I Thought I Bought a Couple’s House, but It Became a Breakup Commune
The text is a list of links and headlines from an Israeli news and culture page, not a single standalone news report. Its lead item is a personal essay titled, in Hebrew, “I Thought I Bought a House for a Couple. It Turned Out I Created a Commune for Women After Breakups.” It suggests a home-buying story that unexpectedly became shared housing for single women rebuilding after separations.
The rest of the page promotes several other opinion pieces and features, including items about children tasting vegetables, coping with alarms during wartime, how a child’s age and behavior can seem to shift during an outburst, and the emotional challenge of grandparents seeing children only between war and routine. One sponsored item asks how to choose coffee, marked as a partnership with Fresh Coffee.
Several political and current-affairs links are also listed. These include a report that a woman who accused Braverman of an assault was photographed with facial bruises after the meeting, a reference to a 1977 election poster described as an ominous prophecy, a new election-related column, and a discussion of a photo of Aaron Haliva published this week. The page also points readers to restaurant criticism, a column on Benjamin Netanyahu, and a book review describing a document as critical to understanding Israel in recent years.
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