Moral injury can cost 15 years of life, new feature says
A Hebrew-language feature examines the long-term toll of moral injury, arguing that when it surfaces, it can feel like your identity falls away. The piece frames the issue through the experience of veteran singer Yishai Levy, described as a heavyweight artist whose main opponent was himself, and says the damage can subtract as much as 15 years from a person’s life.
The article also includes a related vignette about a boy who visited the Israel Museum and damaged Magritte’s "The Castle of the Pyrenees," alongside a broader mix of culture and lifestyle items. Among them are pieces about relationships, parenting with children in sheltered spaces, coffee preferences, and other human-interest topics.
No formal news development is reported, and the article does not specify a date or any follow-up action.
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