Israeli Goy

Israeli Goy

A Child, a Suitcase and Exile (Part II)

1 h 3 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio A Child, a Suitcase and Exile (Part II)

Descripción

God promises: I will rain bread from heaven for you.” - Exodus 16:4 I saw this sentence carved into the city while walking through The Hague during a time when I was surviving day to day - no stable home, living out of hotel rooms with my child, measuring life in small daily provisions rather than long-term certainty. What struck me wasn’t religion in theory, but something far more immediate: provision in motion. Because in that period of exile, nothing was fixed — not housing, not safety, not stability. And still, somehow, there was always enough for the next step. Not everything at once. Just what was needed to keep going. At the same time, another process kept unfolding in the background - legal, Israeli, bureaucratic, emotional - a parallel life of paperwork, hearings, waiting, and holding onto a dream that refused to disappear even when everything else felt suspended. This episode is about that split reality: survival on the surface, and something quietly sustained underneath it. I won’t call it inspiration. I’ll call it what it was: endurance, provision, and the strange way life continues to give you just enough bread for the day you’re in. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/telavivush]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Israeli Goy!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

23 episodios

episode A Child, a Suitcase and Exile (Part II) artwork

A Child, a Suitcase and Exile (Part II)

God promises: I will rain bread from heaven for you.” - Exodus 16:4 I saw this sentence carved into the city while walking through The Hague during a time when I was surviving day to day - no stable home, living out of hotel rooms with my child, measuring life in small daily provisions rather than long-term certainty. What struck me wasn’t religion in theory, but something far more immediate: provision in motion. Because in that period of exile, nothing was fixed — not housing, not safety, not stability. And still, somehow, there was always enough for the next step. Not everything at once. Just what was needed to keep going. At the same time, another process kept unfolding in the background - legal, Israeli, bureaucratic, emotional - a parallel life of paperwork, hearings, waiting, and holding onto a dream that refused to disappear even when everything else felt suspended. This episode is about that split reality: survival on the surface, and something quietly sustained underneath it. I won’t call it inspiration. I’ll call it what it was: endurance, provision, and the strange way life continues to give you just enough bread for the day you’re in. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/telavivush]

Ayer1 h 3 min
episode A Child, a Suitcase and Exile - Part 1 artwork

A Child, a Suitcase and Exile - Part 1

A Child, a Suitcase and Exile — Part 1 After being deported from Israel, I arrived in Amsterdam with my child and little idea of what lay ahead. What began as a forced departure became a long journey through uncertainty, temporary homes, survival, and adaptation. In this first part, I share the story of leaving Israel, arriving in the Netherlands, and navigating the early months of exile. From short-term sublets and bureaucratic hurdles to the emotional weight of raising a child while trying to re build a life from scratch, this episode explores what it means to keep moving forward when there is no clear destination. A personal story about displacement, resilience, parenthood, and the search for a place to call home. Israeli Goy is a podcast about identity, belonging, freedom, and the unexpected paths life takes us on. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/telavivush]

5 de jun de 202657 min
episode The Architect of the Verdict (Part 1): Mastering the High Stakes Legal Game artwork

The Architect of the Verdict (Part 1): Mastering the High Stakes Legal Game

What happens when you enter a legal system that wasn’t built for you? In ISRAELI GOY: The Architect of the Verdict, I share my journey as a foreign mother navigating the Israeli legal system while raising an Israeli child. From lawyers selling unnecessary processes, to others who delay and deflect responsibility, to the rare ones who truly align—this episode reveals the reality behind the scenes. This is not just about legal battles. It’s about strategy, power, and learning how to operate inside a system where the rules aren’t always clear. If you’ve ever felt lost, underestimated, or outplayed—this is where you start taking control. Support the show [https://buymeacoffee.com/telavivush]

29 de abr de 20261 h 4 min