Welcome to this week’s post Mark II.
For the first time in a very long time, I actually had a really good idea for this week’s post, andI even wrote it. This is how it started:
Dateline: Friday, 27 February, 2026
As the gardener left yesterday, Bernice remarked: “Well, when Iran retaliates, at least the garden will be looking tidy.” No, don’t ask me; I have no idea. However, I am fairly sure that Iran will indeed retaliate, because I am fairly confident that the US (and, possibly, Israel) will attack this weekend, or, at the latest, and with historic irony, on Tuesday, which happens to be Purim, when we celebrate our last unequivocal victory over a Persian extremist who wanted to annihilate us.
Where, you may be wondering, does my confidence come from. From my remarks last week, you would infer, correctly, that it does not stem from an in-depth analysis of Trump’s public statements. It comes, rather, from my feeling that I am just starting to wash the car. Let me explain. If ever the country is in the grip of a drought, I always like to wash the car as a public service, quietly confident that, if I do wash the car, it will rain the next day. Unfortunately, living as we do in Maale Adumim, sometimes what arrives overnight is not rain but a sandstorm, which just goes to prove that man proposes and so on.
In the present case, the car I am about to wash is in fact the blog post I am about to write. Having really struggled the last couple of weeks before finally coming up with a topic at the eleventh hour, this week, indeed a couple of days ago, something happened which prompted me to say to Bernice, once we had both stopped laughing: “Well, at least I now have a topic for next week’s blog.” Shortly afterwards, it occurred to me that, rather than running the risk of forgetting the planned topic by the time I sat down to write the post, I would write it early, and enjoy a stress-free Shabbat, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday. This was beginning to look like a win-win situation, until it suddenly struck me that something might happen between now and Tuesday of such significance that I would be forced to scrap the planned post and write a new one.
Of course, the only obvious candidate for ‘something of such significance that I would be forced…’ is war with Iran. So, if it happens, you can blame me. Or, possibly, thank me. We’ll have to see how it pans out.
…..
Dateline: Monday, 2 March, 2026
Well, we all know how that panned out, don’t we?
And, if we are talking about irony, that line above about me enjoying “a stress-free Shabbat, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday” has certainly come back to bite me, hasn’t it? Indeed, Shabbat, Sunday and the start of Monday have all proven so much the opposite of stress-free that I turned to Bernice this morning and said: “I really can’t run with that blog post, can I?”, and, much as she would have liked not to have to, Bernice agreed with me.
Which is why Monday morning finds me writing a new post, this time about ‘the situation’, and filing the other one away for a rainy day. It is a good enough story that it will keep for that other, rainy, but simultaneously sunnier, day.
Meanwhile, let me tell you about my week so far. For the second week running, I woke early enough on Shabbat to get to shul for the start of the service, which meant that at 8:15, when the first siren sounded, I was already deep in the first part of the service. A friend who had kept his phone on, and on him, for just such an eventuality, informed me that the siren was ‘merely’ a signal that Israel had launched an attack on Iran and was anticipating retaliation, rather than a warning of incoming missiles. Nevertheless, our service moved from the upstairs sanctuary to the downstairs hall. I don’t personally feel this is any safer, since our shul is built on a hill and both the upstairs, with its entrance to the west, and the downstairs, with its entrance to the east, are actually on street level, and both spaces have a lot of windows.
Bernice and I, and a couple of close friends, stayed to hear the Torah reading and, specifically, this week’s special reading of Zachor, the passage in which we are commanded to remember Amalek and what the Amalekites did to the Children of Israel, attacking them from the rear after they had crossed the Reed Sea after the Exodus. It is a cliché that every year, every week’s Torah reading has a particular relevance to the current events of that week. Never has the truism been truer than this week, since Haman, the villain of the Purim story, is both identified as a descendant of Amalek and recognised as the political leader of the Persian empire who sought the total destruction of the Jews. Not for the first time it strikes me that not believing in God must require a tremendous act of blind faith in the face of all the evidence, but we won’t get into that.
We all left hastily immediately afterwards, and our friends, who live towards the fashionable end of our street, invited us to join them for refreshments. As we finished our drinks, a ‘proper’ siren sounded, and we made our way to their communal shelter, shared, as ours is, between their ‘terrace’ of five houses. After ten minutes, following what were the rules of engagement the last time we faced missile bombardment from Iran, we all dispersed, and Bernice and I made our way home.
Through the rest of the day, and the night, we suffered several more raids, in each case preceded by a ‘heads-up’ from the Home Guard, warning us to stay close to, and prepare to enter, our shelters. We also gradually realised that the rules had changed, and this time we were required to stay in our shelters until the Home Guard sent a clear message that we could come out.
Bernice and I decided that this time round we would take our chances at home, rather than having to dress and put on shoes during the night and go outside to the public shelter accessed from our neighbours’ garden. Tragically, a man of 105 died of a heart attack yesterday while making his way to a public shelter, and many others have suffered more and less serious injuries on their way to the shelter.
It is not easy to explain this decision. We rationalise it as follows. Our home includes an extension added by the previous owners. This enables us to sit in our upstairs hall, under the original external wall, which is now an internal wall (a strong structural point), by the stairwell (a strong, structural point), in a space with no windows and closed doors between us and all external walls. Our step-count is also enhanced by having to climb our stairs. Listen, you take what you can!
If our house takes a direct hit from a half-tonne ballistic missile, the effect, as we saw yesterday in the tragic attack on Bet Shemesh, would be no worse than if our public shelter takes a direct hit. If (the far likelier event) debris from a hit falls near the house and we suffer a shock and shrapnel, then I am confident it will not penetrate to our inner sanctum. Anyway, what are the chances that anything will fall in Maale Adumim – he writes after two large fragments fell a kilometre away and a humongous missile casing fell about as close, causing a boom which slightly dented even our joshing bonhomie for a moment or two. We had by then grown used to the sound and window- explosions, which we are hearing far more of in Maale Adumim than we did last June.
The Home Front app on my phone allows me to monitor in real time the alerts and attacks in Zichron Yaakov as well. Esther and family have the luxury of an integral safe room that doubles as a spare room in their flat, and they are sensibly sleeping there during this period, which means they get a considerably less disturbed night. The degree to which Raphael has, reportedly, adjusted to the situation is wonderful, and simultaneously slightly depressing, depending on how you look at it.
I went to the Health clinic yesterday morning to fill my prescriptions. I didn’t bother to make an appointment, fondly assuming that nobody else would be venturing out. As I walked up to the clinic, the sirens sounded, and I spent my first 15 minutes there in the fairly large shelter, which was packed out. When we received the message that we could leave the shelter, I found I was 18th in line for the pharmacy, and it was taking the pharmacists a ridiculously long time to open up, so I gave my number to an older man who had arrived after me, and went home to make an appointment for later. When I returned for my 4:40 appointment, the pharmacy was empty. I had obviously caught the panic-buying morning rush earlier.
My regular bridge competition yesterday morning was cancelled, but I did play yesterday evening at the home of a friend, locally. She has a safe room in her apartment, but, when the early-warning siren sounded as we were about to leave after an enjoyable couple of hours, we all agreed we would drive home rather than staying. In the event, the early warning did not lead to a siren instructing us to take shelter. (This often happens, since the early warning frequently comes before our defences have been able to determine what exact part of the country the missile is heading for.) I got home safe and sound.
Meanwhile, in Tel Aviv, where many people in older neighbourhoods do not have safe rooms or even communal shelters close to their homes, many people have apparently been sheltering in the recently opened Tel Aviv and suburbs light rail, which runs underground for much of its route. While I am not old enough to remember it, footage of people flocking down the escalators on Saturday night’s television news put me in mind of the Blitz, when London Underground stations were pressed into identical service.
Until now, touchwood, tu-tu-tu, spit twice and turn round three times, we have not had a meal or a shower interrupted by a siren. Just sleep. As the above doubtless shows, living in Israel means taking all this sort of thing in your stride as part of daily life. Some might argue that that has to be a very unhealthy way to live. I think I would argue the opposite….but ask me again in a week.
Meanwhile, stay safe, Purim Sameach (we’ll be hearing the megila in a neighbourhood shelter – that’s a first) and may we all, by next week, have good news to share.


