0:00 / 0:00
Thrown Into My Mission: The Story of Kol Geulah
895 views
From childhood dreams on the rooftops of Jerusalem to being “thrown” into a mission I never expected — this is the story of how Kol Geulah was born. The mission of Kol Geulah is to inspire Jews everywhere — especially in the Charedi community — to feel how close Geulah really is, to take action that brings it sooner, and to create unity across Klal Yisrael. 🔔 Subscribe to join the journey, and let’s bring redemption closer together. _________________ Filmed and edited by Avrumi Glaser @ Resonance Studio For corporate video or photo shoots, call, text, or WhatsApp: 718-213-5120
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Hi, I'm Arammy Glazer and this is Cole
Gula. I want to tell you a story. The
story of how Kol Gula began and why I'm
standing here today sharing this with
you. From the time I was a little kid, I
was obsessed with Gula. My father used
to teach at Ashatura right across from
the Kisel. And up on the rooftop, there
was something incredible. A scaled model
of the base of Mikdash Shashlishi, the
third temple. Not just plastic or
cardboard. It was built from the actual
materials that will one day be used.
Marble, gold, stone, one of the most
beautiful models in the world. I would
stand there for hours just staring at
it, imagining the day it would be real.
And right next to it, I'd grab the
binoculars and lock my eyes on Harab and
picture the base of Mikdash rising again
in that very spot. It felt so close, I
could almost touch it. One night, my
mother suddenly told us Msiah is here.
We all dropped what we were doing, threw
our shabas clothing on, and ran out the
door. But he wasn't there. It was a
drill. And yet that moment never left me
because it showed me something. How
badly I longed for Gula. In my late
teens, I learned an Ahiva called Vilich
in Antworp. I buried myself in the
Naveim that talk about the final
redemption. I'd sketch architectural
drawings and what the basic would look
like. And when I came back to Israel, my
heart became glued to the land. Friday
nights at the Kisel, I'd sit in the back
watching Jews of every kind fill the
plaza. And I could feel it. Messiah
right there in the air. I wasn't alone.
I had friends who shared that same fire.
Together, we lived it. Together, we
dreamed it. Then came co. I flew to
America for a friend's wedding. I met my
wife. And suddenly, my life took a new
turn. I settled in New York. But here's
the thing. In New York, that fiery talk
about goula, it just wasn't the same.
People weren't focused on it. And yet
every time I went back to Israel, that
spark would come alive again. This year,
Laga, I flew with my family to Israel.
We stayed in SAS and as the night fell,
we took a bus to Miron. The dancing at
Ripshiman's caver, the songs, the
energy, it was electric. Later that
night, my brother Moishi took us to the
gathering at Baka right above the ten of
Ripshiman. It was a huge tent, thousands
of Jews, and we were singing about Gula,
singing on imam, and people were sharing
Torah about Gula. It was a beautiful
event. There were also hostages there
and soldiers who were fighting the war.
[Music]
[Applause]
It was a feeling of amisl rising in the
middle of a war. The air was thick with
it. You could taste gula. And I turned
to Moi and I said, "I wish my friends in
New York could see this. They have no
idea how real it is." And Moi looked me
in the eyes and he said four words that
cut deep. We all have a mission. And I
said, "Yeah, yeah, I know. Every person
has a mission." And he goes, "No, we
have a mission. Me, you, and Silly, my
younger brother." And I said, "What do
you mean?" And he said, "We grew up in a
house that was open to all kinds of
Jews. We had birthright groups coming
through, secular Jews. On the one hand,
we learned in your shami schools, and on
the other hand, we have family members
who aren't religious, and yet we're in
the Karedi community, but we have this
unique perspective that we can share
with this community." And then he says
to me, "You think in this day and age,
you can just live in without any reason?
You have a mission out there, and you
better be doing your mission or else you
have no right to live outside of
Israel." At that moment, I realized that
my mission is to bring the Gula
awareness that was so real and vivid
there back to New York with me. I came
back to New York, settled back in with
my family, and did nothing about my
mission. And then the war with Iran
breaks out. I started posting on my
status, things I was seeing that made me
smile, if it was successes of the
Israeli Air Force or jokes. And I got a
response that I thought was interesting.
Someone said, "You keep posting things
about the physical strength of Israel.
where is Hashem come in? And I said, you
know what, you're right. So, my next
post is going to be about Hashem. And I
posted a question. If Mashiach comes
tomorrow, what do you wish you have done
today? And as I typed it, I felt
something like I had just taken my very
first step towards that mission. Then I
got a reply from Assat Mju who said he
felt happy when the Jews were having
success in the war, but he also felt
guilty for being happy about the success
of the Zionists. I decided to answer him
with a video and by Hashem's plan, my
studio was still set up from an earlier
shoot. So, I hit record. I posted it and
then my phone exploded. Friends asking
me to share the video. Strangers I've
never met asking me to save their
numbers so they could watch my future
statuses. And in that moment, I knew
Hashem wasn't waiting for me to choose.
He threw me into it just like Hashem
threw Ya into Ninve. The very next day,
I surrendered. I started a WhatsApp
group. I opened this YouTube channel and
I wrote, "I'll be posting new weekly
videos." And that was it. Cole Guula was
born. But Cole Gula isn't just my story.
It's our story. The mission of this
channel is to inspire Jews from around
the world, especially in the Kedi
community, to get excited about gula
that's not just coming, but already
here. To feel how close it is to act in
ways that bring it closer and to create
unity that bridges gaps between
communities. Because in the end, we are
one people with one destiny. That's the
voice of redemption. And it's not just
my voice, it's your voice, too. Thanks
for watching.
[Music]