
They fight for our tomorrow
We fight for their today
We stand behind those who stood for us.
Because our duty to protect never ends
Breaking the silence
for Israel’s warriors
Giborei Al was founded to stand behind those who stood for us all.
The organization supports IDF soldiers through emotional and social recovery, operates the “Heroes Journey” program in Colombia for combat processing, provides financial assistance, and holds events that restore warmth, meaning, and belonging to our heroes.
Our Impact
Heroes’ Shabbat
Heroes’ Journey
Psychological therapy
A team building evening
2025
soldiers supported
0
joined the Passover Seder
0
received meal subsidies
0
2026
soldiers to support
0
annual budget
$
0
new centers to be established
0
Stand with our heroes. Make your impact today.
$1,500
Sponsor
A team building evening
Dialogue circles and empowerment
workshops led by professionals

Giborei Al is a registered 501(c)(3)
All donations are tax-deductible.
EIN: 33-4406667
Founders of Giborei Al

Rabbi Levi Wanono
Co Founder and spiritual mentor

Boaz Kashi
Leader of “Heroes’ Journey” Program

Shlomo Rozen
CEO
VOICES OF THE HEROES’

“I arrived skeptical and closed off. The program showed me real ways to communicate pain and rebuild trust with my team. It wasn’t Just to talk - it was work that changed how I face daily life after service.”

“The group let me step back from the rush and finally process the hardest parts. Practical tools, calm guidance, and real brotherhood -I returned home with new balance and hope to keep rebuilding my life.”

“We came as a unit and left as a family. The journey taught us to open up in a way that actually helps -not just words, but methods to carry on stronger, together, after what we went through.”

“These days gave me time and permission to face things I buried. The mix of guided sharing, practical exercises and quiet support helped me find parts of myself I thought lost. This was a real beginning of recovery.”

“I didn’t expect to open up but something here made it possible. The silence, the tools, the language they gave us - suddenly things I carried for years became speakable. I left with real relief and a way to continue.”

“For me this journey was the first time someone helped me understand what was happening inside. Not theory in actual tools to breathe, slow down, and deal with memories that always hit me at night. It changed my inner rhythm.”

“I arrived broken and tired. Not physically but mentally. These days helped me get back into my own skin. For years I functioned like a robot. Here I felt human again and I’m not exaggerating. It gave me a starting point.”

“I arrived with zero expectation. I left with real perspective. I learned how to talk about what I feel instead of locking everything inside. This was the most meaningful personal work I’ve done since I left the battlefield.”

“After service you lose routine and grounding. One Shabbat table with combat brothers reminded me I’m not alone. Eating together felt like being human again not just functioning. It gave me a sense of home I didn’t realize I needed.”

“Traveling after combat looks carefree from the outside but inside it’s noise and weight. This place in Colombia wasn’t a hostel it was a base. A safe landing where I could breathe, speak normally, and not pretend.”

“One night I hit a point where I needed someone to answer not to ‘analyze’ me, just to be there. Someone picked up. Calm. Present. That small moment prevented a slide. Knowing there’s a line that actually answers matters.”

“It’s not about money — it’s about stability so you can keep moving. Sometimes the smallest expense becomes a wall when you’re already carrying too much. This support gave me air in a moment I was sinking. It was dignity not charity.”

“In the army you learn to switch off emotion to function under pressure. After service that becomes a problem. Therapy here wasn’t soft talk it was practical tools that help me navigate daily life without losing control or shutting down.”

“You don’t fall apart during battle you fall apart later, when no one sees you. In Colombia I finally had space to unpack things I hid for years. Not performance truth. It helped me carry the weight in a way I can live with.”



