that. From the outside, most people see the strike, the headline, the statement. Inside the system, alliances are judged differently. They are judged by whether people can speak plainly, understand each other quickly, and work together when time is short and the stakes are high. I’ve spent enough time around decision-makers and military officials to know the difference between a friendly relationship and a working one. What I’m hearing now is about the working kind. That may be one of the most important stories of this war against the IRGC in Iran - and it's proxies.
















