Tikun Olam Juice Party

At the little online clubhouse cafeserra.website, the neon banner read:

“Tikkun Olam Juice Party – Repair the World.”

DJ Doubloon and DJ Kangkine sat behind their turntables, not with vodka or whiskey, but with blenders full of mango, pomegranate, and carrot juice.

“Tonight,” said DJ Doubloon, adjusting his headphones, “no war music. Just healing frequencies.”

A special guest walked in — the reggae singer Matisyahu, famous for songs about faith, exile, and redemption.

Matisyahu looked at the blender lineup and laughed.
“A juice party? That’s a first.”

DJ Kangkine nodded seriously.

“Brother, we’re UN peacekeepers tonight. We’re practicing Tikkun Olam — repairing the world. No fighting. Too much blood already.”

DJ Doubloon raised a glass of bright red pomegranate juice.

“We especially don’t want to fight Israel anymore,” he said. “It’s the burdensome stone the prophet Isaiah talked about — the stone no one can lift without hurting themselves.”

Matisyahu nodded slowly, recognizing the reference.

DJ Kangkine leaned toward the microphone and broadcast a message across the livestream.

“Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, hear this from the peacekeepers: you win. We’re not here to fight. We’re here to repair the world.”

The chat room exploded with comments.

DJ Doubloon continued:

“Look, the world government isn’t always evil. Sometimes it works. The United Nations helped recognize Croatia when it fought for independence from Yugoslavia. Sometimes global cooperation saves lives.”

He glanced at Joe in the audience section of the stream.

“You know that story better than most.”

Matisyahu picked up an acoustic guitar and strummed a slow reggae rhythm.

“Repairing the world,” he said, “doesn’t start with governments. It starts with people deciding not to hate.”

DJ Kangkine raised his glass.

“To peace.”

DJ Doubloon clinked glasses.

“To fixing what’s broken.”

And Matisyahu added quietly:

“To the long, slow work of repairing the world — one soul at a time.” 🌍🥤🎶