The Boom in Jerusalem: What Was That?
If you were watching my live stream from Jerusalem today, you probably heard it—the deep, echoing boom just as the sun was setting. If you’re like me, your first thought in a city like this—where tensions run high and attacks are a reality—is that something bad just happened.
I stopped, scanned the streets, and waited to see how people around me reacted. No one was running. No sirens. No panic. Just the usual evening bustle of the Old City. That’s when it clicked—I had forgotten about the Ramadan iftar cannon.
This is a centuries-old tradition in parts of the Muslim world, including Jerusalem, where a cannon is fired at sunset to mark the end of the daily fast during Ramadan. It’s a signal to the faithful that it’s time to break their fast, and it happens every evening throughout the month.
It was a good reminder of something I already knew but had momentarily forgotten in the moment. When you’re in a place like this, where the unexpected happens all too often, it’s easy to assume the worst. But sometimes, a boom is just a boom—an ancient tradition, not an explosion of violence.
So, if you were watching and wondering what the heck just happened, now you know. Just another day in Jerusalem, where history, faith, and modern reality collide in ways that always keep you on your toes.