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Israel's Lifeline When Missiles Strike - "Magen David Adom" Explained

At a time of renewed war pressure on Israeli civilians, Magen David Adom remains the emergency network that runs toward the blast sites, supplies the nation’s blood, and helps hold Israel’s civilian resilience together.

By Scott Jacobs | JooTube.TV 

As Israel faces renewed rocket and missile attacks, the country’s civilian first responders are once again being pushed to the front lines.

When missiles hit homes, apartment blocks, or public gathering places, the people rushing toward the destruction are often paramedics and volunteers from Magen David Adom, Israel’s national emergency medical service.

“While Israelis stay in shelters, the men and women of Magen David Adom run out of the shelters toward the buildings that were hit.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 8:21–8:48

At the National Religious Broadcasters Convention in Nashville in February, I spoke with Uri Shacham, Chief of Staff of Magen David Adom, about what MDA actually does, how it prepares for wartime mass-casualty events, and why its role has become even more critical as Israel confronts escalating regional threats.

More Than Ambulances

Magen David Adom is often described abroad as Israel’s version of the Red Cross. But that shorthand barely captures its real function. In practice, MDA serves as Israel’s nationwide ambulance service, a central pillar of its blood services system, a humanitarian network, and a mass-casualty response force all at once.

“Magen David Adom is Israel’s emergency services system. In practical words, it is the ambulance service for the entire State of Israel — but it is also the national blood service supplying hospitals and the IDF.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 0:18–0:44

Shacham explained that MDA collects more than 250,000 units of blood annually, processes those units, and distributes them to hospitals throughout Israel. The Israel Defense Forces also rely on blood supplied through MDA’s system. In wartime, that function becomes indispensable, because rapid access to blood can directly reduce mortality for critically wounded soldiers and civilians alike.

Israel's Red Cross, Magen David Adom's Chief Uri Shacham, shows stats of their operation

MDA also operates across the full social fabric of Israeli life. Shacham stressed that there is no discrimination in its lifesaving mission, whether in blood services, volunteering, or emergency treatment. In the field, the patient comes first.
“It’s not uncommon to see an ambulance with a Muslim, a Christian, and a Jew as one team… because the only thing that matters is the person who needs help.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 1:55–2:34

A Nationwide Network of Lifesavers

According to Shacham, MDA operates roughly 2,000 ambulances, about 200 ambulance stations, and more than 3,000 emergency vehicles in all. It is supported by nearly 40,000 people, the overwhelming majority of them volunteers.

One of the most important innovations in MDA’s model is the motorcycle fleet. These medics can cut through traffic and reach patients before an ambulance does, allowing treatment to begin in the earliest minutes of a crisis.

“The motorcycles rush through traffic and arrive first to the scene, allowing the paramedic to begin treatment before the ambulance even arrives.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 3:27–4:21

The Protected Blood Center That Came Online After October 7

Among the most consequential projects MDA undertook was the creation of a secure blood services center capable of operating during wartime. With the help of American donors, that vision became the Marcus National Blood Services Center, much of it built underground for security.

“When Israel needed a secure blood compound after the atrocities of October 7th, the new blood center became operational two days later and provided what the soldiers and the injured needed most.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 5:22–6:06

According to Shacham, the facility became fully operational on October 9, 2023, just two days after the October 7 atrocities. That meant that when Israel suddenly needed a secure, high-capacity blood operation under wartime conditions, MDA was ready.

“Magen David Adom is much more than an ambulance service… it is the backbone of Israel’s resilience.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 6:24–6:46

Missiles, Mass Casualty, and the Scale of Threat

Shacham drew a sharp distinction between the kind of rockets long fired from Gaza or by Hezbollah and the much larger destructive potential of Iranian ballistic missiles. The scale of the threat changes the emergency burden dramatically for first responders.

“An Iranian missile carries at least a thousand pounds of explosives — like a bus full of explosives falling from the sky.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 7:53–8:18
“While all the Israelis stay in the shelter, Magen David Adom people run out of the shelter… toward that whole block that collapsed when the missile hit.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 8:21–8:48

Preparing Now, Not Later

Shacham said MDA has been expanding ambulance readiness, stocking vehicles, increasing training, conducting surprise drills, and improving coordination with the IDF. That preparation is based on the understanding that if a major escalation comes, it may come suddenly.

“We don’t know when it will happen, but we understand that it will. So it’s not a matter of if — it’s a matter of when.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 9:44–10:17

How Supporters Abroad Can Help

Magen David Adom relies heavily on donations to expand its fleet, acquire medical equipment, strengthen blood services, train paramedics, and prepare for large-scale emergencies.

“When you support Magen David Adom, you support Israel.”
— Uri Shacham
Video: 12:29–12:38

What Shacham describes is a model of national resilience built not only on military defense but also on civilian response. In Israel, where threats can emerge with little warning, Magen David Adom remains one of the institutions that makes ordinary life possible.

That is why MDA’s importance rises every time the war reaches deeper into civilian life. It is not merely there after tragedy. It is one of the reasons more people survive it.

For readers who want to learn more or contribute, the site that Mr. Shacham gave is https://savinglivesinisrael.org.

Team Israel at the 2026 World Baseball Classic - Athletic Competitors as Wartime Ambassadors

By JewTube.Info  |  March 2026  |  South Florida

In an exhibition game, Team Israel held a 2-1 lead over the NY Mets in the 8th inning




A fan's TeamIsrael T-shirt
carictacures Kevin Youkilis
in Jew Crew's center spot


Against the backdrop of an ongoing war in the Middle East, rising antisemitism around the world, and the weight of collective Jewish identity, Team Israel arrived in South Florida to compete in the 2026 World Baseball Classic — and they are not just here to play ball. From the stands at Clover Park to the concourses of Miami, a clear message is emerging from team executives, federation officials, and fans alike: Israel's presence at this tournament carries meaning far beyond the diamond.

In conversations at the tournament venues across South Florida, team executives and federation officials shared what this moment means — for the players, for the diaspora, and for the sport itself in Israel.

"The Name on the Front": On Jewish Pride and Resilience

Jason Pressberg, U.S. Operations Managing Director for Team Israel, was candid and passionate when asked what it means for Israel to compete during such a fraught moment in Jewish history. His answer centered on a single word: resilience.

"The Jewish people, thank God, are tremendously resilient. Israel is going through a tremendously challenging time and yet the Jewish people continue to celebrate — people are getting married, having babies, life is continuing even from the Israeli bunker."

Jason Pressberg on resilience — 0:23 to 0:56

Pressberg described the unique composition of Team Israel, noting that the roster is built largely of American Jews with Israeli citizenship — including star pitcher Dean Kramer of the Baltimore Orioles, who has two Israeli parents. But it is the spirit of the enterprise, he said, that defines it.

"In professional sports, you place the name on the back — you're enriching yourself. With Team Israel, it's always about the name on the front. You care so deeply about representing Israel and the global Jewish people who truly are one united family."

Pressberg on the team's identity — 2:10 to 2:30

Pressberg acknowledged the difficult competitive landscape Team Israel faces in what he called the "pool of death" — matched against the Dominican Republic, Venezuela, the Netherlands, and Nicaragua, each a formidable baseball nation. The Dominicans and Venezuelans, he noted, field rosters that resemble MLB All-Star teams.

"We think there's a real opportunity to beat the Nicaraguans like we did in 2023, compete against the Netherlands, and hopefully sneak one through on either the Dominicans or the Venezuelans and make our way into the next stage."

Pressberg on competitive expectations — 4:56 to 5:31

Looking beyond the WBC, Pressberg set his sights on the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics, where baseball is returning as an event. Team Israel qualified for the 2021 Tokyo Games — one of just six nations worldwide to do so — and is determined to return. He described the organization's long-term mission as one of cultural connection and nation-building through sport, growing the game among Israeli children even as rockets fall.

"This national team is really about Jewish pride and facing growing antisemitism head on. There's no better way than succeeding on the base path, playing at the highest level with Israel across your chest and with a heavy but determined and resilient heart."

Pressberg on antisemitism and purpose — 6:07 to 6:24

"We Flew Here to Play Baseball," Attracting Support as Athletic Competitors, Whatever Our Circumstances
TeamIsrael's bench coach, Kevin Youkilis revealed his
yarmulke during singing of Hatikvah in this clip shared 
by fan, Ari Ackerman. Youkilis said, "It's not just about
Israel- it's about the Jewish community all over the world!"

At Clover Park in South Florida, David Friesem — a U.S.-based executive with Team Israel — offered a notably different perspective. Where Pressberg spoke of symbolism and pride, Friesem drew a firm line between sport and politics.

"I think it's wrong to connect politics and baseball. We planned this way in advance. It's really important for the sport in Israel. So we come here, we play baseball, and then we go home and deal with our trouble."

David Friesem on separating sport from politics — 0:06 to 0:43

Friesem acknowledged the personal weight of the moment — noting he has family in Israel navigating hard times — while maintaining that the WBC commitment was made long before the current conflict escalated. For him, the tournament's importance is fundamentally about sport development.

"From overseas, there's a lot of support — from various federations, Jewish federations, Christian federations. We're based on donations from abroad. So it's very important that we make a good impression here and people feel that we're growing."

Friesem on international support for Israeli baseball — 0:46 to 1:04

Friesem's remarks underscore an important operational reality: the Israeli baseball program runs on philanthropic support from abroad, making tournaments like the WBC not just athletic showcases but critical fundraising and visibility platforms. A strong showing — or even a respectable one — translates directly into sustained interest and donations.

"Peaceful Approach": ex-I.A.B. President Dr. Jordy Alter on Sports Diplomacy and Grassroots Growth

Perhaps the most evocative interview came from Dr. Jordy Alter, the immediate past President of the Israel Association of Baseball ("I.A.B.") a — the federation that governs the sport on the ground in Israel itself. Speaking from the WBC venue, Dr. Alter framed Team Israel's participation in explicitly diplomatic terms.

"It's an incredible opportunity for us as a team representing Israel to share with the world the peaceful approach that the Jewish people have towards the world — and this is reflected in sports. To be representative of the country of Israel at a time like this gives tremendous strength to our friends and families back home, and also to all Jews all around the diaspora."

Israel Association of Baseball executive on sports diplomacy — 0:01 to 0:40

He went on to describe the scope of baseball in Israel today — a sport that has grown from a niche American import into an organized national program with over a thousand young players competing in six levels of leagues across the country, from the south to the north.

"The Israel Association of Baseball runs leagues in Israel from ages six and up. We have six different levels of leagues, over a thousand kids playing all over the country — from the south up to the north."

On baseball's grassroots growth in Israel — 0:44 to 0:58

Three Voices, One Team

What emerges from these three conversations is a portrait of an organization navigating multiple identities at once. Team Israel is a competitive baseball program with serious athletic ambitions — gunning for the next round of the WBC and eyeing the 2028 Olympics. It is also a fundraising enterprise dependent on diaspora goodwill and international federation support. And it is, inescapably, a symbol: of Jewish endurance, of Israel's presence on the world stage, and of the complicated, sometimes contradictory relationship between sport and geopolitics.

TeamIsrael fan sports a team cap
and a clever"Matzo Ball'er" t-shirt

Pressberg wears that symbolism proudly and speaks of it freely. Friesem prefers to compartmentalize, insisting that baseball is baseball and the war is the war. The Israeli federation executive threads a middle path — acknowledging the moment's weight while framing the team's participation as an act of peaceful engagement with the world.

Together, they represent a microcosm of how diaspora and Israeli Jews are processing an extraordinarily difficult chapter — not in spite of the game, but through it. 


Update: Team Israel finished Pool D with a 2-2 record, defeating Nicaragua and the Netherlands before falling to Venezuela and the Dominican Republic. While the result ended their run in the 2026 Classic, the finish was sufficient to maintain their qualification status — ensuring Team Israel will return to the next World Baseball Classic, scheduled for 2029.

Videos produced by JewTube.Info. Interviews conducted at Clover Park and in Miami, South Florida, March 2026, during World Baseball Classic pre-tournament activity.