Yonatan Perez was wounded fighting Hamas just days before his planned wedding to Galia. At the same time, his younger brother Daniel Perez, a tank commander, was declared missing and later confirmed taken hostage. As the family struggled to decide what to do, Yonatan’s commander urged them forward, saying, “The Jewish people need moments of joy now. You should get married tonight.” Friends transformed a local school into a wedding hall. In the midst of trauma over Daniel’s fate, the family celebrated Yonatan and Galia’s wedding, holding joy and loss together. Daniel was later declared killed in action, and his body was returned for burial in Israel two years later.
In contrast, many Israelis chose to delay celebrations in the aftermath of national trauma. In the days following October 7th, couples across the country publicly postponed weddings and gatherings, explaining that celebrating felt misaligned with the depth of loss around them. Waiting was described as an act of solidarity, a way of staying present to shared grief and honoring a moment that still felt unbearably heavy.
How do we best celebrate joy and live with trauma at the same time?