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Watch: Rabbi Yaakov Yosef Reinman – Episode #42: The Fourth Kingdom
In this episode, Rabbi Reinman discusses the rise of Rome as the dominant power in the Imperial Quadrant.
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Chapter Forty-two: The Fourth Kingdom
While the Greek kingdoms were battling each other, Rome was looming larger and larger in the west. Rome first appeared on the stage of world history in the sixth century before the common era. It began as a small city-state spread across seven hills on the banks of the Tiber River on the Mediterranean coast of central Italy. The powerful and sophisticated Etruscan kingdom stood to the north in modern-day Tuscany. The Greek colonies of Magna Graecia (Greater Greece) straddled southern Italy and the island of Sicily.
In its early history, Rome was governed by a dynasty of Etruscan kings, but the people were not Etruscan. At the end of the sixth century, the Romans expelled their Etruscan king and established a republic ruled by the aristocratic Senate and the democratic Assemblies. Fifteen years later, feeling newly invigorated and powerful, they went to war with the Latin tribes and defeated them. Rome emerged as the dominant power of the Latin League.
In 390 b.c.e., the Latins revolted. Rome spent the next half century crushing one Latin tribe after the other. In 338 b.c.e., they completed their suppression of the rebellion. The Romans now turned their attention to the Greek colonies in the south of the peninsula. In 272 b.c.e., they captured Tarentum, and the entire peninsula was in their hands. Except for the island of Sicily. Eastern Sicily was essentially the Greek colony of Syracuse. Western Sicily belonged to Carthage, a city in North Africa that had a vast maritime empire in the western Mediterranean basin, with outposts in present-day France, Spain and the African coast.
Carthage had a powerful navy. Rome had a powerful army. Both sought to dominate the western Mediterranean. War was inevitable. In 264 b.c.e., the First Punic (Phoenician) War broke out. Rome built a navy to defend against the Carthaginian fleet and invaded Sicily. After years of fighting, Carthage was defeated. Sicily became part of Rome, and Carthage paid heavy reparations.
In 218 b.c.e., the Second Punic War broke out. Hannibal, the famous Carthaginian general, took an army with war elephants through Spain. He crossed the Alps, invaded Italy from the north and rampaged through the country for fourteen years. Meanwhile, in 204 b.c.e., the Romans invaded Carthage, and Hannibal was recalled to defend the homeland. In 202 b.c.e., the Romans general Scipio Africanus Major defeated Hannibal at the Battle of Zama. In the ensuing peace treaty, Rome stripped away all Carthage’s colonial territories and limited its military.
Rome emerged from the Punic Wars as the fastest rising power in the Imperial Quadrant. Even as Antiochus and Ptolemy fought over Judea, Rome turned its eyes eastward to the vast world of the Greeks. In 200 b.c.e., Rome invaded Macedonia. Four years later, the war was over. Rome forced the Macedonian king to give up his fleet and pay huge reparations. The Romans also declared the Greek states free of Macedonian rule and established a protectorate over them. Rome had arrived on the world stage.
Antiochus III finally realized that the Romans posed a grave threat to the Seleucid empire. In 192 b.c.e., he led a large Seleucid army into Greece to liberate the Greek states from Roman rule. His army, however, was no match for the Roman legions. In 188 b.c.e., the Romans overwhelmed the Seleucids at the Battle of Magnesia. Antiochus was forced to give up almost all his territory in Asia Minor and pay a staggering war indemnity.
In 168 b.c.e., the Romans crushed a Macedonian revolt. They broke up Macedonia into four republics that eventually became Roman provinces.
In that same year, Antiochus IV, the son of Antiochus III, invaded Egypt and defeated Ptolemy. His army stood at the gates of Alexandria. If he could capture the city, he would merge the Seleucid and Ptolemaic kingdoms and have the wealth and the power to face Rome. The fall of the city seemed inevitable. In desperation, Ptolemy appealed to the Roman Senate to come to his aid and prevent the unification of Egypt and Syria.
The Senate sent a delegation to Alexandria headed by Gaius Popillius Laenas, a Roman general. They met Antiochus in a suburb of the city. Antiochus extended his hand in greeting, but Popillius just thrust a letter from the Senate into it. It was a decree ordering Antiochus to leave Egypt immediately. The king said he would discuss it with his advisors before responding.
Popillius took a stick and drew a circle in the sand around Antiochus. “Before you step out of this circle,” he said, “you must give me an answer to deliver to the Senate.” This was the famous “line in the sand.”
Antiochus was stunned. Rome had just won a major battle with Macedonia. If he stepped out of the circle without giving an answer, it meant war with Rome. The prospect was frightening. Antiochus capitulated. He took his armies and returned to Syria …
Read full chapter and earlier chapters at www.rabbireinman.com.
“Minibuses Falling From The Sky:” How Iran’s Current Missile Fire On Israel Differs From Previous Rounds
Impact In Tel Aviv: Victim Was A Foreign Worker; 2nd Woman Collapses & Dies On Way To Shelter
Listen: The Daily “Bitachon 4 Life” Burst of Inspiration on Matzav.com: What Is The Message Of Purim?
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https://matzav.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/Bitachon4Life-Shiur-1720-Semichah-Part-20-Hidden-Purim.mp3For more info, email bitachon4life@gmail.com.
IDF: 40 Senior Iranian Commanders Killed In Opening Strike Of Operation “Roaring Lion”
Huge Explosions Rock Tehran As IDF Targets Terror Regime’s Capital
Airstrikes were reported a short time ago in Diyala Province, Iraq
Listen: Stories4Life Shiur On Matzav.com: Does It Take Up Space?
ISRAEL UNDER ATTACK: Missiles Launched From Iran, Nearly an Hour of Sirens Across Israel
The IDF confirmed early Sunday morning that Iran fired missiles toward Israel, triggering air defense responses and widespread sirens across multiple regions of the country.
In a statement issued shortly after 6:00 a.m., the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit said missiles had been launched from Iran in the direction of Israeli territory and that aerial defense systems were engaged to intercept them.
Warning sirens were heard in central Israel, Jerusalem, and Samaria. Alerts were later extended to the Sharon region.
The military called on civilians to strictly adhere to directives issued by the Home Front Command.
Following nearly an hour marked by repeated sirens and sustained interception activity, the Home Front Command informed residents nationwide that they could exit protected spaces. However, the public was advised to stay near shelters as a precaution.
Magen David Adom said 14 people were treated for injuries sustained while rushing to protected areas.
Authorities reported no direct impacts or property damage.
{Matzav.com}Iranians Celebrate in Streets After Khamenei’s Death
Thick Smoke Rises from Erbil International Airport Impact Site
Rebbetzin Frimit Taub–Housman a”h
It is with great sadness that Matzav.com reports the petirah of Rebbetzin Frimit Taub–Housman a”h, a woman whose life was defined by unwavering yiras Shamayim, profound Torah knowledge, and a lifelong devotion to her family and to communal service. Her presence radiated dignity, strength, and quiet depth; her legacy is etched in the generations she nurtured and the Torah she lived.
Born Frimit Werzberger on the Lower East Side, she was raised in a home distinguished by extraordinary mesirus nefesh for shemiras Shabbos during the grinding years of the Great Depression. At a time when Shabbos observance often meant forfeiting livelihood and security, her family stood firm. Those formative years, shaped by sacrifice and emunah, left an indelible imprint on her character and on the spiritual tone of the home she would later build.
She was a granddaughter of Reb Berish Elefant zt”l, revered maggid shiur at Yeshiva Torah Vodaas and later rosh yeshiva of Nesivos Olam. From him she inherited a deep reverence for Torah learning and a broad, historically grounded understanding of the mesorah of Klal Yisroel.
In her first marriage to Reb Dovid Housman zt”l, a devoted Karliner chossid and shochet, she helped establish a true Torah home, one infused with chassidishe warmth and steadfast commitment to halacha. After his untimely petirah, she carried the mantle of responsibility alone. With remarkable inner strength and unwavering faith, she raised her children, guided them, and married them off, ensuring that the home they had built would continue to flourish in Torah and yiras Shamayim.
Later in life she married Reb Ahron Tzvi Taub zt”l, the Heiliner Rov. As the Heiliner Rebbetzin, she became a source of guidance and inspiration in her own right. She delivered shiurim to women, and those who attended recall her clarity, her command of Torah sources, and her sweeping grasp of Jewish history. Her learning was lived, integrated, and transmitted with warmth and conviction.
Even in her later years, when others might have withdrawn from public involvement, Rebbetzin Taub–Housman remained active in acts of chesed. She prepared food regularly for Yad Efraim, providing comfort and nourishment to hospital patients and their families. This quiet, steady giving, done without fanfare, reflected the essence of her life: Torah anchored, compassionate, and purposeful.
She is survived by her son, Rav Dov Housman of Monsey, and her daughters, Mrs. Eizikowitz, Mrs. Wollner, Mrs. Schwartz of Jersey City, and Mrs. Gober of Monsey. She was predeceased by her son, Reb Mordechai zt”l.
The levayah will take place Sunday morning at Kahal Yereim-Heilin, located at Fort Hamilton Parkway and 47th Street in Brooklyn, NY.
Yehi zichrah boruch.
{Matzav.com}
CAN’T MAKE THIS UP! NYT Glorifies Khamenei as ‘Regional Power’
Imam Reza Shrine Flag Changed to Symbol of Mourning and Revenge After Khamenei’s Death
Iranian and U.S. Ambassadors Clash at UN Over Human Rights
Dan Bongino: Trump Takes Firm Stance, Vows to Avoid Another Iraq‑Style War
HaRav Elya Brudny’s Emergency Purim 2026 Fund
BAAVOD RESHAIM RINAH: Iranian State Media Confirms Supreme Leader Khamenei Is Dead
Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed today in an Israeli strike carried out as part of a sweeping joint military campaign by the United States and Israel, according to confirmation from Iranian state media.
Tehran declared 40 days of national mourning following what it described as the “martyrdom” of the 86-year-old leader, who had governed the Islamic Republic for more than three and a half decades and stood as its ultimate authority since 1989.
President Donald Trump publicly praised the development, writing on Truth Social that Khamenei had been “one of the most evil people in History” and describing his death as “justice” for Americans and others killed by Iran over the years. Trump indicated that U.S. intelligence assets were instrumental in locating and targeting the Iranian leader, stating that Khamenei “was unable to avoid our Intelligence and Highly Sophisticated Tracking Systems.” He also warned that military operations would “continue, uninterrupted throughout the week or as long as necessary” in pursuit of what he called “peace throughout the Middle East and, indeed, the world.”
Trump further asserted that members of Iran’s security apparatus and the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps were already seeking protection, encouraging them to “peacefully merge with the Iranian Patriots.”
Khamenei’s death represents a profound shock to the Islamic Republic’s leadership structure. As one of the longest-serving authoritarian rulers in the world, he exercised sweeping power over the judiciary, state broadcasting, and all armed and security forces, including the powerful Revolutionary Guard. His removal delivers a severe blow to the regime and may hasten the unraveling of its governing system, an outcome U.S. and Israeli officials have openly stated as an objective of their operation.
The immediate aftermath has triggered a succession dilemma with no obvious resolution. Under Iran’s constitution, temporary authority shifts to an interim council while the Assembly of Experts — an 88-member body of Islamic clerics — is tasked with selecting a new supreme leader. However, Israeli officials said their initial wave of strikes severely disrupted Iran’s chain of command, eliminating seven senior defense and intelligence figures and targeting approximately 30 top military and civilian officials.
Among those reported killed are Khamenei’s chief security adviser Ali Shamkhani; Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps commander Mohammad Pakpour; Defense Minister Aziz Nasirzadeh; Khamenei’s senior military aide Mohammad Shirazi; head of Iranian military intelligence Saleh Asadi; Hossein Jabal Amelian, chairman of the SPND nuclear weapons research organization; and former SPND chairman Reza Mozaffari-Nia.
One high-ranking official believed to have survived is Ali Larijani, secretary of Iran’s supreme national security council, former parliament speaker, and a longtime confidant of Khamenei. With much of the senior leadership eliminated, Larijani now appears to be the most prominent civilian figure remaining in the hierarchy. In a statement posted on X, he vowed that Iran would deliver Israel and the United States an “unforgettable lesson.”
Questions now loom over whether the Revolutionary Guard will attempt to consolidate power or whether the military strikes will create the internal opening for mass opposition that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Trump have both publicly urged. Israeli officials said Khamenei’s sons were also targeted, though intelligence assessments suggest they survived. Mojtaba Khamenei, long viewed as a potential successor, remains among the most discussed figures in the unfolding transition.
Khamenei assumed power in 1989 following the death of Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini and spent 35 years tightening his grip over Iran’s political, military, and religious institutions. Throughout his rule, dissent was met with force. Thousands of demonstrators were killed during recent nationwide protests, and reform movements were repeatedly crushed under his authority.
In an overnight video address, Trump urged Iranian civilians to remain indoors during the ongoing air campaign but later rise up and “take over your government” once the operation concludes. Meanwhile, Iran’s exiled former crown prince Reza Pahlavi, who has organized opposition efforts abroad, also called on Iranians to fill the streets. He appealed directly to members of the security forces, urging them to “Join the nation and help ensure a stable and secure transition. Otherwise, you will sink with Khamenei’s ship and his crumbling regime.”
{Matzav.com}
Rabbi Naftali Hertz Cukier z”l
It is with great sadness that Matzav.com reports the petirah of Rabbi Naftali Hertz Cukier z”l, a beloved longtime resident of Lakewood, NJ, and a leading figure in the spiritual revival of Russian Jewry.
As the leader of the extraordinary Dacha program and director of the Lakewood chapter of Vaad L’Hatzolas Nidchei Yisroel, Rabbi Cukier devoted his life to rekindling the flame of Yiddishkeit in souls long deprived of its warmth.
Rabbi Cukier’s own foundations in Torah were laid in the great yeshivos where he immersed himself in learning with the same passion he would later ignite in others.
He first learned at the Yeshiva of Eastern Parkway, where he became a devoted talmid of Rav Mottel Weinberg zt”l. Rabbi Cukier maintained a close kesher with Rav Weinberg for decades, cherishing his guidance and drawing strength from that bond throughout his life. The imprint of those formative years — the rigor in learning, the clarity of thought, and the sincerity in avodas Hashem — never left him.
He later continued his aliyah at Bais Medrash Govoah in Lakewood, where he learned under the rosh yeshiva, Rav Shnuer Kotler. Rabbi Cukier remained a loyal talmid of the yeshiva and a familiar, beloved presence in its batei medrash for more than fifty years.
For decades, Rabbi Cukier stood at the helm of the Dacha, a biannual three-week seminar that became a lifeline for unaffiliated Russian Jews from across the former Soviet Union. In a world often enamored with programming gimmicks and superficial inspiration, the Dacha was the opposite: a “no-shtick, no gimmick” immersion in pure limud haTorah. From early morning until late at night, the air vibrated with shiurim, chavrusah learning, and the steady hum of Torah study. It was the koach of unadulterated Torah itself — ha’or shebo machziro lamutav — that transformed participants, drawing them back again and again, until many progressed to advanced yeshivos, kollelim, and lives of authentic mitzvah observance.The remarkable and enduring success of the Dacha was rooted in Rabbi Cukier’s boundless mesirus nefesh. With unwavering dedication, he spearheaded this spiritual revolution together with a devoted team of shluchim who infused the program with positivity, warmth, and exuberance, all, incredibly, at their own expense. To Rabbi Cukier, this was not a project. It was a sacred mission.
The seeds of this movement were planted by Rabbi Mordechai Neustadt zt”l, who courageously gathered the first group of Refuseniks under clandestine and dangerous conditions for a hidden seminar behind the Iron Curtain. It was Rabbi Neustadt who urged Rabbi Cukier to assume leadership, entrusting him with the future of this fragile yet luminous beginning. Under Rabbi Cukier’s stewardship, what began in secrecy blossomed into a vibrant engine of Torah growth whose impact continues to reverberate throughout Russia and the broader Jewish world.
Every Dacha graduate who went on to build a Torah home, to raise children in the ways of Torah and mitzvos, and to produce generations committed to Yiddishkeit stands as an everlasting zechus for the neshamah of Rabbi Cukier. His legacy is not measured in accolades, but in living, breathing families shaped by his devotion.
For those who came of age in the 1970s and 1980s, the plight of Russian Jewry was a rallying cry that united Jews across the spectrum. Rallies filled city streets. Protests and advocacy campaigns captured headlines. Daring missions were carried out behind the Iron Curtain. For many secular Jews, the struggle mirrored the civil rights movement: a moral cause of freedom and dignity.
But when communism fell in 1991, it became clear that for the frum world, the real battle had only just begun. Political liberation was not spiritual rebirth. Seventy years of enforced atheism had left a vacuum where open Yiddishkeit once flourished. There were Jews who had never tasted Torah, who thirsted for mitzvos like wanderers in a desert longing for water.
The Vaad’s efforts predated the fall of communism. In 1988, Rabbi Cukier himself traveled to the USSR on a perilous mission. Constantly shadowed by the KGB, forced into clandestine meetings, and navigating an atmosphere thick with suspicion, he and his colleagues persevered in their attempts to bring Torah to those yearning for it. Upon returning to Lakewood, Rabbi Cukier organized a parlor meeting that laid the foundation for the Lakewood chapter of the Vaad. In those early years, shluchim were dispatched from Lakewood to sustain the underground work. Rav Sholom Kamenetzky and Rav Chaim Finkel were among the early volunteers who answered the call.
With the collapse of the Iron Curtain, a new chapter began. No longer confined to secrecy, the Vaad could operate openly. Rabbi Cukier, then a full-time kollel yungerman, took upon himself the enormous task of organizing a summer retreat for those hungry to learn. That program — which would evolve into the Dacha — became a beacon of hope. Tens of American bochurim and girls sacrificed their vacations year after year to teach fellow Yidden about Yiddishkeit. In the early years, as many as 700 participants would pass through the camp over the course of an eight-week summer.
Based outside Moscow, the camp drew Jews from across the vast expanse of the former Soviet Union, some traveling from as far as Ukraine. The stated goal was not kiruv in the conventional sense. It was simply to learn Torah. And yet, in the steady glow of limud haTorah, lives were transformed. Communication was often halting — participants knew little English or Hebrew — but the will to learn was fierce. Devorim hayotzim min halev penetrated directly to the heart.
Rabbi Cukier once reflected with quiet awe: “The sippuk you get when you see the unbelievable products that have come out of our program is unmatched. There are tens of bnei Torah who have built real Yiddishe homes all over the world and advanced in their learning to the point where they are true talmidei chachomim. We have a yungerman who is a rosh chaburah in the Mir, a boki b’Shas b’iyun. He learns something like 17 hours a day. There are many alumni who have returned to Russia and started yeshivos and kollelim.”
Those words were not spoken just with pride, but with gratitude — gratitude to see barren soil transformed into flourishing gardens of Torah.
Rabbi Cukier is survived by his devoted wife, Mrs. Pessie Cukier; his sister, Mrs. Hinda Ben-Ezra; his children, Mrs. Blima Prag, Mrs. Feiga Gross, Mrs. Chana Brunner, Mrs. Silky Resnicoff, Mrs. Devora Landsman, Reb Yossi Cukier, Reb Dovid Cukier, Reb Aharon Cukier, Reb Avrohom Yehuda Cukier, and Reb Yitzchok Cukier; and numerous grandchildren who carry forward his legacy.
The levayah will take place tonight at 10 p.m. at Bais Medrash Govoah’s Bendheim (Yoshon) Bais Medrash on Seventh Street in Lakewood, NJ.
With Rabbi Cukier’s passing, a giant of quiet heroism has departed this world. Yet, his impact lives on in every daf learned by a former Dacha participant, in every Shabbos table illuminated by families he inspired, and in every child raised in the light of Torah because one man refused to let a generation remain in darkness.
Yehi zichro boruch.
{Matzav.com}