Sirens screamed across the night as Israel was hit without mercy. In minutes, lives were erased, a synagogue shattered, and a shelter turned into a mass grave. Rescue teams clawed through concrete with bare hands while families waited, praying for a voice under the ruins. Officials warn this may only be the beginn… Continues…
The missile that struck Beit Shemesh did more than collapse a synagogue; it tore open a sense of safety that many Israelis clung to despite months of tension. Beneath the sanctuary, where people believed they were protected, the shelter became a deadly trap as tons of debris crashed down. Medics moved from body to body, choosing who could still be saved, while hospitals braced for more wounded and more news no family wanted to hear.
As investigators trace the missile’s path and officials coordinate with allies, ordinary residents live by the siren. Parents sleep in clothes, children keep shoes by the bed, and everyone listens for the next alert. The government urges calm and discipline, but fear travels faster than any official message. In the coming hours, decisions made in sealed rooms may determine whether this night is remembered as a turning point—or just the first shock in a far darker escalati
