BRAVE HEART

A fulfillment of a sacred vow – to bring them all home

By Rolene Marks

Blessed are You, L-rd our Gd, King of the Universe, who has granted us life, sustained us and enabled us to reach this occasion.”

There were times when we wondered if it would ever happen. Would they all be returned home? For 843 days, we all hoped, prayed, shook the heavens, and bargained with the Almighty and anyone in power. We were brought to our knees, pleading and breathed the fire of our relentless fight for our brothers and sisters. On 7 October, 251 men, women and children including whole families were taken hostage when Hamas infiltrated southern Israel, leaving a trail of atrocities in their wake. Since 2014, Hamas had held the remains of two soldiers, Hadar Goldin and Oron Shaul who fell during Operation Protective Edge. Two civilians, Avera Mengistu and Hisham Al Sayed, were also still captive. Hisham and Avera would be returned to the grateful embrace of their families during the ceasefire deal of January 2025 and the remains of Goldin and Shaul would be returned, months apart, for a dignified burial.

After 843 days, only one remained – Staff Sgt. Ran Gvili.  He was as his superhero mother Talik said, the first one in and the last one out. For 843 days, Talik, Itzik, Shira and Omer fought for their son and brother Ran like the Maccabees themselves. With superhuman strength and a tenacity that is awe inspiring, they persevered with all their might until their beloved son, a hero of Israel was returned.

Master Sgt. Ran Gvili (z’l)

It is almost impossible to describe what we are feeling in Israel. In the last two years we have learnt that it is possible to walk alongside our grief, it is possible to carry both resilience and heartbreak and yesterday we discovered that our hearts can be both full and broken at the same time. We have learnt what it is to carry a profound love for people who we have never met and yet are our family, a part of our souls.

Our hearts are full that our brother, Ran, “the defender of Alumim” has returned to us – but broken that we are laying him to rest. The return of the last hostage may close a painful circle for us – but for their families, there is an aching wound that will never heal, a chasm that can never be filled and a longing that will never end. For the families of the hostages who are deceased, murdered by their captors, the loss will never lessen.

Several days ago, the IDF launched “Operation Brave Heart” to search for the remains of Ran (or Rani as he has become known in Israel) and bring him home. The search took them to a cemetery in northern Gaza and after searching through 250 graves, Ran was found. Speaking at his son’s funeral, Itzik Gvili revealed that not only was Rani whole – but that he had been found in the 250th grave our warriors searched. In Hebrew, each letter is assigned a numerical value and Ran’s name was the equivalent of 250. It is impossible to not see that as a message from the Divine.

Honoring a Hero. Israel’s Chief of Staff, Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir joins his troops in Gaza City for a ceremony honoring slain hostage Master Sgt. Ran Gvili after his body was recovered in Gaza City, on January 26, 2026. (Photo: IDF)

Hiding the bodies of hostages in graves demonstrates another level of Hamas’s depravity. Not content to use their civilian populations as human shields, the terror organization defiles their dead as well.

The soldiers of the Alexandroni Brigade were joined by 20 forensic dentists who meticulously searched through the remains until they found Ran. Gvili was identified through his fingerprints and was found still in the clothes he fought in on 7 October.

Operation Brave Heart was the most fitting name for the mission to recover this hero of Israel. In a tribute written by the Hostages and Missing Families Forum, Ran was described: 

Staff Sergeant Ran (Rani) Gvili from Meitar was a YASSAM Negev fighter in the Southern District of the Israel Police. Ran took great pride in being a police officer and wearing the blue uniform.

On the morning of the Black Saturday, Ran was at home recovering from a motorcycle accident and suffering from a fractured shoulder. Upon learning of the terrorist infiltration, he immediately put on his uniform and went out to assist his fellow unit members in the fighting. On his way, he encountered terrorists and fought with courage and determination on the front line at the entrance to Kibbutz Alumim. Members of the kibbutz community later gave him the name “Ran, the Defender of Alumim.”

Hero’s Homecoming. Israeli Police and IDF soldiers stand in line as they pay their respects at the funeral procession of St.-Sgt.-Maj. Ran Gvili as he makes his way to his Negev hometown of Meitar.(Photo: Yossi Zeliger/TPS-IL)

The bravest heart is now home. He will be laid to rest with the dignity he so richly deserves. Kissing his son’s coffin, his father Itzik told him:

 “We are proud of you, my son”.

Israelis lined the route of Ran’s final journey as the police escorted him with an honour guard that bore testimony to the love and brotherhood that Israel’s protectors and defenders have for each other. Laid to rest in Meitar, Ran can now have the peace he deserves. He is home.

Israelis have cried rivers of tears in the last 2 + years. We have had days that are more sorrowful than others, and some days that epitomize how we live with ha’dvash veha’oketz – the honey and the sting. The return of Rani was exactly that. It closes a painful circle. For the first time since 2014, there are no more hostages in Gaza. For the first time in 843 days, perhaps we can think about a day after 7 October. Israel has fulfilled a sacred vow – we leave no one behind.

The stop watch at Hostages Square that counted down the days, minutes and seconds has been switched off. The yellow pins, dog-tags and posters put away. Perhaps we can start to heal our broken hearts. I have a feeling they will never totally heal. How could they? October 7 was a seismic event that has changed Israel and the Jewish people forever – but we are a stubborn nation. We face forward and look at what we have learnt, how we will grow and what we can do to ensure another generation does not feel this pain again.

Momentous Moment. After 843 days, 12 hours, 5 minutes, and 59 seconds, the clock at Hostages Square in Tel Aviv stopped, a shofar was sounded, and many recited the Shehecheyanu blessing, giving thanks for reaching this moment. The mitzvah of redeeming captives – which Maimonides called the greatest commandment in Judaism – was fulfilled.

Ran Gvili is home. Alumim’s defender is home. The bravest heart can now rest in peace. They are all home. May the living hostages start to heal. May Ran’s and all the deceased hostages’ memories be an eternal blessing.



Lion of Judah.  With a broken shoulder, Ran Gvili went into battle and fought like a lion in defending the lives of the residents of kibbutz Alumim (FB).








CYPRUS, ISRAEL’S CLOSEST FARAWAY PLACE

Not only an attraction for Israel travelers, this captivating Mediterranean gem is attracting Israelis who are contributing to the Island and its tourism industry.

By Motti Verses

Israel does not possess an island, yet it has found one it returns to with remarkable consistency. A close, welcoming getaway for Israelis in the Mediterranean, Cyprus has evolved into something more than a holiday destination for Israelis. It has become a familiar refuge, close enough to feel reassuring, distant enough to feel like an escape.

The connection is evident in the numbers. With multiple daily flights year-round, including during winter months, Israelis travel to Cyprus in extraordinary volumes. Beaches, food, and a sense of ease draw them in, but what sustains the relationship is something less tangible: the feeling of being welcome, understood, and safe.

Few people understand this bond better than Louisa Varaclas, Director of the Israel Office at the Cyprus Deputy Ministry of Tourism. Having spent nearly three decades in the role, she has witnessed the transformation firsthand.

Venturing into the Vinyards. Touring a Cypriot winery, the Director of the Israel Office at the Cyprus Ministry of Tourism Louisa Varaclas (left), assures the writer that “Israelis have discovered that Cypriots remain genuine friends, regardless of circumstances.” (Photo: Motti Verses) 

When I began, fewer than 30,000 Israelis visited Cyprus each year,” she recalls. “By 2025, that number had risen to almost 600,000, not including cruise passengers.”

Varaclas identifies the COVID period as a turning point, but not the sole explanation. “Israelis are natural travelers,” she says. “Travel is embedded in the culture. Cyprus offers proximity, affordability, and the reassurance that home is always within easy reach.”

That reassurance, she adds, has taken on greater importance in recent years. “Cyprus has remained consistently friendly. Israeli visitors feel genuinely welcomed here, especially compared to destinations that have become more complicated or less hospitable. Israeli tourists are also significant contributors to the local economy,  staying in high-end hotels, shopping, dining, and engaging with entertainment and leisure offerings.”

Winter Light, Mediterranean Calm

Arriving in Limassol at the start of 2026, I encountered a city in its quieter season. Winter strips the coastline of its summer crowds and reveals something more elemental. The sea turns dramatic, the air sharp, the promenade contemplative. Walking along the rocky shoreline, with waves crashing hard against the coast, the city feels grounded and honest. A place allowed to breathe.

Yet Cyprus is not only a destination Israelis visit. Increasingly, it is a place where Israeli professionals shape the hospitality landscape itself.

That realization became clear when Roni Aloni, Managing Director of the Mediterranean Region at Leonardo–Fattal Hotels, was awarded the Award of Excellence by the Cyprus Hotel Managers Association, recognizing his contribution to hospitality development across the region in 2025.

Rising Tide. Making waves in the Mediterranean is the award-winning Managing Director of the Mediterranean Region Roni Aloni (right) who tells the writer (left) that “Nine Fattal hotels are already operating in Cyprus with three more set to open soon.”  (Photo: Motti Verses).

The award prompted a deeper look at the Israeli hotel group whose footprint on the island has become impossible to ignore.

Israeli Hospitality, Mediterranean Scale

Leonardo–Fattal Hotels, a publicly traded Israeli hospitality group, has quietly become the largest international hotel operator in Cyprus, surpassing global brands such as Marriott, Hilton, InterContinental, and Wyndham in number of properties.

Coasting Along. Taking in a drink and the vista of the promenade and beachfront from the roof top bar of NYX Limassol. (Photo: Leonardo-Fattal Hotels)

My base during this exploration was NYX Hotel Limassol, part of Fattal’s lifestyle-oriented NYX brand. Positioned along the promenade near the port, the hotel reflects a distinctly urban sensibility: contemporary design, social energy, curated music and art, and a relaxed cosmopolitan atmosphere. With 189 rooms, generous public spaces, and floor-to-ceiling windows overlooking either sea or city, it feels tuned to modern travelers rather than traditional resort guests.

View Bar None. A view of the Mediterranean view from the roof top bar of NYX Limassol. (Photo: Leonardo–Fattal Hotels).

Meeting Aloni there felt less like a formal interview and more like a professional exchange between peers shaped by similar decades in the industry.

Our move into Cyprus began about eight years ago,” he explains. “After establishing ourselves in major European cities, we wanted to enter the resort world, which is operationally and commercially far more complex. Cyprus made sense immediately.”

The group identified underperforming locally owned hotels, particularly in Paphos, and saw opportunity. “We believed these properties could be completely reimagined under our brands. Cyprus was open to foreign investment, close to Israel, and aligned with our long-term vision. Greece followed naturally.”

Lively Lobby. The urban-design lobby in the NYX Limassol blending the contemporary with a Mediterranean feel. (Photo: Motti Verses).

DESIGNED WITH ISRAELIS IN MIND

Many of the group’s Cypriot properties feel uncannily tailored to Israeli travelers. A point Aloni readily acknowledges.

In some ways, we’ve expanded Israelis’ holiday choices beyond Eilat,” he says. “The decision is no longer automatic. Do you drive south, or take a short flight to Larnaca or Paphos? Cyprus competes on price, convenience, and experience.”

The hotels are deliberately segmented: adults-only resorts, family-focused properties, and seasonally adaptable concepts. Attention to detail matters: Hebrew signage, kosher solutions, diverse dining, personalized service, and entertainment designed around Israeli expectations. Even elements like escape rooms, spa concepts, and family lounges were developed specifically for the Cypriot context.

Captivating Cyprus. View of the harbor of the ancient city of Paphos, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. One in eight tourists in Cyprus is Israeli with approximately 590,000 visiting in 2025, making Israel the second largest tourism market in Cyprus after the UK.

The clearest expression of this strategy is Leonardo Laura Beach & Splash Resort in Paphos. With 420 rooms, extensive dining options, constant entertainment, an on-site water park, and a beachfront location, it has become the group’s most sought-after family property on the island.

LOOKING AHEAD

As holiday habits shift toward nearby destinations where travelers feel culturally comfortable, Cyprus continues to strengthen its appeal.

Nine Fattal hotels are already operating here, with three more opening soon,” Aloni notes. Among them: a 240-suite family resort in Latchi near the Blue Lagoon, featuring a floating water park; a 72-room urban hotel in Nicosia opening next month; and later in the year, NYX Nicosia, a 162-room lifestyle property.

Cool View. High above the coastal city, looking out on the Mediterranean from the roof top pool at NYX Limassol. (Photo: Leonardo–Fattal Hotels).

Together, these developments reinforce Cyprus’ evolving role. Not merely as a holiday island, but as a second home of sorts for Israeli travelers and hospitality professionals alike.

Asked about his recent award, Aloni deflects the spotlight. “It’s not about me,” he says. “It recognizes the teams on the ground – leadership, staff, and partners in Cyprus and Greece. Their work is what made this possible.”

Cyprus today is more than a destination Israelis visit. It is a place where Israeli hospitality has taken root, shaping experiences from behind the scenes and making the island feel, in many ways, comfortably familiar.




*Feature picture: Love is in the Air. The writer marveling at the site where legend has it that Aphrodite – the goddess of love and beauty – was born from the Mediterranean waves below. For centuries, people have traveled to Aphrodite’s Rock to sweep their loved one off their feet. (Photo: Motti Verses).



About the writer:

The writer, Motti Verses, is a Travel Flash Tips publisher. His travel stories are published on THE TIMES OF ISRAEL: https://blogs.timesofisrael.com/author/motti-verses/ 
And his hospitality analysis reviews on THE JERUSALEM POST, are available on his Linkedin page LinkedIn Israelhttps://il.linkedin.com › motti-verse…Motti Verses – Publisher and Chief Editor – TRAVEL FLASH TIPSAnd his hospitality analysis reviews on THE JERUSALEM POST, are available on his Linkedin page LinkedIn Israelhttps://il.linkedin.com › motti-verse…Motti Verses – Publisher and Chief Editor – TRAVEL FLASH TIPS.







While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).

Lay of the Land Weekly Newsletter- 01 February 2026

Unveiling the contours and contrasts of an ever-changing Middle East landscape Reliable reportage and insightful commentary on the Middle East by seasoned journalists from the region and beyond.

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What’s happening in Israel today? See from every Monday – Thursday LOTL’s The Israel Brief broadcasts and on our Facebook page and YouTube by seasoned TV & radio broadcaster, Rolene Marks familiar to Chai FM listeners in South Africa and millions of American listeners to the News/Talk/Sports radio station WINA, broadcasting out of Virginia, USA.

THE ISRAEL BRIEF –26–29 January 2026
(Click on the blue title)



Lay of the Land’s Image Pick of the Week

First in, last out, Ran Gvili after 843 days in Gaza is finally home.

Much of the world failed to understand WHY Israel fights for the return of deceased hostage as much for the living.
The explanation lies in who we are and why we will always be.
Am Yisrael Chai.




ARTICLES

Please note there is a facility to comment beneath each article should you wish to express an opinion on the subject addressed.

(1)

WORD OUT ON THE STREET

From a street in Minneapolis to the streets of Tehran, what does media focus reveal about global morality and hypocrisy?
By David E. Kaplan

Streets Apart. The killing on a street in the state of Minnesota by a federal law enforcement official – as chilling
and traumatic as it is to victim, family and nation – shades in media-magnitude to the wholesale slaughter
of thousands on the streets in Iran. Why the disturbing absence of global media interest?

WORD OUT ON THE STREET
(Click on the blue title)



(2)

TIME FOR IRAN’S NUREMBERG TRIALS

Nazi Germany existed for less than a generation. Islamic republic for nearly half a century. The list of crimes and people to be tried will be endless. That alone makes this urgent.
By Marziyeh Amirizadeh – a former Iranian death row inmate

Tehran’s Tormentors. In order not to forget the faces of their interrogators in Tehran’s infamous prison so that they
can someday be brough to justice, the writer and her cell mate, Maryam, sketched “Rasti” and “Haghighat”.  
How long before these two find themselves in a cell – not as interrogators but inmates?

TIME FOR IRAN’S NUREMBERG TRIALS
(Click on the blue title)



(3)

WHY WE ARE “PROTESTANT” ZIONISTS

Israel’s last major allies are several hundred million Protestant Zionists but the Islamist world – with compliant local church support – is desperate to break this alliance.
By John Enarson

Brick Wall. Behind the veneer of the walls of the Old City, the writer (above) exposes what’s behind Jerusalem’s
Catholic church and its allied denominations with their January 19, startling  statement  condemning
Christian support for Israel as a “damaging ideology”. Damaging to who?

WHY WE ARE “PROTESTANT” ZIONISTS
(Click on the blue title)



LOTL Cofounders David E. Kaplan (Editor), Rolene Marks and Yair Chelouche

To unsubscribe, please reply to layotland@gmail.com









THE ISRAEL BRIEF – 26-29 January 2026

26 January 2026Operation Brave Heart and more on The Israel Brief.



27 January 2026 Everyone is home! and more on the Israel Brief.



28 January 2026Burial of a hero and more on the Israel Brief.



29 January 2026Will Hamas disarm? Will the US attack the regime? Who are your choices for “man” and moron of the week? This and more on the Israel Brief.





WORD OUT ON THE STREET

From a street in Minneapolis to the streets of Teheran, what does media focus reveal about global morality and hypocrisy?

By David E. Kaplan

Yes, the fatal shooting of nurse Alex Pretti in Minneapolis was a tragedy.  It was the second killing in less than three weeks of a US citizen in Minnesota by federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and it should not have happened. However, there was something skewered and revealing about what followed.

ICE R’Age. A yellow “GO HOME NAZI” placard is in evidence at a demonstration against ICE at the site where federal agents fatally shot a man while trying to detain him, on Jan. 24, 2026. No such enthusiasm in support of the brutal crackdown of protestors in Iran. (Photo: Evelyn Hockstein—Reuters)

For days on end, US TV new networks, notably CNN, were covering this solitary killing as their Number 1 news item as if nothing else was newsworthy. Well not quite; there was stiff competition from a mega-snowstorm gripping much of the country but as  the big freeze began to thaw, the ‘hot’ news returned exclusively to the street scene in Minneapolis. Different angles of film footages of the scuffle and the shooting were constantly and repeatedly screened as were the endless opinions from law enforcement experts and politicians. The divergent visuals were competing with divergent verbiage and still, five days later, it was still monopolizing the news.

In no way am I belittling the tragic event in Minneapolis either of the victim and his family nor the traumatic impact on the psyche of the American people and its political ramifications. However, contrast this for news relevance with the wholesale state sponsored slaughter unfolding simultaneously in the Islamic Republic of Iran:

 A solitary death on a street in Minneapolis by a Federal law enforcement agent against a mass murder by the thousands on the streets of Teheran and across much of Iran.

Shoveling Snow. Competing with the news on the killing in Minnesota was the mega winter storm that ‘shoveled’ the slaughter in Iran lower down the order of national interest. (Photo: Charles Krupa)

Teheran makes Minneapolis look like a day at Disneyland but what is making the news?

By some accounts, 36,500 Iranians were slaughtered over a period of 48 hours and yet, one did not need a political Richter Scale to  discern that there was little to zilch interest in the US  of  Iran’s mega-massacre – not in the written  press, not on the TV news networks, certainly not among students at colleges who one should have expected  since they did not hesitate to protest against Israel during the last two years  and not on major city streets nor outside embassies. The killing in a US street of a single protestor in confusing circumstances  solicited far more interest than the transparent slaughter of thousands of protesters on multitude streets across Iran!

The silence was staggering. Why? What was the missing ingredient that failed to ‘trigger’ moral outrage and newsworthiness?

Conjuring up images of the Holocaust, Stephen F. Lynch, a Democrat  who represents Massachusetts 8th congressional district describes the death in Minneapolis  as a “brutal execution…..by ICE agents”, more specifically, “…Gestapo-like conduct,” looking like “a firing squad – taking a human life for no reason. Every American should be ashamed to watch this happening.”

Maybe they should, once the dust settles and the facts are clear. But in Lynch’s words, should not every Americanalso “be ashamed,”  to be ignoring the news out of Iran from eyewitnesses and cell phone footage that millions of protestors in the streets are being targets for state rooftop snipers and trucks mounted with heavy machine guns? On Friday, Jan. 9, 2026, an official of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps warned on state television to anyone venturing into the streets:

If … a bullet hits you, don’t complain.”

Can you imagine an American Federal Agent saying that?

Despite the disinterest of the major TV news networks, TIME magazine thought it about time and reported that  “As many as 30,000 people could have been killed in the streets of Iran on Jan. 8 and 9 alone.” Apparently two senior officials of the country’s Ministry of Health told TIME that:

So many people were slaughtered by Iranian security services on that Thursday and Friday, it overwhelmed the state’s capacity to dispose of the dead. Stocks of body bags were exhausted, the officials said, and eighteen-wheel semi-trailers replaced ambulances.”

The extraordinary high death rate over 48 hours led to speculation among experts groping for comparisons with other mass killings.

Les Roberts, a professor at Columbia University who specializes in the epidemiology of violent death, contrasted what was happening in Iran with Aleppo(Syria) and in Fallujah (Iraq),explaining that “when spasms of death this high have occurred over a few days, it involved mostly explosives with some shooting.” The only parallel offered by online databases occurred in the Holocaust when on the outskirts of Kyiv on Sept. 29 and 30, 1941, Nazi death squads executed 33,000 Ukrainian Jews by gunshot in a ravine known as Babyn Yar.

Black Days. Protesting in Iran leads to ending up in black body bags. Men stand amid rows of corpses in a morgue in Tehran following mass killings of protestors by security forces in this undated image obtained by Iran International.

So, while the US news obsessed over Minneapolis, it mostly bypassed the news out of Iran that was exposing bloodshed on a scale so horrifying it was beyond comprehension.

In a brief message sent via Starlink from Tehran to Iran International, one resident said the situation in the capital and other cities was so dire that “every person is reporting the death of a family member, relative, neighbor, or friend,” stressing that “this is not an exaggeration.”

The air was filled with the smell of blood in Tajrish and Narmak,” an Iranian user outside the country quoted a contact as saying in a post on X, referring to neighborhoods in north and east Tehran.

They were washing the blood from the streets with the municipal irrigation tankers they use to water roadside plants.”

Thousands more have reportedly been detained nationwide. Iranian authorities have labeled anyone present on the streets after January 8 a mohareb—“one who wages war against God”—a charge that carries the death penalty.

The whereabouts of most detainees remain unknown.

There have been reports suggesting that families being asked to pay the equivalent of €5,000 to recover the bodies of their loved ones and others asked to pay for the bullets used to kill their relatives.

Why aren’t US students, notably those at the Ivy League campuses screaming “genocide”?

What is the missing ingredient failing to ignite their passion to protest?

On Sunday, two short videos surfaced showing families inside a hangar belonging to Tehran’s forensic medicine organization in the Kahrizak area. Dozens of bodies wrapped in black bags were visible, some on gurneys and others laid directly on the floor. There is footage brought out of Iran by someone who had recently escaped the country of “… bringing in the bodies in pick-up trucks and telling people to search them themselves,” and later footage showing bodies being unloaded from trailers. “Outside the building, hundreds of people moved among rows of corpses laid directly on the ground, wailing and screaming.”

Bags of Bodies. Where are the global protests in response to photographs like these of family members searching for their loved ones among bodies placed in body bags outside the Kahrizak forensic center in the suburbs of Tehran, Iran, January 13, 2026. 

In one clip, a woman’s voice can be heard crying out to her child: “Get up my love, get up for God’s sake,” as families wander among the bodies searching in shock.

The footage appeared to capture only a fraction of what was taking place.

Sadly  – and tellingly – all this frightening footage and revolting revelations have also only captured “a fraction” of global news attention.

The geographic gap between Gaza and Iran is not too far apart but there is one difference. If you can’t blame Jews it is not news.

There lies the missing ingredient.

As the world this week on the 27 January observed International Holocaust Remembrance Day one would have hoped for a news media and those plethora of ‘people’s power’ movements more receptive to mass murder taking place and more responsive to the appeals for support.

It was not to be.

Holocaust comparisons as misappropriately expounded by  Congressman Lynch found more resonance to what was happening in Minnesota than what was happening in Iran.

Never Again” is typically “Once Again”.






TIME FOR IRAN’S NUREMBERG TRIALS

Nazi Germany existed for less than a generation. Islamic republic for nearly half a century. The list of crimes and people to be tried will be endless. That alone makes this urgent.

By Marziyeh Amirizadeh

The elimination of the Islamic Republic cannot come too soon. After 47 years since the Demonic Revolution that brought the ayatollahs to power, and Iranians to their knees, subjugated by the mullah’s extremist Islam, Iranians need to be free.  Iranians will celebrate the fall of the terrorist regime with glee, but to be complete there also needs to be justice for the perpetrators.  What’s needed is an Iranian version of the Nuremberg Trials.

While the ayatollahs seat of power physically is in Tehran, the spiritual seat of power is in their “holy city,” Qom. The Qom Trials will turn the city from which the Islamic Republic derived its theological “authority” abusing Iranians for decades into a capital of justice.

Members of the Iranian parliament chant slogans in support of Hamas on Oct. 7. (IRNA)

Following WWII and the Holocaust (with the anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz commemorated this week), the allied powers needed to come up with a framework to bring justice to the perpetrators of the genocide of the Jewish people and other crimes against humanity. Facing the challenge of how to deal with Nazi war criminals, rather than summary executions or purely national trials, they instituted an international legal process to establish individual accountability and deter future such crimes.

The charges against the Nazis included: conspiracy to commit crimes, crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. A total of 199 defendants were tried, 161 convicted, 37 of whom were sentenced to death. While this was groundbreaking and critical, it’s worth remembering that the Nazi’s crimes spanned less than 15 years. After 47 years of the Islamic regime in control, it seems that these numbers will only scratch the surface in Iran.

What’s needed now is to establish a new framework to try and bring to justice leaders and agents of the Islamic Republic. There is a body of international law and precedent for the world to hold foreign terrorists to trial for war crimes and crimes against humanity.  Nazi Germany existed for less than a generation. Islamic republic for nearly half a century. The list of crimes and people to be tried will be endless. That alone makes this urgent.

While I was subject to the misogyny and cruelty of the Islamic Republic since I was a young girl, many of these experiences I recounted in my books, it’s hard to imagine anyone in Iran who doesn’t have a list of people who are responsible for unspeakable crimes. I have mine.

Ali Akbar HeydariFar who played an important role in repressing, torturing, and killing protesters in 2009, is one of the judges who sentenced the writer to death
  • Abolqasem Salavati is an infamous execution judge who ordered the execution of my best friend Shirin;
  • Ali Akbar HeydariFar is one of the judges who sentenced me to death;
  • Judge Heydari was my second judge;
  • Saeed Mortazavi was the judge who told me he will make sure I will be executed;
  • Yahya Pirabbasi, another of my judges;
  • Mohammad Moghiseh is the judge who ordered the execution of many of my friends in prison;
  • Sadegh Larijani, the head of all judges;
  • Abbas Jafari Dolat Abadi, the Tehran prosecutor who visited me in prison before my release, enraged by Pope Benedict’s letter advocating for me and my friend Mariyam, and threatening not to talk to anyone about what happened to us in prison and our trial.
Infamously known in Iran as the “Hanging Judge” along with Mohammad Moghiseh and Yahya Pirabbasi, Abolqasem Salavati, presided over the case of Mohsen Amiraslani, executed for heresy for describing Jonah and the Whale as an allegory and who ordered the execution of the writer’s best friend Shirin.

Many of the most terrible people have no online presence and go by fake names. In order never to forget them, and pray that they will be used to be brought to justice – something that seemed unimaginable in 2009 – my friend Maryam and I came up with sketches of two of the criminals. One of our interrogators went by “Rasti”. He was the one who lied and got me to the police station where the interrogations began. Another, “Haghighat” threatened to beat us until we vomited blood.

In order not to forget the faces of their tormentors in prison so that they could be brough one day to justice, the writer and her friend Maryam sketched “Rasti” and “Haghighat”.

Two more people who must be brought to justice are:

  • Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’I, the Chief Justice of Iran who has blood of countless Iranians on his hands;
  • Former President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. While no Iranian presidents should escape justice, when I was in prison I witnessed how many people were arrested, tortured, and  killed because of his direct order and fraudulent election that sparked the Green Movement which he repressed with unspeakable brutality.

It is important that the leaders of the regime are not able to flee, and that there is an immediate means to arrest them all, and hold them until charges can be brought.  It’s also urgent that agents of the regime abroad are arrested and extradited to free Iran, and brought to justice. That’s necessary for Iranians who know who they are, but also for the Western and other countries where they live and in which they infiltrate with their evil extremist Islamic values at the behest of the ayatollahs. Left alone, they will be a national security threat to the countries that harbor them.  Any country that takes and shelters leaders and agents of the regime to be protected in their borders should face unrelenting sanctions. 

Saeed Mortazavi was the judge who told the writer he  “will make sure I will be executed”, has been linked to the closure of 120 publications, the murder of Iranian Canadian journalist in July 2003 Zahra Kazemi and the murder of protesters in the Kahrizak detention center in 2009.

Part of the justice that’s needed in order for Iranians to feel as if they are truly liberated is that the trials must be held, and justice served, in Iran. Doing so will create an example to the world and to the Iranian people.  International trials will not do the same.

The crimes of the Islamic regime and its leaders has not been limited to the horrific scenes we have seen coming out or Iran these past weeks, but the wholesale brutalization of millions of Iranians for nearly half a century. Hundreds of thousands have been killed. Maybe millions. The Islamic Republic and its leaders are guilty or widespread crimes directly, and through its terrorist tentacle proxies, around the globe, where millions more have suffered. There needs to be justice for them, and there needs to be a trial of the ayatollahs, mullahs, judges, IRGC, basij, jailers, interrogators, police and others who are guilty of these crimes.

Tehran prosecutor Abbas Jafari Dolat Abadi – responsible for the arrest and torture of many journalists, young bloggers, human rights advocates, political activists and reformist leaders – visited the writer before her release and threatened her not to talk to anyone about her experiences in prison.

Following President Trump’s post to encourage Iranians in early January:

KEEP PROTESTING – TAKE OVER YOUR INSTITUTIONS!!! Save the names of the killers and abusers.  They will pay a big price. I have canceled all meetings with Iranian officials until the senseless killing of protesters STOPS. HELP IS ON ITS WAY! MIGA!!!,” Iranians took to the streets and have continued to protest. Tens of thousands have been killed and hundreds of thousands injured.

Like those found guilty in Nuremberg, the bodies of those who are sentenced to death should be cremated, their ashes dumped into the Persian Gulf in order to prevent ever setting up a shrine to them. The tomb of Ayatollah Khomeini should be burned to the ground, and its remains and his also dumped into the Gulf.

Doing this will serve as an additional form of justice for the hundreds of thousands or more victims of the Islamic Republic, many of whom were simply disappeared and have no resting place, and no closure for their loved ones. While their crimes cannot be erased, every physical presence of their lives can be.

In a dream once, I asked God why He allowed the suffering to take place in Iran.  He said that He was giving the leaders the opportunity to repent and, if not, He would bring His justice. I am praying that President Trump will follow his words with swift action, that the senseless and criminal murder of tens of thousands of Iranians will stop, and that everyone involved from the “Supreme Leader” down to the lowest policeman will be arrested and see justice.



About the writer:

Marziyeh Amirizadeh is an Iranian American who immigrated to the US after being sentenced to death in Iran for the crime of converting to Christianity.   She endured months of mental and physical hardships and intense interrogation. She is author of two books (the latest, A Love Journey with God), public speaker, and columnist. She has shared her inspiring story throughout the United States and around the world, to bring awareness about the ongoing human rights violations and persecution of women and religious minorities in Iran, www.MarzisJourney.com.






WHY WE ARE “PROTESTANT” ZIONISTS

Israel’s last major allies are several hundred million Protestant Zionists but the Islamist world – with compliant local church support – is desperate to break this alliance.

By John Enarson

On January 17, the Roman Catholic Church and its allied denominations in Jerusalem released a statement condemning Christian support for Israel as a “damaging ideology” that misleads the public and harms church unity. This might look like a unified Christian front turning against the Jewish State – but for hundreds of millions of Evangelical supporters of Israel, this statement clarifies exactly why we are not just Zionists—we are “Protestant” Zionists.

Sad Statement of Affairs. The Catholic Church and its allied denominations in Jerusalem “declared war on Christian Zionism” in a statement released January 17 (see above) , where the Patriarchs and Heads of Churches in the Holy Land — led by the Roman Catholic hierarchy along with Eastern Catholic, Orthodox, and other traditional church leaders — condemned Christian support for Israel as a “damaging ideology” that misleads the public and harms Christian unity.

The Patriarchs and Heads of Churches in Jerusalem claim to be bothered by some “Christian” ideology, but the real issue is that these Christians are helping the Jewish people retain national sovereignty in their ancestral homeland. Under traditional Catholic or Eastern Orthodox theology, Jews might be tolerated as stateless minorities in Christian lands. However, the idea that the Jewish nation has a biblical right to sovereignty violates centuries of supersessionist theology—the belief that the Church has replaced Israel.

As Evangelical supporters of Israel, we are “Protestant” for a reason. We “protest” against the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox traditions that preceded it. While modern apologists suggest the Protestant Reformation is over, the protest remains vital, whether against the worship of Mary, or images, or unbiblical soteriology. Chief among our objections is the betrayal of the Bible in favor of church tradition. The foremost meaning of “Evangelical” is to believe in the primacy of Scripture (the euangelion in old parlance).

The Jerusalem churches’ statement does not even attempt a Scriptural argument. They rely on the old accusation that defying their theology is the “sin of disunity.” They ignore that we have compelling biblical grounds for our stance. As offensive as it may sound to the secular West or the old ecclesiastical hierarchies, we maintain that God’s Word is firmly on the side of Jewish restoration. As Romans 3:4 reminds us, God will be found true, though every man a liar.

Exposing Intent. The writer strolling outside the Old City in Jerusalem asserts that the Vatican has been one of the strongest anti-Zionist actors in the West, ever since Jewish independence.

This leads to the second fundamental reason for our divergence: the definition of a Christian.

For Evangelicals, one is not a Christian by being born into a church as if it were an ethnicity. The Protestant Reformation revived the biblical truth that Christianity springs from personal faith, being “born again” (John 3:3–7) to follow Jesus and submit to Scripture. As Evangelical singer Keith Green famously quipped:

 “Going to church doesn’t make you a Christian any more than going to McDonald’s makes you a hamburger.”

This stands in stark contrast to the Middle East, where for centuries — surrounded by dominant Islam — to be “Christian” is effectively an ethnic minority status. Under Islamic dominance, these communities survived by behaving as subservient dhimmis. In this context, the faith often becomes a cultural collective rather than a personal conviction.

Evangelicals understand that there are many individual true believers in the nominal churches, irrespective of cultural tradition. Moreover, we recognize that there is real persecution of nominal Christians in the Middle East. Jihadists who burn churches and behead Christians do not care if they have been born again or not. To them, even secular, hedonistic Europe is “Christian”. The jihadists exemplify sheer hatred against the cross and the Bible, and care not for any nuance. This garners Evangelical sympathy around the world. We mourn and protest this persecution.

However, the Catholic and Orthodox hierarchies in the Holy Land attempt to weaponize this sympathy to marshal the church, including Evangelicals, against the Jewish State. They tell the world, “Israel is oppressing us.” But the reality is far more complex. The “Christians of the Holy Land” are a complex collective primarily under Jihadist — not a Jewish — threat.

Consider the anecdotal observations of Eastern Orthodox Christian Ridvan Aydemir, an online phenomenon and expressly not a Christian Zionist. He recently came to the Holy Land to investigate the conflict for social commentary and found problems on all sides, including among traditional Christians. Ridvan was then attacked for betraying the Christians of the Holy Land. He responded bluntly:

“What Christians are you talking about? You mean those who are embroiled in gang violence over there? Who are actually active in gang violence? Who are running shady businesses in the Holy Land? Or those who are submissive to the Muslims, accepting their role as dhimmis and doing whatever the Muslims tell them because their lives are too precious to them and they just want to live in peace? … Or do you mean those who actively work for the Islamic Iranian regime and with Hamas and other terrorist organizations? Which Christians are you talking about? Or do you mean those who, for the sake of keeping the peace, do whatever Hamas tells them to do, or say whatever Hamas tells them to say, while behind the scenes telling Israel, ‘Hey, we know you’re right, we’re on your side, but we can’t just publicly [say so]?’ Do you mean those cowards? Or do you mean the good ones who actually stand up for themselves over there? Which Christians are you talking about? You have to be more specific” (ApostateProphet, YouTube, Nov 6, 2025).

This is the blunt mechanism of the conflict:

Jihadists fight the “blasphemy” of Jewish independence in the Middle East. The international community pressure Israel to give these Jihadists self-governing control in places like Bethlehem, Ramallah, and Gaza. Here, the Jihadists mercilessly begin to persecute Christians and any moderate Muslims under their control. Meanwhile, Christian communities that remain under Israeli control go on to flourish. Using cities like Bethlehem as their base, the Jihadists continue their attacks on Jews (the Second Intifada). Israel responds by installing security measures, which cut down the suicide bombings dramatically. However, it means everyone (including Christians) from Bethlehem must go through long security checkpoints. Muslims then use Christian dhimmis under their oppression as pawns. These churches largely do not believe what the Bible says about the Jews and Israel anyway. Thus, the historic churches of the Holy Land tell the world:

Israel is oppressing us. How can Christian Zionists support the Israeli aggression against fellow Christians in the Holy Land? And if Israel does not surrender to the Jihadists, it will enrage Muslims against other Christian dhimmis throughout the Middle East. Stop the Zionists!

History is ironic. The Church once claimed to replace the Jews, reenforcing their stateless misery. Then, Islam arose with its own supersessionist claim, forcing Middle Eastern Christians into second-class dhimmi status, denying them any sovereignty over Muslims. Now, after 2,000 years, God has kept His biblical promise and restored Jewish sovereignty, putting the lie to both theologies.

The last major allies Israel has, are the several hundred million Protestant Zionists. The Islamist world, with the help of compliant local churches, is desperate to break this alliance. Thus, Muslim and Christian statements issue forth, labeling “Zionism” a “damaging ideology”, blaming it for everything from racism and colonialism to world wars and the common cold. But actual Zionism is simply “the belief that, like other nations, the Jewish people have the legitimate right to national self-determination in their ancestral homeland.” Christian Zionism ties this belief to solid, Biblical support. Some are dispensationalist, while others are not. Thus, Christian Zionists (like many Jews), not only hold this view to be the just, legal, and historically correct position, but also a modern miracle of biblical significance.

We can only speculate, but the nervous tone of the ecclesiastical statement, which protests that the “Patriarchs and Heads of Churches” themselves are the only legitimate authority on these matters, suggests that there could be a movement of traditional Christians — even ecclesiastical leaders meeting with officials — who are tired of playing the dhimmi to Islamist oppression in the Holy Land. These voices may see an alliance with Israel, even a deeper theological reevaluation of their relationship with Israel, as the way of the future, and rightly so.

Interestingly, by expressly blaming Christian Zionism as a “damaging ideology”. the statement is also attacking Jews and Judaism which holds the same biblical conviction. Even non-Zionist Orthodox Jews recognize that the Bible clearly gives the Land to the Jewish people eternally. To call this biblical view theologically unsound is not only to mock biblical logic, but to de-facto attack pious Jews as well — a position the Catholic Church has attempted to be more careful about after its failures in the Holocaust. After Vatican II, the Roman Catholic Church officially recognizes the biblical significance of Jews and Judaism. But it stopped short of acknowledging their right to the Land. This promise — which is the most oft-repeated promise in the entire Bible — is thus far denied to the Jews in Catholic theology.

Only on the rarest occasions have Catholic leaders been willing to express any openness to the biblical position on the Land. Cardinal Christoph Schönborn came close in a 2005 address at the Hebrew University where he emphasized that Christians should recognize the Jewish connection to the Holy Land and rejoice in the return of Jews to it as a fulfillment of biblical prophecy. He also referenced Pope John Paul II‘s view that the biblical commandment for Jews to live in Israel represents an everlasting covenant that remains valid today. A local Christian priest immediately protested, but to his credit, Cardinal Schönborn did not yield (Catholics for Israel, Mar 31, 2005; citing Jerusalem Post and Washington Post). However, this has never been acknowledged as any official position of the Roman Catholic Church.

A Cardinal Clash. When visiting Cardinal Christoph Schönborn (above) expressed at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2005 that Jews living in Israel represented an “everlasting covenant”, a local Christian priest immediately protested signifying the opposition of Catholic orthodoxy to recognising and biblical Jewish connection to the Holy Land.

By and large, while often expressing solidarity with the Jewish diaspora, the Vatican has been one of the strongest anti-Zionist actors in the West, ever since Jewish independence. This is evident in everything from papal audiences helping rebrand arch-terrorist Yasser Arafat as a statesman, to Pope Francis holding Mass in Bethlehem in front of a massive mural of Jesus and Joseph sporting keffiyehs, helping launder the lie the “Jesus was a Palestinian”. It remains a lie. Jesus is a Jew.

Laundering Lies. In December 2024, Pope Francis inaugurated a nativity scene in the Vatican showing baby Jesus on keffiyeh to promote and help popularize a relatively new and false narrative that  “Jesus was a Palestinian”.

In sum, we are Protestants. We are Biblical Zionists. And we stand for justice in the Holy Land. We protest the unbiblical interpretations of the Roman Catholic Church and its allies. We hold their biblical theology of Israel and the Jews to be thoroughly lacking. We also protest the suffering of historic Christian communities under Islamist oppression. But we see through ecclesiastical statements trying to blame such hardships on the Jewish State and mislead the Evangelical world.




About the writer:

John Enarson is an author and Christian theology student from Sweden. He has lived in the Middle East for over 25 years and currently serves as the Christian Relations Director at Cry For Zion (cryforzion.com). He is happy to receive input or questions about his articles.
j.enarson @gmail.com






Lay of the Land Weekly Newsletter- 25 January 2026

Unveiling the contours and contrasts of an ever-changing Middle East landscape Reliable reportage and insightful commentary on the Middle East by seasoned journalists from the region and beyond.

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THE ISRAEL BRIEF –19–22 January 2026
(Click on the blue title)



Lay of the Land’s PhotoPick of the Week

This photo is an indictment as much against the West as against Iran
Appealing for the support that characterized the streets and colleges of the West since October 2023, Iranians – cut off from communicating – are met with a deafening “Sounds of Silence”.

The desert saying, “The dog barks but the caravan moves on,” reflects Western indifference while Iranian
protestors are slaughtered, hospitals struggle to treat the injured, women wail at cemeteries
overwhelmed by the dead, and morgues fill with bags holding unidentified bodies.
(Photo: Kim Kyung/Reuters)




ARTICLES

Please note there is a facility to comment beneath each article should you wish to express an opinion on the subject addressed.

(1)

BATTLEGROUNDS FOR RECONCILIATION

The Pivotal Role of HBCUs in combating antisemitism in America’s Black Community.
By Jonathan Feldstein

Reviving Reconciliation. While Martin Luther King Jr. – seen here with Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel –
expressed the Jewish community “more than any other ethnic group” stood by the Black community, 
historical shifts, cultural influences, and educational institutions have fueled division. 
Can this process be reversed?

BATTLEGROUNDS FOR RECONCILIATION
(Click on the blue title)



(2)

GOODBYE KHAMENEI, HELLO ABRAHAM ACCORDS

How regime change in Iran can lead to a more peaceful and prosperous Middle East.
By Neville Berman

To Be or Not to Be. Its not just a rhetorical question but the future of millions of Iranians and people in the
region and around the world wait in anticipation for the dawn of a new era of peace and prosperity.

GOODBYE KHAMENEI, HELLO ABRAHAM ACCORDS
(Click on the blue title)



(3)

MAN ON THE RUN

From running marathons to running a top travel agency, Allan Wolman could also not get faster enough to Israel in 1967 to volunteer during the Six Day War.
A tribute by David E. Kaplan

True to his Word. A frequent contributor to Lay of the Land, we pay tribute to this former South African who in his own way, fought for Israel both in word and in deed.

MAN ON THE RUN
(Click on the blue title)



LOTL Cofounders David E. Kaplan (Editor), Rolene Marks and Yair Chelouche

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THE ISRAEL BRIEF – 19-22 January 2026

19 January 2026What is up with the. “Board of Peace” and more on The Israel Brief.



20 January 2026A very special guest on The Israel Brief.



21 January 2026The Israel Brief from the ANU museum.



22 January 2026 Board of Peace treaty signed – all the controversy and more on The Israel Brief.





BATTLEGROUNDS FOR RECONCILIATION

The Pivotal Role of HBCUs in combating antisemitism in America’s Black Community.

By Jonathan Feldstein

In a candid, insightful, and wide-ranging conversation on “Inspiration from Zion,” Dana White, founder of the Randolph L. White Foundation, communications specialist, and a former Pentagon spokesperson, delved into the roots of antisemitism within the Black community in the United States. Drawing from her personal experiences and her 2024 article, “Why HBCUs Are Key to Fighting Antisemitism,” White highlighted how historical shifts, cultural influences, and educational institutions have fueled division. Yet, she argued, Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) hold immense potential as battlegrounds for reconciliation, echoing the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

White in Washington. As the Assistant to the Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, Dana W. White served as the Pentagon Chief Spokesperson for both the Department of Defense and Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis.

White’s insights stem from her family’s multigenerational story, which underscores the once-strong Black-Jewish alliances. Her grandfather, born in 1896, rose from a janitor at the University of Virginia Hospital to a managerial role (the first ever such role there for a Black man) thanks to a Jewish doctor, Dr. Goodwin. This act of recognition embodied the Jewish ethos of tikkun olam —repairing the world — remains central to her and her family’s identity, as it propelled her family’s trajectory. Her parents, graduates of Howard University in the 1960s, cherished fond memories of their Jewish neighbors and faculty, including those who fled Nazi Germany and found refuge at HBCUs. At a time where quotas existed for Jews in many areas across America, these institutions, White noted, saved about 50 German Jews with visas during the Holocaust, fostering a shared history of common destiny and resilience.

Soldier for Justice. Dana White’s grandfather, Sgt. Randolph L White, US Army, proudly served in the 9th Calvary, also known as the famed Buffalo Soldiers and would go on to be an influential African American newspaper publisher, hospital administrator, and civil-rights activist.

White highlighted the post-civil rights era where Blacks and Jews were close allies. The reality of the Jewish role in the civil rights movement is largely not remembered by anyone under 80 she said.  Yet the words of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. echoed this reality on March 26, 1968, days before he was assassinated:

 “Probably more than any other ethnic group, the Jewish community has been sympathetic and has stood as an ally to the Negro in his struggle for justice.”

Yet following King’s assassination and the civil rights movement was a turning point for the unraveling of these positive relations, and seeded rising antisemitism in the Black community. Desegregation in the 1970s led to a “melting away” of familiar ties. Middle-class Blacks and Jews moved out of urban areas, leaving vulnerable populations amid economic decline, drug epidemics, and mass incarceration. This vacuum bred anger and a victim mindset, amplified by the Nation of Islam’s hateful rhetoric. White described how figures like Louis Farrakhan propagated misinformation, such as exaggerated claims of Jewish involvement in the slave trade, which gained traction organically; in barbershops, salons, and family gatherings without counter-narratives because once close personal relationships as her family experienced had eroded.

HBCUs, once havens of Black excellence, became influential conduits for this shift. White contrasted her parents’ positive experiences at Howard — where a significant Jewish presence promoted mutual respect — with her brother’s experience in the early 1990s. By then, HBCUs had transformed into “breeding grounds for revenge history,” a term White uses for distorted narratives seeking retribution against perceived oppressors. Nation of Islam newspapers circulated on campuses, blending empowerment messages with vitriol against Jews as “the other” or “super white people.” Cultural elements like hip-hop, reinforced these tropes. Intersectionality and cultural relativism, emerging in these academic spaces, further alienated Jews by framing them within oppressive structures.

Despite producing only 10% of Black bachelor’s degree holders, HBCUs wield outsized influence, graduating 80% of Black judges, 50% of Black lawyers, and 40% of Black engineers and doctors. This leadership pipeline means ideas incubated there permeate Black culture and mainstream America. White lamented the drift: many HBCU students today have never met a Jew, leading to or at least not having any counteractive balance of the demonization of Jews. She shared stories of sponsoring Black students to visit Israel, where they discovered shared family dynamics during Shabbat dinners, dispelling these myths.

Birthed out of Exclusion. Founded in the 19th and early 20th centuries during a time of widespread racial segregation, Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) were created to provide educational opportunities for African Americans who were systematically excluded from mainstream colleges and universities. Fostering academic excellence, these institutions produced generations of African American professionals, leaders, and scholars.

To reverse this, White advocates leveraging HBCUs as anti-antisemitism hubs through deliberate re-engagement. Jewish communities should invest in campuses — via funding like Michael Bloomberg’s recent commitments — and foster personal connections. “It’s not one-offs,” she emphasized. Through sustained dialogues, shared meals, and educational programs can rebuild familiarity, positive changes can be made. Breaking bread humanizes the “other,” making it harder to hate. White envisions local partnerships, like those at Bowie State University in Maryland, where Jewish and Black groups convene for honest conversations followed by communal events.

Monumental Message. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on March 26, 1968 expressed that the Jewish community “Probably more than any other ethnic group…. has stood as an ally to the Negro in his struggle for justice.”

Central to White’s vision is reviving the spirit of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., whose legacy she believes has been diluted. King, a staunch Zionist, collaborated closely with Jewish leaders like Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel and benefited from Jewish support in the civil rights movement. His final speech evoked the “Promised Land,” drawing from Exodus — a narrative that fueled Black spirituals and faith during slavery. White speculated King would be disappointed today with:

– the frayed Black-Jewish bonds post-desegregation

– the pervasive victimhood language among those far removed from Jim Crow

– the declining Black literacy rates, and

– the indifference to antisemitism.

Special Bond. Friends and prophets, Abraham Joshua Heschel (left) brought Martin Luther King  (right) and his message to a wide Jewish audience, and King made Heschel a central figure in the struggle for civil rights. Often lecturing together, they both spoke about racism, Zionism and about the struggles of Jews in the Soviet Union.

He rose with Jewish backing for organizations like the NAACP, yet modern divisions ignore this shared fight for justice. King would decry how politics overshadowed faith in Black churches, urging a return to Old Testament teachings of hope and self-reliance.

Following her recent visit to Israel where she witnessed the aftermath of the October 7, 2023 Hamas massacre and ensuing war, White’s call is particularly urgent amid surges in antisemitism. She noted that these began the very next day, on October 8, with masses around the world blaming the victim, and she even sees antisemitism as more insidious and permissive than racism. Wearing a Star of David in solidarity, she urges non-Jews to speak out, emphasizing Israel’s unparalleled efforts to protect civilians. By harnessing HBCUs’ cultural clout for education and alliance-building, the Black community can honor King’s vision, repairing divides through dialogue and mutual recognition. As White reflected, small acts — like Dr. Goodwin’s promotion of her grandfather — create ripples. In an era of ignorance, HBCUs offer a pathway to empathy, ensuring antisemitism’s roots are uprooted for generations to come.



About the writer:

Jonathan Feldstein ­­­­- President of the US based non-profit Genesis123 Foundation whose mission is to build bridges between Jews and Christians – is a freelance writer whose articles appear in The Jerusalem Post, Times of Israel, Townhall, NorthJersey.com, Algemeiner Journal, The Jewish Press, major Christian websites and more.






While the mission of Lay of the Land (LotL) is to provide a wide and diverse perspective of affairs in Israel, the Middle East and the Jewish world, the opinions, beliefs and viewpoints expressed by its various writers are not necessarily ones of the owners and management of LOTL but of the writers themselves.  LotL endeavours to the best of its ability to credit the use of all known photographs to the photographer and/or owner of such photographs (0&EO).