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Trump Rips GOP Defectors After House Vote to Curb Iran War Powers

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President Donald Trump sharply criticized four Republican members of Congress on Thursday after they joined Democrats in supporting legislation that would limit his ability to conduct military operations against Iran without congressional authorization.

In a post on Truth Social, Trump condemned the vote as “unpatriotic” and suggested the lawmakers had weakened his administration’s ongoing efforts to bring the conflict with Iran to a close through negotiations.

The House approved the war powers resolution on Wednesday by a narrow 215-208 margin, marking the first successful effort by lawmakers to advance legislation restricting Trump’s authority to continue military action against Iran absent approval from Congress.

Four Republicans crossed party lines and voted with Democrats in favor of the measure: Reps. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, Brian Fitzpatrick of Pennsylvania, Tom Barrett of Michigan, and Warren Davidson of Ohio.

Reacting to the vote, Trump wrote, “Yesterday, in a meaningless vote, the House voted, 4 bad Republicans and all of the Dumocrats, to limit my War Powers, right in the middle of my final negotiations to end the War with the Islamic Republic of Iran.”

He continued by questioning the timing of the move and the motives behind it, writing, “Who would do such an unpatriotic thing. They know where the negotiations stand.”

Trump also accused Democrats of being motivated more by opposition to him than by concern for the country’s interests, invoking what he described as “Trump Derangement Syndrome.”

“They would rather have our Country fail than give me another, of many, victories,” he said.

The president reserved some of his strongest criticism for the Republicans who voted for the measure.

“The four Republicans, that’s a whole other story — They’re GRANDSTANDERS!” Trump wrote. “They should be ashamed of themselves.”

Despite its passage in the House, the resolution faces significant hurdles moving forward and would likely be vetoed by Trump should it ultimately reach his desk.

Trump’s remarks came as his administration continues to pursue a broader diplomatic agreement with Iran after months of military tensions that have had far-reaching effects both in Washington and throughout the Middle East.

Throughout the conflict, Trump has defended his approach, maintaining that his policies have increased American leverage while pressuring Iran to engage in negotiations. He has repeatedly argued that his strategy has strengthened the U.S. position and helped bring Iranian leaders back to the bargaining table.

{Matzav.com}

Trump Accuses Dems of Trying to ‘Steal’ California Primaries

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President Donald Trump charged on Thursday that Democrats are attempting to sway the results of California’s gubernatorial and Los Angeles mayoral primary contests through the use of late-arriving mail ballots, while also criticizing the state’s vote-counting process.

Posting on Truth Social, Trump accused Democrats of trying to alter the outcome of both races in favor of their preferred candidates.

“The Dumocrats are at it again! They are trying to STEAL THE GOVERNOR OF CALIFORNIA PRIMARY, AND THE MAYOR OF LOS ANGELES, PRIMARY, AWAY FROM TWO GREAT REPUBLICAN CANDIDATES,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.

Trump also took aim at the continued tabulation of ballots after Election Day.

“Here we go with the very late and massive numbers of MAIL IN BALLOTS,” he wrote.

In another social media post, Trump went further, alleging widespread misconduct in the election process.

“There’s BIG cheating by the Dumocrats in California. Votes are all tied up. May not be in for weeks. Under investigation by the US Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles. Why the vote counting DELAY???” Trump wrote.

The president did not identify which Republican candidates he believed were being affected, nor did he provide evidence to support his claims.

California officials swiftly rejected Trump’s accusations. The office of Gov. Gavin Newsom responded with a sharp statement on social media.

“Trump is lying about California again — time to take the phone away from grandpa and put him to sleep,” the Governor Newsom Press Office wrote on X.

California election law permits mail ballots to be counted if they are postmarked by Election Day and received by county election offices no later than June 9, according to The Hill.

The vote-counting process continues during the official canvass period following Election Day. Counties are required to submit certified election results to the Secretary of State by July 3, with statewide certification scheduled for July 10.

In the race for governor, Democrat Xavier Becerra and Republican Steve Hilton currently occupy the top two positions, with Hilton holding a narrow advantage. Under California’s election system, the two candidates receiving the most votes move on to the November general election regardless of party affiliation.

In Los Angeles, Democratic Mayor Karen Bass is facing significant challenges from City Council member Nithya Raman and Republican candidate Spencer Pratt, the reality television personality who entered the race after losing his home in the Palisades wildfire.

If any candidate secures more than 50 percent of the vote in the mayoral primary, that candidate wins outright. Otherwise, the leading contenders will advance to a November runoff election.

State law allows election officials to begin processing vote-by-mail ballots as many as 29 days before Election Day. This year, voters were permitted to begin returning completed ballots to official county drop boxes on May 5, according to information from Secretary of State Shirley Weber’s office.

California lawmakers have enacted several measures in recent years aimed at shortening the time required to complete vote counts.

One of those measures, Assembly Bill 5, was signed by Gov. Newsom in October and shortened the deadline for counting most ballots from 30 days after an election to 13 days.

The legislation covers provisional ballots as well as ballots requiring signature verification. Counties unable to meet the deadline must notify the Secretary of State and explain the reason for the delay.

Another measure, Assembly Bill 626, became law in 2023 and permits counties to process certain Election Day mail ballots as if they were cast in person.

According to the California Voter Foundation, 31 of the state’s 58 counties currently use that option. Los Angeles County is not among them.

Last month, Newsom sent a letter to election officials throughout the state emphasizing the importance of completing vote counts promptly in order to maintain public confidence.

“We must acknowledge that the longer the voting count takes, the more mis- and disinformation spreads,” Newsom wrote. “That means we must do all that we can to tabulate votes quickly and accurately. Time is of the essence in preventing election lies from taking hold.”

State election records show that as of Monday, more than 4.2 million mail ballots had been returned and accepted across California. More than 23.3 million ballots were distributed to voters statewide, including nearly 6 million in Los Angeles County and more than 2 million in San Diego County.

According to Weber’s office, election officials have accepted over 98.9 percent of all returned vote-by-mail ballots.

{Matzav.com}

Trump Critic Turned Defendant: Bolton Strikes Plea Deal Over Classified Information

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John Bolton, who served as national security adviser during President Donald Trump’s first administration, has agreed to plead guilty to a single charge involving the retention of classified information, according to a person familiar with the matter. The agreement with the Justice Department could enable Bolton to avoid serving prison time.

The plea arrangement would bring to a close a criminal prosecution that began in October, when Bolton was charged with 18 counts tied to either keeping or sharing classified material. Prosecutors alleged that the case centered in part on diary-style notes from his government service that he provided to family members while preparing a memoir about his time in office.

Under the terms of the agreement, Bolton would also be required to pay a $2.25 million fine, the source said, speaking on condition of anonymity because the deal has not yet been publicly disclosed. While any prison sentence would be limited to a maximum of five years, the agreement leaves open the possibility that he will receive no incarceration at all. The ultimate sentence will be determined by a judge.

The case unfolded amid accusations from critics that the Justice Department was using prosecutorial authority against individuals viewed as adversaries of President Trump. The charges against Bolton were filed just weeks after indictments were secured against former FBI Director James Comey and New York Attorney General Letitia James. Although the public first learned of the investigation last August, when FBI agents executed search warrants at Bolton’s Maryland home and Washington office, the inquiry had already been underway before Trump returned to the White House in January 2025.

A longtime figure in Republican foreign policy circles, Bolton built a reputation as a staunch advocate of aggressive American foreign policy. He served in the Trump administration for a little over a year before being dismissed in 2019. After leaving government, he published a book highly critical of Trump, portraying the president as poorly informed and casting his leadership and decision-making in a negative light.

The Trump administration unsuccessfully sought to prevent the release of Bolton’s memoir, “The Room Where it Happened,” arguing that it contained classified information. The plea agreement, however, concerns notes Bolton allegedly shared with family members rather than anything that appeared in the book.

A rearraignment hearing, often a sign that a plea agreement has been reached, is scheduled for June 26 in federal court in Greenbelt, Maryland.

The Justice Department declined to comment on the matter.

Had Bolton been convicted on all 18 counts in the indictment, he could have faced a lengthy prison sentence.

Prosecutors Say Bolton Shared Sensitive Information with Relatives

According to court filings, Bolton provided two family members with “diary-like” documents containing classified information, including material classified at the top-secret level. Prosecutors say the information came from intelligence briefings, meetings with U.S. officials, and conversations with foreign leaders.

After sending one such document, Bolton allegedly warned his relatives, “None of which we talk about!!!” Prosecutors said one family member responded, “Shhhhh.”

The indictment alleges that some of the information involved foreign adversaries and revealed intelligence-gathering methods used by the United States. One document reportedly discussed a planned missile launch by a foreign adversary, while another outlined covert U.S. government operations and included intelligence assessments blaming an adversary for an attack.

Following his indictment, Bolton issued a statement accusing Trump of conducting an “intensive effort” by Trump to intimidate his opponents, to ensure that he alone determines what is said about his conduct.”

Bolton’s government service stretches back decades. He worked in the Justice Department during President Ronald Reagan’s administration and later served as the State Department’s lead official on arms-control matters under President George W. Bush.

Bush nominated Bolton to serve as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, but he failed to secure Senate confirmation. He ultimately served for 17 months through a recess appointment, which allowed him to hold the post temporarily without Senate approval.

Foreign Policy Disputes Led to Split with Trump

Bolton became Trump’s third national security adviser in 2018. His tenure was marked by disagreements with the president on major foreign policy issues, including Iran, North Korea, and Ukraine.

Those clashes eventually brought his time in the administration to an end. In September 2019, Trump announced on social media that he had accepted Bolton’s resignation.

After leaving office, Bolton sharply criticized Trump’s handling of foreign policy and government affairs. In his memoir, he alleged that Trump linked military assistance to Ukraine to the country’s willingness to investigate Joe Biden, then preparing to challenge Trump in the 2020 election, as well as members of the Biden family.

Trump responded by denouncing Bolton as a “washed-up guy” and a “crazy” warmonger who would have led the country into “World War Six.”15

{Matzav.com}

Chief Rabbi Condemns Violent Protesters: Torah Does Not Permit Assaults or Vandalism

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Israel Asheknazi Chief Rabbi Rav Kalman Ber, has issued a sharply worded public letter denouncing the extremists who took part in the violent demonstration outside the residence of Deputy Supreme Court President Justice Noam Sohlberg, declaring that such conduct stands in direct opposition to Torah principles.

In his official statement, Rav Ber expressed profound distress over the recent incidents of violence and property damage, emphasizing that these actions cannot be justified in the name of religious or ideological causes. He stressed that the behavior displayed by the protesters represents a distortion of authentic Torah values.

“Lately, we have seen phenomena of violence and vandalism in public and private spaces. The problem is rooted in the fact that certain values are given precedence over others. ‘The freedom to protest’ can not permit harm to others. This policy leads to bad results. A situation has formed where everyone can hide under the cloak of ‘freedom’ and allow themselves, because they think they’re correct, to express their opinion and position while harming others,” Rabbi Ber wrote.

The Chief Rabbi went on to stress that the Torah’s ethical teachings form the foundation of civilized society and are not subject to shifting public sentiment or changing social trends.

He added that “the values of Israel’s Torah are the cornerstone of human existence. They do not change with the atmosphere or people’s moods.”

Rav Ber further explained that even when people believe they are fighting for important and holy causes, they are not granted permission to harm others in the process. He pointed to the teachings of Shlomo Hamelech as guidance for handling disputes with patience and restraint rather than aggression.

According to Rav Ber, “Even a struggle for sacred values does not permit harming others. King Solomon, the wisest of all men, warned against this when he said, ‘A hot-tempered man provokes a quarrel; A patient person calms strife.’ (Mishlei 15). The way in which an argument and a struggle should be conducted must be with forbearance, and only in this way can a quarrel be settled.”

Calling for an immediate reduction in tensions, the Chief Rabbi urged members of the public not to allow personal pain or grievances to lead them into confrontations that violate Torah standards. He stressed that honoring the Torah requires conduct that elevates its reputation rather than causing a chilul Hashem.

The Chief Rabbi called to calm tensions. “We call on everyone from a pained heart not to provoke a quarrel, even if something hurts you, be careful not to violate your honor, and to return the favor. To honor the Torah, fight in a manner that does not desecrate the name of Heaven. And there is no permit, G-d forbid, to lift a hand against someone or harm their property or prevent them from reaching their destination.”

In concluding his remarks, Rav Ber also directed criticism toward those who deliberately seek to deepen divisions within the Jewish people. He urged all sides to focus on unity, avoid needless conflict, and embrace the Torah’s path of peace and mutual respect.

“This is also an opportunity to call on all those troublemakers who try with all their might to split and divide G-d’s nation, avoid disputes and division! We must find what connects everyone and stop the debate and quarrel. We must go in the path of the Torah whose ‘ways are pleasant ways, and all her paths, peaceful,” Rav Ber concluded.

{Matzav.com}

Malkieli Blasts Bennett Over Chareidi Education Plan: “Don’t Believe a Word He Says”

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Shas MK Michael Malkieli launched a scathing attack on former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett on Wednesday night, accusing him of hostility toward the chareidi community and warning voters not to trust his promises following Bennett’s pledge to overhaul and defund independent chareidi school networks if he returns to office.

Speaking in an interview with Kikar HaShabbat, Malkieli reacted sharply to Bennett’s recent statements regarding chareidi education.

“I say, understand who is standing before us,” Malkieli said. “But I call on those who are considering voting for Bennett: if you think he can become prime minister and give everyone everything they demand, then you do not understand what kind of swindler you are dealing with.”

Malkieli intensified his criticism, questioning Bennett’s credibility and leadership.

“Don’t believe a word he says, he is hollow. Even people within his own camp understand that. They know this is a person who will sell everything.”

Bennett’s Education Proposal Sparks Outrage

Malkieli’s remarks came in response to comments Bennett made earlier this week outlining his vision for a unified national education system and his intention to end government funding for independent party-affiliated school networks.

Under Bennett’s proposal, networks such as Bnei Yosef and Chinuch Atzmai would no longer receive state funding unless they join a unified national educational framework.

Bennett unveiled the plan as part of an initiative titled “From Tribes to One Nation,” which seeks to create a single education system across Israel and eliminate what he describes as separate educational sectors.

According to the proposal, government funding for independent and party-affiliated educational systems would be halted immediately unless they comply with the new standards.

Bennett: ‘A Separate Chareidi State Has Emerged Within Israel’

Speaking at the Eli Hurvitz Conference on Economy and Society hosted by the Israel Democracy Institute, Bennett sharply criticized the current structure of chareidi education.

“A separate, anti-Zionist chareidi state has arisen under our noses within Israel. And we are financing it with our own money,” Bennett said.

He argued that future governments must reverse decades of educational policy.

“In the next government, we are going to correct the historic mistake of creating separate education systems that created separate states,” Bennett declared.

He summarized the principle behind his proposal with the slogan: “If it is not state-run, it will not be funded by me.”

Under the educational framework Bennett presented, at least 60 percent of classroom hours would be devoted to core subjects, including Hebrew, English, mathematics, Tanach, civics, and Zionism. Schools would be permitted to use the remaining instructional hours for additional educational content of their choosing.

{Matzav.com}

Chareidi Party Leaders Condemn Violence at Justice Solberg’s Home, Declare: “The Blood of Torah Learners Is Not Hefker”

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The leaders of Israel’s chareidi political parties issued a joint statement after midnight Wednesday night condemning the violent disturbances outside the home of Deputy Supreme Court President Noam Solberg, while also criticizing what they described as the ongoing persecution of Torah learners.

The statement was signed by Shas chairman Aryeh Deri, Degel HaTorah leader Moshe Gafni, and Agudas Yisroel chairman Yitzchak Goldknopf following the protest, which resulted in significant property damage and dozens of arrests.

While unequivocally denouncing the violence, the three leaders also took aim at Israel’s judicial system, accusing it of pursuing policies that have intensified tensions surrounding the arrests of yeshiva students.

“We are pained and shocked by the ongoing campaign of persecution and trampling of Torah learners by the judges of the Supreme Court,” the statement said. “We have warned time and again that these measures would lead to extremism and anarchy, and sadly, we are now witnessing those fears become reality.”

The chareidi leaders stressed, however, that violence has no place in the response.

“We strongly condemn any act of violence of any kind. Violence is contrary to the way of the Torah and is completely unacceptable,” they declared.

The statement went on to call upon leaders of Israel’s right-wing parties to condemn what the chareidi parties view as the continued targeting of yeshiva students.

“We demand that the leaders of the right-wing parties, who were quick and correct to condemn this incident, also condemn the ongoing and cruel persecution of Torah learners and yeshiva students,” the statement said. “The blood of Torah learners is not hefker.”

65 Arrested Following Violent Protest

The protest took place Wednesday night when dozens of extremist demonstrators gathered outside Solberg’s home to protest increased enforcement measures against yeshiva students who have not reported for military service.

According to police, demonstrators damaged property at the residence, smashing windows, breaking decorative pots and planters near the entrance, and vandalizing the judge’s vehicle.

Large police forces were dispatched to the scene and restored order within minutes. By the end of the operation, officers had detained 65 individuals suspected of participating in the disturbances.

Police said the suspects were taken in for questioning and would later be brought before a court, where investigators are expected to seek extensions of their detention.

The investigation has been assigned to the Judea and Samaria District Major Crimes Unit. Detectives collected witness statements at the scene, while forensic investigators gathered evidence and documentation related to the incident.

Later that night, senior commanders from the district held a situation assessment meeting to review the violent protest and the damage caused to the home and property of the deputy president of the Supreme Court.

Netanyahu Calls Solberg

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke with Justice Solberg following the incident.

According to officials, Netanyahu reiterated his strong condemnation of the attack against the judge and his family, inquired about their well-being, and emphasized that he expects law-enforcement authorities to take firm action against those responsible.

National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir also condemned the violence.

“Freedom of protest is a fundamental right, but it does not include the freedom of anarchy. I strongly condemn the small extremist group that threw stones, acted violently, and disturbed the peace outside Justice Solberg’s home,” Ben Gvir said.

Meanwhile, senior figures within the Jerusalem Faction sought to distance themselves from the demonstration, stating that they had no connection to the events outside the judge’s residence.

The incident is the latest in a series of increasingly heated protests that have erupted in recent days following a wave of arrests involving yeshiva students.

{Matzav.com}

Why Justice Solberg Became a Target: The Court Ruling That Sparked Fury Over Yeshiva Student Arrests

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Deputy Supreme Court President Noam Solberg became the focus of a violent protest this week after issuing a court ruling that strongly criticized police reluctance to enforce military draft laws against yeshiva students and ordered greater cooperation between civilian police and military authorities.

The ruling, published about six weeks ago, has been cited by extremist protesters as the reason they targeted Solberg’s home and family. The demonstration on Wednesday night drew widespread condemnation from across Israel’s political spectrum.

In his decision, Solberg addressed what he described as the police’s ongoing refusal to play a more active role in locating and detaining draft evaders and military deserters from the chareidi community.

He wrote that the court had been informed, both in written submissions and during oral arguments, that police continue to refrain from detaining draft evaders during routine encounters despite having the authority to do so. The police also maintained that they were unable to assist the military police in planned operations to apprehend draft evaders, even though military authorities require police cooperation to carry out such actions in civilian areas.

Solberg sharply criticized this approach, noting that the police justified their policy by citing concerns that enforcement operations in chareidi neighborhoods often trigger large-scale disturbances and require additional manpower.

The judge acknowledged that police resources are limited and that law enforcement agencies must prioritize among competing responsibilities. However, he argued that a complete refusal to exercise legal authority cannot be justified simply by invoking resource constraints or budgetary limitations.

According to Solberg, police discretion does not extend to abandoning enforcement altogether. He wrote that leaving legal authority unused and effectively dormant cannot be excused by claims of competing priorities.

He concluded that the police were failing to fulfill their legal duty to enforce the law against draft evaders from the chareidi sector and stated that such a situation could not be accepted.

Solberg then directed the Israel Police to assist military enforcement authorities and actively participate in enforcing conscription laws within the chareidi community.

He emphasized that such cooperation is especially necessary because the issue involves what he described as a large-scale, ongoing, and deliberate violation of the law.

In one of the ruling’s most forceful passages, Solberg argued that allowing public disorder to deter enforcement sends a dangerous message and rewards those who seek to obstruct the legal process.

He wrote that it is unacceptable for authorities to avoid enforcement specifically because opponents threaten widespread disturbances, warning that such an approach creates a reality in which lawbreakers benefit from their actions and force determines outcomes.

The judge further stated that a democratic society cannot tolerate a situation where those willing to exert pressure or create unrest effectively dictate whether laws will be enforced.

Concluding his discussion of enforcement, Solberg instructed the state to move quickly and diligently to pursue criminal proceedings against draft evaders from the chareidi community according to the same standards applied to the broader public.

He also specifically rejected any policy under which police officers decline to detain or arrest individuals identified as draft evaders during routine interactions with law enforcement.

The ruling ultimately paved the way for increased police involvement in locating and apprehending yeshiva students classified as draft evaders, including arrests made during traffic stops and other routine encounters, followed by their transfer to military authorities.

{Matzav.com}

‘We’ll Take to the Streets Like Kaplan’: Beitar Illit Mayor Warns Over Arrests of Yeshiva Students

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Beitar Illit Mayor Meir Rubinstein, who also serves as chairman of the Forum of Chareidi Local Authority Heads, delivered a forceful warning Wednesday night over the arrests of yeshiva students and the ongoing draft crisis, declaring that the chareidi public will not accept efforts to criminalize Torah learners.

Speaking on Kol Chai’s Hamahadura Hamerkazit with host Avi Blum, Rubinstein said the current situation has created fear and anxiety throughout the yeshiva world.

“I haven’t changed—the reality has,” Rubinstein said at the start of the interview. “We are living through a disgraceful situation in which thousands of yeshiva students are walking around in constant fear, even terror. Every yeshiva student feels like a fugitive. This cannot continue, and it cannot simply be accepted.”

Rubinstein noted that since the founding of the State of Israel, prime ministers from across the political spectrum—including David Ben-Gurion, Yitzchak Rabin, Shimon Peres, Yitzchak Shamir, and Menachem Begin—supported arrangements that exempted yeshiva students from military service.

“After 70 years, this is not going to work. It simply will not work,” he said.

Asked whether chareidi municipal leaders should halt cooperation with the police and state authorities, Rubinstein replied that the damage has already been done.

“There is no greater harm than taking our entire community and turning everyone into criminals,” he said.

He stressed that the chareidi public would not resort to violence but would pursue other forms of resistance, including public protest, separation from government institutions, and a broad outcry against the policy.

Rubinstein argued that no democratic country could successfully impose such a dramatic change on such a large segment of its population.

“Maybe that can happen in North Korea, or in the Russia of the czars, in places like that,” he said.

He added that municipal leaders who interact with residents daily witness firsthand the fear and distress affecting yeshiva students and their families.

Addressing the performance of the chareidi political parties, Rubinstein acknowledged that their efforts had fallen short but declined to place blame on individual lawmakers.

“There is not a single chareidi Knesset member who did not work on this issue,” he said. “But in terms of results, the failure has been total.”

At the same time, he insisted that the setback in the Knesset cannot lead the chareidi public to surrender, close their Gemaros, or accept a reality in which yeshiva students are treated as criminals.

Turning to the prospect of a broader public campaign, Rubinstein said the chareidi community should learn from the tactics employed by opponents of judicial reform.

“We were promised judicial reform, and why didn’t judicial reform happen? Because of pressure from the streets,” he said. “We are now going to take to the streets exactly like Kaplan. The entire country will burn, just like Kaplan. They taught us a lesson.”

Rubinstein argued that the issue requires no complicated strategy, only a firm and united public stance.

“You do not touch what is sacred. ‘Do not touch My anointed ones.’ It is not going to happen. Period.”

He vowed that the chareidi community would never accept a situation in which yeshiva students and their families—whom he described as a population of more than one million people—are transformed into fugitives.

“That is not going to happen during wartime, during peacetime, during difficult times, or during times of prosperity,” he said.

Asked whether the draft dispute is affecting the chareidi community’s place within Israel’s right-wing camp, Rubinstein responded that he remains firmly identified with the political right and deeply committed to Eretz Yisroel.

At the same time, he emphasized that the priorities of the chareidi public are clear.

“For us, the right begins first with Toras Yisroel, and only afterward with Eretz Yisroel,” he said.

He concluded by arguing that the real question is no longer whether the chareidi community remains part of the right, but whether the right itself remains true to its principles.

“The chareidi public is still on the right,” Rubinstein said. “But if the right is not protecting yeshiva students, then the question is not whether the chareidim have left the right. The question is whether the right has remained the right.”

{Matzav.com}

Pence: GOP Has to Return to Founding Principles, Ditch ‘Populist Right’

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Former Vice President Mike Pence is warning that the Republican Party is moving away from its traditional conservative roots, arguing that a growing “populist right” faction poses a significant challenge to the principles that have guided the party for decades.

Speaking Wednesday on CNN’s “News Central,” Pence said many Americans, particularly those in agricultural communities, remain concerned about the economic impact of broad tariff policies and rising costs.

“There’s concern in the heartland, particularly on the farm, for the impact of broad based tariffs, the rising input costs for farmers and, I expect Republicans will take all of that to heart. And, I hope what they do, as I argue in my book, is return our party to the consistent advocacy of the conservative agenda. This define the Republican movement for the last 50 years.”

Pence said he wrote his new book in part to alert Americans to what he sees as an ideological shift within the conservative movement itself.

“I wanted people to know around the country that, a new threat to conservatism has emerged from within our movement. And it’s, I call it the populist right. And essentially advances policies of protectionism, isolationism, marginalizing traditional values. And, and while they’ve had some success prevailing on the second Trump administration, not all, I think the second Trump administration has gotten a lot right. Secured the border, extended all those Trump Pence, tax cuts, stood up to Iran, stood with Israel but when you look at when you look at the stops and starts on Ukraine, by this administration, when you look at, the, you know, voices on the outside that have even questioned our support for Israel and the economic policies, nationalization of businesses, broad based tariffs against friend and foe alike, price controls. I wanted to write a book that it was about what conservatives believe in the hopes that in the midterms and in 2028, we return our party to those founding principles.”

While praising several accomplishments of President Trump’s current administration, Pence expressed concern about policy directions he believes are inconsistent with long-standing Republican views on free markets and limited government.

He specifically pointed to proposals that would involve greater federal participation in private enterprise and said such ideas would have been unthinkable in earlier Republican administrations.

“This new cabinet that, new voices, I mean, the idea of, of literally having the federal government take a percentage share of American businesses, would have, I think, never even been discussed in the first Trump administration. Republicans have always believed in and limited government in free market economics and free enterprise. Those policies, big government policies that have made their way into this administration.”

Pence’s remarks reflect an ongoing debate within Republican circles over the party’s future direction, as competing factions vie for influence ahead of the 2026 midterm elections and the 2028 presidential race.

{Matzav.com}

New Cancer Vaccine Delivers Stunning Result Against One Of The Deadliest Skin Cancers

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A personalized mRNA-based cancer vaccine developed by Moderna and Merck has demonstrated encouraging long-term results in patients with advanced melanoma, significantly reducing the chances of the disease returning or leading to death over a five-year period.

The experimental treatment, known as intismeran autogene, is being tested in combination with KEYTRUDA (pembrolizumab), a widely used immunotherapy drug. New findings from the phase 2b KEYNOTE-942 trial were unveiled at the American Society of Clinical Oncology’s annual meeting in Chicago on May 27.

Researchers reported that patients who received the vaccine-immunotherapy combination experienced a 49% lower risk of melanoma recurrence or death compared with those treated with pembrolizumab alone after nearly five years of follow-up.

The study included 157 individuals with high-risk stage 3 and stage 4 melanoma whose tumors had been surgically removed. Participants were divided into two groups, with one receiving both intismeran autogene and KEYTRUDA, while the other received only KEYTRUDA.

According to investigators, the benefits seen in the combination-treatment group continued over time and remained durable throughout the follow-up period.

The vaccine is tailored to each individual patient. Scientists identify specific mutations within a patient’s tumor and use that information to create a personalized mRNA therapy designed to train the immune system to recognize and attack cancer cells if they return.

Researchers said the treatment has thus far demonstrated a favorable safety profile and has generally been well tolerated by patients.

Among the most frequently reported side effects were fatigue, pain at the injection site, chills, fever, and headaches. Investigators said they observed no new long-term safety issues and no serious adverse events directly linked to the vaccine.

The treatment has now advanced to a phase 3 clinical trial, the final stage typically required before regulatory approval can be considered.

In comments released by Merck in January, Kyle Holen, MD, Moderna’s senior vice president and head of development, oncology and therapeutics, said the findings underscore the “potential of a prolonged benefit … in patients with resected high-risk melanoma.”

“We continue to invest in our platform in oncology because of encouraging outcomes like these, which illustrate mRNA’s potential in cancer care,” he said.

Dr. Marjorie Green, senior vice president and head of oncology, global clinical development at Merck Research Laboratories, noted that many patients with advanced melanoma remain vulnerable to the disease returning even after surgery.

“As such, demonstrating the longer-term potential of intismeran autogene and KEYTRUDA to reduce the risk of recurrence for certain patients with melanoma is a meaningful milestone,” she said.

Merck also highlighted the positive long-term data while pointing to upcoming results from the late-stage INTerpath clinical program being conducted with Moderna in several cancers that have traditionally been difficult to treat.

{Matzav.com}

Musk Set to Hit $1 Trillion Net Worth as SpaceX IPO Nears

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Elon Musk is on the verge of becoming the first person in history with a net worth exceeding $1 trillion, a development that is already fueling debate in Washington and emerging as a talking point for Democrats ahead of the 2026 midterm elections.

The catalyst is SpaceX’s anticipated debut on the Nasdaq on June 12. The rocket and aerospace company is expected to enter public trading with a valuation of approximately $1.75 trillion, a move that could push Musk’s fortune beyond the trillion-dollar mark for the first time.

Democratic lawmakers have quickly seized on the prospect, using it to spotlight concerns about wealth inequality and advocate for higher taxes on the ultra-wealthy.

“Nobody should be a trillionaire. Tax the … rich,” Rep. Pramila Jayapal, D-Wash., wrote on X.

Sen. Bernie Sanders echoed that sentiment during a campaign event in Maine last month, calling it “insanity” for a single individual to accumulate such enormous wealth. Meanwhile, Michigan state lawmaker Mallory McMorrow, who is seeking the Democratic nomination for the U.S. Senate, has incorporated the issue into her campaign messaging.

Speaking by phone, McMorrow argued that Musk’s immense fortune helps illustrate broader economic concerns facing American families.

“Elon Musk is somebody who would not be as successful as he is without billions of dollars of government contracts and subsidies,” she said, drawing the line to gas prices, healthcare cuts and federal contracting.

To put the figure in perspective, McMorrow noted that $1 trillion would be enough to fund Michigan’s entire $81 billion state budget for more than a dozen years.

Musk’s approach toward the trillion-dollar threshold stems from two major financial developments.

The first occurred in November 2025, when Tesla shareholders approved a compensation package that could ultimately be worth as much as $1 trillion if Musk achieves a series of business and market-value goals, including raising Tesla’s valuation to $8.5 trillion.

The second is the upcoming SpaceX public offering. The IPO is expected to raise approximately $75 billion under the ticker symbol SPCX. Because Musk owns roughly 42 percent of the company, the offering alone could elevate his net worth beyond $1 trillion.

Musk has repeatedly argued that his wealth is tied to long-term goals involving humanity’s future beyond Earth. His SpaceX compensation package is reportedly linked to progress toward establishing a self-sustaining city of one million residents on Mars.

The billionaire has also defended himself against criticism over taxes. In 2021, Musk stated that he paid more than $11 billion in federal taxes. However, ProPublica reported that he paid no federal income tax in 2018.

Tax experts note that federal tax laws generally apply to income rather than overall wealth, meaning large increases in asset values do not automatically result in income-tax obligations.

Public opinion appears to be largely concerned about growing economic disparities. An Economist/YouGov survey conducted from January 2 through January 5 among 1,646 American adult citizens found that 80 percent view the gap between rich and poor as a major problem, while 59 percent support federal efforts to reduce that disparity. The poll had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.4 percentage points, with larger margins for subgroup results.

The debate is also taking on immediate policy significance. California voters are expected to consider a proposal this fall that would impose a 5 percent annual tax on net worth exceeding $1 billion.

Although Musk lives in Texas and would not be subject to the proposed California levy, his potential emergence as the nation’s first trillionaire has already intensified the political battle over wealth, taxation, and economic inequality.

{Matzav.com}

British Doctor: My Colleagues Said They Would Refuse to Treat Dying Israelis

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A Jewish physician in the United Kingdom has raised serious concerns about antisemitism within the National Health Service, claiming that some medical professionals have openly stated they would refuse emergency treatment to Israeli patients, prompting a government response and an urgent review of the healthcare system.

The doctor, identified only as Baruch, told ITV News that he was disturbed by conversations with fellow healthcare workers at a London hospital who allegedly admitted they would not provide life-saving care to Israelis in emergency situations.

“It is very scary to me that I have met doctors who’ve said that they will not, point-blank, treat somebody who has come from certain areas of the world. If they are dying in A&E, I’ve been told by doctors that if they’re from Israel, then they will not treat that person. That to me is disgraceful,” Baruch stated.

Baruch also alleged that Jewish patients had, in some cases, been denied access to kosher food while receiving hospital care.

The accusations drew a swift response from Britain’s Department of Health and Social Care, which characterized the claims as deeply troubling.

Officials acknowledged broader concerns within the healthcare system, stating that “the medical healthcare professional regulatory system is failing to protect Jewish patients and NHS staff.”

In response to the allegations, Prime Minister Keir Starmer ordered an urgent review of antisemitism and discrimination within the NHS. The investigation will be led by Lord Mann and will examine both antisemitic incidents and other forms of racism throughout the public healthcare system.

Baruch said the atmosphere he has experienced within the medical profession, combined with growing concerns about antisemitism in British society, has led him and his wife to decide to leave the United Kingdom and relocate to Israel.

The move brings an end to a family history in Britain stretching back approximately 400 years, dating to the return of Jewish settlement during the era of Oliver Cromwell. With his parents and five siblings already living overseas, Baruch said he will be the last member of his family to leave.

“To have that long lineage of a family who came here 400 years ago and now having to leave because on the one hand we want to leave, we love Israel, but also leaving because of antisemitism, is very sad,” Baruch reflected.

A spokesperson for the Department of Health and Social Care reiterated the government’s concerns and commitment to addressing the issue.

“These reports are shocking. It is unacceptable that people do not currently feel safe working in and using the health service. Recent incidents of antisemitism have drawn stark attention to problems of culture and how racist incidents are addressed. This government has been clear that change is needed and that the medical healthcare professional regulatory system is failing to protect Jewish patients and NHS staff. That’s why the prime minister ordered an urgent review, led by Lord Mann, into antisemitism and all forms of racism in the health service. We will use every tool at our disposal to make sure Jewish NHS staff feel safe at work,” the spokesperson confirmed.

The revelations come against the backdrop of a broader rise in antisemitic incidents across the United Kingdom. In late April, two Orthodox Jewish men were wounded in a stabbing attack in London’s Golders Green neighborhood, an incident that contributed to the government raising the national terrorism threat level from “substantial” to “severe” for the first time in more than four years.

{Matzav.com}

Report: Trump Will End Iran Ceasefire Only If American Troops Are Killed

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President Donald Trump has reportedly told senior aides that he would be prepared to abandon the current ceasefire with Iran if American service members are killed by Iranian forces, according to a report published Wednesday by The Wall Street Journal.

Despite that warning, U.S. officials told the newspaper that the ceasefire remains in effect, even after a new round of hostilities this week. Those incidents included American strikes Tuesday night on Iran’s Qeshm Island and an Iranian response involving missiles and drones launched toward Kuwait.

The report suggests that Trump is still seeking to avoid a wider war in the region and may be willing to tolerate limited exchanges between the two sides rather than immediately return to full-scale conflict. Officials indicated that the president appears prepared to endure smaller confrontations for an extended period if doing so helps prevent a broader regional war.

Speaking to reporters on Wednesday, Trump struck an optimistic tone regarding ongoing negotiations with Tehran and suggested an agreement could be close at hand.

“I hear the negotiations with Iran are going very well. If a deal happens with Iran it could be done over the weekend,” Trump told reporters, adding that Iran is “close” to signing the papers.

Trump also said he wants Iran’s stockpile of enriched uranium transferred to U.S. control and expressed confidence that such a move could occur soon.

When asked whether the ceasefire remained intact following Iran’s overnight attack on Kuwait, Trump replied, “There’s a reason for everything, and we hit them pretty hard”, while also acknowledging that “anything can happen when you are dealing with Iran.”

The president’s comments came a day after he pushed back against reports claiming that negotiations between Washington and Tehran had broken down.

In a post published Tuesday on Truth Social, Trump said discussions with Iran had continued uninterrupted and insisted that recent reports suggesting otherwise were inaccurate.

“Fake News Reports that the Islamic Republic of Iran, and the U.S.A., stopped speaking a few days ago are false and erroneous,” wrote Trump.

He added, “The conversations between us have been going on continuously, including four days ago, three days ago, two days ago, one day ago, and today. Where they lead, one never knows, but as I told Iran, ‘It’s time, one way or another, for you to make a Deal. You’ve been doing this for 47 years, and it cannot be allowed to go on any longer!’”

Trump’s remarks followed reports in Iranian media claiming that Tehran had suspended indirect talks with the United States because of Israel’s expanding military operations in Lebanon. The president’s statements directly contradicted those reports and underscored his administration’s position that negotiations remain active.

{Matzav.com}

NYU Alumnus Arrested Over Swastika-Defaced Israeli Flag

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A recent graduate of New York University has been arrested after allegedly placing a banner featuring swastikas and a Star of David on top of a university building during commencement celebrations, authorities announced Wednesday.

According to law enforcement officials, the 23-year-old suspect has been charged with criminal trespass as a hate crime, as well as burglary and aggravated harassment. Investigators say he climbed onto a campus building near West 4th Street and Greene Street in Greenwich Village and displayed the banner at approximately 5 p.m. on May 13.

Police said the banner was designed to resemble the Israeli flag and contained two swastikas, a Star of David, and the university’s logo. The student newspaper Washington Square News reported that the banner was hung from the Steinhardt building, home to NYU’s education programs and named after Jewish philanthropists Judy and Michael Steinhardt.

University officials subsequently filed a hate-crime complaint with law enforcement, prompting a formal investigation.

Authorities arrested the suspect Tuesday after reviewing surveillance footage that allegedly showed him inside the building and later on the roof around the time the banner appeared. According to court documents, investigators determined that he used his own NYU electronic access credentials to enter the facility.

A source familiar with the investigation said the suspect admitted during questioning that he created and displayed the banner because some students were concerned about the university’s positions regarding Israel.

Because the charges do not qualify for bail under current New York law, the suspect was released following a brief appearance in Manhattan Criminal Court on Tuesday evening.

In a statement, the university thanked investigators for their efforts in identifying the individual responsible.

The university expressed its appreciation for the police department’s “exhaustive work and for the efforts of the Manhattan District Attorney in identifying the person responsible for this heinous crime.”

“The symbols that were represented are antisemitic and hateful to every person of conscience; this appalling act violated our sense of community and solidarity,” Wiley Norvell, NYU senior vice president for university relations and public affairs said, as quoted by the New York Daily News. “In addition to criminal proceedings, we will immediately pursue our disciplinary procedures, which carry the most severe consequences.”

The arrest comes amid a continuing rise in antisemitic incidents reported on college campuses across the United States since the October 7, 2023 Hamas attack on Israel and the subsequent war in Gaza.

New York University has been among the institutions facing scrutiny over campus antisemitism. In July 2024, the university reached a settlement in a lawsuit brought by Jewish students who alleged that the school had failed to adequately address antisemitic conduct on campus.

{Matzav.com}

House Passes Resolution to Restrict Trump’s War Powers in Iran

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In a significant challenge to President Donald Trump’s authority over military operations involving Iran, the House of Representatives voted Wednesday to approve legislation aimed at restricting the president’s ability to engage in military action without congressional approval.

The vote marks the latest success in an ongoing effort by congressional Democrats to place legal limits on the administration’s war-making powers. According to CNN, momentum behind the initiative has been building in recent weeks as lawmakers push for greater congressional oversight of military decisions involving Iran.

The measure, which takes the form of a concurrent resolution, must also be approved by the Senate before it can take effect. Because it is not standard legislation, it does not require the president’s signature and will not be sent to the White House.

The resolution passed by a narrow 215-208 margin. Four Republicans—Representatives Thomas Massie, Brian Fitzpatrick, Tom Barrett, and Warren Davidson—broke with party leadership and joined Democrats in supporting the measure. The vote came after three previous attempts to advance similar legislation failed in the House.

Representative Gregory Meeks of New York, the ranking Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, led the effort to bring the resolution to the floor.

The House had originally planned to vote on the proposal on May 21, but Republican leaders canceled the vote at the last moment after determining that member absences would likely result in defeat.

Following that decision, Meeks accused House Speaker Mike Johnson of deliberately preventing lawmakers from voting in order to protect the administration from political embarrassment.

Ahead of Wednesday’s vote, Johnson mounted a vigorous defense of the president’s authority and warned that congressional intervention could undermine delicate diplomatic negotiations currently underway.

“I think it is a very dangerous prospect to take away from the administration and the commander-in-chief right now the ability to negotiate. That’s what this does. It, it weakens us, our position, and our leverage in negotiation on the peace in that situation. ‘Operation Epic Fury’ is concluded,” Johnson told CNN on Wednesday.

The Speaker also argued that the administration’s objectives in Iran had been clearly defined and successfully accomplished, rejecting growing calls from lawmakers in both parties for additional details about the strategy and its implementation.

“The president is now in the process of, of concluding a peace agreement, and we have to allow him the latitude to do that, and I think a war powers resolution right now is very untimely, and a very, very negative, and dangerous thing for the country,” the Speaker concluded.

{Matzav.com}

Witnessing Eternity

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By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz

Those at the Adirei HaTorah event on Sunday participated in something extraordinary.

They saw tens of thousands of bnei Torah gathered together. They saw roshei yeshiva, rabbonim, yungeleit, baalei batim, fathers and sons. They heard singing, felt excitement, and sensed that they were part of something historic.

But there are some people who would see much more than a gathering.

They would see a miracle.

Imagine a Holocaust survivor entering the stadium.

He looks across the sea of faces and struggles to comprehend what he is seeing. Everywhere he turns are young men devoted to Torah learning. Tens of thousands of people who have come together for no purpose of personal gain, entertainment, or recognition. They assembled for one reason, to honor the Torah and those who dedicate their lives to studying and living by it.

To many, it is inspiring.

To him, it is almost unimaginable.

He remembers a different world.

He remembers the great Torah centers of Europe. Warsaw, Vilna, Lublin, Pressburg, Slabodka, Mir, Kletzk, Telz, Ponovezh and hundreds of towns and villages whose very air seemed filled with Torah. He remembers botei medrash that hummed day and night, yeshivos overflowing with talmidim, and communities whose lives revolved around Torah.

Then came the destruction.

The Nazis did not merely seek to murder Jews. They sought to eradicate Judaism. They burned seforim, destroyed yeshivos, murdered rabbonim, roshei yeshiva and talmidim, and attempted to sever a chain stretching back to Har Sinai.

The survivor remembers standing amid the ruins and wondering whether that chain had been broken forever.

He remembers the ashes.

He remembers the silence.

He remembers a world in which entire communities vanished almost overnight.

Who could have imagined then what would come next?

Who could have imagined that less than a century later, there would be gatherings of tens of thousands of bnei Torah in America?

Who could have imagined stadiums filled not for sports, not for politics, not for entertainment, but solely for kavod haTorah?

A survivor would not simply see a crowd.

He would see the grandchildren of those who never had the opportunity to grow old.

He would see the dreams of murdered parents and grandparents walking among the living.

He would see proof that the Jewish people possess a resilience that defies every law of history.

Most nations celebrate military victories, economic achievements, or political triumphs.

The Jewish people fill stadiums to celebrate Torah.

A survivor would understand the significance of that better than anyone.

He witnessed what happens when Jews lose everything. Homes can be confiscated. Businesses can be destroyed. Entire communities can be wiped out.

Yet one thing endured.

The Torah.

The Nazis believed that they were burying the future of the Jewish people.

Instead, they planted seeds.

From the remnants emerged new yeshivos. From displaced persons camps emerged future roshei yeshiva, rabbonim, and teachers. Survivors crossed oceans carrying little more than faith, memories, and an unwavering commitment to rebuild.

Today, their descendants fill botei medrash across the globe.

Every young man learning a blatt Gemara is a declaration that the Jewish story continues.

Every yeshiva is a monument greater than any structure of stone.

Every child learning Alef-Bais is a victory over those who sought to extinguish us.

There is another person whose eyes would fill with tears upon entering the Adirei HaTorah event.

Not a survivor of Europe, but a Torah Jew who lived in America during the 1930s and 1940s.

He remembers a very different America.

Today we speak about the flourishing Torah world in the United States as though it were inevitable.

It was anything but.

In those years, many observers—within and outside the Orthodox community—were convinced that traditional Judaism had little future in America.

The challenges seemed overwhelming.

Shabbos observance often came at the cost of employment. Day schools were scarce. Yeshivos struggled to survive. Children of immigrants rapidly assimilated. The prevailing assumption was that America could provide economic opportunity, but never become a true home for Torah.

Europe was where Torah flourished.

America was where it would fade away.

Even many sincere Torah Jews feared that Orthodoxy might survive only as a small and shrinking remnant.

Had you told someone in those years that one day tens of thousands of bnei Torah would gather in a packed stadium to celebrate Torah learning, he would have thought that you were describing a fantasy.

A stadium?

Filled with lomdei Torah?

In America?

The very idea would have seemed impossible.

Imagine bringing such a Jew to Adirei HaTorah.

He would look around in astonishment.

Not because he had never seen a large crowd, but because he had spent a lifetime hearing that such a crowd could never exist.

Every face would refute the predictions.

Every yeshiva represented would disprove the experts.

Every voice joining in song would testify that Torah had not merely survived in America, but had flourished beyond anyone’s expectations.

The small yeshivos that struggled to keep their doors open became thriving institutions.

The handful became thousands.

The thousands became tens of thousands.

What many believed could never take root on American soil became one of the greatest centers of Torah learning in the world.

Standing at Adirei HaTorah, he would realize that he is witnessing one of the greatest surprises in modern Jewish history.

The dream became reality.

In truth, these two men, the survivor from Europe and the Torah Jew from early America, are seeing the same thing.

One sees the defeat of Hitler.

The other sees the defeat of assimilation.

One remembers a world where Torah was nearly destroyed.

The other remembers a world where Torah was expected to disappear.

Both arrive at the same conclusion.

The chain was not broken.

The Torah lives.

Yet, perhaps there is an even deeper perspective.

The survivor and the American Torah pioneer would not merely be looking at a crowd. They would be looking at the fulfillment of their hopes and prayers.

For the young men filling the stadium are not merely participants in an event. They are the answer to questions that previous generations carried in their hearts.

The survivor wondered whether there would be grandchildren learning Torah.

There are.

The immigrant who struggled to keep Shabbos wondered whether his descendants would remain faithful to Yiddishkeit.

They did.

The rosh yeshiva who opened a small classroom with a handful of students wondered whether Torah would ever flourish in America.

It has.

The parents who sacrificed comfort and convenience so their children could receive a Torah education wondered whether those sacrifices would bear fruit.

The fruit is before us.

What previous generations could only dream about, this generation experiences as reality.

And perhaps that is the greatest lesson of all.

When we look at a gathering such as Adirei HaTorah, we should not merely count how many people are present.

We should think about how many people stand behind them.

Behind every ben Torah are parents and grandparents who sacrificed. Behind every shteiging yungerman is a dedicated wife.

Behind every yeshiva are visionaries who built when there was little reason to believe they would succeed.

Behind every row of young men holding Gemaros are generations who carried the Torah through poverty, persecution, exile, and uncertainty.

In a sense, every seat in the stadium is occupied by more than one person.

The living fill the seats.

But surrounding them are the hopes, dreams, prayers, and sacrifices of generations past.

As the singing rises and the voices of thousands join together in honor of Torah, one can almost hear the verdict of history itself.

Those who sought to destroy us failed.

Those who predicted our decline were mistaken.

Against every calculation, every forecast, and every expectation, the Torah world has risen from the ashes, crossed oceans, taken root in new lands, and flourished beyond imagination.

The world may see a gathering.

They would see a resurrection.

The world may see a stadium.

They would see the rebuilding of a civilization.

The world may see an event.

They would see the fulfillment of a promise that has accompanied our people through every exile and every persecution: that the Torah entrusted to us at Har Sinai will never disappear from the Jewish people.

Standing amid the tens of thousands assembled for the honor of Torah, they would know that they are witnessing far more than a celebration.

They are witnessing eternity.

They tried to extinguish the flame.

Instead, it became a blazing fire.

And its light continues to illuminate the world.

Many articles about the growth of the Torah world focus on numbers — how many attendees, how many yeshivos, how many students, how many communities. Those numbers are certainly remarkable.

But what makes Adirei HaTorah so moving is that it is not really a story about quantity. It is a story about improbability.

If you had stood in Europe in 1945 amid the ruins of Jewish civilization, you would not have predicted this.

If you had stood in America in 1950, when many believed that Torah Judaism was destined to fade into history, you would not have predicted this.

If you had asked the survivors, the struggling roshei yeshiva, the rabbonim fighting off efforts to lower the mechitzah and open the parking lot, the immigrants fighting to keep Shabbos, or the parents sacrificing everything to send a child to yeshiva, they would have hoped for this, but many would have hardly dared imagine it.

That is why a gathering like Adirei HaTorah feels different. It is not merely large. It is unexpected. It represents the triumph of faith over statistics, conviction over prediction, and mesorah over the powerful currents that seemed destined to sweep it away.

Perhaps the most powerful image is not the stadium itself, but the thought of those earlier generations looking upon it.

A survivor searching the crowd for the grandchildren he feared would never exist.

A European rosh yeshiva seeing thousands of talmidim learning on a continent once thought inhospitable to Torah.

An immigrant laborer who lost job after job for Shabbos watching generations of descendants proudly living as Torah Jews.

A mother who scrimped and sacrificed to pay yeshiva tuition seeing a world where Torah education is cherished and sought after.

What would they say?

Perhaps nothing.

Perhaps they would simply stand silently and cry.

Not tears of sadness, but tears of gratitude.

Because before them would stand the answer to decades of prayers.

A living testimony that Torah is not merely preserved in books. It lives within people. It passes from parent to child, rebbi to talmid, generation to generation. And as long as that chain remains unbroken, the story of Klal Yisroel continues.

That is what makes Adirei HaTorah so powerful.

It is not only a celebration of those learning Torah today.

It is a tribute to those who made sure that there would still be Jews learning Torah today. And it is a declaration to future generations that the chain they preserved is now in our hands.

Yet, Adirei HaTorah is not merely a celebration of the past.

It is a celebration of the present.

To focus only on what was lost or what was rebuilt would be to miss the extraordinary reality standing before us.

The greatest achievement of Torah Jewry is not that Torah survived.

It is that Torah lives.

Across America and around the world, hundreds of thousands of Jews begin and end their days with Torah. Botei medrash hum from early morning until late at night. Young men devote years to serious Torah study. Baalei batim rise before dawn and remain after exhausting workdays to learn. Children fill classrooms learning Chumash, Mishnah, Gemara, and halacha. Families build homes centered around Shabbos, tefillah, chesed, and mitzvos.

This is not a museum preserving a glorious past.

It is a vibrant, living world.

The Torah celebrated at Adirei HaTorah is not merely the Torah learned by previous generations.

It is the Torah being learned today.

At this very moment, somewhere, a father is learning with his child. Somewhere, a rebbi is teaching a class. Somewhere, a chavrusa is struggling over a difficult Tosafos. Somewhere, a young boy is reciting Alef-Beis. Somewhere, a young girl is learning what it means to live a life of kedusha and emunah.

The chain continues to grow.

And perhaps that is what makes the gathering so remarkable.

The attendees are not gathering around a memory.

They are gathering around a reality.

The world often measures success through wealth, power, fame, or influence.

Adirei HaTorah celebrates something entirely different.

It celebrates people who dedicate themselves to understanding Hashem’s wisdom.

It celebrates lives shaped by Torah values.

It celebrates parents who sacrifice for Torah education, teachers who devote themselves to their students, communities built upon chesed, and individuals who strive each day to become better servants of Hashem.

In an age captivated by celebrities, athletes, entertainers, and influencers, tens of thousands gather to honor lomdei Torah.

What does that say about a people?

It says that despite all the changes in the world, despite the distractions and pressures of modern life, Torah remains at the center of Jewish existence.

The significance of Adirei HaTorah is not merely that tens of thousands attend.

It is what those tens of thousands represent.

They represent countless more learning in yeshivos and kollelim here and around the world.

They represent families striving to build Torah homes.

They represent communities where Torah guides daily life.

They represent a generation that appreciates that Torah is not an artifact of the past, but the foundation of the present and the future.

That is worthy of celebration.

Not only because previous generations dreamed it would happen.

But because it is happening.

Perhaps one of the most remarkable aspects of Adirei HaTorah is that many of those who attend do not fully appreciate how remarkable it is.

Not because they are ungrateful.

But because they are young.

They were born into a world where Torah flourishes.

For them, bustling botei medrash are normal. Thriving yeshivos are normal. Torah communities stretching across cities and continents are normal. Fathers learning with their children, kollelim filled with yungeleit, schools overflowing with students, and neighborhoods built around Torah life are simply the reality they have always known.

They never experienced the world that came before.

They never stood in the shadow of the destruction of Europe.

They never heard predictions that Orthodox Judaism could not survive in America.

They never saw yeshivos struggling to keep their doors open or families fighting to preserve Torah observance against overwhelming odds.

And that is precisely what makes the moment so extraordinary.

The greatest victories eventually become so complete that people forget there was ever a battle.

The young man sitting in a packed stadium surrounded by tens of thousands of fellow bnei Torah naturally assumes that this is how things are supposed to be.

But the generations before him know differently.

They know how improbable it all is.

They know how many obstacles stood in the way.

They know how many tears were shed, how many sacrifices were made, how many tefillos were offered, and how much faith was required to bring the Torah world to this point.

The young men filling the seats see themselves as ordinary participants in an extraordinary event.

But from the perspective of history, they are the event.

They are what previous generations dreamed about.

They are the answer to prayers offered in DP camps, in struggling yeshivos, in immigrant apartments, and in homes where parents wondered whether their children and grandchildren would remain faithful to Torah.

The greatest tribute to those earlier generations is not merely remembering their sacrifices.

It is recognizing what those sacrifices produced.

Look around the stadium.

Look at the thousands of young faces.

That is the achievement.

That is the victory.

That is the miracle.

Not simply that Torah survived.

But that an entire generation has grown up taking its flourishing for granted.

And perhaps that is the most profound sight of all.

The builders of the Torah world would look upon those young men and smile.

For they would know that what was once an impossible dream has become reality.

Rav Aharon Kotler, the Ponovezher Rov, the roshei yeshiva of Telz, and the many other builders of Torah who were mocked, criticized and perceived as irrational and impractical relics are today viewed as heroes blessed with incredible foresight and spiritual strength.

It’s a new day, a new era, with new vistas, old battles won and new battles to be fought. We look forward with faith and strength, saluting today’s heroes who make it possible, leading, supporting and implementing shelo yomush haTorah hazos mipinu umipi zareinu vezera zareinu ad olam ad bias Moshiach Tzidkeinu bekarov beyomeinu. Amein.

{Matzav.com}

Iranian FM Warns: Strikes On Beirut Will Trigger ‘Full-Scale Resumption’ of War

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Iran issued a sharp warning on Wednesday that any military strike on Beirut would trigger a renewed regional conflict, as diplomatic efforts to secure a ceasefire between Israel and Lebanon continued in Washington.

Speaking to the Hezbollah-affiliated Al Mayadeen television network, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi said the conflict involving Iran, Israel, and the United States cannot be separated from developments in Lebanon.

“The fate of the war between Iran and the Zionists (Israel) and Americans is inseparable from the fate of the battle in Lebanon, and these two fronts have been intertwined since day one,” Araghchi stated during an interview with the pro-Hezbollah Lebanese broadcaster Al Mayadeen TV.

Araghchi also warned that Tehran is prepared to respond militarily if Israel targets the Lebanese capital, making clear that Iran views Beirut as a red line.

“Any attack on Beirut will have grave consequences and will lead to a full-scale resumption of the war,” he continued, adding Iran’s “armed forces are ready to strike Israel if it attacks Beirut”.

Since the outbreak of hostilities, Iranian officials have repeatedly insisted that any diplomatic effort to resolve the broader regional conflict must include an end to military operations in Lebanon.

On Wednesday, Araghchi reiterated that, from Tehran’s perspective, a lasting end to the fighting can only be achieved if Israel completely withdraws its forces from Lebanese territory.

“The end of the war in Lebanon also means the end of the occupation. That is, the end of the war must be accompanied by the withdrawal of the Zionist regime’s forces from the areas they have occupied,” Araghchi told the television station.

The comments came as Israeli and Lebanese representatives met in Washington for a second consecutive day of direct talks under American mediation. The discussions marked the fourth round of negotiations between the two sides.

Following Wednesday’s session, the United States, Israel, and Lebanon announced that progress had been made toward a ceasefire arrangement. In a joint statement, the parties said they had agreed on a truce “contingent on a complete cessation of Hezbollah fire and the evacuation of all Hezbollah operatives from the South Litani Sector”.

The current diplomatic effort follows an earlier meeting held on April 23, attended by Israel’s ambassador to the United States, Yechiel Leiter, and Lebanon’s ambassador to the United States, Nada Hamadeh Moawad.

After that initial round of talks, President Donald Trump expressed optimism that Israel and Lebanon could achieve peace before the end of the year.

Trump also said he would like to host a meeting in Washington between Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu and Lebanese President Joseph Aoun within the next few weeks.

Aoun, however, has indicated that such a summit is not currently under consideration, maintaining that ending the fighting must come before any direct political engagement between the two leaders.

The Lebanese president has also emphasized that a complete Israeli withdrawal from southern Lebanon remains a “non-negotiable” condition for reaching any final agreement.

{Matzav.com}

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