Tag Archives: Am Yisrael

Coming Home with a Paintbrush

by Albert Levi (Hod HaSharon, Israel)

A few months ago, I returned home from reserve duty in Gaza

The streets were quiet

My boots were still covered in dust

And inside me, a storm was still raging

There are things we carry back from war that have no words

Things you don’t talk about over coffee

Things that settle in your chest and stay there unless you find a way to release them

For me, that release came through paint

I walked into my studio the very next morning

Not because I felt inspired

But because I needed to breathe

And sometimes the only place I know how to breathe is in front of a blank canvas

I opened jars of acrylic

Picked up my palette knife

And something in me started to move

I didn’t plan to paint what I painted

But I reached instinctively for blues and whites

And I began creating something that felt like light

Lions with fire in their eyes

Doves carrying quiet prayers

Trees that held the memory of generations

Maps of Israel drawn with energy and color, not lines

My name is Albert Levi

I’m twenty-three years old

I’m a Jewish artist living in Israel

And before I was an artist, I was a soldier

For the past year, I served as a combat commander in a special forces unit

I was called to the north, then to Gaza

I saw destruction, fear, grief

I also saw unity, bravery, compassion, and a fierce kind of love

And through all of it, I carried something invisible with me

A sense that even in the worst moments, we are not only fighting to defend life

We are fighting to preserve meaning, memory, and beauty

When I came home, I didn’t want to paint war

I wanted to paint what we are fighting for

Family

Spirit

Joy

Light

The stories we tell our children

The strength we find in ancient roots

The future we still believe in

So I painted

Every day

Not because I had something to sell

But because I had something to feel

And eventually, something to give

Now, my art hangs in Jewish homes around the world

Some are homes I will never visit

Some belong to people I will never meet

But I know that when they look at the canvas, they feel something real

They feel the roar of the Lion of Judah

The quiet of Jerusalem at sunset

The pride of Am Yisrael standing tall

Even when far from Israel, even when surrounded by different languages or customs, they see their reflection

I did not go to art school

I did not study composition or technique

I studied life

In the sand

In the silence

In the longing for home

My colors are not perfect

My lines are not clean

But they are true

Because they come from the same place the Jewish people always created from

From resilience

From heart

From hope that refuses to die

I don’t know if art can heal the world

But I know it can hold a piece of it

And that is enough for me

Albert Levi is a 23-year-old Jewish artist living in Israel. After serving as a combat commander in a special forces unit, he returned home carrying more than just memories. He carried emotions too big for words. That’s when he picked up a paintbrush. 

Through bold colors, Jewish symbols, and emotional honesty, Albert creates art that speaks to the heart of the Jewish people. His work now hangs in homes across the world, as a reminder of resilience, identity, and the light we continue to fight for.

You can explore his paintings at www.albertlevi.com

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Filed under Israel Jewry, Jewish, Jewish identity, Jewish writing, Judaism, poetry

One People, Many Faces

By Steve Pollack (Woxall, PA)

My son’s bar mitzvah year called us to the northernmost Israeli seacoast town of Nahariya in the summer of 1991, the year that 15,000 Ethiopian Jews were airlifted as part of “Operation Solomon.” We wanted to lend our hands to the historic and miraculous effort.

The Israeli government provided the new immigrants with temporary housing, Hebrew language classes, and job training. Local B’nai B’rith leaders collected clothing and other personal needs. One day we were assigned to distribute various powders & liquids—soaps for bathing, washing clothes or cleaning dishes—and to demonstrate their use for people accustomed to washing in a river, not certain the purpose of each plumbing fixture in a hotel bathroom. That assignment is what sent me to an upper floor where I met a man whose priestly position in the tribe I learned only later. 

I did not ask his name nor speak mine. I did not speak Amharic, the official language in Ethiopia. Yet I stood before him, an elder among recent immigrants ravaged by famine and civil-war, awed by his dignity and personal warmth. His coarse cotton robe, white ragged beard, and distinctive scepter of smooth wood and horsehair held upright looked to my Western eyes as unfamiliar as my shorts and baseball cap must have appeared to him.

The elderly man motioned for me to sit by him on the bed and opened a well-worn leather-bound volume. He turned the thick book to a page inside the back cover and together we recited the twenty-two letters of the Hebrew alphabet—Alef, Bet, Gimel… This was no test or school lesson, no bland reading. The experience felt like a joyful song, an ancient chant of profound connection.

Our group of B’nai-B’rith volunteers visited the new immigrants most afternoons. We strolled the mosaic promenade parallel to the Mediterranean Sea holding hands with the youngest children while their parents prepared evening meals served in a common dining hall. Lean teenagers walked with us, their English vocabulary more extensive than my Hebrew. They taught us their Amharic names, articulations unpronounceable by my lips. 

While at local playgrounds or on Nahariya sidewalks, we were greeted with broad smiles from Israelis going about their everyday routines. A tribe of African kids parading with North Americans was a sight that became a local headline. We were hosted like celebrities at the Mayor’s city hall office and gifted commemorative pins; the city’s name, from nahar, Hebrew for river, its iconic water tower and idyllic position by the sea symbols on the crest.

During an evening talk with our group, an Israeli-educated anthropologist who had fled from Ethiopia only a handful of years before highlighted his community’s history and customs on the Horn of Africa. I learned that the elderly man who I had met was much respected. His scepter was a sign of sacred wisdom, not kingly wealth. 

I learned, too, that to be married in their tradition, young couples presented him with family documents going back seven generations, proof they were not too closely related. It was quite a contrast to the way my wife and I had applied for a marriage license in Philadelphia. We had gone to city hall, passed blood tests, and then a rabbi in tailored business suit witnessed our names and wrote the wedding date on our ceremonial ketubah

Sitting among new friends during that informal evening, and often during the many years since, I thought about the many leafless branches on my family tree—before immigrant grandparents I was privileged to know. Of those who never boarded a boat, I know nothing. How many millions of lives could have been saved if US quotas had not been imposed, if safe harbor had been open ten years before 1948, when the modern state of Israel was born in my lifetime? 

Social scientists have researched several theories about the Ethiopian Jewish community, and notable rabbis authenticated their origins to the tribe of Dan, one of the ten lost tribes. I wondered also about millennia before, which of Jacob’s twelve sons, which mother carried my seed—concubine or wife? I must be satisfied with Biblical narratives, stories of struggle and strength, grateful for names and traditions passed forward, one generation to the next. 

During our month-long adventure that year, we also took in sights and tastes as tourists from the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, from chalk cliffs of Rosh Ha’nikra to sandstone mountains of Eilat, from Galilee to Dead Sea, from Nahariya to Jerusalem. But it was those minutes that I shared with a black African man who had traveled across a desert and flown through clouds to a Promised Land thatheightened my pride in being Jewish and broadened my sense of Am Yisrael

Although Jews are dispersed in different lands, across seas and circumstance, all of us are bonded through an alphabet, the poetic language of urgent prayers, and the covenant of an enduring faith.

We are one people of many faces.

Steve Pollack hit half-balls with broomsticks, rode the Frankford El, sailed across the equator on the USS Enterprise. He’s been an usher, delivery boy, engineer and administrator. Creative writing found him later. “Bashert”, appeared in Jewish Literary Journal. His poems in print and on-line, most recently Poetica Magazine and Schuylkill Valley Journal. His poetry chapbook, “L’dor Vador–From Generation to Generation”, was published in 2020 by Finishing Line Press. He serves on the One Book One Jewish Community team sponsored by Gratz College, and sings bass with Nashirah: the Jewish Chorale of Greater Philadelphia.

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Filed under Ethiopian Jews, history, Jewish, Jewish identity, Jewish writing, Judaism