06/17/2026
Back in Israel - Day 22
Yesterday was not a training day, but a reflective one.
It was a day of closing some loops and helping a friend who lives here in Israel and is connected to one of the communities we serve back home. They also helped me when I first arrived on this trip, so it was good to spend some time together.
I also took some time to find a few kippahs to bring home for a friend who recently welcomed a grandson into the world.
I got a haircut, trimmed my beard, and spent much of the day reflecting on a question that has followed me throughout this entire journey.
How do we put this to work in the United States?
How do we reach more communities and get people to take action before the crisis, before the shooting, before the bombing, before the escalation of danger that we continue to see rising around us?
Peaceful times have created complacent people who operate under the false assumption that these threats will never affect them.
Yet history is filled with thousands upon thousands of examples of people who once believed the exact same thing, until they became the victim.
So the question becomes, what is stopping people from choosing to become proactive?
What is stopping people from becoming trained?
What is stopping people from seeking real security solutions instead of assuming someone else will handle it?
Over the last two weeks, I watched fourteen other Jewish people, ranging from their early twenties into their sixties, choose to step up. They chose to train. They chose to become advocates and voices for their communities back home so they can help prepare them before something happens.
I have been serving the Jewish community for nearly a decade, waiting and hoping to see more people take ownership of that responsibility.
My heart is overjoyed to watch these men and women work so hard and commit themselves to protecting their communities.
Later in the evening, I met with one of the counterterrorism commanders I know here. We spent time with his family, talked about the goal of building stronger people and stronger communities, and discussed what comes next.
As I closed out the day, I found myself asking the same questions again.
How do we put this to work?
How do we make a larger difference?
How do we get more people involved?
If you have ideas, I would genuinely love to hear them.
Because our chance is now.
Before anything happens.
Before the cost of assumed safety and comfort comes due.
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