Jewish Quarter Organizes Night Watches Across Major Districts
Volunteer patrols formed in Shushan and beyond as families brace for possible unrest linked to the decree.
Night watch rotations are now posted on doorways in several Jewish neighborhoods, handwritten in shifts so families know who is awake, who is listening, and who can run for help if trouble starts.
Elders told PMN the patrols are intentionally defensive: no roaming outside district lines, no retaliation missions, and no armed confrontations unless immediate life is at risk. Where possible, schedules are shared with gate officials to prevent misunderstandings after dark.
Women in several blocks said the watches have changed the sound of the night. Instead of silence broken by panic, there are timed footsteps, low check-in calls, and occasional knocks signaling that a household is safe.
"We are not pretending this removes danger," one organizer said. "It just means no family sits alone in fear while everyone else sleeps."
Similar watch structures are being reported in Media, Babylon, and smaller provincial towns. Community leaders there are adapting the same model: rotating volunteers, designated messengers, and basic first-aid preparation near central courtyards.
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