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ISRAEL
Everyone Has an Opinion About Your Country. I Have Advice for Your Life.
Men in Israel are settling. Elder X has been through bipolar, psych wards, religious trauma, and came out the other side. He gives personal advice — not therapy — for $250/week. Elder X speaks English. Submit your message in your language. He will respond to every person. We will use translation tools to communicate.
Virtually all Jewish Israeli men serve 32 months of mandatory military service
An estimated 20% of combat veterans experience clinically significant PTSD
Reservist duty disrupts civilian life for men well into their 40s
Ultra-Orthodox men who don't serve face a separate crisis of economic exclusion
Male suicide in the military has generated increasing public concern
The Sabra Soldier: Israeli masculinity is defined by mandatory military service in one of the world's most active combat zones. The sabra ideal — named after the prickly pear cactus that is tough outside and soft inside — was the founding masculine myth: the new Jew who fought back, who would never again be led to slaughter. But three generations of combat have hardened the exterior and dried out the interior. Israeli men are expected to be warriors at 18, entrepreneurs at 25, and involved fathers by 30, with the PTSD from their army years treated as a character feature rather than a wound.
Israel is the only country where virtually every Jewish man has combat training and many have combat experience — and this shapes a masculine culture unlike any other. The army isn't just a phase; it's the defining social institution. Unit placement determines adult social networks, career opportunities, and even romantic prospects. The men who served in elite units carry prestige; the men who served in non-combat roles carry a quiet shame. The reservist system means that civilian men can be called up for military operations well into middle age, keeping the warrior identity permanently active.
The October 7th attack and subsequent conflict has created a trauma event that will reshape Israeli masculinity for a generation. Men who responded as reservists, men who lost family members at the Nova festival and in kibbutzim, and men who served in the subsequent military operations carry a burden that the existing mental health infrastructure — though well-developed by regional standards — may not be sufficient to address. The ultra-Orthodox male crisis adds another dimension: men in Haredi communities who are exempt from military service face economic exclusion (their yeshiva education doesn't translate to labor market skills) and social stigma from secular Israelis who resent the exemption. These men pray while the country fights, and neither community understands the other's masculine sacrifice.
Israeli masculinity is the sabra — prickly outside, sweet inside — but the sweetness gets drilled out in basic training and never reinstalled.
Mandatory military service creates universal male exposure to combat trauma
Ongoing conflict and security threats produce chronic hypervigilance
Holocaust generational trauma persists even in families that don't discuss it
Reservist duty disrupts civilian life and mental health throughout adulthood
Ultra-Orthodox and secular masculine expectations clash within the same society
CITY COVERAGE IN ISRAEL
110 city pages indexed
Jerusalem
801K people
Tel Aviv
433K people
West Jerusalem
400K people
Haifa
267K people
Ashdod
225K people
Rishon LeẔiyyon
220K people
Petaẖ Tiqwa
200K people
Beersheba
187K people
Netanya
172K people
H̱olon
166K people
Bnei Brak
154K people
Reẖovot
133K people
Bat Yam
129K people
Ramat Gan
128K people
Ashkelon
106K people
Jaffa
100K people
Modi‘in Makkabbim Re‘ut
89K people
Herzliya
84K people
Kfar Saba
81K people
Ra'anana
80K people
Hadera
76K people
Bet Shemesh
67K people
Lod
67K people
Nazareth
65K people
Modiin Ilit
64K people
Ramla
64K people
Nahariyya
51K people
Qiryat Ata
49K people
Givatayim
48K people
Kiryat Gat
47K people
Acre
46K people
Eilat
46K people
Afula
45K people
Karmi’el
44K people
Hod HaSharon
43K people
Umm el Faḥm
41K people
Nof HaGalil
41K people
Tiberias
40K people
Qiryat Moẕqin
39K people
Qiryat Yam
39K people
Rosh Ha‘Ayin
39K people
Ness Ziona
39K people
Qiryat Bialik
37K people
Ramat HaSharon
36K people
Dimona
34K people
Eṭ Ṭaiyiba
33K people
Yavné
32K people
Or Yehuda
31K people
Yehud-Monosson
29K people
Safed
28K people
Gedera
26K people
Tamra
26K people
Yehud
26K people
Daliyat al Karmel
25K people
Migdal Ha‘Emeq
25K people
Sakhnīn
25K people
Netivot
25K people
Mevasseret Ẕiyyon
24K people
Ofaqim
24K people
Arad
24K people
VOCE NAO ESTA SOZINHO
Israeli masculinity is the sabra — prickly outside, sweet inside — but the sweetness gets drilled out in basic training and never reinstalled.
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