
The Roar of Judah Foundation exists to confront a generation where truth is twisted and Jewish identity is under attack, answering this moment with the fire of Sinai and the certainty of covenant. We teach Torah with strength, history with clarity, and identity with the flame that carried our people through every exile and every return, awakening Jews, strengthening allies, and equipping all who refuse to bow to distortion or hatred. Through books, podcasts, education, advocacy, and gatherings that ignite courage, we bring light where others spread shadows and restore the roar that belongs to the people of the Covenant, a roar built on truth, Torah, and the unbroken voice of a nation that has outlived every empire and every lie.

Moshe David is the founder and guiding voice of the Roar of Judah Foundation, a writer, a teacher, and a bearer of an ancient story carried into a modern world. His work moves through the fire of Jewish memory and the resilience of a people who have survived every empire, every exile, and every lie spoken against them. With a cinematic cadence shaped by covenant and conviction, he speaks from a place where faith, history, and identity meet.
He is the author of a growing trilogy that includes The Day the Lion Wept, The Roar Remembered, and I Am That I Am, He Who Stood in the Fire of the Eternal, works dedicated to restoring Jewish memory, confronting antisemitism, and awakening courage in the hearts of those who seek truth. His writing is matched by his podcast, The Roar of Judah, In the Name of I Am, a thunderous and intimate journey through Torah, Jewish history, the sanctification of time, and the eternal flame that binds the Jewish soul across generations.
Through the Roar of Judah Foundation, Moshe David leads a worldwide Torah Master Series Study, offering clarity where confusion rises, strengthening identity where it has been diluted, and calling forth a generation ready to stand upright in the face of rising hatred. His mission is unwavering, to safeguard Jewish identity, to elevate Jewish pride, and to give voice to a people whose story refuses to be forgotten