While Israel Fights for Survival, What Are You Fighting For?


By Sarah C.

Last Updated June 20, 2025

Right now, Israeli soldiers are risking everything so we can stay who we are.
But not every battle is on the front lines.
Some happen in our homes, in our choices, in what we stand for without saying a word.
This moment is asking each of us something simple but powerful:
How are you showing up for your people?

White cabinet with framed photos, American flags, and a blue tree painting above.

1. Every blank wall is a decision. What does yours say?

You already care. You already feel it.
But look around your home for a second.
Does it reflect what matters to you?

A blank wall isn’t just empty.
It quietly says, this space doesn’t speak.
And in moments like this, silence is a luxury we can’t afford.

When you hang “Tree of Life – Am Yisrael Chai” by Albert Levi, you’re not just adding art.
You’re making a choice. A Jewish choice.
To live with memory. To raise children in a home that tells our story before you even open your mouth.

Because when identity is on the line, even the walls should speak.

2. Buying from an Israeli soldier-turned-artist isn’t support – it’s solidarity.

You don’t have to wear a uniform to take a stand.
Sometimes, it’s about who you choose to stand with.

Albert Levi isn’t just an Israeli artist.
He’s a soldier who served in a combat unit, came home, and kept fighting – through his art, through color, through culture.

When you bring his work into your home, you’re not just adding something beautiful.
You’re showing up. You’re choosing to be part of something bigger than yourself.
This isn’t a donation. It’s not a gesture.
It’s a statement. And it lasts.

3. Your kids are watching.

What will they remember?

Identity doesn’t come from lectures.
It comes from what surrounds us, day after day.

Your children notice everything – what’s on the walls, what gets honored, what gets ignored.
If the only Jewish symbol they see is a mezuzah on the doorframe, what are they really learning?

When you bring Albert’s art into your home, you’re not just adding a painting.
You’re giving them a story. A reference point. A reason to be proud.

You’ll tell them about the soldier who came home and kept fighting with a brush.
You’ll show them that being Jewish isn’t just a memory – it’s alive.
And it lives right here, on this wall.

4. You don’t have to be in Israel to be part of its story. You just have to show up.

There are people who see what’s happening and feel far away.
They say, “What can I do? I’m not in Israel.”
And there are others who ask a different question:
“What can I do from here?”

One question leads to distance. The other leads to action.
And action doesn’t have to be loud to be meaningful.

Bringing Albert Levi’s art into your home is one way to answer that question.
It’s a quiet but powerful way to say:
I care. I’m connected. I choose to be part of this.

Because when you hang a piece created by someone who served, who risked, who now creates from that same place of purpose –
you’re not just watching. You’re participating.

Find the piece that speaks to you and make your home part of something bigger.
Explore the Collection

5. One day, your kids will ask what this moment meant to you

Years from now, when the noise settles and the headlines are long gone,
this moment will still be part of your story.

And someone younger, a child or a grandchild, might ask you,
“What did you do back then? When Israel was fighting, when the world felt so uncertain?”

You may not have worn a uniform.
You may not have been there physically.
But you will be able to say,
“I stood with my people. I brought Israel into our home. I supported those who lived it and created something meaningful from it.”

Albert’s art is not just something you hang.
It becomes part of the home, part of the story. It stays.
And long after this moment passes,
it will remind you of the choice you made.

1. Every blank wall is a decision.

What does yours say?

You already care. You already feel it.
But look around your home for a second.
Does it reflect what matters to you?

A blank wall isn’t just empty.
It quietly says, this space doesn’t speak.
And in moments like this, silence is a luxury we can’t afford.

When you hang “Tree of Life – Am Yisrael Chai” by Albert Levi, you’re not just adding art.
You’re making a choice. A Jewish choice.
To live with memory. To raise children in a home that tells our story before you even open your mouth.

Because when identity is on the line, even the walls should speak.

2. Buying from an Israeli soldier-turned-artist isn’t support – it’s solidarity.

You don’t have to wear a uniform to take a stand.
Sometimes, it’s about who you choose to stand with.

Albert Levi isn’t just an Israeli artist.
He’s a soldier who served in a combat unit, came home, and kept fighting – through his art, through color, through culture.

When you bring his work into your home, you’re not just adding something beautiful.
You’re showing up. You’re choosing to be part of something bigger than yourself.
This isn’t a donation. It’s not a gesture.
It’s a statement. And it lasts.

3. Your kids are watching.What will they remember?

Identity doesn’t come from lectures.
It comes from what surrounds us, day after day.

Your children notice everything – what’s on the walls, what gets honored, what gets ignored.
If the only Jewish symbol they see is a mezuzah on the doorframe, what are they really learning?

When you bring Albert’s art into your home, you’re not just adding a painting.
You’re giving them a story. A reference point. A reason to be proud.

You’ll tell them about the soldier who came home and kept fighting with a brush.
You’ll show them that being Jewish isn’t just a memory – it’s alive.
And it lives right here, on this wall.

Find the piece that speaks to you and make your home part of something bigger.
Explore the Collection

4. You don’t have to be in Israel to be part of its story.

You just have to show up.

There are people who see what’s happening and feel far away.
They say, “What can I do? I’m not in Israel.”
And there are others who ask a different question:
“What can I do from here?”

One question leads to distance. The other leads to action.
And action doesn’t have to be loud to be meaningful.

Bringing Albert Levi’s art into your home is one way to answer that question.
It’s a quiet but powerful way to say:
I care. I’m connected. I choose to be part of this.

Because when you hang a piece created by someone who served, who risked, who now creates from that same place of purpose –
you’re not just watching. You’re participating

5. One day, your kids will ask what this moment meant to you

Years from now, when the noise settles and the headlines are long gone,
this moment will still be part of your story.

And someone younger, a child or a grandchild, might ask you,
“What did you do back then? When Israel was fighting, when the world felt so uncertain?”

You may not have worn a uniform.
You may not have been there physically.
But you will be able to say,
“I stood with my people. I brought Israel into our home. I supported those who lived it and created something meaningful from it.”

Albert’s art is not just something you hang.
It becomes part of the home, part of the story. It stays.
And long after this moment passes,
it will remind you of the choice you made.

What families feel when Albert’s art enters their home

“This painting made me feel like I finally did something.”

Not just words. Not just worry.

Something real.

— Eli G., Los Angeles

Verified Buyer

“It made my home feel proudly

Jewish again.”

You don’t realize what was missing

until it’s back.

— Miriam S., Miami

Verified Buyer

“It doesn’t just hang. It says something.”

Every time I look at it, I remember

why I care.

— Emily T., New York

Verified Buyer

While Israel fights for survival, this is how you fight for who you are.


While Israel fights for survival, this is how you fight for who you are.

This isn’t about decor.
It’s choosing a side.
It’s standing with a soldier who now fights through art,
and letting your home say what matters.

Explore the collection →

Handmade in Israel. Ships worldwide. Stays with you.


What started as a simple choice for the wall became something that made our home feel more like us.

Not louder. Not trendier. Just honest.