As missiles rained down and sirens wailed, the Rebbe’s Shluchim refused to let the joy of Purim be silenced. Hundreds of Megillah readings brought hope to the underground.
This Purim, the streets of Tel Aviv weren’t filled with parades, but with the haunting sound of non-stop sirens. Families, children, and the elderly were forced to flee their homes again and again, seeking safety in cold, cramped bomb shelters.
In these moments of absolute terror, the Shluchim of the Rebbe in Tel Aviv became a lifeline of hope.
Through a massive, high-risk logistical operation coordinated of Central Chabad Tel Aviv by the head Shalich Rabbi Yoseph Gerlitzky, no shelter was left behind. From the darkest hours of the night through the entire day, Shluchim and Yeshiva students braved the streets under fire to reach every single public shelter in the city.
“The only ones who didn’t lose their composure were the Chabadniks,” shared one emotional resident. “While the world outside felt like it was collapsing, they walked in with smiles, radiating a supernatural security that gave us the strength to breathe again.”
These weren’t just Megillah readings; they were spiritual rescue missions. They transformed damp, underground bunkers into sanctuaries of joy, providing a desperate social and emotional break for parents and children who have been pushed to their limit by the war.