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The Schmooze

Every pound we raise for Israel is an act of defiance against attempts to destroy it

The UJIA’s Israel Director outlines the charity’s role in helping rebuild after the Iranian attacks

June 17, 2025 15:51
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BAT YAM, ISRAEL - JUNE 15: Emergency and rescue soldiers search for trapped people around heavily damaged buildings after an overnight missile strike from Iran on June 15, 2025 in Bat Yam Israel. Iran launched a retaliatory missile strike on Israel starting late on June 13, after a series of Israeli airstrikes earlier in the day targeted Iranian military and nuclear sites, as well as top military officials. (Photo by Amir Levy/Getty Images)
2 min read

For the past 20 months, Israel has been living through a prolonged state of emergency. Since October 7, daily life has unfolded against the backdrop of war. In recent days, what we have experienced is of a magnitude Israel has never seen — not in the past 50 years, and arguably not ever.

While Israelis have sadly become used to rocket attacks, waves of terror, and intense rounds of conflict, the current war with Iran is different. It has brought Israel into a state of near-total shutdown. Schools are closed, workplaces shuttered, airspace shut. Even public transport is largely suspended.

Israel’s strong air defences are a source of pride and comfort. These defensive systems continue to perform magnificently under near-impossible conditions. But the sheer scale of this attack –  hundreds of missiles, including long-range ballistic threats – means that up to 10 per cent of projectiles have penetrated defences. The result is scenes of bombed-out apartment buildings, families climbing through rubble, entire neighbourhoods unrecognisable from the day before.

Over 1,000 Israelis are now homeless and this number is expected to grow. This fresh wave of internal displacement comes just as previous evacuations were winding down.