Saturday, October 18, 2025

Alon Eder and Band - The Future


Finally! I woke up so excited on Monday and rushed to my mom's place so we could watch the hostage release together. It felt like the whole country had stopped, and it helped that there wasn't work in most places because it was Erev Simchat Torah. Words can't explain how moving it was to see the 20 living hostages released, and to see the emotional reunions with their loved ones. Later in the afternoon, I heard and saw the helicopters bringing some of the hostages to one of the hospitals nearby. It was such a relief after I had become accustomed to hearing them only during emergencies, often carrying wounded soldiers in urgent need of care. For the first time, the released hostages didn't have to rush to send messages delivered from hostages left behind, and they didn't have to advocate for their urgent release after coming back from the nightmare of captivity. For the first time, they could focus on healing and recovery, and so can we. Now we are waiting for the bodies of 18 deceased hostages; 18 families deserve closure and a final goodbye.

I was just thinking that this will be the third October without the beloved InDnegev festival, when I saw an emotional post announcing the return of the festival in November:

Returning home and making hope bloom:

Two years since the world turned upside down for us.
We have all had two difficult and painful years, two years of dealing with endless pain and a lack of clarity about the future.
Work on InDnegev 23 was interrupted just before we reached our destination, and everything stopped.

We are excited and happy to announce that InDnegev is returning home, and we invite you to take part. 

This is a call to everyone who is still determined to create hope, determined to dream of peace and a normal life, of a positive and healthy reality. This is a call to activism, to solidarity, to everyone who still has a drop of faith - come make hope bloom with us.

On November 13-15, we will open Mitzpe Gvulot and hold a very special and limited version of InDnegev, a weekend of cultural and artistic activity, a weekend in which we will escape to reality, the one we want and can create.

For the past two years, we have said that we will stay in Mitzpe Gvulot, and that we will wait until all the kidnapped people return and the war is over before we hold the festival again. We have always seen this as part of our mission - to be part of the renewed blooming of the Western Negev, through music, art, and people.

And now, even though everything is still broken and the future is still unclear, we can see a small ray of light. It is time to start creating a space again where we can look deeply into the wounds and begin the process of healing and recovery, allow ourselves to create hope, and allow ourselves to feel compassion.

We intend to do what we have always done: create an open and respectful space, with a diverse and amazing community, with an abundance of ideas. We will set up our stages and, next to them, the conversation tents and the displays, we will bow our heads in the face of the death and destruction of the past two years and raise our heads together to the sounds of hope.



The future is growing in you
And soon it will be reflected
It's also mine, it's also yours
We'll give it a name, it will take the rest

Without a plan, without an introduction
It simply decided to arrive
It's also yours, it's also mine
And everything else feels marginal

The heart beats with excitement
In the head, everything is less simple
This is just a drop in humanity
We'll row, and then we'll learn to sail

The future is very close
I don't even have time to think
It's also mine, it's also yours
We'll give it a name, it will take the rest

Saturday, October 11, 2025

Ester Rada, Geva Alon, and Maya Belsitzman - Hallelujah


I saw the excellent show "Who by Fire: Leonard Cohen in the Yom Kippur War" last September and remember being so moved when this song began at the end of the evening, after learning how the Yom Kippur War influenced Cohen's life and music. The yellow ribbon, the symbol for remembering the hostages, lit up in the corner, and no words were needed to explain. The show took place at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, and before we entered, we walked through the Hostages Square, which is in front of the museum. I remember the chill down my back when I saw Aviva Siegel sharing her experiences with a circle of listeners, at the time still advocating for the release of her husband, Keith. It reminded me too much of the scenes of holocaust survivors sharing their testimonies, so we will never forget. 
When I woke up to the joyous and almost unbelievable news of the ceasefire on Thursday, I thought of all the people I knew whose lives were altered by October 7th and the war in the past two years. I remember hearing the tragic news that a niece of one of my colleagues was murdered at the Nova festival, and a friend's sister came back from it and wouldn't talk about it for weeks. In December 2023, I came to work to learn that the son of one of my colleagues had been killed in Khan Younis, a father to three young children. At the shiva, his father shared how important it was for him to bring back the security to the people living in the Gaza Envelope, and to all of us in Israel. And there was a hope among the soldiers that they would bring the hostages home. For many, it was their motivation to keep going, despite the risk and the challenges. A year and a half later, a son of another colleague began his mandatory army service in the Armored Corps, and understandably, she's been dreadfully worried about what will happen after he finishes his training. She has been going to the Hostage Square Saturday rallies almost every week since the war began, pleading for the return of the hostages and for the war to end in an agreement. And this week it will finally happen. There's a debate going on whether the agreement that was reached could have happened a year ago, or if it was really reached because of the army and the geopolitical changes in the region, as Netanyahu insists. What's clear is that an agreement was reached thanks to Trump's efforts (and we were all holding our breath that it would happen before the announcement of the Nobel Peace Prize winner), and Trump has repeatedly mentioned the protests that have swept the country, built on the principle that we will not tolerate a reality in which our people are abandoned and left behind. My thoughts are with the 42 hostages who were killed in captivity; for 42 families, this will be an understandably difficult time. And yet, hopefully, this will be the beginning of recovery for everyone affected by this war.

Saturday, October 4, 2025

Chava Alberstein - Song of Tishrei


Closer than ever, we have reached the most fragile point. If this deal doesn't happen now, we are at risk of losing the remaining hostages, more soldiers will die in battle, and more innocent lives will be lost. For two years, a significant part of the Israeli public has felt that they have been held captive by an extreme minority government that has shown again and again that they are only interested in their own interests, and not the whole country. We're in a surreal situation where the most extreme voices in the government have not reacted to Hamas's declaration because of the Shabbat, and based on the group's vague and problematic statements, it's clear that there is going to be pushback and not everyone will be happy, to say the very least. And yet, we can't miss this opportunity, it's time to come home.


The sky is changing
before the eyes of the farmers.
The neighbors are getting ready
for the Days of Atonement.

Somebody is thinking of you
and writing down your deeds.
Come home quickly
with the cool wind.
Come home quickly
with the cool wind.

Mandarins ripen
in the orchard at their time.
The teachers cough
and go to bed early.

I've already seen a wagtail
and maybe I just imagined it-
another heat wave ended yesterday.
Summer vacation has ended.
Another heat wave ended yesterday.
Summer vacation has ended.

"What will happen and what will pass?"
ask the reporters
as along the Coastal Highway
the sea squills stand straight.

In the evening newspapers
what does the headline say?
Come home quickly
with the cool wind.
Come home quickly.


Thank you, Meeeruh, for this beautiful translation.