ISRAEL’S SOUNDS OF SIRENS

They resonate, they reverberate, they blare telling a story of where we were in the past but also where we are in the present.

By David E. Kaplan

A stranger who is totally unfamiliar with Israel’s customs and history visiting Israel during these trying times could be excused for asking:

 “Why is there a siren blaring now?”

Holocaust Day. Traffic come to a halt on Yom HaShoah in Israel as sirens sound calling people to observe a moment of silence for those murdered during the Holocaust. Days later, they sound again, this time for fallen soldiers and victims of terrorism.

Try explaining we have sirens sounding for the past and for the present. For the past an air raid siren sounded at 10.00 a.m. on April 23 throughout the country on Yom HaShoah (Holocaust Remembrance Day) observing two minutes of solemn reflection for the six million Jews murdered in the Holocaust during WWII.  Days later, on April 29, the first siren is heard heralding in Yom HaZikaron, Israel’s day of remembrance for its fallen soldiers and victims of terror and again the next morning, a second siren sounds at 11.00am, when most Israelis, wherever they are or whatever they are doing, stop and stand in silence.

‘Stand’ with Israel. With the mournful sound of the siren, Israel comes to a standstill as traffic stops and people stand for two minutes reflecting on the lives lost in uniform and those killed in acts of terrorism.

Then there are the more frequent sirens that have been blaring for some 20 months at all times of the day or night that contrary to the abovementioned sirens where you stand in silence, these sirens you run as fast as you can for cover.

If the former sirens commemorate past deaths, these erratic sirens warn to prevent future deaths as we wait for incoming missiles from Gaza, from Lebanon, from Iran or from Yemen – yes, that could be from the north, from the east, from the south west and from the south. Israel is surrounded by enemies determined to extinguish Jewish sovereignty in the Middle East. The first thing people in apartment blocks ask when they collectively huddle in the bomb shelters is:

Where is this missile coming from?”

Either in clothes or pajamas – depending on what time of day –  the anxious are quickly on their cellphones to come up with the answer!

Sirens not to Stand but to Run. A typical message that appears on your cellphone app indicating in what areas sirens have sounded indicating incoming missiles.

While to the unacquainted visitor from abroad it may be confusing, to the average Israeli it is all part of a routine. Even my under 6-year-old grandchildren understand when it is time to stand and when it is time to run. All associated with violent death, the sirens are either to remind of those killed in the past or they are to prevent being killed in the present.

As I type, I suddenly withdraw my fingers from the keyboard, swivel off my computer chair to hurriedly call my brother living on a moshav in the north of Israel because a siren had gone off in his area warning of an incoming ballistic missile from the Houthis in Yemen – an enemy over 2,211km (1,373 miles) away who nearly two years ago, most Israelis had never even heard of! The breaking news later confirmed the missile attack with this headline:

 “Missile debris falls on kindergarten in northern Israel after interception of Houthi launch.”

Houthis Hounding Kids. Debris from an intercepted missile fired by Yemen’s Houthi rebels landed on a kindergarten in northern Israel on May 1, 2025, piercing the building’s roof and ceiling. Fortunately, no children were present at the time. (Photo: Megiddo Regional Council).

The debris pierced the kindergarten building’s roof and ceiling but thankfully no children were present at the time and no injuries were reported. Yes, survival in Israel can depend on luck but most certainly on sirens.

As there are enemies unhappy with Jews in Israel there are today enemies unhappy with Jews anywhere – in the US, UK, Canada, Ireland, France, Germany, Italy, Belgium, Holland, South Africa and Australia. There may not be sirens sounding in these countries, but the warnings are clear – Jews are under threat everywhere. It is the hunting season and Jews are the prey. My daughter’s dancing students who have this year won competitions in Israel qualifying them to compete in competitions in Europe – London and Paris – cannot realistically consider going – too unsafe, particularly for young girls! However, it is not only Israelis, who are today precautionary as when they travel abroad that might switch languages or tone down the volume when they speak Hebrew. Jews generally, are lowering or disguising their religious, ethnic or cultural profile by removing:

kipot (skullcaps)

Magen David (Star of David) necklaces

– Menorahs from the front doors of their homes

– when holding community events, only notifying of the venue at the last moment so as to minimize the danger of attacks

– increasing security at synagogues.

Australia, once considered a “Jewish paradise” is no more. Earlier this year, two men with covered faces, dressed in black, came to a house in Sydney’s Eastern Suburbs and sprayed the garage with red paint, set the cars parked in the street on fire, and added antisemitic graffiti. Their target was the former home of Alex Ryvchin, co-CEO of the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, the representative body of the country’s Jewish community and a contributor to Lay of the Land. They erroneously thought Ryvchin still lived there.

In an interview with Globes, Ryvchin related:

My wife and I woke up early that morning, because we received the security camera recordings from our old neighbor who lives opposite. On the cameras, we saw a car pull up and two men pouring gasoline on the road leading up to the house and setting two cars alight. On one of the cars, they wrote ‘Fuck Israel’ on one side and ‘Jews’ on the other side.”

Their choice of parlance reveals to them as it does to across the world that Israel and Jews are synonymous.

Only a month earlier in Australia, a children’s daycare center next to a Sydney synagogue was set on fire, and in December, a Molotov cocktail was hurled at a synagogue in Melbourne.

Data reveals that the number of antisemitic incidents in the “Jewish paradise” jumped to 2,062 in the twelve months following the October 7 massacre from just 495 in the previous year. There is no shortage of reports from harassment to physical attacks. Two highly publicized incidents that majorly rattled the Jewish community was when a Jewish-owned business in Melbourne was sprayed with the words “Gas the Jews” and then followed when two nurses from a Sydney hospital Ahmad Rashad Nadir and Sarah Abu Lebdeh, refugees from Afghanistan, related in a conversation on TikTok that when it comes to Israeli patients, Ahmed said “I won’t treat them, I will kill them,” and “I want you to remember my face, so you can understand that you will die the most disgusting death,” with Nadir chiming in with, “You have no idea how many Israeli dogs came to this hospital and I send them to Jahannam (hell).”

What would Wagner have thought of this Opera outside an Opera House? Only 2 days after the October 7 2023 massacre, pro-Palestinian, anti-Israel protesters gather on October 9 at the Sydney Opera House, which had been planned to be illuminated in the colors of the Israeli flag following the atrocities of October 7 and chanted “gas the Jews” and “f…the Jews”. (Photo: AP/Rick Rycroft)

The “siren” for Australian Jews should have been when a few days after the October massacre in 2023, a demonstration took place outside the Sydney Opera House, with participants recorded shouting “Where are the Jews” and “Gas the Jews”. While the world was horrified, the Australian government besides condemning the incident, did little to curb the outbreak of Jew hatred that has only grown in momentum and contributed to the global pandemic.

At least in Israel, Jews do not ask as they might do when traveling abroad:

“I wear a kippah. If I were to come, would that be dangerous for me?”

If they have to ask that question, the siren is already sounding.

Rocket Warning Sirens Sound in Tel Aviv | VOANews

EPILOGUE

One writes in Israel as it is happening. As I conclude this article I am compelled to UNEXPECTABLY add an epilogue.

It is 9.40am Sunday 4 May and suddenly I was drawn away again from my computer only to return 15 minutes later from the shelter here in my apartment block in Kfar Saba.

Yes, another SIREN!

My wife WhatsApp’s me that she stopped the car and has run into a supermarket for cover! This is followed by my Lay of the Land co-partner, Rolene Marks living in Modiin, WhatsApping me:

 “WOW! That bang was loud…in the shelter at gym – whole building shook.”

I could understand why as the news breaks on Ynet:

Houthis target Israel in ballistic missile strike, hit Ben Gurion international airport

The airport is close to Modiin and it was the fifth missile fired by the Houthis in two days.

Houthi Havoc. Following sirens across all of central Israel, a Houthi missile crashes around access road to Terminal 3 at Ben Gurion Airport, May 4, 2025. Three people were mildly wounded as a result of the blast and the access road to Terminal 3 suffered damage. (Photo: MDA)

Israelis will wait another year for the sirens to sound once more for Yom HaShoah and Yom HaZikaron but in the meantime, we can expect many more sirens ‘screaming’ at us to run for cover.





THE ISRAEL BRIEF- 28 April- 01 May 2025

28 April 2025Is Syria the next to join the Abraham Accords? This and more on The Israel Brief.



29 April 2025Hostage families concerned deceased loved ones may not be recoverable and headlines on The Israel Brief.



30 April 2025The Israel Brief at The Nova site.



01 May 2025Yom Ha’atzmaut Sameach on the Israel Brief.




28 April 2025 – Rolene Marks on The Schilling Show.





THE ARAB VOICE – APRIL 2025

Perspectives and insights from writers in the Arab media

What has significantly changed following Israel’s defensive response to Hezbollah’s missile war on Israel following Hamas’ October 7 massacre is that the now weakened Shia Islamist political party and paramilitary group is increasingly losing Arab media support and is now being perceived as more of a liability than an asset to the best interests of Lebanon.

See recent articles (below) in the Arab media addressing this issue below.

David E. Kaplan
Editor Lay of the Land




(1)

THE HEZBOLLAH PARADOX

History does not move in reverse – especially not in war
By Jean Feghali 

Nidaa Al Watan, Lebanon, March 21

Hezbollah’s actions and rhetoric have become increasingly contradictory, particularly in the aftermath of its defeat by Israel. On one hand, it seeks to assert itself as the ultimate authority, acting as both the state and the dominant power, yet on the other, it scrambles for protection under the very state it undermines – having lost the political and strategic umbrellas it once relied on from its leadership structure to the Assad regime.

This contradiction is evident in its stance toward the Lebanese Army. It calls for the army’s presence in the town of Hawsh al-Sayyid Ali, yet the moment the army arrives, Hezbollah unleashes its loyalists to hurl insults, level accusations, and brand army officers and soldiers as “agents” and “Zionists”.

What exactly does Hezbollah want? In practical terms, it wants to revert to the status quo before October 8, 2023, when it launched its operation against Israel. But history does not move in reverse – especially not in war. The reality on the ground has changed entirely.

Hezbollah has suffered devastating losses, including two of its top leaders, Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah and Hashem Safieddine, along with over 30 of its highest-ranking field commanders and more than 120 mid-level field officers. Hundreds of others have been rendered unfit for service, and it has lost much of its military infrastructure south of the Litani River, including key tunnel networks and ammunition depots.

Hezbollah’s Legacy. A woman walks amongst the rubble in Lebanon after an Israeli airstrike.  The empty space where once buildings stood is a metaphor for what Hezbollah has brought upon the Lebanese people.

Externally, the situation is just as dire. Hezbollah has lost what was once its greatest strategic asset: the Syrian lever. With the fall of the Assad regime, it no longer enjoys the logistical and territorial depth that allowed it to operate with impunity. Forced to retreat into Lebanon’s borders, it has attempted to revive its long-standing mantra of “the people, the army, and the resistance.”

But this is where the contradiction deepens: How can it cling to this formula while simultaneously discrediting one of its supposed pillars – the Lebanese Army? The party’s own loyalists have accused the army’s officers and soldiers of treason, labeling them “Zionist agents,” effectively dismantling the very equation Hezbollah seeks to uphold. What remains is an absurd inversion: “the people, the Zionists, and the resistance.”

Hezbollah is now ensnared in its own rhetoric – demanding the army’s protection while actively eroding its legitimacy. Simply repeating the claim of “embracing the army” is no longer enough. If Hezbollah truly seeks legitimacy, it must do more than just pay lip service to the idea of national unity; it must accept the reality that the Lebanese Army alone has the rightful monopoly on weapons.

Until Hezbollah reaches this level of acknowledgment, the rhetoric of its officials – including the latest remarks by MP Hussein Hajj Hassan – is nothing more than a smokescreen, an attempt to obscure the fundamental contradiction of a movement that, on one hand, demands the army’s support, while on the other, denounces it as a traitor.

The real test for Hezbollah is whether it can confront this paradox – or whether it will continue to evade the inevitable reckoning with Lebanon’s sovereignty.

-Jean Feghali 



(2)

HEZBOLLAH SEVERS OUTSTRECHED HAND

Rather than reflecting on its ruinous past, Hezbollah choses delusion brandishing threats to manipulate public fear.
By Assaad Bechara

Nidaz Al Watan, Lebanon, April 17

An extended hand is met with severance – this is Hezbollah’s enduring equation, a principle it has embedded into its conduct for decades.

Dialog, in Hezbollah’s view, is never a pathway to mutual understanding but a tactical maneuver. Partnership is not a framework for cooperation but a platform for domination. 

In Hezbollah’s lexicon, any initiative toward reconciliation is rebranded as a conspiracy that must be crushed – either through force or political subversion.

In 2006, national dialogue among political factions was swiftly followed by catastrophe, as Hezbollah unilaterally abducted Israeli soldiers, dragging the country into a devastating war that destroyed infrastructure and spilled innocent blood, bypassing all legitimate state authority.

When Hezbollah joined the government and refused to honor its agreements, the May 7 clashes of Beirut and Mount Lebanon erupted – a violent episode burned into national memory. The Baabda Declaration, forged at president Michel Suleiman’s dialogue table, was barely dry before Hezbollah disavowed it, treating it as though it had never existed.

On the other Hand! While Lebanon’s new Prime Minister – in a gesture to Iran-backed Hezbollah – Nawaf Salam said his hands were “extended to everyone”, Hezbollah’s senior official, Mahmoud Qmati delivered a speech firmly rejecting the Lebanese government’s desire for the terror organization’s disarmament, saying “whoever extends their hand to touch the weapons, their hand will be cut off.” (Photo: Reuters/ Mohamed Azakir)  

Today, President Joseph Aoun extends his hand under enormous strain, facing both international and domestic pressure to confront the illegal presence of arms in Lebanon. 

His goal is to safeguard Lebanon’s military institution and uphold civil peace. Hezbollah’s response: not political dissent or legal argument, but overt threats to sever his hand – a discourse alien to democratic societies, steeped instead in fascist overtones that ignore the nation’s painful history.

On the domestic front, Hezbollah no longer hides that its weapons are not Lebanon’s shield, but a lever for foreign agendas and a tool for internal coercion. 

It is a party that does not seek common ground because it is nourished by discord and ruin. 

In Hezbollah’s worldview, anyone who dares to build a state is not a partner but a traitor – someone whose outstretched hand deserves to be cut off. Unless the Lebanese people rise to reject this doctrine of sabotage and repression, the state will remain shackled, and the metaphor of severed hands will remain a grim rule imposed on any effort at national rescue.

– Assaad Bechara



(3)

INTERGRATING HEZBOLLAH INTO LEBANESE ARMY?

How can Hezbollah fighters be transformed from ideological foot soldiers of the mullahs into disciplined military personnel who accept orders only from the Lebanese chain of command?
By Riad Kahwaji

An-Nahar, Lebanon, April 18

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun recently announced his intention to lead a direct dialogue with Hezbollah’s leadership regarding the transfer of its weapons to legitimate state authorities. He also expressed support for the integration of Hezbollah members into the national military establishment – not as an autonomous resistance force akin to the Popular Mobilization Forces, but as part of the state’s official defense apparatus. This initiative is a key component of President Aoun’s broader efforts to resolve the ongoing dilemma of Hezbollah’s weapons, which continues to obstruct reconstruction efforts and delay the flow of international aid.

Reports suggest that the Lebanese army has already quietly begun collecting weapons from certain Hezbollah sites, out of the public eye in order to avoid political embarrassment. However, the issue of integrating Hezbollah members into the armed forces poses a significant and complex challenge, both domestically and internationally – one that may not have been fully anticipated by the president’s advisory team and must be urgently addressed.

The Lebanese army has a relatively successful track record in absorbing former militia members following the civil war and the implementation of the Taif Agreement in the early 1990s. 

At that time, Hezbollah’s weapons were exempted due to regional arrangements brokered by the late Syrian president Hafez Assad, under the justification that they were necessary for resisting the Israeli occupation in southern Lebanon.

The militias that were integrated into the army at the time were secular in nature, with nationalist leanings on both the Right and Left. Their fighters underwent training focused on discipline, adherence to military hierarchy, and alignment with the Lebanese army’s doctrine. 

Hezbollah, however, is fundamentally different. It is an ideological party rooted in armed Shi’ite political Islam, established by the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRCG) as part of a broader regional project that has extended far beyond Lebanon’s borders over the past four decades.

Many of Hezbollah’s youth have been raised from childhood in party-run institutions, indoctrinated with loyalty to the supreme leader of Iran. These cadres have played a key role in militarizing Shi’ite movements across the Arab world, particularly since 2004.

The use of religious doctrine to justify violence within Shi’ite political Islam is not fundamentally different from its Sunni counterpart. Both rely on religious rulings and fatwas issued by clerical authorities deemed legitimate by their respective movements. 

In Sunni jihadist groups like al-Qaida and ISIS, fighters pledge allegiance to an emir or religious figure who sanctions acts of violence, including suicide bombings, promising divine reward. 

Hezbollah’s system is more structured but mirrors the same ideological framework. What are locally known as “religious mandates” are issued to fighters, defining their mission and assuring martyrdom status in the event of death.

‘Burning’ Question. Holding a Hezbollah flag in Tyre in southern Lebanon on the second day of the ceasefire between Israel and the Iran-backed group, how keen would these celebrating fighters be in integrating into the Lebanese army? (Photo: Reuters/Aziz Taher)

Hezbollah’s leaders have openly acknowledged their allegiance to Iran’s supreme leader and their organic ties to the IRGC. Militant political Islam – whether Sunni or Shi’ite – rejects national borders in favor of transnational religious unity, with ultimate objectives such as reestablishing the caliphate or expanding the Islamic nation according to each sect’s interpretation.

Globally, there is no precedent for rehabilitating and integrating members of armed ideological Islamist groups into a national army, particularly in a country like Lebanon, which has endured decades of sectarian strife. 

Has the Lebanese army command developed a concrete plan for such integration? 

Will Lebanese Shi’ite clerics be recruited to support this transformation?

Since 2001, as part of the global war on terror and the emergence of al-Qaida and later ISIS, Western and Arab states have focused on confronting armed Sunni political Islam. The Lebanese army has engaged in multiple confrontations with Sunni militant groups in Tripoli, Sidon, and the outskirts of Arsal. 

These groups were defeated, many of their members imprisoned, and Lebanon’s security services continue to monitor and detain suspects affiliated with them – hundreds remain incarcerated without trial. 

How, then, can Sunni political Islamists in Lebanon justify the inclusion of Hezbollah members in the same army that has persecuted them for decades? This question is particularly sensitive in Lebanon’s sectarian political system and must not be overlooked.

Furthermore, the new Syrian regime and its military forces are themselves born of Sunni political Islam, raising the potential for future complications if Hezbollah fighters are absorbed into the Lebanese army. 

Most Arab countries – and especially the Gulf states – have rejected both Sunni and Shi’ite manifestations of armed political Islam. 

Even Western powers that once cooperated with Shi’ite militias now classify many of them, including Hezbollah, as terrorist organizations and are actively working to dismantle their influence as part of broader efforts to contain Iran’s regional reach. Therefore, despite the good intentions and theoretical appeal of integrating Hezbollah’s armed wing into the Lebanese military, the initiative carries significant risks and red flags that must be taken seriously to prevent future instability.

 – Riad Kahwaji





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