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Israel Today: Ongoing War Report - Update from 2026-06-13 at 07:01
Published 1 month ago
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HEADLINES
Iran seals uranium stockpile as talks advance
Lebanese Christian in Israel thrives amid displacement
Club Hotel Eilat time-share ritual endures
The time is now 7:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Direct Israel-Iran Clashes, Iran has escalated efforts to seal off its stockpile of enriched uranium, collapsing tunnels and placing explosive mines at entrances in recent weeks, CNN reported citing five sources familiar with US intelligence. This comes a day after a senior administration official said the US and Iran are close to a deal requiring Iran to relinquish its uranium enriched to near-bomb-grade. Reuters reported that the emerging US-Iran agreement would dismantle the Iranian nuclear program and allow the US to collect the enriched uranium, though details of how retrieval would occur were not clear. US President Donald Trump has said retrieving the uranium is a priority and has suggested that only the United States and possibly China have the capability to do so. CNN reported that the United States had originally planned to launch a ground mission into Iran to recover the uranium, but the operation was paused. An interview on 103FM quoted former defense minister Yoav Gallant on the matter.
In Uplifting News, a series of personal stories highlight resilience and perspective. One piece notes that after cancer treatment, curly hair can be a sign of recovery; the author describes how hair regrowth after chemotherapy is a common experience and that hairstyles often mirror cultural shifts. The piece recalls Laura Ben-David, who died in 2025 after a long battle with ovarian cancer, and uses the curls as a memory. Sociologist Rose Weitz is cited saying hair is one of the first ways we tell the story of who we are, and historian Robin D. G. Kelley adds that style is never superficial; it is how people make history visible on their bodies.
A Lebanese Christian living in Israel is described as G., who speaks Hebrew, earned a degree in industrial engineering and management with a specialization in information systems, and built a career as a product manager in Israel’s hi-tech sector. His closest friends are Jewish Israelis, and he describes himself as fully immersed in the Israeli ecosystem, even as Lebanon remains part of his memory. The piece reflects the broader experience of thousands of Lebanese Christian families who fled to Israel after the withdrawal from South Lebanon in May 2000, and notes that many carry the emotional weight of displacement and divided identity as they assess the future of Lebanon.
Another piece revisits a long-running family travel tradition at Club Hotel Eilat, born from a time-share pitch after a free dinner in Jerusalem more than 30 years ago. The author describes exchanging weeks through a time-share network and a habit of returning for May stays, sometimes aligned with Shavuot, with half-board options offered on some visits. The family’s weeks have evolved into ongoing holidays that include summer getaways and shared experiences with friends over the years.
A parenting column examines how attachment theory can help Israeli parents understand children’s behavior in times of crisis. The piece references John Bowlby’s theory, which emphasizes that children thrive when caregivers are secure bases—emotionally available, predictable, and attuned. A securely attached child seeks proximity when distressed and feels confident to explore when safe, while insecure attachments may manifest as clinginess or withdrawal. The author notes that many English-speaking parents who make Israel home confront unique pressures, and that evaluating a child’s attachment status is a key part of understanding their emotional world.
Thank you for tuning in to this Israel Today: Ongoing War Report update.
I'm Noa Levi. Stay safe and informed.
Keep in mind that this
Iran seals uranium stockpile as talks advance
Lebanese Christian in Israel thrives amid displacement
Club Hotel Eilat time-share ritual endures
The time is now 7:01 AM in New York, I'm Noa Levi and this is the latest Israel Today: Ongoing War Report.
In Direct Israel-Iran Clashes, Iran has escalated efforts to seal off its stockpile of enriched uranium, collapsing tunnels and placing explosive mines at entrances in recent weeks, CNN reported citing five sources familiar with US intelligence. This comes a day after a senior administration official said the US and Iran are close to a deal requiring Iran to relinquish its uranium enriched to near-bomb-grade. Reuters reported that the emerging US-Iran agreement would dismantle the Iranian nuclear program and allow the US to collect the enriched uranium, though details of how retrieval would occur were not clear. US President Donald Trump has said retrieving the uranium is a priority and has suggested that only the United States and possibly China have the capability to do so. CNN reported that the United States had originally planned to launch a ground mission into Iran to recover the uranium, but the operation was paused. An interview on 103FM quoted former defense minister Yoav Gallant on the matter.
In Uplifting News, a series of personal stories highlight resilience and perspective. One piece notes that after cancer treatment, curly hair can be a sign of recovery; the author describes how hair regrowth after chemotherapy is a common experience and that hairstyles often mirror cultural shifts. The piece recalls Laura Ben-David, who died in 2025 after a long battle with ovarian cancer, and uses the curls as a memory. Sociologist Rose Weitz is cited saying hair is one of the first ways we tell the story of who we are, and historian Robin D. G. Kelley adds that style is never superficial; it is how people make history visible on their bodies.
A Lebanese Christian living in Israel is described as G., who speaks Hebrew, earned a degree in industrial engineering and management with a specialization in information systems, and built a career as a product manager in Israel’s hi-tech sector. His closest friends are Jewish Israelis, and he describes himself as fully immersed in the Israeli ecosystem, even as Lebanon remains part of his memory. The piece reflects the broader experience of thousands of Lebanese Christian families who fled to Israel after the withdrawal from South Lebanon in May 2000, and notes that many carry the emotional weight of displacement and divided identity as they assess the future of Lebanon.
Another piece revisits a long-running family travel tradition at Club Hotel Eilat, born from a time-share pitch after a free dinner in Jerusalem more than 30 years ago. The author describes exchanging weeks through a time-share network and a habit of returning for May stays, sometimes aligned with Shavuot, with half-board options offered on some visits. The family’s weeks have evolved into ongoing holidays that include summer getaways and shared experiences with friends over the years.
A parenting column examines how attachment theory can help Israeli parents understand children’s behavior in times of crisis. The piece references John Bowlby’s theory, which emphasizes that children thrive when caregivers are secure bases—emotionally available, predictable, and attuned. A securely attached child seeks proximity when distressed and feels confident to explore when safe, while insecure attachments may manifest as clinginess or withdrawal. The author notes that many English-speaking parents who make Israel home confront unique pressures, and that evaluating a child’s attachment status is a key part of understanding their emotional world.
Thank you for tuning in to this Israel Today: Ongoing War Report update.
I'm Noa Levi. Stay safe and informed.
Keep in mind that this