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Let us know what you think of each episode when you have had a listen #dogood
This week’s episode of The Do Good Podcast is different.
No guest.
No conversation.
Just a moment to pause… and to feel what is really happening right now.
As Jews around the world prepare to sit down for Passover, telling the ancient story of survival, exile, and liberation… that story no longer feels distant.
It feels present.
Because across the world, antisemitism is rising again.
Not quietly. Not subtly.
But in ways that feel familiar, unsettling, and deeply personal.
And in Israel, millions of people are not watching a war unfold.
They are living inside it.
Sirens.
Missiles.
Sleepless nights.
Children asking questions no child should ever have to ask.
This is not a headline.
It is a nervous system.
And in the middle of it all, life continues.
People still show up.
They still care.
They still rescue.
They still feed the animals shaking in fear from explosions they cannot understand.
They still open doors.
Still carry each other.
Still choose humanity… even when the world feels like it is hardening.
This episode is a reflection on all of that.
On fear.
On identity.
On what it means to be Jewish right now.
On what it means to stand with Jews.
On what it means to hold compassion in a time when compassion feels selective.
And on why Passover, this year, hits differently.
Because this is a story about survival.
And right now… that story is not just being told.
It is being lived.
A deeply personal episode about antisemitism, war, resilience, tenderness, and the quiet, defiant choice to keep doing good… even when the world feels like it is breaking.
At its heart, this episode is about more than conflict. It is about memory, identity, tenderness, resilience, and moral courage. It is about what Passover means this year, when the themes of Jewish survival and freedom feel painfully immediate. And it is about what it means to keep choosing humanity, compassion, and goodness in a world that can feel increasingly hard, hostile, and numb.
This is an honest and heartfelt reflection on antisemitism, war, fear, survival, and the quiet, stubborn acts of care that still matter, perhaps now more than ever.
Don't forget to leave a review and tell us what you think :) #DOGOOD
By Sword of Iron Israel VolunteeringLet us know what you think of each episode when you have had a listen #dogood
This week’s episode of The Do Good Podcast is different.
No guest.
No conversation.
Just a moment to pause… and to feel what is really happening right now.
As Jews around the world prepare to sit down for Passover, telling the ancient story of survival, exile, and liberation… that story no longer feels distant.
It feels present.
Because across the world, antisemitism is rising again.
Not quietly. Not subtly.
But in ways that feel familiar, unsettling, and deeply personal.
And in Israel, millions of people are not watching a war unfold.
They are living inside it.
Sirens.
Missiles.
Sleepless nights.
Children asking questions no child should ever have to ask.
This is not a headline.
It is a nervous system.
And in the middle of it all, life continues.
People still show up.
They still care.
They still rescue.
They still feed the animals shaking in fear from explosions they cannot understand.
They still open doors.
Still carry each other.
Still choose humanity… even when the world feels like it is hardening.
This episode is a reflection on all of that.
On fear.
On identity.
On what it means to be Jewish right now.
On what it means to stand with Jews.
On what it means to hold compassion in a time when compassion feels selective.
And on why Passover, this year, hits differently.
Because this is a story about survival.
And right now… that story is not just being told.
It is being lived.
A deeply personal episode about antisemitism, war, resilience, tenderness, and the quiet, defiant choice to keep doing good… even when the world feels like it is breaking.
At its heart, this episode is about more than conflict. It is about memory, identity, tenderness, resilience, and moral courage. It is about what Passover means this year, when the themes of Jewish survival and freedom feel painfully immediate. And it is about what it means to keep choosing humanity, compassion, and goodness in a world that can feel increasingly hard, hostile, and numb.
This is an honest and heartfelt reflection on antisemitism, war, fear, survival, and the quiet, stubborn acts of care that still matter, perhaps now more than ever.
Don't forget to leave a review and tell us what you think :) #DOGOOD