What We Offer?
Intervention Services
The ROOFING service by MOSHE is free of charge and open to anyone in distress, based on the belief that support must be accessible to all.
It is nationwide, fully online, and offered in real time, with no need to travel. The service is for people in Israel and is supervised by experienced mental health professionals.
It’s important to stress that MOSHE does not replace therapy, medical, or psychiatric care. It works alongside them to build a strong, accessible, life saving support network in critical moments.
The service is free of charge!
A Community Holds Life
When It Matters Most
Training for Organizations:
Community's Unique Role
in Suicide Prevention
MOSHE offers tailored training for organizations and professionals who want to understand the community’s role in responding to suicide risk.
The programs give clear, practical tools for safe and effective action, and are adapted to each audience and setting. Training is available, on request, for schools, social services, medical teams, HR departments, and more.
*This training is a paid service.
Intial Session
Assessment and Initial Intervention – SSI (Single Session Intervention)
A short, focused first meeting for communities facing suicide risk. It includes risk assessment, steps to reduce danger, coping guidance, and coordination with natural supports and professionals.
Based on MOSHE’s method, it offers a fast and accessible response. At the end, a joint decision is made about continuing with MOSHE. Many cases need follow up to ensure steady support and safe community connection.
As more people reach out by WhatsApp, many do not move to assessment, often due to ambivalence in crisis.
To address this, MOSHE created the Outreach Team, trained professionals and community companions who respond to WhatsApp inquiries, build caring contact, and encourage the first step toward help.
Group Session Interventions
Supportive Group Intervention
For anyone supporting a person at risk, family, friends, partners, or colleagues, who wants practical tools for support and coping.
In a safe, sensitive space, participants meet online for three weekly sessions. They learn to spot warning signs, understand suicidal distress, and build crisis response skills, with the goal of reducing risk and strengthening the support network.
The group is led by qualified professionals and a trained community companion, and is adapted to the participants’ needs.
The Intervention Circle
Circle Session Interventions, MOSHE’s Community Circle
A focused service for a person at risk and their close circle, family, friends, and significant people in their life.
The circle offers practical tools, emotional support, and a safe space to face the crisis, while strengthening the support system around the person.
It includes three weekly online sessions, ninety minutes each, plus an active WhatsApp group for ongoing contact. The person at risk is encouraged, but not required, to join.
Led by a professional facilitator and two trained community companions, the circle provides immediate support and builds stability, connection, and hope.
Frequently Asked Questions
What services do you offer?
We believe that people in a suicidal crisis need a human support circle around them, and that suicidal thoughts are not something you carry alone. Our service offers online interventions that help build a community that holds together and helps reduce suicide risk.
What is a one-time consultation meeting?
The goal of the meeting is to give you a safe space to share what is going on, do a shared risk assessment, and think together about the right supports, both within and outside MOSHE. The meeting lasts one hour on Google Meet.
What is a community circle?
Support for a person at risk of suicide and their community, with the goal of preventing suicide by creating a safe, positive network to manage the crisis. It is a focused process of about three weeks that includes three online meetings and a dedicated WhatsApp group for consultation and support. The circle includes 3 to 5 people from the person’s community and three MOSHE team members.
Who can contact you?
Anyone who is worried about suicide risk, whether it is about themselves or someone around them. There is no “correct” threshold. Concern is enough to reach out and consult. The service is available only to people who are currently in Israel.
How do we contact you?
On WhatsApp: https://wa.me/97223819999
Do you offer therapy?
No. As part of the service, and when needed, we help connect and refer people to relevant treatment providers.
Can I get immediate help?
Our service is not an immediate emergency response, and you need to schedule a meeting in advance. You can fill out a contact form at any time and schedule an initial consultation meeting.
Who will I meet on the other side?
All of our services are provided by a professional team and trained volunteers, “Moshot”, who have completed dedicated training and hands on experience supporting spaces where there is suicide risk.
Does the service cost money?
The service is free of charge for anyone who needs it.
How does WhatsApp support work?
WhatsApp is used to route you to the right support within MOSHE, and it is not a standalone helpline. Human support on WhatsApp is available Sunday to Thursday, 8:30 to 16:00.
Where are you located?
Our service is provided nationwide, online.
What if I don’t have a community? Can MOSHE help me even if I’m alone?
Yes, absolutely. No one should be left alone. There are many ways to feel part of a community, and we believe that lack of belonging is part of suicidal pain. So part of our work together will be to understand how to build a community support network.
What if I’m not sure this is about suicide?
If there is any doubt, it is worth checking. It is better to reach out, think together, and find out it is not about suicide than to miss it.
I think I want help, but I’m not sure, what should I do?
Suicidal crisis often includes ambivalence, a constant back and forth between life and death, between accepting help and not. We are here to sit with you in that uncertainty. You do not need to come “fully sure” or fully decided.
Do you report to the police?
In cases where there is immediate danger to someone’s life, we will first offer the community based tools we believe in. If we understand together that extra support is needed, we will stay with you and, at the same time, involve the police to create a protective barrier between the person at risk and their death. This will be done openly and together, in a respectful and sensitive way.
In which languages is the service available?
At this stage, our full service is available in Hebrew only.
Is contacting you anonymous?
We understand the fear of being exposed in suicidal situations, and it is important to make room for that. At the same time, we believe secrecy can make coping harder, so contacting us is not anonymous. We are committed to protecting your privacy and will keep full confidentiality.
What should I do in an immediate emergency?
If there is immediate risk, please contact crisis helplines or go to the nearest emergency room.