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Chacham Nissim Ben Shimon: ‘The Churban Was Caused by Baseless Hatred—We Must Not Repeat That Mistake Today’

Matzav -

As Bein HaMetzarim begins amid ongoing tensions surrounding the military draft of bnei yeshivah, Chacham Nissim Ben Shimon is urging the Torah community to remain steadfast in Torah learning while avoiding the trap of sinas chinam, warning that division among Jews must not be allowed to deepen during this sensitive period.

In a special interview with Kol Chai Radio’s “Tzav Ma’atzar” program, conducted by Gudi Silman, the veteran Bnei Brak gaon addressed the draft crisis, the status of bnei yeshivah, and the need to strengthen the Torah world.

Asked whether he could recall another period when the chareidi community faced circumstances similar to those of today, Chacham Ben Shimon replied that he could not.

“Honestly, I don’t remember a situation like this,” he said. “There has never been a time when people who sit and learn Torah were taken and treated this way. It’s difficult even to speak about such a situation.”

He noted that the current developments are especially painful during Bein HaMetzarim, when Jews reflect on the causes of the destruction of the Bais HaMikdash.

“We are in the days when we speak about sinas chinam, and דווקא now we must be careful not to add more hatred.”

The gaon also offered words of encouragement to yeshivah bochurim and avreichim who are anxious about the current situation.

“There is no need to be afraid,” he said. “We believe that HaKadosh Baruch Hu guides the world. We must continue learning Torah and never diminish its value. On the contrary, the more we are afflicted, the more we must strengthen ourselves.”

He added that faith in hashgachah pratis should give Jews confidence even during difficult times.

“In the end, everything comes from HaKadosh Baruch Hu, and one who learns Torah merits siyata diShmaya.”

When asked how the chareidi public should respond to the strong emotions surrounding the draft controversy, Chacham Ben Shimon stressed that disagreements must never become personal hostility.

Even in the midst of profound disputes, he said, there is no place for inflammatory rhetoric or angry confrontation.

“If you want to influence people, you don’t do it through anger and shouting,” he said. “You have to speak pleasantly, to bring people close rather than push them away. When you speak with respect and appreciation, people listen.”

He also used the interview to call for greater internal chizuk within the Torah community, particularly with regard to maintaining the sanctity of batei knesses.

He urged worshippers to refrain from engaging in idle conversation during tefillah.

“Talking in shul causes tremendous harm. The more we reduce conversation and increase our respect for the holiness of the place, the greater our genuine chizuk will be.”

Chacham Ben Shimon added that while it is important to explain the value of Torah to the broader public, the Torah world must first strengthen itself from within.

Later in the interview, he related a story from his experience on the Bais Din involving a man who had once been completely distant from Torah observance but gradually returned to Judaism because a rav chose to guide him patiently rather than rebuke or frighten him.

According to Chacham Ben Shimon, the story illustrates that Jews are brought closer through love, patience, and gradual spiritual growth—not through accusations or intimidation.

“There are many stories like that,” he said. “When you bring someone close with love and allow him to advance step by step, you can see how he changes.”

Concluding the interview, Chacham Ben Shimon was asked what message he wished to deliver to bnei yeshivah during this challenging period.

“They should not be afraid,” he said. “They should continue learning Torah. Fear itself creates more fear, but one who occupies himself with Torah merits siyata diShmaya. Even when there are things we do not understand in the calculations of Heaven, our responsibility is to continue learning and strengthening ourselves, and with Hashem’s help, He will assist all bnei Torah.”

{Matzav.com}

Mamdani Mocked After Telling New Yorkers to Set ACs to 78 Degrees During Brutal Heat Wave

Matzav -

New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani has found himself at the center of a social media firestorm after urging residents to conserve electricity by setting their air conditioners to 78 degrees during a dangerous heat wave that could push temperatures to 100 degrees for the first time in more than a decade.

With soaring temperatures placing heavy demand on the electrical grid, Mamdani took to X to encourage New Yorkers to reduce their energy usage.

“New York: it’s hot out there, and the power grid is working overtime to keep us cool,” the Muslim socialist mayor wrote in a post on X. “Set your AC to 78 degrees, turn off lights/electronics you’re not using, and unplug what you can.”

The suggestion quickly sparked widespread ridicule, with many users insisting that 78 degrees was far too warm to provide meaningful relief during extreme summer heat.

Among the most prominent critics was Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy, who has previously floated the idea of challenging Mamdani in a future mayoral election.

“78 degrees??? Welcome to communism people! Hope you enjoy!” Portnoy wrote.

Conservative commentator Bonchie also mocked the mayor’s recommendation, posting, “Do you feel the warmth of collectivism yet?”

Many everyday New Yorkers joined the criticism, with some pledging to do exactly the opposite of what the mayor had requested.

“As a New Yorker I’ll be setting my AC to 62 degrees for the foreseeable future as a direct retaliation to your authority,” one user responded.

Another wrote, “I have texted all my coworkers who voted for Zohran to send me a photo of their A/C set to 78.”

Others questioned why residents should be expected to keep their homes uncomfortably warm while brightly lit landmarks such as Times Square continue consuming enormous amounts of electricity around the clock.

Moshe Spern, president of the United Jewish Teachers, also weighed in with a tongue-in-cheek response.

“My Mayor is Muslim. My Bagel is Jewish. My Christian Dior. Thermostat set to 74. Or lower,” he wrote, parodying the popular “Knicks in four” slogan. “Only a Communist believes distribution of wealth also means distribution of air conditioning. Send thermostat pics at Gracie and City hall please!!”

In his post, Mamdani said city government would also be reducing electricity consumption by following the same thermostat guidelines and limiting unnecessary energy use in municipal buildings.

“Our City is doing its part too: maintaining the 78 degrees rule in our buildings, dimming/turning off our lights during peak electricity demand, asking private partners to do the same, and powering down non-essential equipment,” he wrote.

He argued that reducing electricity demand would help prevent outages during the heat emergency.

“A stable grid means the AC stays on, and lives are saved. Let’s ease demand — and get through the heat — together.”

The U.S. Department of Energy recommends thermostat settings between 75 and 78 degrees during the summer months and advises homeowners to raise the temperature further when no one is home.

Mamdani is not the first New York City mayor to make such a recommendation. During a heat advisory in July 2023, then-Mayor Eric Adams similarly encouraged residents to set their air conditioners to 78 degrees to reduce strain on the electrical grid.

Forecasters say the most dangerous conditions are expected today and Friday, when AccuWeather predicts temperatures across New York City’s five boroughs could reach 100 degrees.

{Matzav.com}

Very Thoughtful Third Graders

Matzav -

By Rabbi Shraga Freedman A third-grade rebbe shared the following incredible story with me.

It was the last day of school, and the rebbe had heard that the non-Jewish teacher who served as his co-teacher for third grade would not be returning the following year.

Before the day ended, he encouraged his students to thank her and wish her success.

As he was leaving the classroom, he took out a sticky note and wrote her a short message:

Dear …,
Thank you for a wonderful year. It was a pleasure teaching alongside you. Wishing you much success wherever you go.
Signed, Rabbi …

The rebbe left the room.

A little while later, a few third graders approached him and said, “Rebbe, we want to show you something. Can you come back to the classroom?”

When he walked back in, he was stunned.

The teacher’s desk was entirely covered with sticky notes—one from each of the third graders—each note expressing appreciation and gratitude to their English teacher.

He was completely blown away.

He never found out how the teacher reacted when she saw the notes. But he walked away with a powerful realization:

Perhaps the greatest Kiddush Hashem in that moment was not what reached the teacher, but what entered the hearts of his students.

They learned far more from his actions than from his words.

This is one of the deepest truths about Kiddush Hashem—it is conveyed far more through authentic behavior than through preaching.

And often, its greatest impact is not on distant observers, but on those closest to us—our students, our children, and all those within our circle of influence.

{Matzav.com}

24-Hours-a-Day Non-Stop Learning in Yerushalayim?

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[COMMUNICATED]

Three kedoshei elyon had one common concept when it came to learning Torah – they were the Ohr Hachaim Hakadosh (Rabbi Chaim ibn Attar 1696-1743) when he came to Eretz Yisroel; the Ramchal (Rabbi Moshe Chaim Luzzatto 1707-1746) when he lived in Padua, Italy;  and Hagaon, Harav Chaim Volozhiner, (1749-1821) the famous talmid of the Gaon of Vilna.

They each had a yeshiva with ‘around-the-clock’ Torah learning, 24-hours a day, so that there would be no minute when the sound of Torah learning would not be heard in this world. The 24-hour period would be divided into shifts, and as one ended the next would begin.

Torah-24

“Torah-24” Center has been opened in Yerushalayim and the Nasi is Maran Sar Hatorah, Harav Chaim Kanievsky, zt”l.

Under ONE ROOF, from 6:00 am – 6:00 am, 10 kollelim fill successive learning shifts. Each kollel focuses on a specific area of in-depth Torah study. The “Torah-24” Kollelim include: Boker (Gemora), Yerushalmi, Bavli, Zeraim-Taharot, Dalet Chelkei Shulchan Aruch, Erev (Gemora), Chatzos- Zohar/Kabbolah, Erev Shabbos (Chumash / Medrash b’iyun). 

Already there are 52 avreichim metzuyonim, and a large number of candidates are vying for the remaining slots in the kollelim. All the avreichim are required to take rigorous monthly tests.

Endorsements & Letters

Endorsements include Maranan Hagaonim shlit”a: Harav Gershon Edelstein, Harav Berel Povarsky, Harav Shimon Badani, Harav Dovid Cohen, Harav Boruch Mordechai Ezrachi, Harav Chaim Feinstein, Harav Shimon Galai, Harav Shraga Shteinman.

Letters of support-encouragement have been received from Maranan Hagaonim, shlit”a: Hamekubal Harav David Bazri, Hamashpia Hagadol Reb Elimelech Biderman, Hamekubal Harav Yaakov Meir Schechter, Harav Moishe Sternbuch, Harav Yitzchak Tuvia Weiss.

For more “Torah-24” information click on: www.torah-24.com or call 718-766-5022

MK Uri Maklev Defends Torah Study Law: “What Makes Us the Jewish People—Falafel?”

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MK Uri Maklev, chairman of the United Torah Judaism faction, delivered a passionate speech in the Knesset plenum during debate over the proposed Basic Law: Torah Study, arguing that the very need for such legislation demonstrates a growing erosion of Torah’s place in the identity of the Jewish people and the State of Israel.

The Knesset approved the Basic Law: Torah Study in its first reading, after which Maklev strongly criticized opponents of the measure, saying much of the criticism had little to do with the legislation itself and instead reflected broader political disputes.

Opening his remarks, Maklev said, “Unfortunately, we heard many things that have absolutely nothing to do with this law. What didn’t we hear? That this law is really a budget for yeshivos, that it is anti-Zionist, and other claims that were simply political populism unrelated to the legislation. All of the political battles and struggles taking place in Israel over the past period have been poured into this one bill.”

He went on to argue that much of the opposition reflected a lack of understanding about the role Torah plays in Jewish life.

“Unfortunately, Mr. Speaker, we heard a great deal of ignorance. I don’t even know if I should call it ignorance, because ignorance results when people are never taught. Today, in elementary schools, high schools, and even universities, they don’t teach the essence of Torah. I wish they taught even 10 percent of what is taught in the United States about the Ten Commandments, basic Jewish values, and the importance of Torah study.”

Maklev then questioned what truly defines the Jewish people, arguing that national symbols alone cannot provide that identity.

“How can people understand who we are when they don’t recognize the foundation of our nation? What makes the Jewish people the Jewish people in the State of Israel? Is it because we have a national food—falafel or shawarma? Every country has a flag and a national anthem. What is it that makes us the Jewish people?”

According to Maklev, the Jewish people’s right to live in Eretz Yisroel is rooted in the Torah rather than in the decisions of modern political leaders or movements.

“There is no question that everything stems from the Torah. It is our right to exist. It is the reason we are here. We cannot say that our right to live in this land exists because the Zionist Congress decided it, or because of a speech by Herzl or Ben-Gurion. If you look at what they themselves said, our right to settle this land comes from the promise of ‘the land of our forefathers.’ That fundamental principle appears in the Torah, and that is the source of our right to exist.”

Maklev also argued that Zionism itself has no lasting meaning without Torah serving as its foundation.

“There is no Zionism without Torah behind it. Zionism by itself is empty—it has nothing. Whatever people call our attachment to this land only has meaning when it is built upon the foundation of Torah. In the end, all values lead back to Torah. Some people want to say that good character, caring for others, equality, or observing Shabbos are the central values. Of course those are values—but they all ultimately flow from Torah.”

As he concluded his address, Maklev said the fact that lawmakers now find it necessary to pass a Basic Law affirming the importance of Torah study reflects how negatively bnei yeshivah have come to be viewed in Israeli society.

“We’ve heard people say that the Knesset has deteriorated. I agree that there has been deterioration. But if we’ve reached the point where we need a Basic Law on Torah study, that didn’t happen by itself. It happened because people who learn Torah are being portrayed as criminals.”

Maklev recalled attending proceedings in a military court earlier in the week, where he witnessed what he described as a striking contrast.

“I was in a military court this week. There were hearings involving soldiers who had trafficked weapons and behaved like criminals guilty of very serious offenses. And then there was another line of people whose only ‘crime’ was that they studied Torah.”

He concluded by comparing the legislation to a hypothetical law declaring democracy to be an important national value, arguing that fundamental principles only require legal protection once they come under attack.

“If we heard that the United States was passing a law declaring democracy to be an important value, people would ask, ‘What happened? Isn’t that already the foundation?’ The fact that we now need a law explaining the value of Torah study is only because that value is being challenged. That is why this legislation is necessary, and I thank you very much.”

{Matzav.com}

MK Meir Porush Blasts Torah Study Law Opponents: “Ugandan Politicians—What Do You Have to Do With Eretz Yisroel?”

Matzav -

MK Meir Porush launched a scathing attack in the Knesset on Wednesday against opponents of the proposed Basic Law: Torah Study, urging lawmakers to support the legislation and accusing its critics of failing to understand the Torah’s central role in the Jewish people’s connection to Eretz Yisroel.

Speaking during the Knesset debate, the United Torah Judaism lawmaker said anyone who believes in the importance of Torah should vote in favor of the bill.

Porush began by asking why, despite Israel being founded as a Jewish state, legislation affirming the importance of Torah study had never been enacted.

“Seventy-eight years ago, Ben-Gurion declared the establishment of a state, which he defined as a Jewish and democratic state. One could rightly ask: How is it that in a country whose founders wrote in the Declaration of Independence about the ‘eternal Book of Books,’ they did not immediately enact a Basic Law on Torah study?”

He answered his own question by pointing to the Declaration of Independence itself.

“The answer is no less compelling than the question. It, too, is written in the Declaration of Independence: ‘The Jewish people arose in the Land of Israel.’ As is well known, the Jewish people received the Torah at Har Sinai 3,338 years ago, and by virtue of that Torah we are in Eretz Yisroel.”

Porush argued that, under normal circumstances, no such law should even be necessary because the importance of Torah ought to be self-evident.

“In a properly ordered world, there would be no need for such a law. There are things that are far beyond legislation, things that should be obvious to anyone who seeks to live in Eretz Yisroel by virtue of the Divine command written in the Torah, which is our deed to this land.”

He then turned his criticism toward those opposing the bill, introducing what became the central theme of his address.

“In recent years, however, a new group of politicians has emerged. Let’s call them the ‘Ugandan politicians.’ Some are politicians sitting here in the Knesset, while others disguise themselves as jurists, legal advisers, and judges.”

Porush said those critics fail to appreciate the Jewish people’s Torah-based connection to the Land of Israel.

“They don’t understand because they have no connection to Torah. As far as they are concerned, the state could just as well have been established in Uganda—a democratic state with no connection to the Jewish people. In that case, there באמת would be no reason or logic to enact a Basic Law on Torah study. What does Uganda have to do with Torah study?”

He also cited a military committee formed after the October 7, 2023, massacre, arguing that even senior defense officials have acknowledged the importance of full-time Torah learning.

“To show how absurd this all is, there is one body that does not accept the position of the ‘Ugandan politicians’—the army. After the terrible tragedy on Simchas Torah 5784, then-Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, today a favorite of the left, established a professional security committee with the support of then-Defense Ministry Director-General and current Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir, together with then-Chief of Staff Herzi Halevi.”

According to Porush, the committee’s recommendations specifically recognized the need to preserve the Torah world.

“The committee, chaired by Maj. Gen. (res.) Eliezer Shkedy and composed of senior military officers, recommended the following: ‘Preserving the core values of the chareidi community means preserving those whose Torah is their profession (those who study three sedorim a day).’ Those words appear in General Shkedy’s recommendations.”

He continued, “As I said, this committee, established after Simchas Torah 5784, determined that someone who studies three sedorim a day should not be drafted. Apparently there are people in the army who understand the value of Torah study. But the Ugandan politicians do not. Against that group of politician-jurists who embrace the Uganda approach, we must provide a Jewish response today—a response that should be completely self-evident.”

Porush also directed sharp criticism at members of the governing coalition who planned to oppose the legislation, including some from the religious Zionist camp.

“To those coalition members who intend to vote against this law, some of whom even wear knitted kippot, I want to say: What do you have to do with Eretz Yisroel? You proudly insist that not a single grain of this land should be surrendered because it was promised to us in the Torah. Yet when it comes to Torah study, you want us to settle for only a few grains of Torah. May I ask you for just a little soul-searching.”

Concluding his remarks, Porush thanked those responsible for advancing the legislation and urged lawmakers to support it.

“I want to thank my friend, former MK Rabbi Moshe Shimon Roth, who wisely submitted this bill at the beginning of the Knesset term, and MK Rabbi Moshe Gafni, who is now leading its advancement together with all the members of United Torah Judaism. I call upon every member of the Knesset today to vote in favor of Torah—otherwise, you are voting in favor of the State of Uganda.”

{Matzav.com}

Report: Rep. Jeffries Seeks Maps That Could Shake NYC Left

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Several progressive Democrats who recently secured victories in New York City congressional primaries may face an uncertain future in Congress even before taking office, as state leaders prepare for a potential redrawing of congressional district lines that could dramatically reshape the political landscape ahead of the 2028 elections.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries is expected to push for new congressional maps in New York that could create additional Democratic-leaning districts. Any changes, however, could also alter the boundaries of seats represented by some of the party’s newest progressive nominees, potentially forcing them into more competitive territory.

Before any redistricting can occur, New York voters must approve a constitutional amendment that would permit the state to redraw its congressional map.

A congressional map proposed in 2022 offers a glimpse of how future changes could affect several districts. Under that proposal, former New York City Comptroller Brad Lander’s district would be merged into an area that includes Republican-leaning Staten Island, while Assemblywoman Claire Valdez would lose much of the northern section of her current district.

“There will be new lines in 2028 and, generally speaking, the newer members are the most at risk,” Chris Coffey, CEO of Tusk Strategies, told Politico.

Not everyone believes redrawing the districts would weaken the Democratic Socialists of America. Gustavo Gordillo, co-chair of the organization’s New York City chapter, argued that altering districts represented by Lander or Valdez could actually benefit the group’s broader political ambitions.

“Claire Valdez is already basically a packed DSA district, so if they change that district very much, it suddenly makes any neighboring district easier terrain for us. I think that also goes for NY-10 as well,” he said, referencing Lander’s district.

“I’m curious to see how they navigate that.”

Jeffries has not publicly outlined exactly how he would redraw New York’s congressional boundaries, but he has repeatedly argued that Democrats should use redistricting to offset Republican-led map changes in other states.

“Leader Jeffries is focused on passing the constitutional amendment to ensure New York has a fair and competitive congressional map that can help stop the nationwide MAGA power grab in places like Florida and Texas, and create additional opportunities to elect House Democrats in 2028 and beyond,” spokesperson Justin Chermol said in a statement to Politico.

Any revised congressional map would require cooperation among Jeffries, the New York State Democratic Party, and the Democrat-controlled state Legislature. However, recent elections have shifted both the State Senate and Assembly further to the left, adding another layer of complexity to the process.

“I don’t know about anyone else, but the Senate is not interested in using redistricting to take sides in a civil war,” state Sen. Michael Gianaris, D-Astoria, told Politico.

{Matzav.com}

Federal Judge Blocks USPS Mail-In Ballot Policy in Blow to Trump Administration

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A federal judge has halted the U.S. Postal Service from implementing new mail-in ballot restrictions, ruling that the proposed policy violated an existing legal agreement requiring the agency to prioritize the prompt handling of election mail.

The ruling, issued Wednesday by U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan in Washington, D.C., dealt another legal setback to President Donald Trump’s effort to tighten rules governing mail-in voting ahead of the Nov. 3 midterm elections. The decision marked the second courtroom loss for the administration on the issue within two weeks, as Republicans seek to retain control of both chambers of Congress.

The Postal Service announced the proposed changes in May, saying states would be required to submit voter lists and adopt revised election procedures before the agency would transport mail-in ballots. Under the proposal, states that failed to satisfy those requirements would have had their ballots refused for delivery.

Judge Sullivan, an appointee of President Bill Clinton, agreed with arguments brought by the NAACP, which contended that the Postal Service’s proposal conflicted with a 2021 settlement requiring the agency to take “extraordinary measures” to ensure timely delivery of ballot mail.

{Matzav.com}

TWO PEAS: Kamala Harris Cozying Up to NYC Mayor Mamdani

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Vice President Kamala Harris has begun cultivating a closer relationship with New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, signaling a new effort to strengthen ties with one of the Democratic Party’s most influential progressive figures as early maneuvering for the 2028 presidential race quietly takes shape.

According to Axios, Harris and Mamdani held a lengthy private phone conversation last week centered on the future direction of the Democratic Party. The discussion is expected to be the first of several conversations between the two.

“This is about positioning for the 2028 primary where no candidate knows where the lane for support for Palestinian rights is going to be but they know there’s going to be one,” Republican consultant Mike Madrid told The California Post.

“No question this is a risky move but it’s one transforming both parties and the calculus at the moment has become it’s better to do something than nothing,” he added.

The call came shortly after candidates endorsed by Mamdani and aligned with the Democratic Socialists of America claimed victories in three New York congressional primaries, defeating two sitting members of Congress and underscoring the mayor’s expanding political clout.

A source familiar with the conversation told The Post that Harris initiated the outreach as part of an effort to reshape her image following her 2024 presidential defeat and connect more effectively with younger Democratic voters. During the conversation, she also congratulated Mamdani on the success of his endorsed candidates in New York City.

“The vice president reached out to have a conversation, and we’ve had a brief conversation,” Mamdani told SiriusXM’s “The Clay Cane Show” Wednesday. “We’ve been in touch over the last few months, and I really do appreciate her outreach.”

Political strategist Matt Klink told The Post that Harris’ decision reflects long-term planning ahead of the next presidential primary season.

“The 2024 loss made clear that the activist left, if not energized, has enough leverage to sink a Democratic nominee, and she would rather have those people knocking doors than burning down her campaign before it starts,” he said.

Harris’ recent outreach is part of a broader effort to reconnect with the Democratic Party’s progressive base, particularly activists who sharply criticized the Biden administration’s support for Israel during the war in Gaza.

During New York City’s mayoral race, Harris avoided endorsing a candidate before the Democratic primary. After Mamdani secured the nomination, she offered cautious support during an MSNBC interview, saying, “I support the Democrat in the race, sure,” without mentioning him by name.

“Harris is ‘kissing the ring’ in her Mamdani outreach, as the mayor is the most high-profile DSA leader in America. Mamdani’s primary wins proved the DSA machine can deliver election results outside Brooklyn,” Klink added. “Harris read that scoreboard faster than most: the activists have the passion, the money, and the primary voters, and she wants all three.”

Over recent months, Harris has also quietly met with progressive organizers, including individuals connected to the pro-Palestinian Uncommitted Movement, as well as longtime Democratic National Committee member James Zogby and Michigan Democrat Abbas Alawieh.

Alawieh said Harris personally requested the meeting after months of private discussions. During their conversation, he urged her to oppose the use of American taxpayer dollars in ways that harm civilians or destroy communities.

He also shared stories from constituents who lost family members in Israeli airstrikes carried out with U.S. military support.

The renewed engagement represents a noticeable shift for Harris. During the 2024 campaign, she struggled to gain the support of many Arab American and progressive voters after declining to significantly break from President Joe Biden’s strong backing of Israel during the Gaza conflict.

The outreach comes as Democratic Socialists of America-backed candidates continue making gains in elections around the country.

In New York City, several DSA-backed challengers recently defeated longtime Democratic incumbents in congressional primaries, including Reps. Dan Goldman and Adriano Espaillat.

Elsewhere, Los Angeles City Councilmember Nithya Raman is challenging incumbent Mayor Karen Bass, while DSA member Janeese Lewis George captured the Democratic mayoral nomination in Washington, D.C.

In Colorado, first-time candidate Melat Kiros appears on track to become the first Generation Z woman elected to Congress after defeating 15-term Rep. Diana DeGette in the Democratic primary, according to a race projection.

Klink even suggested that the possibility of a future Harris-Mamdani national ticket should not be dismissed entirely.

“Palestinian/anti-Israeli activists this early in the 2028 cycle is an acknowledgment that the DSA wing sets the price of admission for a Democrat presidential primary,” he told The Post.

However, Mamdani cannot serve as vice president under the U.S. Constitution. Born in Kampala, Uganda, to Indian-born parents and naturalized as a U.S. citizen in 2018, he does not meet the constitutional requirement that both the president and vice president be natural-born citizens.

Although that prevents him from serving on a presidential ticket, it does not bar him from pursuing other elected offices.

Madrid, who has worked on presidential campaigns, said Harris’ evolving strategy reflects both demographic changes and growing ideological divisions within the Democratic Party.

“Harris’ shift is a sign of just how much has changed, and how quickly, in the Democratic Party on the issue of Palestine and Israel,” he said.

“There’s definitely an emerging split in the party that’s very reminiscent of the Tea Party extremism that consumed the GOP a decade ago,” he said, noting that despite recent DSA gains, “for every DSA win, there’s a [James] Talarico and [Xavier] Becerra win.”

Despite her 2024 defeat, Harris remains the early frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination. A national Center Square Voters’ Voice Poll released last month found that 27 percent of Democratic voters favored Harris for the party’s 2028 nomination, nearly twice the support of California Gov. Gavin Newsom, who received 14 percent.

While her polling numbers have slipped from earlier highs, Harris continues to lead a large field of potential Democratic contenders.

Other Democrats considering White House bids have also adjusted their rhetoric on Israel as debate within the party intensifies.

Newsom, who is openly considering a presidential campaign after completing his final term as governor, briefly referred to Israel as an “apartheid state” earlier this year before later saying he regretted that characterization. He reaffirmed his support for Israel while directing his criticism toward Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu rather than the Israeli state.

Other Democrats frequently mentioned as possible 2028 presidential candidates include Pete Buttigieg, Govs. Josh Shapiro, Andy Beshear, J.B. Pritzker, and others.

“Every serious 2028 Democrat presidential contender is watching Harris and taking notes. The candidate who figures out how to embrace the activist energy without getting photographed at the wrong rally will have a real advantage in what will be a crowded Democrat primary,” Klink added.

Mamdani has become one of the country’s most outspoken critics of Israel, repeatedly accusing the Jewish state of apartheid and genocide while remaining a vocal supporter of the Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions movement. At the same time, he has gradually developed stronger relationships with leaders in the Democratic establishment, including Harris.

Not everyone believes Harris’ strategy will pay off.

“Chasing the activist left, in this case the socialist wing, to gai momentum and to win a primary is a time-honored Democratic tradition that consistently creates general election problems,” Klink said. “Harris is gambling that she can consolidate the base early, capture and bottle their enthusiasm, and then, if successful, pivot to the center later.”

“It’s a flawed strategy with a notably poor track record,” he added.

{Matzav.com}

Organization Head Warns Yeshivah Students: ‘Don’t Pay Thousands for Promises of a Military Exemption’

Matzav -

The head of an organization that assists yeshivah bochurim detained over Israel’s military draft says the number of arrests has stabilized in recent days but is warning against lawyers and other individuals who promise guaranteed exemptions from military service in exchange for large sums of money.

In an interview on Kol Chai Radio’s “Tzav Ma’atzar” program, Chaim Karelitz, CEO of the Ezram U’Maginam organization, said most of the bnei yeshivah currently being held in military detention were arrested at the military induction center rather than through proactive enforcement operations.

“The overwhelming majority were arrested at the induction center, and only two were arrested through proactive operations—one by the traffic police and one during a home visit,” he said.

Karelitz added that proactive arrests have declined noticeably over the past week.

“For the past week, there have essentially been no proactive arrests carried out by the Israel Police,” he said.

Despite that trend, Karelitz cautioned yeshivah bochurim and avreichim against relying on attorneys who claim they can secure military exemptions in exchange for payment.

According to Karelitz, many people are being misled into believing that appearing at a draft office with legal representation will automatically resolve their status.

“Today I received a phone call from a young man who had gone to the draft office,” Karelitz recounted. “I asked him why he went, and he told me he was convinced that if he reported, he would receive an exemption and the matter would be over. Instead, he found himself on his way to detention.”

Karelitz explained that the military’s approach has changed significantly since the outbreak of the war.

“In the past, someone who was unable to adapt to military service would often receive an exemption. Today, the army says, ‘Come to us, and we’ll work it out with you.’ Most lawyers are still operating based on the old policy, but the reality has changed.”

As an example, he described the case of a yeshivah bochur whose family paid an attorney a substantial amount of money believing he would obtain an exemption.

“That young man is now completing his third detention, and he still doesn’t have an exemption,” Karelitz said.

Karelitz concluded the interview by offering three recommendations to bnei yeshivah.

First, he advised anyone without a long-documented medical condition not to attempt to manufacture medical grounds for an exemption.

“Everyone who has tried to play that game has gotten burned,” he warned.

Second, he urged families not to pay lawyers in advance if they promise a guaranteed exemption.

“Anyone who takes money upfront cannot guarantee a result,” he said.

Finally, Karelitz encouraged people to seek additional professional opinions before taking any significant step.

“Don’t rely on just one source. Ask questions, verify the information, and make sure no mistake has been made in the process.”

Karelitz concluded by saying that, in his view, the safest course for bnei yeshivah is to follow the guidance of the gedolei Yisroel.

“A bochur who follows their instructions and sits and learns is in the safest place possible. He has no reason to look for shortcuts or other solutions,” he said.

{Matzav.com}

Bereaved Father: ‘Rav Amos Guetta Blessed Me That I Would Be a Father Again—and It Came True’

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Baruch Ben Yigal, whose only son, IDF soldier Amit Ben Yigal Hy”d, was killed during an operational mission in 2020, shared an emotional personal account this week following the murder of Rav Amos Guetta zt”l, recalling a meeting that he says changed his life.

In a heartfelt tribute, Ben Yigal described visiting Rav Guetta during the first year after his son’s death, saying the elderly mekubal offered him comfort born of personal experience—and a blessing that was ultimately fulfilled.

According to Ben Yigal, the meeting was arranged by Rav Meir Bloch, who suggested that he travel to Netanya to meet Rav Guetta, a widely respected mekubal to whom thousands turned for brachos, guidance, and encouragement.

“We drove to Netanya. I met a very special Jew. From the very first moment, I felt like I was sitting down to speak with a father,” Ben Yigal wrote. “He sat inside the teivas hachazzan and received me for a private conversation. When he heard that I had lost my only son, he burst into tears and said, ‘I also buried a child. I know how you feel.'”

Ben Yigal said that during their conversation, Rav Guetta unexpectedly offered him a blessing that seemed almost impossible to imagine at the time.

“And then, out of nowhere, he blessed me and said: ‘May you merit enduring offspring. You will be a father again.'”

At the time, however, Ben Yigal said his grief was so overwhelming that he found it difficult to absorb the words.

“In those days I was so broken by Amit’s fall that I couldn’t attach any significance to the blessing. I thanked him, and we each went on our way.”

Reflecting on the years that followed, Ben Yigal wrote that he repeatedly heard stories of people who had visited Rav Guetta and left strengthened by his blessings and counsel.

“Since then, I have heard about countless people who met Rav Amos, received from him a blessing, advice, comfort, and hope. There is no doubt that he was a special person and a tzaddik, whose entire life was devoted to giving and doing good for others.”

Ben Yigal also expressed profound sorrow over Rav Guetta’s murder.

“And tonight, with great pain, we learned that he was murdered. An 80-year-old man who devoted his entire life to acts of kindness and helping people.”

He concluded his tribute with a prayer honoring both the revered mekubal and his fallen son.

“May his memory be blessed. May the memory of Rav Amos Guetta be blessed, and may the memory of Amit z”l remain forever engraved in our hearts.”

{Matzav.com}

Tragedy in Modiin Illit: 7-Year-Old Moshe Galinsky Killed by Bus While Returning From Cheder

Matzav -

A devastating tragedy struck Modiin Illit today, the fast of Shivah Assar Tammuz, when 7-year-old Moshe Galinsky was fatally struck by a bus while walking home from cheder in the city’s Brachfeld neighborhood.

The child, a third-grade talmid at the Breslover Talmud Torah, succumbed to his injuries at the scene.

He was a great-grandson of the renowned maggid, Rav Yaakov Galinsky zt”l.

ZAKA volunteers responded to the tragic scene and worked to ensure kavod hameis while assisting authorities.

Levayah arrangements were announced for Thursday afternoon. The levayah is scheduled to begin at 4:00 p.m. from the Breslover kloiz in Brachfeld, continue at 5:30 p.m. from the Shamgar Funeral Home in Yerushalayim, and conclude with kevurah on Har Hazeisim.

According to sources, schools dismissed early because of the fast. At approximately 12:04 p.m., Moishy was crossing the street after leaving cheder when he was struck by a Kavim bus driven by an Arab driver. Witnesses said several children had already crossed the street, and the driver allegedly failed to check whether additional children were still crossing before proceeding, fatally hitting the boy.

At approximately 12:30 p.m., ZAKA’s emergency hotline received a report of a 7-year-old child who had been struck by a bus on Rechov Rabi Akiva in Modiin Illit. Magen David Adom paramedics rushed to the scene but were forced to pronounce him dead.

Volunteers from ZAKA’s Judea and Samaria District, including the Modiin Illit team, responded immediately and carried out the sensitive task of caring for the meis and collecting all necessary remains and evidence. Their efforts enabled the child’s body to be released promptly for kevurah.

Shlomo Gottlieb, commander of ZAKA Modiin Illit, together with volunteers Aryeh Hershler and Tzvika Yabrov, described the heartbreaking scene.

“This is an extremely difficult and painful scene. When we arrived, we found a 7-year-old child who had been struck by a bus, and sadly MDA paramedics had no choice but to pronounce him dead at the scene. ZAKA Modiin Illit volunteers are now working to preserve the dignity of the deceased and gather all relevant findings from the scene.”

Moishy was the son of Reb Aharon Galinsky, one of the prominent Breslover chassidim in Modiin Illit and a member of the Kollel Chatzos at the Breslover kloiz. His paternal grandfather was Rav Nachman Nachman Galinsky zt”l, a Breslover chossid from Emanuel and a son of the famed maggid, Rav Yaakov Galinsky zt”l.

On his mother’s side, Moishy was a great-grandson of Rav Shmuel Shapiro zt”l, one of Breslov’s foremost rabbonim and mashpi’im. His mother is a daughter of Reb Yaakov Shapiro, a prominent Breslover chossid.

Teachers and classmates remembered Moishy as an exceptionally cheerful, sweet, and beloved child. Staff at the Breslover cheder said that just one day earlier he had traveled with his class to Kever Rochel in celebration of completing Chumash Bereishis. A class siyum had been scheduled for Friday, but in light of the tragedy, it is expected to be postponed. Moishy, who had eagerly anticipated the celebration, will tragically not be there to participate.

Umacha Hashem dimah me’al kol ponim. 

{Matzav.com}

Controversy Erupts After Report Says Female Soldiers Were Moved During Netanyahu Visit to Chashmonaim Brigade

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A visit by Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu to IDF forces in southern Lebanon has sparked controversy following claims that several female soldiers were instructed to leave a building during the visit in order to accommodate members of the Chashmonaim Brigade, the military’s chareidi combat unit.

The allegation was first reported by Kan 11, citing the mother of one of the artillery soldiers stationed at the location. According to her account, commanders asked four female soldiers to relocate to another part of the building while Netanyahu met with soldiers from the Chashmonaim Brigade.

Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yisroel Katz visited commanders and troops in southern Lebanon on Tuesday. As part of the visit, the prime minister posed for photographs with soldiers from the Chashmonaim Brigade, who had arrived from a separate military position in the area.

According to the report, soldiers had spent hours cleaning the building and reinforcing it ahead of the high-profile visit. The mother of one of the female artillery soldiers claimed that, shortly before Netanyahu’s arrival, the four women were instructed to leave the main area of the building.

“When Bibi was supposed to arrive to meet the Chashmonaim at the site that they had worked on, the girls from the artillery battery were told that the Chashmonaim had been promised they wouldn’t see any girls there, so they had to go to another house and stay downstairs,” she was quoted as saying.

She further alleged that the female soldiers remained there for approximately four hours.

“For four hours, only the girls from the battery sat downstairs and were not allowed to go upstairs so that the Chashmonaim wouldn’t accidentally encounter them. Of course, the staff’s response was that they were doing it out of respect for them,” she said.

Opposition politicians quickly seized on the report to criticize both Netanyahu and the government’s relationship with the chareidi community.

Democrats Party chairman Yair Golan wrote, “Let every Hebrew mother know that the prime minister will hide her daughter who serves in combat in order to be photographed with chareidi soldiers. This is contempt for the women who serve and risk their lives every day, every hour. Our female combat soldiers are an inseparable part of Israel’s security and of the State of Israel, and we should be proud of them.”

In response, the IDF said the incident stemmed from poor logistical planning rather than official policy.

“The gathering was not properly planned in light of the conditions at the brigade command house in enemy territory. The incident will be investigated,” the military said in a statement.

{Matzav.com}

MK Merav Ben Ari Apologizes After Falsely Accusing MK Moshe Abutbul of Draft Evasion

Matzav -

A public dispute between MK Merav Ben Ari of Yesh Atid and MK Moshe Abutbul of Shas came to an end Wednesday evening after Ben Ari formally apologized on the floor of the Knesset for incorrectly claiming that Abutbul had evaded military service.

The controversy began earlier in the day after Abutbul was interviewed on Kan Reshet Bet about the issue of chareidi military service. Shortly afterward, Ben Ari appeared on the same broadcast and, although asked about a different topic, criticized Abutbul personally.

“The man is a draft dodger. He didn’t serve in the army,” she said, adding, “And how does he even know what’s going on?”

Abutbul immediately challenged the remarks during the broadcast, insisting that he had, in fact, served in the Israel Defense Forces. He asked host Aryeh Golan to correct the record, and his military service number—3619778—was even disclosed during the program to refute Ben Ari’s accusation.

Later in the day, Abutbul condemned the remarks, saying, “Even when you have no answer, you’re not allowed to lie. This is slander worthy of a libel lawsuit.”

During Wednesday evening’s Knesset session, Ben Ari took the podium to issue a personal statement retracting her comments and apologizing publicly.

“When I’m wrong, I apologize. I also apologized personally to MK Abutbul, and he accepted my apology,” she said.

The apology brought the daylong confrontation to a close after it became clear that Ben Ari’s assertion that Abutbul had not served in the IDF was incorrect.

{Matzav.com}

It’s Time to Come Home

Matzav -

By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz

This week, we enter the Three Weeks, a period unlike any other on the Jewish calendar, a time of mourning for events that took place centuries ago. It is a time to remember what we have endured as a people, to miss what we no longer have, and to recognize that the absence we have grown accustomed to was never meant to be normal.

The Bais Hamikdosh was the place where Heaven and earth met. It was where the Shechinah rested openly among Klal Yisroel, where every korban expressed our yearning to draw closer to Hashem. The Bais Hamikdosh was where tefillos ascended with a clarity we can scarcely imagine. It was the beating heart of the Jewish people, the place from which holiness radiated to the entire world.

Its destruction marked the beginning of a long exile in which Hashem’s presence became hidden and our nation was scattered across the globe. We have built communities, yeshivos, and homes of Torah that are sources of great pride. Yet, every simcha remains incomplete, every home bears a zeicher l’churban, and the center of Jewish life remains in ruins.

Perhaps the greatest tragedy of golus is not merely that we have lived so long without the Bais Hamikdosh, but that we have become accustomed to living without it. We have learned how to navigate golus. We have learned how to flourish in foreign lands. We have become comfortable in a world that our ancestors never mistook for home.

The Three Weeks insist on awakening us from that complacency. They remind us that no matter how secure we feel, no matter how prosperous our communities become, no matter how much Torah is learned and how many beautiful shuls are built, something essential is still missing. We are a people waiting to come home.

Lately, we have received several reminders of this reality. We became comfortable in our golus in Western Europe, in the United States, and, dare we say, even in Eretz Yisroel. Each of these places has recently reminded us of the true nature of golus, leaving us shaken and concerned.

There was a time, not very long ago, when support for Israel was one of the few issues that united Democrats and Republicans. From President Harry Truman’s recognition of the Jewish state in 1948 through decades of bipartisan congressional support, standing with Israel was viewed as both a moral obligation and an American strategic interest. Republicans and Democrats disagreed on taxes, spending, foreign policy, and countless domestic issues, but support for Israel remained a bipartisan constant.

For decades, New York stood at the center of that consensus. It was home to some of America’s strongest pro-Israel Democrats. Men such as Senators Daniel Patrick Moynihan and Jacob Javits defended Israel unapologetically on the world stage. The city’s large Jewish population helped create a political culture in which support for Israel was considered both morally right and politically prudent.

Those days are changing. Last week’s Democratic primary elections in New York may ultimately be remembered as a turning point. A slate of socialist candidates defeated established Democrats while campaigning on democratic socialism, class warfare, and promises of dramatically expanding government.

More importantly, woven through nearly every successful campaign was a common thread of hostility toward Israel.

These candidates were not merely critical of Israel. They attacked their opponents for supporting Israel. Progressives have created a political environment in which, to survive Democratic primaries, candidates increasingly feel compelled to distance themselves from support for Israel.

That is an extraordinary political reversal.

Ultra-liberal Congressman Dan Goldman was condemned for being too close to Israel and for his relationship with AIPAC. His victorious challenger, Brad Lander, repeatedly attacked those ties, making opposition to AIPAC a defining issue of his campaign.

Lander accused Israel of committing genocide in Gaza, pledged to oppose American arms sales to Israel, and declared after his victory that he intends to become “one of the Jewish members of Congress most willing to stand up for Palestinian human rights,” while insisting that American taxpayers should no longer finance “Netanyahu’s wars.”

Elsewhere, Darializa Avila Chevalier defeated veteran Congressman Adriano Espaillat after campaigning on ending military aid to Israel. Her political résumé includes organizing Columbia University’s pro-Palestinian encampments and participating in anti-Israel activism dating back to her years as part of Students for Justice in Palestine.

Her victory celebration was punctuated by chants of “Free Palestine” as she proudly repeated her promise to block military assistance to Israel.

These were not isolated races.

They were victories by candidates backed and promoted by New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani, whose political rise has become emblematic of a movement that increasingly views opposition to Israel not as a liability but as a badge of ideological purity.

Only a few years ago, rhetoric of the type these people employ would have ended a mainstream political career. Today, it helps build one.

But something deeper is taking place.

When these people talk about Israel, they do not merely mean Israel. They mean us. They mean the Jews – the rich Jews, the greedy Jews, the Jews who throughout history have been made the scapegoats for society’s ills. Yet, they cloak their antisemitism in language that denies the Jewish people’s right, after centuries of persecution, exile, expulsions, pogroms, and the Holocaust, to live safely in their ancestral homeland.

We do not need to agree with every decision of the Israeli government – and we don’t – to recognize that relentlessly portraying the world’s only Jewish state as uniquely evil both feeds, and is fed by, antisemitism.

The line between anti-Zionism and antisemitism becomes increasingly blurred when Jewish students are harassed, Jewish businesses are targeted, and elected officials are ostracized simply because they support Israel’s existence.

Moreover, politicians, as well as podcasters and media talking heads, have discovered that attacking Israel energizes activists, excites donors, dominates headlines, and increasingly wins elections in urban districts.

As hostility toward Israel becomes a reliable path to clicks, ratings, and higher office, more politicians and media figures will adopt similar rhetoric. It is noteworthy that virtually none of the Democratic Party’s leaders or elected officials has condemned the statements and beliefs of these progressive candidates. You can count on the fingers of one hand those who have declared that such individuals do not belong in the Democratic Party, in Congress, in the Senate, or in any position of public responsibility.

As America celebrates its 250th anniversary as the bastion of liberty, this trend should concern not only Jews, but all freedom-loving people, both in the United States and around the world.

History has repeatedly shown that societies that normalize hostility toward Jews rarely stop there. Antisemitism has often served as an early warning sign of broader civic and moral decline.

The issue facing America is larger than foreign policy.

It is whether we remain capable of distinguishing between a democratic ally defending itself against terrorists and organizations that openly celebrate the murder of civilians.

It is whether ideological purity will replace moral clarity.

These elections, together with the recent primaries that have produced similar candidates in Maine, Michigan, New Jersey, and elsewhere around the country, should serve as a warning.

Ideas once confined to the political fringe have steadily entered the mainstream.

Language once universally condemned is now increasingly accepted and applauded.

Hostility toward Israel is no longer merely tolerated in parts of American politics. It is rewarded.

Chazal tell us, “Halacha hee b’yodua she’Eisov sonei l’Yaakov.” Throughout history, that hatred has worn many disguises. Sometimes it came draped in the robes of religion. Sometimes it marched beneath the banners of nationalism. Today, it often presents itself clothed in the language of human rights, anti-colonialism, and social justice.

The vocabulary changes. The animosity remains the same.

History teaches another lesson. Every empire, every ideology, and every movement that sought to marginalize or erase the Jewish people eventually passed into history.

Klal Yisroel endured.

We do not place our trust in political parties or election returns. We appreciate our friends, recognize dangers when they arise, and speak honestly about the challenges confronting our community. But ultimately, our confidence rests where it always has – in the Ribbono Shel Olam, Who has sustained His people through every generation.

During this period of the Three Weeks, we think of the churban of the Botei Mikdosh and of the many Jewish communities that existed for centuries, only to vanish almost overnight.

If you travel today to Vilna, you will find weathered gravestones whose inscriptions are slowly disappearing beneath layers of moss. You will see a vast, historic cemetery with a sports complex at its center, and you will read about plans to further develop the resting place of thousands of our ancestors. It is not enough that they did their best to destroy Jewish lives, torturing and tormenting them beyond imagination. They now feel compelled to disturb them even in death, denying them the most basic human dignity of resting in peace.

And in Vilna, and all across Europe, on streets where every Friday afternoon women once hurried home carrying fish, where fathers returned from the market and children ran to greet them, today there is only silence. Where there were once shtieblach, shuls, and botei medrash pulsating with life, filled with the sounds of Torah and tefillah that sustained the world, today there is emptiness and desolation, as many locals have done their best to ensure that those places are – and remain – Judenrein.

The Nazis, their collaborators, and all those who sought to erase Jewish existence succeeded in destroying bodies and buildings. They succeeded in emptying streets and silencing communities. But they did not succeed in silencing the Torah.

Auschwitz, Birkenau, and the forests of Ponary and Kelm, as well as Bialystok and Babi Yar, where the voices of Jews were cut short, still stand as haunting reminders of that destruction. But in cities and towns throughout the world, those voices are once again heard, loudly, proudly, and unmistakably.

Today, young people sit in botei medrash, struggling over the very same difficult line of Gemara that a child in Tashkent, Brody, or Warsaw struggled with a hundred years ago. Mothers light Shabbos candles, covering their eyes and swaying with emotion as they recite the same tefillah their grandmothers whispered in small wooden homes across Eastern Europe. Jews everywhere are opening seforim and continuing conversations that tyrants tried to bring to an end.

There is a profound thought from Chazal (Taanis 5b) that offers a powerful response to the tragedies of our history: “Rabi Yitzchok said in the name of Rabi Yochonon, Yaakov Avinu lo meis – Yaakov Avinu did not die.” The Gemara explains that just as Yaakov’s children are alive, he, too, is alive. The continuity of his descendants, their loyalty to Yiddishkeit, and their commitment to Torah and mitzvos are themselves a form of eternity.

Nowhere is that more evident than when we reflect on the Jewish communities of the Diaspora that have been lost since the churban.

Think of the men who sat in little shtieblach in Kishinev and Galicia, worrying whether their grandsons would know a Tosafos. Think of the mothers in Germany, Spain, and Portugal who recited Tehillim, praying that their children remain faithful Jews. Think of the millions of simple Yidden who owned little, endured much, and measured success not by wealth or honor, but by whether their children would continue the chain that stretched back to Har Sinai.

Their worlds were consumed by fire. Their homes were burned. Their botei medrash were emptied. Entire towns, cities, and even countries were emptied of Jews. And yet the chain was never broken.

The bochur wrestling with a difficult Rambam. The father walking to shul on a Shabbos morning with his little son. The family gathered around the table singing zemiros. The child in cheder reciting, “Torah tzivah lanu Moshe morasha kehillas Yaakov.” These are not merely echoes of the past. They are the answer to those who believed they could erase us.

Our president is fighting with his opponents over the construction of a giant arch at Arlington National Cemetery. Civilizations build their monuments out of stone and marble. Ours are built of children, Torah, and memory.

The great cities of Europe once contained magnificent shuls whose walls seemed to touch the heavens. Many are now museums, ruins, or empty shells.

The enormous botei medrash in Lakewood, the crowded shtieblach in Boro Park, and the yeshivos in Eretz Yisroel, filled with thousands of people learning Torah, are our memorials to the generations that came before us.

The signs of the churban are everywhere. You can walk through Yerushalayim and still see walls scorched by the Romans as they destroyed the Bais Hamikdosh. You can see the massive stones they hurled from the walls surrounding the Bais Hamikdosh. You can walk along the very paths trod by millions of olei regel. And, of course, you can daven at the only remnant we have of the Bais Hamikdosh, the Kosel, from which the Shechinah has never departed. It still stands, beckoning us to come home, to return to what we once were and what we can once again become.

We have lost so much. We are a wandering people, and now we enter three weeks of mourning, three weeks of aveilus, to reflect upon what we have lost and what we continue to lack.

The headlines change. Political parties rise and fall. Empires come and go, just as they always have. But the Jewish story has never truly been about them. It has always been about a people carrying the memory of their true home, refusing to mistake golus for geulah.

As the Three Weeks begin once again, we remember what was destroyed and what still must be rebuilt. We remember that we are a people waiting to come home, and that we can never be comfortable until we do.

I remember as a young child, we would be playing outside by a neighbor and my mother would call for us and say, “It’s time to come home. It’s time to have supper and do homework.”

The Three Weeks is like that call, reminding us that we have work to do and we have to come home.

Every day, we await the arrival of Moshiach. Every day, we daven for him and hope that this will be our final day in golus. May these be the last Three Weeks we observe in mourning, and may we soon merit to witness the fulfillment of the tefillah we recite three times each day: “Vesechezenah eineinu beshuvcha l’Tzion berachamim.” Amein.

{Matzav.com}

Knesset Legal Adviser Warns New Draft Bill Would Erase Months of Work

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The Knesset’s chief legal adviser warned Wednesday that the latest version of legislation addressing the arrest of bnei yeshivah departs so dramatically from the original draft law that advancing it could effectively nullify months of committee work and force the next Knesset to restart deliberations on draft legislation from scratch.

The warning came during a meeting of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, which continued its deliberations on a bill freezing the arrest of Torah students. The proposal was carved out of the broader draft law, but the discussion quickly shifted from the bill itself to questions about whether the legislative process remains legally sound.

Knesset Legal Adviser Sagit Afik presented a sharply critical legal opinion, arguing that the proposal now before lawmakers bears little resemblance to the version developed through months of committee deliberations.

“The text that was formulated after 86 committee meetings has effectively been replaced by an entirely different arrangement,” Afik said. She added that the new proposal “is almost entirely inconsistent with the objectives of the original bill.”

Afik acknowledged that circumstances may have changed during the lengthy legislative process and that new realities could require a different legal framework. However, she argued that such changes should be introduced through a separate piece of legislation rather than by fundamentally rewriting an existing bill.

“They are placing a new arrangement onto the skeleton of the previous draft,” she said, noting that the compressed timetable before the expected dissolution of the current Knesset appears to be driving the change.

According to Afik, the problem extends beyond procedural concerns. She said the integrity of the legislative process depends on maintaining a connection between the bill originally debated and the legislation ultimately approved. Replacing the substance of the proposal with an entirely different framework, she argued, undermines that process.

She also warned that the Knesset cannot legislate only part of the broader issue while leaving central elements—such as enforcement and sanctions—unresolved.

Addressing the proposed oversight and enforcement mechanisms, Afik noted that lawmakers have long argued that no effective enforcement system currently exists. She questioned whether such a framework could realistically be designed within just three months under a temporary emergency measure, calling it “a difficult challenge.”

Afik further argued that the committee must be presented with a full factual record demonstrating both the necessity and urgency of the new proposal before proceeding. She said lawmakers must ensure that the legislation is supported by sufficient evidence rather than being driven solely by political deadlines.

Concluding her remarks, Afik cautioned that if the committee advances only the narrower proposal now before it, the practical result would be to erase all of the committee’s previous work on the broader draft legislation. She said the earlier versions could no longer benefit from legislative continuity, meaning the next Knesset would have to begin consideration of the draft law all over again.

{Matzav.com}

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