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Iranian Parliament Speaker: Iran and Hezbollah Are ‘One Soul’

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Iranian Parliament Speaker Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf reiterated Wednesday that any ceasefire arrangement involving Iran must also address Lebanon, even as the United States and Israel have made clear that the Lebanese front is not part of their ceasefire framework with Tehran.

In a post on social media, Ghalibaf stressed that a lasting halt to hostilities cannot be separated from developments in Lebanon. “The completion and consolidation of a comprehensive ceasefire in Lebanon will be the result of the resistance and steadfast struggle of the great Hezbollah and the unity of the Axis of Resistance,” he wrote.

He continued, “The United States must comply with the agreement. Resistance and Iran are one soul, both in war and in ceasefire. America should withdraw from ‘Israel First’ mistake.”

Last Friday, upon arriving in Islamabad for discussions aimed at easing tensions with Washington, Ghalibaf said talks would move forward only if the U.S. accepted Tehran’s “preconditions.”

Those demands included a ceasefire in Lebanon as well as the release of Iranian assets that have been frozen abroad. In another social media statement, Ghalibaf claimed that both issues had already been “mutually agreed upon between the parties” but had “yet to be implemented”.

Despite these assertions, U.S. and Israeli officials have emphasized that the current ceasefire arrangements with Iran do not extend to Lebanon, directly contradicting Tehran’s position.

{Matzav.com}

60 SECOND WIPEOUT: Israeli Strike on Hezbollah More Devastating Than 2024 Pager Attack, IDF Says

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A large-scale Israeli air operation on April 8 dealt what Israeli officials described as one of the most severe blows to Hezbollah’s leadership structure during the current war, targeting key command and intelligence hubs across Lebanon.

In a coordinated assault, approximately 50 Israeli aircraft struck more than 100 Hezbollah-linked sites almost simultaneously, with explosions reported in Beirut, the Beqaa Valley, and southern Lebanon.

According to the Israel Defense Forces, the targets were not weapons stockpiles or launch sites, but rather central nodes of Hezbollah’s operational infrastructure, including command centers, intelligence headquarters, and planning offices used by senior operatives.

The strike signaled a shift in the conflict between Israel and Hezbollah, which began on March 2 after Hezbollah entered the war in support of Iran, following joint U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran and the killing of Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.

Since then, Hezbollah has launched rockets, drones, and anti-tank missiles toward northern Israel, while Israeli forces have escalated their response with expanded airstrikes and a ground campaign in southern Lebanon.

“Within only a minute, the IDF eliminated 250 Hezbollah terrorists in three areas simultaneously,” the Israeli military said in a statement, adding the assessment is still ongoing.

Lt. Col. Nadav Shoshani, an IDF spokesman, said the operation was the culmination of extensive intelligence gathering over several weeks, during which Israeli agencies tracked Hezbollah operatives moving between apartments, offices, and safe houses throughout Lebanon.

“The timing had to do with the preparations,” Shoshani said. “There was weeks of amazing intelligence.”

Responding to questions about Israel’s intelligence reach, Shoshani pointed to the scale and precision of the strike.

“The fact that we were able to find 250 terrorists hiding in different locations in Lebanon, many of them in locations for recent weeks, eliminating them in real time, I think the capabilities speak for themselves,” he said.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun condemned the operation, while international officials also reacted sharply.

“The scale of the killing and destruction in Lebanon today is nothing short of horrific,” said United Nations Human Rights Chief Volker Türk. “Such carnage, within hours of agreeing to a ceasefire with Iran, defies belief.”

Hezbollah vowed to continue its response, stating, “This response will continue until the Israeli-American aggression against our country and our people ceases.”

The strike has drawn comparisons to the so-called “beeper” operation in September 2024, when communication devices used by Hezbollah operatives detonated across Lebanon and Syria in a coordinated attack widely attributed to Israel.

That earlier operation killed more than 40 people and wounded approximately 4,000, according to Lebanese authorities, while Hezbollah later acknowledged that roughly 1,500 of its fighters were taken out of action, severely disrupting its communications network.

“The beeper had more … effective injuries. That was the purpose of it,” Shoshani said. “But both targeted hundreds of terrorists and within 60 seconds.”

He added that, like the earlier operation, the April 8 strike aimed not only to eliminate personnel but also to disrupt Hezbollah’s internal structure.

“It was important to the aspect of creating disarray, of breaking their chain of command, breaking their command and patrol capabilities and kind of tilting the organization out of balance,” he said.

A former Israeli intelligence official said the latest strike may not match the scale of the beeper operation but appeared to have hit a broad swath of Hezbollah’s mid-level leadership.

According to the former official, Hezbollah remains stunned by the impact, even if that has not yet translated into a reduction in its attacks.

He cautioned, however, that the effectiveness of the strike should not be judged solely by casualty figures, but by whether it weakens Hezbollah’s ability to function.

The IDF said many of those killed were members of Hezbollah’s elite Radwan Force, along with operatives from its intelligence, missile, and aerial Unit 127 divisions.

Israeli officials also said that many of the targeted sites were located within civilian areas.

“Most of the infrastructure that was struck was located within the heart of the civilian population,” the IDF said.

Shoshani said Israel issued evacuation warnings ahead of the strikes, but claimed Hezbollah shifted its operatives into other civilian areas.

“When we gave the warnings for areas, civilians moved out, then Hezbollah saw that they moved out and started hiding behind civilians in new locations,” he said.

Despite the operation, Israeli officials stress that Hezbollah continues to pose a significant threat. Shoshani noted that the group, which before the war was believed to possess between 150,000 and 200,000 rockets and missiles, retains the ability to strike Israeli territory.

“They still are a real threat for our civilians,” he said.

The strike came as Israel and Lebanon opened their first direct negotiations in more than 30 years at the U.S. State Department in Washington.

Lebanese President Joseph Aoun has indicated openness to discussions about normalization and the eventual disarmament of Hezbollah, while Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu has made clear that Israel will not agree to a ceasefire until Hezbollah is dismantled and pushed away from the border.

Within hours of those diplomatic efforts, Israeli airstrikes resumed in Lebanon, and Hezbollah responded by launching rockets toward northern Israel.

{Matzav.com}

Rabbi Spiegel Cries Out at Levayah: “Avi, Where Are You? Why Should I Lose Both of You in One Day?”

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In a heartbreaking levayah filled with intense crying and pain, thousands gathered in Ramat Shlomo to escort habochur Yissachar Dov Spiegel z”l, a talmid of Yeshivas Tifrach and Keter Torah, who was niftar after drowning in Netanya on Erev Shabbos. The grief was compounded by the fact that his brother Avi is still missing.

The levayah opened with divrei hisorerus from his father, Rav Shlomo Spiegel, head of the Spiegel chaburah in Beis Yisrael, who spoke through bitter tears. “Three partners are in a person — the father, the mother, and Hakadosh Boruch Hu. So if Hakadosh Boruch Hu gave us a gift, how does He take it back without asking us? The answer is: it is not a gift; it was given to you as a deposit. The Owner of the deposit takes back the deposit. Hakadosh Boruch Hu gave us such a good deposit. Not that I know how to guard the deposit, but even our minimal guarding was enough. He did not need encouragement — he was always drawn to daven, to learn, and to be good. We are returning the deposit complete and pure.”

He continued by quoting Rav Schneur Kotler zt”l: “It is written, ‘He who toils on Erev Shabbos will eat on Shabbos.’ There is an Erev Shabbos of summer and one of winter; sometimes it is short and sometimes it is long. My son merited a short Erev Shabbos in which he toiled, but now he has come to a world that is entirely good, a world that is entirely Shabbos, pure and clean.”

The father then applied the posuk: “Is Ephraim a dear son to Me, a delightful child… Is Yissachar Dov a dear son to Me, a delightful child, for whenever I speak of him, I remember him still,” adding in the name of Rav Meir Shapiro that the word “still” reflects not only what was, but the pain over what could have been. “We always asked him to come home more often for Shabbos; he would tell us, ‘I love to learn — in yeshiva I can learn more.’”

He concluded with a piercing cry: “Why should I lose both of you in one day.” Then he cried out in anguish, “Where is Avi? Where is he? Why two? Now that you are going up to Heaven, ask that we find Avi — be a melitz yosher so that I can continue to hold the yeshiva.”

His rebbi, the rosh yeshiva Rav Aviezer Piltz of Tifrach, was maspid next, quoting the piyut of Yom Kippur: “The angels above cried out bitterly: is this Torah and this its reward?” He added, “You must understand that these were not destructive angels in the waves of the sea, but angels of mercy. The angels bring Yissachar Dov before Hakadosh Boruch Hu and say: see what kind of young man was here in this world — one whose entire focus was Torah, who devoted nights like days to learning.” He also spoke with pain about the gezeiros on the olam haTorah, noting that they do not understand the value of a ben yeshiva.

Rav Avraham Moshe Ziskind, rosh yeshiva of Keter Torah, followed, describing how he would prepare the shiurim with him, and that in every sugya he had a unique havana, adding that the entire yeshiva benefits from his zechuyos.

Rav Yitzchak Ezrchi, rosh yeshiva of Mir, spoke next.

The mashgiach, Rav Don Segal, said with emotion: “We have all been struck — not only the parents. This is a blow to all of us. We must strengthen ourselves in matters between man and his fellow and reinforce unity among friends.”

After the father recited kaddish, breaking down in tears,  the levayah continued its way to Har HaMenuchos.

{Matzav.com}

Reservists Party Launches Controversial Campaign Targeting Chareidi Lawmakers

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Israel’s Reservists Party, led by Yoaz Hendel, has sparked backlash after unveiling a campaign targeting chareidi politicians, with messaging that calls for restricting voting rights for those who do not serve in the military or national service.

The campaign, rolled out Wednesday across billboards, social media, and online ads, features the slogan: “They will not decide — the serving public will decide,” alongside the message, “Anyone who does not serve will not be able to vote or be elected to the Knesset.”

Hendel framed the campaign as part of a broader political push ahead of upcoming elections, stating: “The next elections will decide whether a government will be formed here that relies on the chareidi parties, the Arab parties — or a Zionist government that relies on reservists.”

The campaign’s design closely mirrors a 2019 Likud election campaign that used the phrase “They will not decide — you will decide,” which at the time targeted journalists. In this new version, however, the imagery has been replaced with photos of chareidi and Arab Knesset members, including Yitzchak Goldknopf, Ahmad Tibi, Moshe Gafni, and Ayman Odeh, under the revised slogan emphasizing the “serving public.”

As part of the initiative, the party is again promoting its draft proposal, which would bar individuals who do not perform military or national service from voting or running for office.

Hendel elaborated on his position, saying: “We are fed up with carrying the chareidi and Arab public on our backs. We are fed up with the concept that they are the ones who control coalitions. We are here to break that, because governments that rely on non-Zionist elements are extorted into making non-Zionist decisions. In the next elections, the serving public will change the picture. The elections will decide whether a government will be formed here that relies on the chareidi parties, the Arab parties — or a Zionist government that relies on reservists.”

{Matzav.com}

Ben Gurion Airport Worker Fired After Photographing U.S. Military Aircraft

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A temporary employee at Ben Gurion Airport was dismissed after taking unauthorized photos of U.S. military aircraft and sharing them, an incident that reportedly raised serious security concerns with both American officials and the IDF.

According to reports, the worker photographed U.S. military planes parked at the airport in violation of protocol and distributed the images via a WhatsApp group, an act that nearly led to a significant incident involving U.S. authorities and Israeli security officials.

In a separate but related development, a soldier who had access to the airfield was also identified as having taken photos of the aircraft and is suspected of circulating them online.

The soldier is currently undergoing disciplinary proceedings within the IDF.

The IDF alerted the Airports Authority to the breach after identifying that an employee was photographing American aircraft against regulations. The report was subsequently confirmed by the airport’s security division.

Responding to the report, the Airports Authority said, “The information is not accurate. This involves a temporary employee who was employed for a period of two months and was dismissed due to a disciplinary violation, in accordance with procedures.”

{Matzav.com}

Chabad Shliach: Arrest of Israelis in Philippines ‘Pure Harassment,’ Says Bridge Jumping Is Common Practice

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A routine outing by Israeli travelers on the island of Siargao in the Philippines turned into a legal ordeal after two young men were arrested for jumping off a bridge, with a local Chabad emissary claiming the incident was unwarranted and reflective of broader tensions.

In an interview with Ami Maimon on the “Chidudon” program on Kol Berama radio, Rabbi Mendel Spindler, director of the Chabad House on the island, detailed the circumstances surrounding the arrests, which took place this past Sunday.

According to Rabbi Spindler, the two Israelis were detained after jumping from a bridge at a popular tourist site. He stressed that, contrary to initial reports, there were no signs at the location prohibiting such activity, and that both tourists and locals regularly engage in similar jumps.

“This is pure harassment of two innocent Israelis,” Rabbi Spindler said in the interview. “The local police decided to enforce the law more strictly דווקא now, apparently due to the large number of Israeli tourists and the rise in antisemitism around the world following the war. They took two scapegoats to make an example.”

The situation was further complicated by the timing of the arrest, which occurred on Sunday, a day when government and judicial offices in the Philippines are closed. Rabbi Spindler, who is well known at the local police station, said he rushed to the scene upon hearing of the incident and attempted to secure their release, but was unsuccessful.

“They told me there was nothing to discuss and refused to release them until a lawyer arrived and filed a formal protocol,” he recounted to Ami Maimon. With all offices closed, the process dragged on for several difficult days for the detainees.

During the interview, Rabbi Spindler noted that the Chabad House in Siargao, which has been operating for about two and a half years, hosted approximately 1,100 participants at its most recent Pesach Seder—an immense logistical undertaking in such a remote location.

At the same time, he reported an increase in antisemitic responses on the Chabad House’s social media platforms, including hostile comments and anti-Israel rhetoric.

To counter this atmosphere, he said the Chabad House has been working to serve as a positive force in the community through outreach efforts such as food distribution and beach cleanups, aiming to improve the image of Israelis on the island.

{Matzav.com}

Rav Asher Arieli Delivers Rare Shiur at Belz During Bein Hazmanim

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Rav Asher Arieli, senior maggid shiur at Mir Yerushalayim and widely regarded as one of the most prominent maggidei shiur in the world, delivered an unusual shiur at a Belzer bein hazmanim yeshiva, expressing admiration for the dedication of the bochurim and declaring, “This is not bein hazmanim. This is a yeshiva.”

The shiur, given at Yeshivas Ve’har’einu B’vinyano of Belz, focused on the sugya of “takfo kohen” in Maseches Bava Metzia and took place during bein hazmanim.

Rav Arieli, who generally does not travel to deliver shiurim outside his own yeshiva, agreed to come after hearing that the bochurim—many from abroad—maintain a full yeshiva framework during bein hazmanim, learning throughout the day and davening together as they would during the regular zman.

Following the shiur, Rav Arieli walked through the large beis medrash hall. Although he had davened there on previous occasions, he had never had the opportunity to tour the facility.

Speaking afterward, he expressed amazement at what he witnessed, noting the seriousness of the chassidishe bochurim who remained in the yeshiva just days before Pesach. He said it was remarkable that a shiur could be delivered on the complex sugya of takfo kohen and that the bochurim would sit immersed in Torah, debating and analyzing as though it were the middle of the zman.

“We all need to learn from this for all bein hazmanim yeshivos. Usually, in a bein hazmanim yeshiva, you can barely give a shiur even on the halachos of chametz and matzah. This current yeshiva is a special yeshiva, where bochurim are shteiging two days before Pesach. They are disconnected from the entire world and from all the preparations for Pesach. Even among us Litvishe, we should emulate this and do the same.”

{Matzav.com}

White House: ‘Not True We Requested Ceasefire Extension’

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The White House on Wednesday pushed back on reports claiming the Trump administration had asked to extend the current ceasefire with Iran, calling the assertions inaccurate while emphasizing continued engagement in negotiations.

“I saw some bad reporting this morning that we had formally requested an extension of the ceasefire. That is not true,” White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters today.

Leavitt said the United States is still actively involved in discussions with Iran and expressed optimism about the direction of the talks, noting that the administration “remains very much engaged” and “feels good about the prospects of a deal.”

Earlier in the day, President Donald Trump announced a separate development involving China, saying Beijing has agreed not to supply weapons to Iran.

In a post on Truth Social, he wrote, “China is very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz. I am doing it for them, also – And the World. This situation will never happen again.”

He added, “They have agreed not to send weapons to Iran. President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are working together smartly, and very well! Doesn’t that beat fighting??? BUT REMEMBER, we are very good at fighting, if we have to – far better than anyone else!!!”

{Matzav.com}

Russia: Iran Has ‘Inalienable Right’ to Enrich Uranium

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Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said Moscow will support any outcome in nuclear negotiations with Iran that affirms Tehran’s right to enrich uranium for civilian use, signaling continued backing for Iran’s position amid ongoing diplomatic efforts.

Speaking to reporters during a visit to Beijing, Lavrov said Russia would stand behind Iran regardless of whether it agrees to suspend enrichment or continues to assert its right to do so, according to a report cited Wednesday.

“[Russia will accept] any approach based on this principle, the principle of the universality of the right to enrichment,” he said, while emphasizing that Russia and China “firmly support” the talks to end the war.

He added that such an approach would enable the parties involved to “advance realistic and fair goals, fully respecting the legitimate rights of each party, in accordance with international law.”

Iran is a signatory to the 1970 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, which permits member states to pursue peaceful nuclear energy programs under international safeguards, though the agreement does not explicitly address uranium enrichment.

President Donald Trump, however, took a harder stance earlier this month, writing in an April 8 post on Truth Social that there “will be no enrichment of Uranium” and adding that “the United States will, working with Iran, dig up and remove all of the deeply buried (B-2 Bombers) Nuclear ‘Dust.'”

Lavrov also pointed to the International Atomic Energy Agency’s findings, saying, “The International Atomic Energy Agency has never recorded that uranium enrichment in Iran had military purposes,” according to remarks cited by Iranian state media.

“The right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes is an inherent and inalienable right for Iran,” the minister said.

He went on to defend Iran’s conduct in the region, arguing that its actions are reactive rather than aggressive. “Persian Gulf countries are well aware that Iran would not take aggressive actions in the region without American and Israeli attacks,” he said, while calling on Washington to halt its military campaign.

“I hope that America will be realistic and will not continue its aggression in West Asia, a situation from which even that country’s allies are suffering,” Lavrov added.

Report: Iran Used Chinese Spy Satellite to Track and Target U.S. Bases in Middle East

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Iran has reportedly deployed a Chinese-built surveillance satellite to monitor and assist in targeting U.S. military positions across the Middle East, raising fresh concerns about Beijing’s indirect role in strengthening Tehran’s military capabilities.

According to a Financial Times report published Wednesday, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps gained control of a satellite known as TEE-01B toward the end of 2024. The satellite was originally launched by China and later transferred into Iranian hands, providing Tehran with significantly enhanced reconnaissance capabilities.

Documents reviewed by the Financial Times indicate that Iranian commanders used the satellite to observe key U.S. installations, collecting detailed imagery before and after missile and drone strikes to evaluate their impact.

Among the sites reportedly monitored were Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, American facilities in Jordan and Bahrain, as well as additional strategic locations in Iraq and Kuwait.

Experts say the satellite represents a substantial upgrade in Iran’s intelligence operations. With imagery sharp enough to distinguish aircraft and other military assets, it enabled Iranian forces to better plan strikes and assess results.

“This satellite is clearly being used for military purposes,” one expert told the Financial Times, adding that it allows Iran to identify targets ahead of time and refine its strike operations.

The report is expected to further strain relations, particularly in light of growing indications of closer cooperation between China and Iran.

Although Chinese officials have consistently denied supplying weapons or direct military aid, other intelligence assessments cited in separate reports suggest Beijing may be considering additional support, including air defense systems.

Chinese authorities have dismissed such allegations as “groundless,” maintaining that the country does not provide arms to parties involved in the conflict.

Critics, however, argue that China’s commercial space industry often operates in close coordination with the Chinese Communist Party and military institutions.

The findings come as part of broader concerns over China’s global strategy. Analysts warn that backing U.S. adversaries may be part of a wider effort to challenge American influence while preserving a degree of deniability.

At the same time, President Donald Trump has taken a firm stance, cautioning China against assisting Iran and warning of significant tariffs if cooperation continues.

Trump has said he personally urged Chinese President Xi Jinping not to supply weapons to Tehran, with Xi reportedly denying any involvement.

The developments are unfolding amid ongoing tensions in the Middle East, where a fragile ceasefire remains in place and U.S. forces continue efforts to counter Iranian actions.

The use of advanced foreign technology by Iran highlights the changing nature of modern conflict and underscores the risks posed by growing alignment among U.S. adversaries.

For American officials, the involvement of a Chinese-linked satellite in Iranian military activity represents a troubling escalation that could alter the region’s strategic balance.

CRINGE: Joe Biden Says Black Man ‘Looks Like’ Obama In Incredibly Awkward Moment During Speech: ‘Barack, What Are You Doing?’

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Joe Biden drew attention during a portrait unveiling ceremony at Syracuse University School of Law when he singled out a man in the audience he said reminded him of President Barack Obama, leading to an awkward but widely discussed moment.

While speaking at the event held at his alma mater, Biden noticed Jeffrey Scruggs, chairman of the school’s Board of Trustees, and joked about the resemblance. “I always want to turn around to one guy and say … ‘Barack, what are you doing?’” Biden said.

The remark referred to Scruggs, who was seated in the audience. Biden then called him forward to the stage, repeatedly urging him to come up despite initial hesitation.

“Come here, come here, come here, come here … come here,” Biden said, motioning him forward.

After Scruggs eventually joined him at the podium, Biden continued the comparison, joking about their positions on stage. “I feel like he should be standing on the right and I should be standing on the left,” he said, as the audience laughed.

Biden then turned to those in attendance and asked, “Doesn’t he look like Barack?” Scruggs responded with a shake of his head, appearing to disagree with the comparison.

Wrapping up the exchange, Biden added, “As they say, you’ve done good, fella,” prompting Scruggs to reply, “Well, you know, I try.”

According to reports, Scruggs had earlier mentioned backstage that his daughter wanted him to ask Biden whether he resembled Obama. The moment on stage was intended, at least in part, to relay that message.

The exchange sparked debate online, with some social media users agreeing with Biden’s observation while others criticized the remark.

“He does look like Barack though,” one X user argued. “The hair, the face shape, the suit.”

“Low key he does look like him!” another user chimed in.

“That dude does genuinely look like Obama,” read another X comment.

{Matzav.com}

Ships ‘Go Dark’ in Hormuz to Evade Detection

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Maritime monitoring firms say vessels operating near the Strait of Hormuz are increasingly using deceptive tracking methods following a U.S.-led blockade targeting ships connected to Iranian ports, raising concerns about enforcement and the continued movement of energy supplies through the strategic waterway, according to a report by The New York Times.

Ami Daniel, CEO of maritime intelligence company Windward, said that over the past day, ships in the region have begun altering their behavior, with more vessels either disabling their tracking systems or transmitting misleading identification data after initially continuing operations normally following U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran in late February.

“Now, we are starting to see vessels going dark or using ‘zombie’ or random identification,” Daniel said, referring to a growing pattern in which ships interfere with their automatic identification systems, or AIS, which are required under international maritime regulations.

The AIS network provides real-time data on a vessel’s identity, position, and route through a unique nine-digit number, effectively acting as a digital identifier for ships at sea.

Experts say operators are now exploiting weaknesses in the system by turning off their transmitters, falsifying voyage details, or adopting the identities of other vessels — a tactic known as “spoofing.”

According to analysts, these maneuvers resemble those used by Russia’s so-called “shadow fleet” to bypass sanctions after its invasion of Ukraine, when ships altered identifying information or operated under unclear or stateless registrations to continue exporting oil.

“What the Russians have been doing is altering the numbers,” said John C.K. Daly, adding that similar methods are now being observed among vessels tied to Iran.

A Windward report published Tuesday found that some ships associated with Iran have already stopped transmitting tracking data, while others under sanctions or using false flags continue to transit the region, suggesting that operators are testing how far they can push enforcement boundaries.

“The continued movement of similar vessel profiles indicates that operators are testing the practical limits of enforcement in real time,” the report said.

Analysts caution that the growing use of so-called “ghost” vessels is creating what Erik Bethel described as a “contested information environment,” where incomplete or manipulated data makes it harder to track ships and enforce restrictions.

“A blockade is only as strong as the intelligence behind the interdictions,” Bethel said.

The situation is further complicated by the nature of international shipping, where vessels are often registered, owned, and managed across different countries, making it difficult to determine responsibility even under normal circumstances.

Despite these evasive tactics, U.S. officials maintain that enforcement remains effective. More than a dozen U.S. Navy ships are currently deployed in international waters in the Gulf of Oman, and U.S. Central Command reported Tuesday that six commercial vessels had already complied with directives to turn back toward Iranian ports.

Daniel noted that geography may ultimately limit the success of such evasion efforts, pointing out that the narrow passage of the strait makes it difficult for ships to avoid detection entirely.

“My expectation is that the U.S. Navy can sit out in the Gulf of Oman,” he said. “I don’t think there’s a way to breach the blockade.”

{Matzav.com}

Israel Appoints First Ambassador to Somaliland

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Israel has approved two new diplomatic postings, including the country’s first-ever ambassador to Somaliland, following a decision by the Foreign Ministry’s appointments committee.

The panel, headed by Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar, signed off Wednesday on the nominations of Yahel Vilan and Michael Lotem for key overseas roles.

Vilan has been selected to serve as Israel’s ambassador to Singapore and East Timor. He brings prior experience from his previous postings as ambassador to Kenya and Serbia.

Lotem, who currently serves as a non-resident economic ambassador to Africa, has been chosen as Israel’s inaugural ambassador to Somaliland. His past roles include diplomatic assignments in Kenya, Azerbaijan, and Kazakhstan. At the outset, he will carry out the position as a non-resident ambassador.

Israel formally recognized Somaliland in December 2025, becoming the first—and so far only—nation to grant official recognition to the self-declared republic, which Somalia continues to regard as part of its sovereign territory.

Shortly after that move, Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar traveled to Somaliland for an official visit.

In January, President Isaac Herzog met with Somaliland President Abdirahman Mohamed Abdullahi on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum in Davos.

Following that meeting, Herzog wrote on social media, “I welcome the establishment of diplomatic relations between our two nations and look forward to deepening our bilateral cooperation for the benefit of both our peoples.”

Abdullahi echoed the sentiment in his own post, writing, “Our discussions focused on strengthening and advancing bilateral relations between the Republic of Somaliland and the State of Israel.”

{Matzav.com}

Trump Says China Will Halt Weapons Transfers to Iran

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President Donald Trump said that China has committed to refraining from supplying weapons to Iran, even as recent reports have suggested Beijing may be preparing to send military equipment to Tehran.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump wrote, “China is very happy that I am permanently opening the Strait of Hormuz. I am doing it for them, also – And the World. This situation will never happen again.”

He continued, “They have agreed not to send weapons to Iran. President Xi will give me a big, fat, hug when I get there in a few weeks. We are working together smartly, and very well! Doesn’t that beat fighting??? BUT REMEMBER, we are very good at fighting, if we have to – far better than anyone else!!!”

The statement comes days after CNN reported that China is expected to deliver weapons shipments to Iran in the near future.

According to that report, the shipments are believed to include advanced air defense systems, particularly shoulder-fired missiles, which could enhance Iran’s ability to defend against potential airstrikes by Israeli and American forces should tensions escalate again. Sources also indicated that China might attempt to conceal the final destination of the shipments by routing them through an intermediary country. Beijing has recently taken part in diplomatic talks between the United States and Iran in Pakistan and is expected to remain involved in mediation efforts.

China has rejected those claims. A spokesperson for the Chinese embassy in Washington said that Beijing has not provided weapons to either party in the conflict, dismissing the report as inaccurate and urging the United States to avoid what it described as baseless accusations while instead focusing on de-escalation.

Separate reporting has pointed to other forms of cooperation between China and Iran. Earlier this month, The Telegraph reported that four Chinese vessels have docked in Iran since the war began, carrying precursor materials used in the production of solid fuel for missile engines.

The report stated that the ships departed from Gaolan Port in Zhuhai, a major center for liquid chemical storage in China.

Experts cited in the report assessed that the shipments may have included sufficient quantities of sodium perchlorate to support the production of hundreds of ballistic missiles. However, it remains uncertain whether Iran currently retains the ability to manufacture such weapons following recent strikes by the United States and Israel on its facilities.

In a related development, Reuters reported in February that Iran was nearing completion of a deal with China to acquire CM-302 anti-ship cruise missiles. These supersonic weapons, designed to travel at high speed and low altitude to avoid detection, have an estimated range of about 290 kilometers and could significantly enhance Iran’s naval strike capabilities.

The negotiations, which have been underway for at least two years, reportedly intensified following the 12-day conflict between Israel and Iran in June 2025. According to sources, Iranian officials, including Deputy Defense Minister Massoud Oraei, have traveled to China as part of efforts to move the talks forward.

{Matzav.com}

Sephardic Rabbonim Clarify: No Haircuts or Shaving Permitted This Friday Despite Rosh Chodesh Iyar

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A public notice issued by Sephardic rabbonim Rav Leeor Dahan and Rav Meir Gavriel Elbaz states that Sephardic Jews should not take haircuts or shave this coming Friday, even though it coincides with Rosh Chodesh Iyar and Shabbos.

The clarification follows widespread discussion regarding a commonly cited leniency. According to many poskim, including the Peri Chadash, Bach, Magen Avraham, and the Ba’al HaTanya, when Rosh Chodesh Iyar falls on Shabbos—as it does this year—it is permissible to take a haircut and shave on Friday in honor of the combined kedushah of Shabbos and Rosh Chodesh. This approach is also referenced in the Mishnah Berurah (493:5) and is accepted practice among many Ashkenazim, even for those observing the restrictions of the first days of Sefirah.

However, in a letter, Rav Dahan and Rav Elbaz emphasized that this leniency does not extend to Sephardic communities. Citing the clear ruling of the Mechaber in the Shulchan Aruch (Orach Chaim 493:3), as well as the position of the Yalkut Yosef (Sefiras HaOmer, p. 463), they stressed that Sephardic custom remains unchanged and the heter does not apply.

In light of numerous inquiries received in recent days, the rabbonim felt it necessary to issue a firm and public clarification to prevent misunderstanding. Despite the unique calendar alignment and the existence of lenient opinions in other traditions, Sephardic Jews are instructed to maintain the standard minhag and refrain from shaving or taking haircuts this Friday.

{Matzav.com}

Matzav Inbox: The Great Assault on Our Summer Camps

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Dear Editor@Matzav.com,

The Pesach Yom Tov is now behind us, and summer plans are beginning to occupy our minds in earnest.

Many parents have already been put on notice that their child’s yeshiva elementary school year will, for the first time in history, end approximately two weeks earlier than usual and begin the coming year two weeks early as well. We are told that this is to rectify a “problem” of the Elul zman beginning in the middle of August.

Since the yeshivos begin Rosh Chodesh Elul, and the mesivta bochurim will have to head back to yeshiva in mid-August, it was deemed necessary for all talmidim to start and end the summer season two weeks in advance.

The question that many are asking is: How did this suddenly become a problem that now requires a solution? Why wasn’t this an issue for the frum New York community for the past three-quarters of a century or more? For years, all the camps followed the schedule of a July–August summer season, and no one seemed to have any difficulty. What changed over the last decade and a half that created an “Elul crisis” that has now upset our school year and summer calendar?

Before we discuss the factors that contributed to this “Elul problem,” and the havoc it is wreaking upon our communities, a brief overview of the operational history of our yeshivos and boys’ camps is in order.

The leading mesivtos here in New York, where the majority of heimishe bochurim once attended, such as Torah Vodaas, Mir, Chaim Berlin, Chasan Sofer, Be’er Shmuel, MTJ, Kaminetz, and others, were founded around a century ago by selfless rabonim and baalei batim with the purpose of providing a sound chinuch for the children of the Jewish community that would produce erliche Yidden shomrei Torah u’mitzvos. I believe we can all agree that they largely succeeded in their goal.

At the same time, summer camps for children and mesivta bochurim were being set up as well. They too were founded and operated by clear-thinking askonim, individuals who understood the importance of keeping yeshiva kids in camps during the summer, and as far away as possible from the sweltering pritzusdika city streets.

The dedicated founders of those great yeshivos and camps were not pretending to emulate Brisk, Slabodka, Kletsk, Mir, or Pressburg. They were not fooling themselves or others. They, who originated precisely from the old country, understood the environment they were currently living in and worked accordingly, and thus the yeshivos and camps scheduled their calendar to coincide with the end of the secular school year, and to accommodate the Regents exam schedule and bungalow colony seasons. The official summer season began around July 4th and ended around Labor Day.

When Elul would come in August, the camps continued as usual. Some camps added a daily mussar seder, and the rabbeim often included in their learning group lessons about the Yomim Noraim and that it is a time for teshuvah. Some camps based their color war themes on the Yamim Tovim of Tishrei. One camp even published beautiful booklets compiling the halachos of Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and Sukkos, with contests and prizes for campers who memorized them. It was out of the question, however, to bring yeshiva kids back to the steamy hot city for an “Elul zman.”

The exception to this was Lakewood and Bais Hatalmud, which did begin in Elul. Both of these yeshivos were for bais medrash-age bochurim. Mesivta boys remained in camp. This enabled many of the older mesivta bochurim to be counselors for the younger campers. Those choshiveh budding yeshivaleit often had a positive and long-lasting influence on their campers.

Beginning around twenty years ago, several new small mesivtos opened in the small towns of New Jersey. Their new and young roshei yeshiva, wishing their yeshiva to be recognized as a real and better makom Torah than the existing ones, decided to begin their zman on Rosh Chodesh Elul. Unlike the founders of the original yeshivos, they did not have the foresight to realize how this new schedule would eventually negatively impact the chinuch of thousands of children throughout the summer months.

Imitating the pre-war yeshivos of Europe that began in Elul served as an attractive novelty to the newly emerging young parent body that wanted only the best for their children.

Initially, this did not pose much of a problem. The amount of bochurim enrolled in these mesivtos was minimal, and their absence from camp was hardly felt. These new yeshivos were out of town, and the boys would dorm there. This then did not disrupt the family’s summer plans either, as they could continue to remain in the mountains or wherever, while their bochurim were dorming and being taken care of.

However, when more and more mesivtos began springing up that were competing for the same exclusive student body, they too felt compelled to begin Rosh Chodesh Elul. Should they begin on Labor Day, they would be considered inferior to those prestigious yeshivos, and would not get the enrollment they truly desired. Thus, in a few short years, the boys’ camps began losing their finest bochurim in the middle of August and were basically left without counselors or staff. Desperate head counselors would scramble to find counselors from here and there (often from the “weaker” non-Elul yeshivos) and, at times, would have to combine or divide bunks as necessary.

The problem became compounded when even some Brooklyn and Queens mesivtos, not to be outdone by their out-of-town competitors, recently began their new zman on Rosh Chodesh Elul as well. This now created a fresh crisis. Since they had no dormitory, those bochurim would have to be alone in their homes during the evening hours. This was obviously unacceptable, and parents found themselves forced to cut their stay in the country and come home to “babysit” their mesivta son.

This whole new development began to erode the camp structure, and parents soon sought other venues for their bochurim and yeshiva kids to spend their now-limited summer vacation. One-month hiking camps, Eretz Yisroel trips, and groups of boys organizing their own road trips across the United States were being initiated, and a new trend had begun. Removing so many bochurim from the boys’ camps, however, resulted in calling into question the entire viability of the boys’ camp as it had been known until now.

None of this posed any problem for the roshei yeshiva. As implied above, as long as the bochurim would be back for the psichas hazman on Rosh Chodesh Elul, all was well and good, and parents, influenced in no small way by “brand names” and herd mentality, were still clamoring to get their bochurim into these newer “distinguished” yeshivos.

The ones who had much to fear from these new and fragmented summers were obviously the camp owners.

With most of their quality staff abandoning camp two weeks into the second half or earlier, and others now rethinking the entire camp participation in lieu of more interesting short vacations, the camp summers were being chiseled down, and so were their revenues. Those in the know will confirm that it is almost not worthwhile to open and operate a smaller camp for just six weeks (and with a mediocre staff at that).

But besides for the camp owners’ profits, the real victims here are the children.

Truth be told, who, like mechanchim, camp owners, and head counselors, knows what a lifesaver the camps are for quite a lot of children and teenagers? Kids from broken or dysfunctional homes (even from homes that appear regular but actually aren’t) found themselves safely distracted and cared for in a healthy and fun environment for eight solid weeks. To get away from a troubling home situation, or for an academically challenged child to enjoy a break from a miserable school year, is a priceless gift that only a camp can give. Unlike the roshei yeshiva of the better mesivtos, who deal mostly with the “cream of the crop,” camp head counselors and learning directors are intimately involved with the nitty-gritty of painful home and/or child situations of Klal Yisroel, and have indeed worked wonders with the children entrusted in their care. The benefits of them being in a summer camp environment cannot be overstated and have enduring positive effects. This is an undisputed, but often overlooked, fact.

Desperate to save their camps, the camp owners tried negotiating with the mesivtos to perhaps somewhat delay the Elul zman. Some learning directors even proposed adding another 45-minute learning seder and a mandatory 20-minute mussar seder to the camp’s daily learning program. This, they claimed, would help simulate an Elul atmosphere within the camps and prepare their talmidim for the upcoming zman. But the roshei mesivtos were adamant. No matter what, yeshiva must begin on Rosh Chodesh. They were either unaware or unconcerned that, as a result, hundreds of yeshiva kids would now be without counselors yirei Shomayim and fine role models.

The camp directors then initiated meetings with the gedolim to see how they could possibly help salvage the camps. The gedolim were sympathetic, and several of them, who themselves had experienced the benefits of camp, more than validated the argument that a Torah-oriented summer camp can have a terrific effect on a child. Nevertheless, and despite their opinion that (in contrast to Eastern Europe) the hot summers of America, with its treifeneh streets, are not comparable to an Elul zman of yesteryear, they were reluctant to take on the roshei yeshiva to revert back to the original school/summer schedule. The reason being their understanding, all too well, that no rosh yeshiva could begin seder only on the week of Labor Day and still have his yeshiva considered a “shtarkeh makom Torah.”

It was then that the camp owners came up with a brainstorm—the novel idea of ending the school year early and starting camp mid-June, then ending camp mid-August and beginning the next school year early as well. This would grant the camps the full eight weeks for the children and the bochurim, and then allow for the Elul zman to begin promptly on Rosh Chodesh.

When this proposal was initially floated, it was understandably met with opposition from several important parties.

The elementary yeshivos, for a number of reasons—but primarily due to staff and maintenance logistics—were not enthusiastic about altering their school calendar. Neither were they interested in forcing their rabbeim (some of them great talmidei chachomim themselves) to change their summer arrangements just so that some yeshiva high schools could have a “choshiveh name” because they officially began Rosh Chodesh Elul. Getting secular studies teachers to come in mid-August is practically impossible, and giving off English because of that, and allowing the children to be unoccupied in the afternoons, would be a disaster as well.

The parents had their own problems with this new schedule. It would throw a wrench into any and all of their summer plans that necessarily must occur during July and August. Also, if they have girls in Bais Yaakov, they would now be in limbo since those schools were operating on the regular calendar. Parents would not be able to go up to the mountains or vacation early since the girls would still be in school and even be taking Regents. Then they would also have to return to the city in mid-August while the girls are still participating in the day camps of the country. It is also questionable whether bungalow colonies and estates were willing to accommodate and open two weeks earlier for a handful of people, something that would involve additional planning and expense. The idea of having yeshiva boys hanging around the city during the mid-August long afternoons while public school kids are off and roaming the streets was not something most parents were looking forward to either. All in all, this new idea was simply not feasible.

Nevertheless, a few, perhaps well-meaning influential leaders in our community decided to go ahead and implement this absurd plan. Using various methods of persuasion, including the claim (in a circulated letter) that this is what the gedolim ordered, they began promoting their agenda and coercing the more timid principals in various schools to change over to this new schedule. Few were able to withstand the pressure and reluctantly consented. The bandwagon effect will predictably cause other schools to follow suit. Parents are being forced into compliance despite the immense impracticality of this new arrangement. And, as we can expect, when the multitude of problems enumerated above come crashing down on us as a result of this upheaval, we will surely be left alone to cope with its consequences.

To conclude:

The traditional summer structure was not broken. It balanced chinuch, family life, and the well-being of children in a way that served generations successfully. Camps were not just a convenience; they were, and remain, a critical component of raising healthy, grounded Yiddishe children.

The so-called “summer calendar problems” we now face were self-inflicted due to the interference of individuals who have (unknowingly perhaps) placed personal ambitions over responsibility for the klal. And the new, ridiculous “solution” is now being championed by other individuals, some of them with similar personal interests as well.

While this new arrangement is officially being put into place only for the summers that clash with Elul, it is hard to believe that once such severe alterations are enforced and become tolerated, we will ever be able to revert to the original secure and predictable calendar schedule.

In today’s volatile world, where stability is increasingly challenged, and with so many children and parents living on edge due to the nature of the times we live in, it would be wise, for the sake of everyone’s mental well-being, to try and preserve whatever is left of consistency and permanence.

Therefore, it should be obvious to any truly objective and caring person that before we rush to overhaul an entire system, we must ask ourselves: Why exactly are we doing this? Are we truly improving things, or are we sacrificing something essential in the process? Perhaps the time has come not for adjustment, but for honest and deep reflection.

And finally, let us all daven that our leaders and educators are granted the wisdom and vision to guide us with honesty, foresight, compassion, and sensitivity.

Rabbi Elchonon Weinberg

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Veteran Modzitzer Meshamesh Bakodesh, Who Served Three Generations of Rebbes, Passes Away

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The Modzitzer chassidus in Eretz Yisroel and around the world was plunged into mourning with the passing of the veteran meshamesh bakodesh, Rav Shmuel Yitzchok Penigstein z”l, who served the Modzitzer Rebbes with unmatched dedication for three generations.

R’ Shmuel Yitzchok was a living embodiment of what it means to be a meshamesh bakodesh, zocheh to a rare and extraordinary zechus to serve in the inner sanctum of three successive Admorim of the Modzitzer shalsheles. He was not merely a gabbai in the technical sense; he was a living link between doros and a central address for chassidim seeking an eitza or access to the rebbes.

His avodas hakodesh began in the era of the Modzitzer Rebbe the Imrei Eish.

Throughout the years of the hanhogah of the Nachalas Dan, R’ Shmuel Yitzchok stood faithfully at his side with mesirus nefesh. He managed the Rebbe’s home with quiet authority and refinement, while safeguarding the kavod of Beis Modzitz with utmost care.

Even in the current dor, R’ Shmuel Yitzchok remained the familiar and beloved figure at the entrance to the Rebbe’s home, carrying with him the taam of earlier generations and the vast experience he had accumulated from the previous admorim, until his strength waned in recent years.

R’ Shmuel Yitzchok was renowned for his absolute ne’emanus. His entire metzius was batel to the ratzon of his Rebbes, viewing his role as a lofty shlichus ruchniyus. Despite the constant demands and pressures of serving in the homes of gedolei Yisroel, he received every person b’sever panim yafos, with patience and a genuine smile, always seeking to assist each chossid in whatever way he could.

As a true Modzitzer chossid, he was deeply connected to the unique olam haniggun of the chassidus, and was a participant in the elevated moments of niggun and shirah at the tishen and other exalted occasions.

With his petirah, the Modzitzer chassidus has lost one of the last sh’eiris hapleitah of a previous dor, a Yid who saw with his own eyes the rebuilding and flourishing of the chassidus in Eretz Yisroel.

The levayah took place this morning, departing from his home on Rechov Ganei Gad in Bnei Brak, passing the Modzitzer beis medrash at 20 Rechov Chavakuk, and continuing to the beis hachaim in Yarkon, Petach Tikvah.

Yehi zichro boruch.

{Matzav.com}

BUMBLING BERNIE: Sanders Aims to Block Sale of Bombs and Bulldozers to Israel, Accusing US Ally of ‘Genocide’

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Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont is seeking to halt a major U.S. arms transfer to Israel, announcing plans to force a Senate vote aimed at stopping the sale of bombs and bulldozers valued at nearly $500 million.

“This week, I will be forcing a vote on legislation to block the sale of nearly half a billion dollars worth of bombs and bulldozers to the Israeli military,” he said in a post on X.

The senator sharply criticized Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s government, accusing it of carrying out “genocide.”

“The extremist Netanyahu government that has committed genocide in Gaza does not need more military support from American taxpayers,” Sanders said in the post.

In a separate message posted Tuesday on another X account, Sanders reiterated his position, calling for immediate action to prevent the transfer.

“This week, I will be forcing a vote to block nearly $500 million in bombs and bulldozers to Israel. Enough is enough.”

He continued by arguing that American funding should not support Israel’s military operations across the region.

“U.S. taxpayers must not keep funding the Netanyahu government’s mass killing and displacement of civilians in Gaza, Iran and Lebanon,” he added.

Sanders had already taken steps last month to advance this effort, introducing joint resolutions designed to stop the proposed sales of both bulldozers and munitions to Israel.

The push comes in the wake of recent coordinated military operations in which the United States and Israel carried out extended strikes against the Islamic Republic of Iran over the course of more than a month.

{Matzav.com}

Ben Tzur: Draft Law Will Pass During Current Knesset Term

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MK Yoav Ben Tzur said he believes legislation regulating military exemptions for yeshiva students will be approved before the end of the current Knesset term, while launching a sharp attack on the judiciary and the attorney general.

Speaking against the backdrop of Holocaust Remembrance Day, Ben Tzur referenced remarks made during High Court proceedings about what he described as the potential “destruction of the Torah world,” drawing a comparison between the Jewish people’s past suffering and current tensions in Israel. “More than six million Jews were murdered in the Holocaust… and even in the darkest period our people faced, we survived as a nation in order to continue the chain of generations through Jewish tradition,” he said, adding that today, “specifically here, in the Jewish state… they want to dismantle the Torah world.”

According to Ben Tzur, many in the chareidi public feel they are under sustained pressure from elements within the legal system. “The atmosphere is that both the attorney general and the Supreme Court are looking for every possible way to restrict us,” he claimed, warning that the public discourse is spilling over into incitement. “They are trying at any cost to incite… and that incitement is slowly filtering into the public.”

At the same time, he called for greater unity, invoking the days of Sefiras HaOmer and the lesson from Rabi Akiva’s talmidim. He argued that the divisions within Israeli society stem not only from ideological disagreements but from a lack of mutual respect. “They did not treat one another with respect,” he said, expressing regret over the deep internal strife.

The debate also centered on the proposed draft law, which Ben Tzur described as an urgent necessity. “I think it is important to pass this law. We have no other choice,” he said, explaining that the goal is to formalize the status of Torah learners and remove the constant uncertainty they face. Still, he acknowledged the unknowns ahead: “What will happen afterward? We do not know, but we are making our efforts,” particularly in light of the possibility of High Court intervention.

He concluded on a cautiously optimistic note, saying efforts are ongoing to reach agreements and that the outcome will also depend on rabbinic leadership. “We hope and are working to regulate the status of Torah learners,” he said, expressing confidence that despite the challenges, the law will pass before the end of the current term.

{Matzav.com}

What Buyers Are Really Finding in Givat Hashalvah: Reframing Life in Eretz Yisroel

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[COMMUNICATED]

There is a certain kind of language that keeps coming up when community members speak about Givat Hashalvah. Not the language of brochures or floor plans, but the language of people trying to describe why a place feels different. They talk about belonging. They talk about like-minded families. They talk about a community geared toward their lifestyle. And that may be one of the clearest signs yet of what this project is really trying to build.  

For many families considering life in Eretz Yisroel, the question is not only where to live, but how to live. Givat Hashalvah keeps returning to that distinction. The goal is not simply proximity to Yerushalayim, nor only a higher construction standard, nor only a stronger amenity package. It is the effort to bring those things together into a way of life that feels more aligned. Community members describe it as a place that understands what Americans are looking for, not in the sense of importing America, but in the sense of planning carefully for the rhythms, expectations, and daily dignity that matter to frum families.  

That thought process shows up in the details. Walking paths. Biking paths. Nearby fitness. Spaces to gather. Large windows opening out to the hills. A summit location that gives the project both presence and perspective. In another setting, those might read as amenities. Here, they begin to feel like part of a larger idea: that ruchniyus and gashmiyus do not need to compete with one another when a community is planned with intention. They can support one another. They can help create the kind of daily life people actually want to come home to.  

The setting adds another layer. Givat Hashalvah is close enough to Yerushalayim to remain connected, yet removed enough to offer quiet, air, and a sense of relief from the rush. Community members speak about that balance with unusual clarity. They are not looking for the center of the noise. They are looking for a real life near Yerushalayim, with the city still within reach and the home experience shaped by calm, scenery, and space. From the summit, the hills become part of the atmosphere, part of what residents will wake up to and live with every day.  

In that sense, Givat Hashalvah is not only making a real estate pitch. It is making a case for a different kind of neighborhood experience, one built around shared purpose, thoughtful planning, and a clearer sense of what a community can feel like when it is designed from the ground up. If the community members already speaking about it are any indication, that message is beginning to land.
Explore Givat Hashalvah → https://go.lyo.group/3LxM3tz

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