Givati Brigade – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Tue, 07 Oct 2025 14:25:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg Givati Brigade – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 Anti-Israeli group tries to arrest IDF soldiers at Tomorrowland https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/07/20/anti-israeli-group-tries-to-arrest-idf-soldiers-at-tomorrowland/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/07/20/anti-israeli-group-tries-to-arrest-idf-soldiers-at-tomorrowland/#respond Sun, 20 Jul 2025 10:15:38 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1074217 The Hind Rajab Foundation, an anti-Israeli organization dedicated to pursuing IDF soldiers internationally, has submitted a formal complaint to Belgian authorities targeting two IDF soldiers currently in Boom, Belgium. According to a statement published on the organization's website, the foundation collaborated with the legal group GLAN to file the complaint with federal prosecutors in Brussels, demanding […]

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The Hind Rajab Foundation, an anti-Israeli organization dedicated to pursuing IDF soldiers internationally, has submitted a formal complaint to Belgian authorities targeting two IDF soldiers currently in Boom, Belgium. According to a statement published on the organization's website, the foundation collaborated with the legal group GLAN to file the complaint with federal prosecutors in Brussels, demanding the immediate arrest and prosecution of both individuals under international law.

In a statement on their website, the foundation said the following: "These individuals are not fringe actors or incidental participants. They are directly implicated in some of the most egregious crimes committed during Israel's ongoing military campaign in Gaza, including:Indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas, homes, and hospitals;The use of torture and human shields;Mass arbitrary detention and forced displacement of civilians;And the deliberate infliction of conditions calculated to destroy the Palestinian population, consistent with genocide under Article 6 of the Rome Statute and the Genocide Convention."

Both soldiers are attending, alongside thousands of other Israelis, the "Tomorrowland" electronic music festival, among the world's premier events of its genre and a major attraction for European youth. The organization withheld the soldiers' identities, presumably for legal considerations.

Last week's festival events, scheduled to continue on Friday, transformed into venues for multiple pro-Israel displays, featuring Israeli flag presentations and interactions between Israeli and Iranian attendees.

The Hind Rajab Foundation expressed fury over the display of a Givati Brigade flag by festival participants during one performance. "The Givati flag, publicly displayed in the heart of Belgium, is not just a military symbol. It has become, for millions, a symbol of impunity, destruction, and ethnic cleansing. Its appearance in Boom raises urgent political questions: Why are those involved in grave international crimes able to walk freely, celebrate in public, and glorify their actions without consequence?" it said.

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IDF controls 50% of Gaza Strip, nears operation objective https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/06/05/idf-controls-50-of-gaza-strip-nears-operation-objective/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2025/06/05/idf-controls-50-of-gaza-strip-nears-operation-objective/#respond Thu, 05 Jun 2025 03:02:31 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1063663 The IDF has established control over roughly half of Gaza Strip territory through Operation Gideon's Chariots, a senior security source confirmed to Israel Hayom on Thursday. With just over a month remaining, military planners face intense pressure to reach their ambitious territorial objectives. When Operation Gideon's Chariots launched, IDF leadership established a target of controlling […]

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The IDF has established control over roughly half of Gaza Strip territory through Operation Gideon's Chariots, a senior security source confirmed to Israel Hayom on Thursday. With just over a month remaining, military planners face intense pressure to reach their ambitious territorial objectives.

When Operation Gideon's Chariots launched, IDF leadership established a target of controlling 75% of Gaza's territory within approximately two months. Current progress puts forces in a critical race against time to fulfill the military strategy's original timeline.

Video: Palestinians carrying an IED get eliminated / Credit: IDF

Separately, an ongoing investigation into this week's combat engagement that resulted in three Givati Brigade fatalities has uncovered significant new information about the incident. Investigation findings contradict initial battlefield reports, revealing that the soldiers encountered no more than three explosive devices rather than the 20 devices reported in preliminary accounts.

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Yonadav's yahrzeit https://www.israelhayom.com/2024/12/01/yonadavs-yahrzeit/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2024/12/01/yonadavs-yahrzeit/#respond Sun, 01 Dec 2024 13:23:23 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=1015659   The yahrzeits of Israeli soldiers who fell in battle at the start of the IDF counter-assault against Hamas, a month or so after October 7 last year, are being marked right now, in mid-Mar-Cheshvan – the bitter, bitter Hebrew month of Cheshvan. (Yahrzeit is Yiddish for the anniversary of death.) One of these slain […]

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The yahrzeits of Israeli soldiers who fell in battle at the start of the IDF counter-assault against Hamas, a month or so after October 7 last year, are being marked right now, in mid-Mar-Cheshvan – the bitter, bitter Hebrew month of Cheshvan. (Yahrzeit is Yiddish for the anniversary of death.)

One of these slain heroes is my beloved young friend Yonadav Raz Levenstein, may the Heavens avenge his death. Yonadav had the physique of a giant and the soul of a singer-scholar. Given his size, enormous red beard, and outstanding military leadership, he was known as the "Viking" of the Givati Brigade's reconnaissance unit. Given his calm demeanor and erudite take on all things, he was revered at 23 years old as the wise old man of the unit.

He had married the love of his life, Hadar Karavani, just two months before being felled by Palestinians who popped out of a terror attack tunnel in Gaza. I remember Yonadav's Givati platoonmates dancing and singing at the wedding with such passion and power that the ground literally shook, and the heavens seemed to stir, too. He was the youngest son of my dear friends, the Levensteins: the late, great Dr. Michael and valiant Leora.

What I saw was astounding at Yonadav's yahrzeit gravesite gathering several days ago at Mt. Herzl and at many other recent cemetery memorial gatherings (far too many!). What I heard was heartening, and what I felt was fortifying.

Of course, there was anguish and longing, pain and pathos, bone-penetrating sadness at the loss of a promising life cut short, and acute compassion for the immediate bereaved family. All this folded into the grim reality of so many other one-year-old military grave markers arrayed in precise rows as far as the eye could see, immersing me in the enormity of Israel's national sacrifice.

But there was no despair. No regrets, and no wallowing in recrimination. No talk of giving up hope.

Instead, there was pride in the privilege of fighting for the freedom, security, and sovereignty of the Jewish people in the land of Israel. There was determination to battle on. There was resolve to win against all enemies. It was a tsunami of steadfastness, a demonstration of overpowering ideological devotion to Jewish destiny.

And there was buoyancy: enthusiasm to live a happy, meaningful, and productive life despite the tragedy – out of allegiance to the fallen soldier and, indeed, to the nation at large.

Young soldiers arrived straight from the battlefield and went directly back to the battlefield, who spoke of the morality and courage they learned from their fallen comrade-in-arms. There were battered and bereaved grandparents offering wisdom about the vicissitudes and vulnerabilities of life, while charging their other grandchildren to struggle on – since Israel's path is righteous, and its cause is just.

This is what social scientists call resilience. Broad segments of the Israeli public are fueled and redeemed by such resilience, driving them to take on myriad tasks of volunteer kindness and brotherly love.

This ranges from remarkable mothers holding down the home front to the hundreds of thousands of Israelis (and Diaspora Jews) who volunteer in myriad ways to make up labor shortfalls in fields, factories, and hospitals. From those who babysit for families of reservists away from home, to those who cook and bake for soldiers on the frontlines. From social workers and trauma specialists accompanying the families of hostages, the displaced, and the bereaved, to public diplomacy mavens who courageously take on the antisemites around the world.

In short, Israeli society is heroic, compassionate, determined, and resilient. It is a beautiful thing.

Despite the losses of the past year and the grim reality of continued battle that likely will be Israel's lot for years to come, most Israelis are also optimistic about the future. Dozens of in-depth polls and international indexes of "happiness" bear this out.

For example, a recent survey of Israel's younger generation (by Glikman, Shamir, and Samsanov of the Publicis Group) makes it crystal clear that Israel is blessed with the most believing youth – a generation of future leaders who are upbeat and keen enough to drive Israel towards every success despite the challenges ahead.

Fifty-nine percent believe that Israel is strong, will win all wars, and has a great future. Forty-nine percent say they are mobilized to the military or are volunteering in civilian frameworks and are "devoted" to the State of Israel. Eighty-two percent are prepared (to some or to a great extent) to pause the "good life" in terms of personal plans for work, study, and vacation in order to serve the country, and they are prepared to forgo travel abroad altogether.

The explanations given for such unbelievable optimism and commitment – despite internal Israeli disagreements and escalating external conflicts – range from the rich tapestry of social connections that bind Israelis together to shared cultural and national creeds.

I think that Israel is also a deeply believing nation, one of the most "religious" societies in the modern world, and this is a central source of resilience. As "secular" as many Israelis are in their lifestyle, they are simultaneously deep believers in divine providence over the Jewish people.

By and large, Israelis sense that they are on a grand meta-historic journey, a journey pregnant with spiritual powers and loaded with a moral heritage that has sustained the Jewish people for thousands of years and returned it to the land of Israel. They know that no Jew lives in Israel merely by chance or on a whim, but rather that there is a guiding hand behind the modern renaissance of Jewish life and peoplehood.

Look at all the prayer assemblies in every corner of this country. Witness the mass Kabbalat Shabbat ceremonies at the hip Tel Aviv Port and Jerusalem Train Station entertainment spaces every Friday night, attended by hundreds. Listen to pop music lyrics on mainstream supposedly "secular" radio stations – songs of spiritual longing with words drawn from the Bible and traditional prayers. You feel the spiritual searching underway, with increasing intensity since the atrocities of October 7.

In data published by the Central Bureau of Statistics, 80% of self-declared secular Israelis say that they "believe in the G-d of Israel." Eighty percent! In my view, this means that four-fifths of "secular" Israelis are not truly secular! They believe in the G-d of Abraham, Isaac, and Jaco,b who remains active in Jewish history. And this, I think, is a central source of Israeli resilience in the face of so much adversity.

Alas, antagonistic-to-religion Israelis (a super minority of the public) drown in their own rancor and displeasure at such statistics. Supposedly "enlightened" but in fact downbeat and blinkered, they are scared by "true believers"– whether they mean believers in God or believers in Jewish rights to the land of Israel.

What they don't understand is that "religious" and "believer" need not mean, and generally doesn't mean, insular, intolerant, or irrational. Rather, it means contemplative, proud, determined, and resilient. It means faith in G-d, confidence in Jewish-Zionist rights, and trust in the Jewish future.

The late, great British Chief Rabbi Lord Dr. Jonathan Sacks wrote: "The Jewish People have been around for longer than almost any other. We have known our share of suffering. And we are still here, still young, still full of energy, still able to rejoice and celebrate and sing. Jews have walked more often than most through the valley of the shadow of death, yet they lost neither their humor nor their hope – because of faith in G-d."

On Yonadav's yahrzeit, in his honor and memory, it is appropriate to acknowledge the deep wellspring of identity, loyalty, and purpose that animates this nation. It is important to know the gutsy optimism and amplify the patriotic faith authentically expressed by Israel's younger generation and much of Israeli society. The Jewish people cannot afford anything less robust.

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