I’ve long argued that a godless West simply can’t understand or properly reason with a Middle East where religion rules politics.
Author - Aviel Schneider
Aviel born on a Kibbutz and grew up in Jerusalem in a family dedicated Zionism. After high school he served in the renown Givati Brigade and fought in the First Lebanon War. After his service he studied Music at the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance and later went on to study Telecommunication and Marketing.
Together with his wife Anat they raised four children and for the couple “family is above all!” They live on a Moshav in the hills around Jerusalem where Aviel served for years in a rescue team in the Judean desert and has a passion for the unique wilderness of Israel. He enjoys hiking, running, cooking, music, kitesurfing and travel. Family, work and faith help him keep balanced in mind, body and soul.
Aviel loves to uncover biblical truths that shine light on current political dramas in Israel and the region. “As is it written, ‘There is nothing new under the sun.’ But there is a lot of ancient wisdom and things that people forget, especially concerning Israel. Whether we like it or not, the Bible is the only mandate for Israel’s rebirth and existence today.”
More articles from Aviel Schneider
The US president’s brilliant plan to relocate more than a million Palestinians from the “ruins of Gaza” has once again brought discussion about the future into sharper focus.
No one can claim that the lives of Jewish souls in Israel are less valuable than military successes or the destruction of Hamas rule.
Israel must find a creative way to both free our sisters and brothers from captivity, and destroy Hamas. But how?
This biblical injunction compels us to do everything in our power other than help those in mortal danger.
Israel in distress
This is not the first time that Israel has been in a crisis situation. What stimulates Israel’s history are its constant emergencies, which make the people turn toward God.
The recent toppling of Syrian ruler Bashar al-Assad raises many questions. Nothing lasts forever, neither the Assad regime nor the regime of the ayatollahs in Tehran.
In the last year in particular, the divide between Israel’s ultra-Orthodox community and the rest of society has further deepened.
The Arab governments in the Middle East are less enthusiastic about the new government in Syria than the Western states.
“The blood of the arch enemies on their own heads” – A review of targeted killings in 2024.
