
Why Israel's Unbreakable Spirit Shakes the World to Its Core
- Bruce News MA Ed.
- Sep 8, 2025
- 3 min read
Why Israel's Unbreakable Spirit Shakes the World to Its Core
Inspired by favorite teacher Rabbi Moshe Snow
Bruce News MA Ed.
CEO / Writer
In the shadowed corridors of global discourse, a whisper turns to a roar: Israel. A name that ignites fury, sparks boycotts, and unleashes torrents of condemnation from podiums and pixels alike. But peel back the layers of political venom, the accusations of borders and battles, and you'll uncover a truth that terrifies the soul. It's not the actions of a nation that provoke such visceral unease—it's the very essence of its existence.
Israel is a tiny speck on the map, besieged by hatred, thriving against annihilation. How dare this improbable powerhouse refuse to fade into oblivion? How dare it rise, radiant and relentless, from the ashes of history? This is no mere story of survival; it's a cosmic rebellion that forces us to confront the divine hand at work. Brace yourself, for what follows is not politics—it's prophecy unfolding before our eyes.
Imagine a nation no larger than New Jersey, a population rivaling that of Chicago, stranded in a sea of hostility. No oil gushes from its veins, no vast resources fuel its engines—yet Israel stands as a colossus. Surrounded by enemies who vow its destruction, vilified in the gilded halls of the United Nations, targeted by terror's relentless grip, slandered by silver-screen celebrities, boycotted by the self-righteous, and assaulted from every angle.
Still Israel thrives with a ferocity that defies tomorrow's dawn. In military might, it forges shields of iron that snatch rockets from the sky. In medicine, it pioneers cures that mend the broken. In security and intelligence, it outwits the shadows. In technology, it births innovations that reshape the world. In agriculture, it commands the barren desert to bloom with life, coaxing water from thin air like a modern-day Moses parting the seas.
The world gazes upon this spectacle and recoils in confusion. How? They cry. A people meant to vanish millennia ago—enslaved by pharaohs, scattered by empires—refuse to play by history's cruel script. The Babylonians, the Romans, the Crusaders, the Inquisition's flames, the pogroms' blood-soaked nights, the Holocaust's unspeakable abyss—all designed to erase them. Yet here they stand, not just surviving, but conquering. They return to their ancient homeland after 2,000 years of exile, revive a dead language that echoes through bustling Tel Aviv streets, and resurrect their identity from the grave. They rescue hostages from the jaws of tyranny, win wars that prophets of doom declared unwinnable, and build a society pulsing with unbreakable will and unyielding morality.
Scratch deeper, and the outrage reveals its core: envy masked as ethics, fear disguised as fury. They accuse cheating—American aid, oppression, some shadowy sorcery—anything to deny the undeniable. Heaven forbid it's earned through sweat and sacrifice. Heaven forbid it's destined, a thread woven into the fabric of fate. Because if Israel's strength isn't a trick, if it's real and rooted in something eternal, then the math of mortality crumbles. No rational roadmap leads from gas chambers to global influencers. No precedent explains enduring empires' wrath and still clocking in on Monday morning, innovating amid the chaos.
This is what unravels the world's fragile facade: Israel doesn't make sense unless you believe in miracles. Unless you acknowledge that this hated, ancient nation isn't just resilient—it's chosen, protected, divine. A testimony etched in stone and spirit, proving that history isn't a random roulette, evil doesn't claim victory, and God isn't a forgotten fable. He's alive in the story, keeping promises forged in fire, guiding a people who embody the eternal.
And so, the denial erupts into rage. Smears fly like arrows, boycotts build walls of hypocrisy, because admitting the miracle means everything shatters. The enemies of Israel's enemies moral compass spins wildly, assumptions about power and justice implode. You're not witnessing an empire's end, but the dawn of something profound—an internal reckoning that demands surrender to the sacred.
Israel thrives not despite the divine, but because of it. In its unbreakable spirit, we glimpse the ultimate truth: G-d is still writing the narrative, and His promises endure. To rage against Israel is to rage against the heavens themselves. But in that defiance, perhaps, lies our salvation—if only we dare to believe.
Pray, Vote and be Active --- Bruce
Support The Movement!








Comments