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Smotrich Threatens Knesset Dissolution After Budget Vote Delayed Over Draft Law Dispute

Matzav -

Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich issued a sharp warning after the government postponed a vote on the state budget, signaling that the delay could trigger the collapse of the Knesset.

The budget had been set for a vote on Monday, but the schedule was pushed to Wednesday after the chareidi parties refused to back it, citing the government’s failure to advance a Draft Law.

The chareidi factions, United Torah Judaism and Shas, said they would not support the budget until they are able to meet with the Knesset’s legal adviser about the status of the Draft Law.

Their insistence stems from a desire to first clarify legal issues surrounding the promotion of the conscription legislation with the Knesset’s legal advisers.

In response, Smotrich delivered a blunt message to Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, declaring, “If the budget does not pass today, it does not pass at all. Let’s dissolve the Knesset.”

Until Monday morning, coalition leaders believed that Shas and Degel Hatorah would back the budget in its first reading, based on an understanding that the second and third readings would move forward only after the Draft Law was passed.

That expectation unraveled when the chareidi parties informed Netanyahu they would not support the vote as planned and asked for a postponement. Netanyahu agreed to delay the vote in order to address unresolved legal concerns.

Amid the growing crisis, Netanyahu convened an emergency meeting that included Smotrich, Shas chairman Aryeh Deri, and Finance Committee Chairman Moshe Gafni of United Torah Judaism.

{Matzav.com}

Guinness World Records Unblocks Record Submissions From Israel, Including Historic Kidney Donation Event

Yeshiva World News -

Guinness World Records has reversed a controversial decision and is once again accepting submissions from Israel, Israeli President Yitzchak Herzog announced. The move follows months of criticism after the organization refused to recognize Israeli entries, citing regional tensions. Herzog made the announcement at a Jerusalem event hosted by Matnat Chaim, an Israeli nonprofit that facilitates […]

From Harsh Criticism of Chareidim to Deep Compassion

Matzav -

By Rabbi Shraga Freedman

I wanted to share with Matzav readers a powerful story that took place in the aftermath of the terrible tragedy that occurred in Yerushalayim last week, when two young children died in a charedi daycare. It appears that there was overheating, and as a result, two infants, one three months old and one six months old, were niftar, R”l.

I believe the story below captures something profound about how the Jewish people can navigate deep and painful machlokes within our nation.

The tensions in Israel between the charedi community and the rest of the population are currently at an all time high. Many people have accused the charedi public of an overall culture of lawlessness.

One such person is Chaggai Luber. Chaggai, a religious Zionist, lost his twenty four year old son, Yonatan, in Gaza last year. He has since been an outspoken critic of certain aspects of the charedi world.

This past week, Chaggai joined the many Israelis who felt anger, and even a sense of smugness in reaction to the daycare tragedy.

He wrote in a post:

“And I too participated yesterday, at least as a listener, in the collective frenzy.
And I too clicked my tongue at “the irresponsible parents….”
And I too read about “a culture of contempt, lawbreaking, and irresponsibility among the charedim.”
And I too hurried to reach a verdict and take a stance.
And I too wallowed in that same murky swamp.”

But then he wrote that his wife reminded him of something. Chani Katz, the mother of one of the children who died in that daycare, had once visited the Luber family during their shiva.

Not only that, but when she came, she brought with her a heart shaped necklace bearing Yonatan’s image. It was part of a large jewelry project she launched after October 7, to commemorate those who were killed in the war.

In a social media post, Chaggai wrote that in that moment everything changed. The charedim were no longer a faceless group to criticize. They were people. Brothers and sisters. Broken parents.

He wrote:

והיא עמדה לפני, אמא במלא כאבה,
במלא צערה.
במלא אובדנה

“And I saw her standing before me. A mother filled with hurt. Filled with pain. Filled with loss.”

ומה קרה לי, אב שכול שהצטרפתי לחגיגה
ונסחפתי, אפילו במחשבה, לאותו מחול האשמות נורא.
כשהמתים עוד מוטלים לפנינו, עוד לפני הקבורה.

“What happened to me, a bereaved father, that I joined in the celebration against the charedim? That I got carried away, even if only in thought, into that terrible dance of blame, while the dead were still before us, even before burial?”

והתחרטתי וכמעט שקרעתי קריעה

“And I regretted it. And I almost tore my clothes in mourning.”

This story, I believe, carries within it an answer to the existential struggle of painful machlokes in Klal Yisrael. We can disagree strongly, even passionately, and still truly feel another person’s pain. We can see the most human side (tzelem elokim) of those with whom we differ.

Chani Katz, who carried her own ideological worldview, nevertheless entered the home of grieving parents and joined them in their mourning. Her ability to feel the pain of others created a remarkable transformation in someone who had been emotionally closed off to her world.

This is the challenge of our generation. How to defend Torah values with vigor and conviction, while remaining faithful to Torah’s call for love, dignity, and respect. We can unequivocally reject ideas without rejecting people.

And perhaps the most compelling defense of our values is not the force of condemnation, but the integrity of our conduct. Living as a reflection of Hashem, as mekadshei Hashem, to the point that the Name of Heaven becomes beloved through us.

(This story was adapted with permission from the following article: https://nertamid.net/sermons/praying-for-the-ayatollah-parshas-bo/)

Rabbi Shraga Freedman

Living Kiddush Hashem Foundation

Email LivingKiddushHashem@gmail.com for a free file of stories and sefer Mekadshei Shemecha. Visit LivingKiddushHashem.org for more resources.

Germany Arrests Fourth Suspect in Chilling Hamas Plot Targeting Jewish and Israeli Sites

Yeshiva World News -

German authorities have arrested a fourth suspect in a Hamas-linked terror cell accused of plotting attacks against Jewish and Israeli targets in Germany and elsewhere in Europe. The suspect, identified only as Mohammad S., 36, was taken into custody Friday at Berlin Brandenburg Airport after returning from Lebanon, according to federal prosecutors. Investigators allege that […]

Europe’s Trump Strategy Changes: From Appeasement to Resistance

Yeshiva World News -

No more fawning praise. No more polite workarounds and old-style diplomacy. And no one is calling Donald Trump “daddy” now. European leaders who scrambled for a year to figure out how to deal with an emboldened American president in his second term edged closer to saying “no,” or something diplomatically like it, to his disregard for international law and his demands […]

Ye Issues New Apology for Antisemitism in Wall Street Journal Ad: “I Love Jewish People”

Matzav -

Ye has again publicly apologized for years of antisemitic remarks, purchasing a full-page advertisement in the Wall Street Journal in which he linked his behavior to past, untreated health issues.

“I lost touch with reality,” the rapper and fashion designer formerly known as Kanye West wrote in the ad. Elsewhere in the statement, he added, “I am not a Nazi or an antisemite. I love Jewish people.”

Since late 2022, Ye has repeatedly drawn outrage from Jewish communities worldwide and from much of his own audience. That period began when he threatened to go “death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE.” The following year, he aired a Super Bowl commercial promoting T-shirts featuring swastikas and later released a song titled “Heil Hitler,” which was recently played by a group of far-right antisemitic influencers, including Nick Fuentes, at a Miami nightclub in a widely shared video.

The Wall Street Journal advertisement is the latest in a string of apologies from Ye. Previous attempts included a May 2025 statement declaring that he was “done with antisemitism,” as well as a personal apology delivered to Rav Pinto in November.

In the ad, Ye said he suffered a head injury in a car accident 25 years ago that went undiagnosed until 2023, an injury he said “caused serious damage to my mental health and led to my bipolar type-1 diagnosis.” Ye has spoken publicly for years about living with bipolar disorder.

Describing his mindset at the time, Ye wrote, “In that fractured state, I gravitated toward the most destructive symbol I could find, the swastika, and even sold t-shirts bearing it.” He referred to periods of “disconnected moments” and “reckless behavior” related to his condition, while emphasizing, “It does not excuse what I did, though.”

He also extended an apology “to the black community – which held me down through all of the highs and lows and the darkest of times.” After he openly embraced Nazi imagery and rhetoric, following earlier promotion of the phrase “White lives matter,” many former allies and collaborators in the Black community distanced themselves from him. Despite that, his music continues to circulate widely on social media, frequently used as background for Instagram posts and other user-created content.

Ye said he is now pursuing an “effective regime of medication, therapy, exercise and clean living,” and closed the ad by writing, “I’m not asking for sympathy, or a free pass, though I aspire to earn your forgiveness. I write today simply to ask for your patience and understanding as I find my way home.”

His typically active social media accounts, which have previously featured antisemitic language and imagery, were silent Monday morning following the publication of the ad.

Ye has continued to perform live and maintains a busy concert schedule. He is slated to headline two major shows in Mexico City later this week.

Despite the renewed apologies, Ye’s past antisemitic statements continue to fuel extremist figures online. In recent days, Candace Owens, a far-right commentator and antisemitic conspiracy theorist whose collaborations with Ye helped spark his public antisemitic turn, resurfaced some of his original antisemitic posts for her audience. “This tweet is a whole vibe,” she wrote in reference to his “death con 3″ tweet. Owens has also been promoting claims that Israel was involved in Charlie Kirk’s assassination.

{Matzav.com}

Global Leaders Gather in Jerusalem for High-Profile Conference on Combating Antisemitism

Yeshiva World News -

International political leaders, diplomats and public figures convened in Jerusalem on Monday for the second International Conference on Combating Antisemitism — a two-day summit framed by Israeli officials as a global response to a sharp rise in antisemitism and Holocaust denial since Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023, attack on southern Israel. The conference, titled Generation of […]

REPORT: Israel Has Provided U.S. With “Smoking Gun” Evidence Of Iran Killing Protestors In Mass Executions

Yeshiva World News -

Israeli intelligence helped the United States confirm that Iran’s regime carried out mass executions of protesters, contradicting assurances that President Donald Trump said he had received from Tehran, according to Yisrael Hayom. According to officials familiar with the intelligence, Israel was a key partner in gathering and corroborating evidence showing that Iranian authorities executed large […]

Trump Says Hamas Aided Final Hostage Recovery, Urges Group to Follow Through on Disarmament

Matzav -

President Trump said Monday that Hamas played a role in helping locate the remains of the last Israeli hostage, saying the group must now fulfill its pledge to lay down its weapons as the process moves into its next phase.

Speaking in a joint interview with Axios and Israel’s Channel 12, Trump said the recovery of Ran Gvili’s body завершed the return of all Israeli hostages — both alive and deceased — under the first stage of his peace framework. He noted that many Israeli officials had initially doubted that every hostage could be accounted for, assuming some remains would never be found.

Trump said the operation to locate and identify the body was harrowing and complex. He told Axios and Channel 12 that teams faced a grim reality on the ground, explaining that the work was “very tough” because they “had to go through hundreds of bodies.” He added, “It was a hard scene.”

Despite years of enmity, Trump said Hamas cooperated during the search. “They worked very hard to get the body back. They were working with Israel on it,” he said, adding that details shared by Hamas helped make the recovery possible.

With the first phase now completed, Trump said there are no longer barriers standing in the way of the next steps. He recalled that the effort to bring back every hostage had been widely doubted, but said those doubts have now been put to rest. “Nobody believed we would bring back all the hostages. It was a great moment,” he said, stressing that only the families and the people of Israel can fully grasp what it means to bring home every last trace of those taken.

Trump said the focus must now turn to enforcing the next part of the agreement, which calls for Hamas to disarm. “Now we have to disarm Hamas as they promised,” he said.

He said he received updates Monday morning from advisers Steve Witkoff and Jared Kushner and later spoke with Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, whom he said “was thrilled.” Trump also pointed back to comments he made last week suggesting that the sides were close to finding the final hostage.

Recalling a recent meeting with the family, Trump asked that his reaction be conveyed to Gvili’s parents. “Please tell the parents I am very happy,” he told Axios and Channel 12.

Trump later spoke with Channel 13 reporter Neria Kraus after Gvili’s remains were returned to Israel. “We are very happy about Gvili’s return,” Trump said, describing it as “a great honor to be part of this process and to be involved in it.”

He said he had spent time with Gvili’s parents and with other families who lost loved ones, calling the recovery something few believed could be achieved. “I got to know Ran Gvili’s parents and his family, and other families as well,” he said. “It’s an amazing achievement. Nobody thought it was possible.”

Asked about the arrival of the USS Abraham Lincoln aircraft carrier in the region, Trump told Channel 13 that “the process in the Middle East is significant and very important.”

{Matzav.com}

Poll Shows Sharp Rise in AI Use Among American Workers

Yeshiva World News -

American workers adopted artificial intelligence into their work lives at a remarkable pace over the past few years, according to a new poll. Some 12% of employed adults say they use AI daily in their job, according to a Gallup Workforce survey conducted this fall of more than 22,000 U.S. workers. The survey found roughly one-quarter say they use AI […]

AI Boss Sounds Alarm on the Dangers of Artificial Intelligence

Matzav -

The chief executive of one of the world’s leading artificial intelligence companies has issued a stark warning about the dangers posed by the very technology his firm is developing. Dario Amodei, the CEO of Anthropic, published a 38-page essay cautioning that the next major threat from artificial intelligence may come from AI companies themselves as the technology rapidly accelerates.

“It is somewhat awkward to say this as the CEO of an AI company, but I think the next tier of risk is actually AI companies themselves,” wrote Dario Amodei, who leads Anthropic, on Monday.

Amodei warned that if current trends continue, artificial intelligence could soon outperform humans at “essentially everything,” a shift he said could have sweeping and destabilizing consequences. Among the risks he outlined were widespread job displacement, heightened terror threats, increased power for authoritarian governments, and a political environment in which leaders are reluctant to impose limits because of the immense influence and financial stakes tied to AI.

He explained that the purpose of the essay was to shake policymakers, industry leaders, and the public into confronting those dangers before they become unmanageable. “The years in front of us will be impossibly hard, asking more of us than we think we can give,” he wrote.

The essay builds on earlier efforts by Amodei and others to push for stronger guardrails on artificial intelligence. It follows a “Statement on Superintelligence” released in October that called for limits on AI development and has since been signed by more than 100,000 people, including prominent figures from the worlds of technology, entertainment, royalty, politics, and business.

{Matzav.com}

Trump Says He’s ‘Amazed’ Gavin Newsom’s Running For President, Issues Withering Two-Word Insult

Matzav -

President Trump voiced disbelief that California Gov. Gavin Newsom is contemplating a run for the presidency, saying the governor’s stewardship of the state makes such ambitions hard to fathom. Trump argued that California’s problems under Newsom’s leadership would undermine any national campaign.

“I’m amazed Gavin wants to run for office,” Trump told The California Post in an Oval Office interview following his administration’s legal action against California over sanctuary policies, allegations of fraud, and the move to reclaim federal funds.

Trump, who owns a golf course in the state, said his view of California has soured as conditions there have deteriorated during Newsom’s tenure.

“People love the dream of California, but they hate what’s happening to them,” Trump said.

He added that the state is suffering from a lack of effective leadership, contending that its current governor has failed to deliver.

“Gavin’s incompetent,” he said.

Newsom has been adopting a sharper social media approach as he builds a national profile and currently tops early polling for the 2028 Democratic presidential nomination, according to RealClearPolitics averages.

Those figures show Newsom with 24% support among Democrats, ahead of former Vice President Kamala Harris at 21%, former Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg at 11%, and New York City Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez at 8%.

Trump predicted that Newsom’s tenure in California would be a central issue on the campaign trail, pointing in particular to the state’s troubled high-speed rail initiative intended to link Los Angeles and San Francisco.

The rail effort, now estimated to cost $135 billion, is the most expensive train project in U.S. history.

Earlier this month, Newsom touted progress on the project during his State of the State address.

“Speaking of tracks, we’re finally laying them,” Newsom said, citing more than 60 miles of guideway completed in the Central Valley, land acquisitions, and environmental approvals for much of the route.

Trump dismissed those claims and reiterated his criticism of the project.

“He has the train, the train to nowhere, that was supposed to be a simple train that went from San Francisco to Los Angeles,” he said. “It’s the greatest cost run over that I’ve ever seen.”

“I could have built that thing, and I could have built that thing in one year,” Trump said.

Originally slated for completion in 2020, the rail line is now projected to reach a limited Central Valley segment between Bakersfield and Merced sometime around 2030, well short of California’s largest cities.

The project has also faced persistent financing troubles, with federal funding repeatedly withdrawn and reinstated, leaving state taxpayers responsible for keeping construction moving.

Trump suggested that the rail project is emblematic of broader issues in the state.

He also said his personal relationship with Newsom has deteriorated sharply since his first term.

“I used to get along with him, but now it’s sort of a hopeless situation. They’ve gone radical left. They’re crazy,” he said.

Newsom, as he weighs a 2028 presidential bid, attended the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, at the same time as Trump.

During the gathering, Newsom publicly criticized Trump’s actions in office and accused global leaders of yielding to the U.S. president.

Trump confirmed to The NY Post that he briefly spoke with Newsom in Davos but declined to elaborate.

“I saw him in Davos,” he said. “I spoke to him. I spoke to him fine.”

{Matzav.com}

Can You Believe Your Sleep Tracker? Experts Say: Be Careful

Yeshiva World News -

Your watch says you had three hours of deep sleep. Should you believe it? Millions of people rely on phone apps and wearable devices like rings, smartwatches and sensors to monitor how well they’re sleeping, but these trackers don’t necessarily measure sleep directly. Instead, they infer states of slumber from signals like heart rate and movement, raising questions about how […]

Walz: Trump Considers Drawing Down ICE In Minnesota

Matzav -

President Donald Trump said Monday that Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz reached out to him directly and expressed support for sending border czar Tom Homan to the state amid intensifying confrontations between protesters and federal immigration agents, the NY Post reports.

“Governor Tim Walz called me with the request to work together with respect to Minnesota. It was a very good call, and we, actually, seemed to be on a similar wavelength,” Trump wrote in a post on Truth Social.

“He was happy that Tom Homan was going to Minnesota, and so am I!,” the president added.

The exchange marked a shift in tone following weeks of sharp public criticism between the two leaders after Trump ordered expanded ICE operations in Minnesota last month.

Trump struck an optimistic note about future coordination, indicating the conversation would not be a one-off.

“Both Governor Walz and I want to make it better!,” he declared.

Walz later characterized the discussion as constructive, saying Trump agreed to “look into reducing the number of federal agents” operating in the state. The governor also said he pressed the president to allow a state-level investigation into recent incidents.

Walz said he reminded Trump that the Minnesota Department of Corrections routinely notifies ICE “when a person committed to its custody isn’t a U.S. citizen.”

The conciliatory tone contrasted sharply with Walz’s remarks just a day earlier, when he likened Trump’s immigration actions in Minnesota to those of Nazi Germany.

“We have got children in Minnesota hiding in their houses, afraid to go outside,” Walz said at a press conference. “Many of us grew up reading that story of Anne Frank.”

Minnesota has emerged as a focal point of Trump’s nationwide immigration enforcement push. About 3,000 ICE agents are currently operating in Minneapolis, and a senior ICE official told CBS News that roughly 3,400 arrests have been made in the area.

The heightened enforcement has coincided with rising unrest following the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse. Video from the scene showed officers restraining Pretti on the ground amid shouts that he had a gun. An officer was seen removing Pretti’s 9mm handgun, with the slide appearing to move during the struggle, suggesting the weapon may have discharged before officers opened fire.

The incident occurred just 17 days after the death of Renee Good, also 37, who was killed after accelerating her vehicle toward an ICE officer in Minneapolis.

In the wake of the shootings, protests intensified across the city.

Trump announced Monday that Homan would be dispatched to oversee federal operations in Minnesota.

“[Homan] has not been involved in that area, but knows and likes many of the people there,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. “Tom is tough but fair, and will report directly to me.”

The move prompted questions about Trump’s confidence in Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who has described Pretti and Good as domestic terrorists. A White House official told The Post that the president maintains full confidence in Noem, adding that Homan “is uniquely positioned to drop everything and focus solely on Minnesota.”

According to White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt, Homan will oversee ICE activity on the ground to help “continue arresting the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens,” while also coordinating with officials handling “the massive, widespread fraud” investigations underway in the state.

Despite the cooperative language following Monday’s call, Trump has continued to criticize Walz publicly. Last month, he referred to the governor as “seriously retarded.”

{Matzav.com}

Trump Antisemitism Envoy Rabbi Yehuda Kaploun Slams Tim Walz for Comparing ICE to Nazis

Yeshiva World News -

Rabbi Yehuda Kaploun, the U.S. State Department’s special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, ripped into Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz after the former Democratic vice presidential nominee compared the experiences of families in his state during federal law enforcement activity to Anne Frank hiding from the Nazis. “Ignorance like this cheapens the horror of the […]

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