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250th Birthday Quarters Scrapped; Trump $1 Coin Stays

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A sweeping redesign of America’s currency for the nation’s 250th anniversary has ignited fresh controversy, with a proposal now circulating that places President Donald Trump at the center of a commemorative $1 coin.

According to the online materials tied to the Mint’s semiquincentennial planning, new illustrations of Trump have been drafted for the obverse of a potential 2026 dollar coin. At the same time, concept art for earlier “America 250” quarters—once built around themes such as abolition, women’s suffrage, and civil rights—has reportedly been shelved in favor of a return to more traditional, founding-era motifs.

The Mint’s broader 2026 redesign calls for all coins to bear dual dates honoring both the birth of the nation and its 250-year milestone. As part of this shift, officials have previewed imagery steeped in Revolutionary-era symbolism, including iconic documents and scenes tied to America’s founding. These new directions come after the abandonment of concepts initiated during the Biden years that placed greater emphasis on later chapters of American social progress.

A series of five quarters is expected for 2026, each tied to a pivotal historical text or event: the Mayflower Compact, the Declaration of Independence, the Revolutionary War, the U.S. Constitution, and the Gettysburg Address.

Treasurer Brandon Beach has acknowledged that a Trump-themed dollar is being weighed, and several reports describe mock-ups portraying Trump’s profile on one side and, on the other, an image of him thrusting his fist upward following the 2024 assassination attempt, accompanied by the words “FIGHT, FIGHT, FIGHT.”

The idea, however, runs directly into federal restrictions prohibiting living presidents—current or past—from appearing on U.S. coinage. Advocates of the new coin insist that special semiquincentennial authorities could offer legal leeway, while opponents argue it would violate long-established practice and risk politicizing the nation’s money.

Within conservative circles, the controversy is framed as part of a larger cultural battle over how America’s 250th birthday should be told: whether through the nation’s founding ideals and foundational texts or through what they see as the left’s negative reinterpretations of American history.

Alongside these debates, the Mint is also preparing updates to long-standing circulating coins for 2026. Even the dime—whose appearance has been unchanged for eight decades—is scheduled for a refresh. And although the penny exited daily circulation in 2025, collectors will still be able to obtain it in annual Mint sets, complete with the commemorative “1776 ~ 2026” dual date.

{Matzav.com}

Charlie Kirk’s Alleged Assassin Said He Thinks About The Shooting ‘Every Day’

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The man accused in the killing of Charlie Kirk returned to court this week, and a newly analyzed off-mic exchange revealed disturbing remarks that shed light on his mindset in the months since the shooting, the NY Post report. A professional lip-reading review of the courtroom footage suggests that Tyler Robinson repeatedly referenced the attack and even brought up Kirk’s widow, Erika, in a chilling aside to his attorney.

As Robinson entered the Provo, Utah, courtroom on Thursday—his first in-person appearance more than three months after the shooting—he appeared composed, even sharing a quiet laugh with his lawyer. Yet the lip-reading analysis captured a far darker tone beneath the surface. One portion of the footage shows him saying, “I think about the shooting daily,” a remark attributed to a private moment before the hearing began. He went on to add, “Every morning … all the time.”

The analysis indicates that Robinson then shifted to the subject of Kirk’s family, referencing the activist’s widow, who is raising their two young children alone. At one point, the lip reader caught him saying, “So, he had a wife….”

Other snippets appeared to show Robinson speaking about his own state of mind. According to the review, he confessed privately to his lawyer that he’s been “smoking a lot … Not sleeping at night … it’s driving me mental.” He continued with, “Unfortunately, it’s doing my head in. I’m not good for anything.”

Despite those alleged comments, Robinson displayed little visible distress while standing before the judge, wearing a plain blue button-down shirt paired with an argyle tie. Prosecutors say he opened fire on the 31-year-old conservative activist on September 10 during a Turning Point USA event at Utah Valley University, attacking in front of thousands of attendees.

Thursday’s proceedings were expected to address two issues: whether cameras would be permitted in the courtroom and whether portions of an earlier October phone-hearing transcript—regarding Robinson’s right to appear in street clothes—would be released to the public. Robinson’s defense opposed both. Judge Tony Graf spent more than two hours behind closed doors considering arguments, ultimately postponing any decision.

A new hearing was set for December 29, when the judge is scheduled to issue rulings on the outstanding matters.

Robinson remains held on multiple serious charges, including aggravated murder, obstruction of justice, felony discharge of a firearm causing serious bodily injury, two counts of witness tampering, and committing a violent offense in the presence of a child.

{Matzav.com}

Former IDF Chief Of Staff Pays Emotional Tribute To His Fallen Son: “Gal Is Missing From Every Second Of My Day; He Walks With Me Always”

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A moving memorial ceremony was held this morning at the Herzliya cemetery marking two years since the death of Gal Eisenkot, the son of former IDF Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot, who was killed in Gaza during an operation to recover the bodies of kidnapped Israelis.

Standing before family, friends, and soldiers, Eisenkot spoke with raw emotion about the profound void left by his son’s loss. “Gal is missing from every second of my day, and he walks with me always,” he said. “What defined Gal more than anything was his deep friendship.”

He reflected on the bond between Gal and his close friend Eyal, who fell alongside him during the same mission. “They shared an enormous love for the country, a sense of camaraderie and commitment,” Eisenkot said. “In their deaths—like so many young men and women whose lives have been cut short—there remains a duty and a command: to advance the State of Israel with a spirit of responsibility, mutual responsibility, excellence as a way of life, and the principle of ‘Ve’ahavta l’reiacha kamocha,’ not in words, but in actions.”

Eisenkot continued by describing the spirit in which his son and his comrades went to battle: “Gal and his friends went out to a just and difficult war, after a very serious national failure, and they demonstrated remarkable resilience that teaches us something about Israeli solidarity and the strength found within Israeli society.”

In his closing words, the former chief of staff emphasized what he sees as the essential message of his son’s legacy. “The final point, which in my eyes is the central one, is mutual responsibility and solidarity. If there is something that defined Gal from childhood—and this was echoed by his friends who spoke here—it is mutual responsibility. And if something is deeply troubling today, it is the enormous gap between the talk of solidarity, unity, and shared purpose, and the practical reality.”

{Matzav.com}

Tragedy in Ramot: Thirteen-Year-Old Dies After Devastating Fire

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A deep pall of grief has fallen over Yerushalayim after the passing of 13-year-old Nosson Tzvi Reizfeld z”l, a child with special needs who succumbed to injuries sustained in a catastrophic fire last week. He died at Hadassah Ein Kerem Hospital, despite a week of intensive medical efforts. His levayah was held at midnight at the Shamgar Funeral Home, followed by burial at Har Hamenuchos.

The heartbreaking incident occurred last Wednesday. According to initial reports, the boy left a therapeutic program in the Ramat Shlomo area and made his way to a residential building on Yaakov Elazar Street in the Ramot neighborhood. There, he accidentally ignited a blaze that quickly engulfed two floors of the building, posing a grave risk to the residents inside.

Fire and rescue teams rushed to the scene within minutes, battling the flames and evacuating residents from the smoke-filled building. Firefighters found Nosson Tzvi unconscious, suffering from severe smoke inhalation and extensive burns.

The drama intensified during the emergency transport to the hospital. Shuki Baker, a United Hatzalah paramedic, described the life-or-death struggle inside the ambulance. According to Baker, the child’s heart stopped en route, forcing the medical crew to initiate advanced resuscitation.

“After administering an electric shock from the defibrillator, his heart began beating again, and we transported him to the hospital in critical condition,” Baker said.

For a full week, hospital teams fought tirelessly to stabilize him. Tragically, his condition deteriorated and doctors were ultimately forced to declare his passing.

{Matzav.com}

Missing Bnei Brak Woman Found Alive in the Yarkon as Search for 19-Year-Old Continues

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A major search effort intensified along the Yarkon River on Friday as rescue teams scoured the area from both air and water in an urgent attempt to find 19-year-old Eliyahu Abba Shaul of Bnei Brak, who has been missing since Wednesday. Helicopters, drones, rescue boats, and dozens of volunteers joined the operation as fears for his safety increased.

While the teams were searching for the young man, police received a second report: another resident of Bnei Brak had disappeared. Rescue crews immediately divided into separate units to search two areas simultaneously.

After roughly two hours of parallel searches, the missing woman was found alive.

According to ZAKA, police alerted them around midday about the additional missing person. Divers and rescue boats were deployed along the river, carrying out extensive sweeps of the water and surrounding terrain. During the search, ZAKA’s diving team discovered the woman exhausted and exhibiting signs of severe hypothermia as she called out for help.

She was brought onto a rescue boat and transferred for medical treatment.

The search for the 19-year-old, however, remains unresolved. His clothing and electric bicycle were found near the river, raising growing concern for his well-being. Police and numerous volunteers continue to search on foot, by boat, and in kayaks, covering significant stretches of the Yarkon as daylight hours pass.

Yisroel Chossid, spokesperson for ZAKA, said: “The search for the young man was underway at the same time that we received a report about another missing person in the river. ZAKA divers, together with the rescue boat, located her while our teams worked quickly and professionally to save her life. We are continuing the search for the missing young man using every operational resource available to us.”

Rescue teams say the operation will continue nonstop until he is found.

{Matzav.com}

NY Slams ‘Failing’ Trump Admin As State Risks Losing $73M In Funds Over Immigrant Licenses

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Federal officials sharply escalated their criticism of New York’s commercial driver licensing system on Friday, with U.S. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy warning that the state could lose $73 million in highway funding unless it overhauls how it handles licenses issued to immigrants. Duffy said the problem stems from licenses remaining valid well beyond the period an immigrant is authorized to live or work in the country.

State officials pushed back, insisting that their procedures comply fully with federal rules and that they have been properly checking lawful status before issuing any commercial driver’s license. They rejected any suggestion that New York was ignoring regulations or failing to verify documents.

Duffy’s scrutiny of New York is part of his broader national campaign to tighten oversight of truck and bus driver qualifications. He launched that push after a tragic Florida crash in which a truck driver — who was not permitted to be in the country — made an illegal U-turn that led to three fatalities. Although the regulations governing these licenses have been on the books for years, Duffy has begun leaning heavily on states he says are falling short.

While the Transportation Department has emphasized that it is reviewing these “non-domiciled” commercial licenses nationwide, only states with Democratic governors have been threatened with the loss of federal highway money. Still, Duffy insisted politics has nothing to do with it, saying the goal is simply to ensure that anyone operating a massive tractor-trailer is properly vetted and legally authorized.

According to Duffy, federal investigators examined roughly 200 commercial licenses in New York and concluded that more than half were issued incorrectly. Many defaulted to eight-year validity even when an immigrant’s work authorization would expire much sooner. Investigators also reported that New York could not demonstrate proof of lawful-status checks for the 32,000 active non-domiciled commercial licenses currently on the books, and that in some cases the state granted licenses even though the applicant’s work permit had already lapsed.

“When more than half of the licenses reviewed were issued illegally, it isn’t just a mistake — it is a dereliction of duty by state leadership. Gov. (Kathy) Hochul must immediately revoke these illegally issued licenses,” Duffy said.

New York now has a 30-day window to submit its formal response. The DMV, meanwhile, flatly rejected Duffy’s accusations, with spokesperson Walter McClure issuing a pointed rebuttal.

“Secretary Duffy is lying about New York State once again in a desperate attempt to distract from the failing, chaotic administration he represents. Here is the truth: Commercial Drivers Licenses are regulated by the Federal Government, and New York State DMV has, and will continue to, comply with federal rules,” McClure said.

“Every CDL we issue is subject to verification of an applicant’s lawful status through federally-issued documents reviewed in accordance with federal regulations. This is just another stunt from Secretary Duffy, and it does nothing to keep our roads safer. We will review USDOT’s letter and respond accordingly,” the statement continued.

Although immigrants constitute about one-fifth of the nation’s truck-driving workforce, these non-domiciled licenses make up only about 5% of total commercial licenses nationwide. At the same time, the Transportation Department has attempted to impose stricter rules limiting which noncitizens can qualify for commercial licensing, but those regulations are currently paused due to a court ruling.

New York is not the only state facing threats of financial penalties. Duffy has issued similar warnings to California, Pennsylvania, and Minnesota after federal audits flagged significant compliance issues, including licenses remaining valid long after a driver’s work authorization had expired. Under that pressure, California ultimately revoked 17,000 licenses.

{Matzav.com}

CNN: FDA Considers Strongest Warning for COVID Vaccines

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A major shift in how COVID-19 vaccines are presented to the public may be on the horizon, as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration is preparing to add a stringent “black box” warning to the shots, according to a CNN report citing individuals familiar with the internal discussions. A black box warning is the FDA’s strongest caution, reserved for highlighting potentially serious risks or important limitations on use.

CNN reported that the effort to implement the enhanced warnings is being directed by Vinay Prasad, who serves as the FDA’s chief medical and scientific officer as well as director of the Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research. His office is reportedly coordinating the review and the proposed language of the label changes.

Pharmaceutical manufacturers Moderna, Pfizer, and Novavax, along with the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, did not immediately respond to Reuters when asked for comment about the developing plan.

According to CNN, the proposal remains fluid. Officials have not yet finalized the policy, and the contours of the warning could still be revised before anything is made public.

The report said it is still uncertain whether the warning—expected to be announced before the end of the year—would apply only to mRNA-based vaccines or to all COVID vaccines on the market. It also remains unclear whether the warning would be uniform across all age groups.

Moderna and Pfizer both rely on messenger RNA technology for their shots, while Novavax offers a protein-based vaccine built on a more traditional platform.

{Matzav.com}

Homan: Illegal Immigration Isn’t Victimless

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Border czar Tom Homan issued a direct challenge to Catholic leadership on Thursday, inviting bishops and pastoral figures to accompany him and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement teams in the field so they can witness, as he put it, “why illegal immigration is not a victimless crime.” His outreach followed repeated criticism from the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, which has warned about fear spreading in immigrant communities and raised concerns about “conditions in detention centers” and “lack of access to pastoral care.”

Pope Leo XIV has also spoken about the emotional toll on longtime residents caught up in enforcement activity, urging that pastoral staff be allowed into detention facilities and noting that people who spent years in the country “never causing problems” have been “deeply affected” by recent policies.

Appearing on “The World Over with Raymond Arroyo,” Homan—who emphasized his identity as a practicing Catholic—pushed back against the suggestion that immigration enforcement violates human dignity. He insisted that abandoning enforcement empowers cartels, increases human trafficking, and leads to more migrant deaths on the journey into the United States.

Homan also argued that border security measures, including stronger physical barriers, directly protect vulnerable populations. In his telling, heightened security “save lives” because fewer migrants are forced onto perilous routes dominated by traffickers.

The tensions around enforcement erupted into national debate when a parish near Boston transformed its Nativity scene to protest ICE. According to the National Catholic Reporter, the traditional Holy Family was removed and replaced with a sign that read “ICE was here.” The Archdiocese of Boston denounced the modified display and asked that it be taken down, saying sacred items should not be turned into political props.

Homan said gestures like that inflame resentment toward front-line officers and contribute to what he described as increasingly dangerous rhetoric directed at ICE personnel. He cast the current immigration strategy under President Donald Trump as unprecedented in its scale and discipline, asserting that the system prioritizes “public safety threats” and “national security threats” while ensuring that all immigration laws are enforced.

He claimed the pace of removals is already surpassing historical markers, saying the government is approaching “around 600,000” removals in under a year. According to Homan, those numbers will rise further as the administration aims to hire 10,000 additional agents and is “tripling the size of the ICE enforcement branch.”

A significant component of the renewed effort, he said, involves tracking down migrant children who were released into the United States during the Biden administration and subsequently disappeared. Homan estimated that roughly half a million minors were smuggled into the country and that federal authorities “lost track” of about 300,000 of them.

He reported that the Trump administration has already identified 62,456 of those children. Some, he said, were safely living with relatives, while others had been forced into “forced labor” or “forced sexual slavery.” Homan added that minors who have reached adulthood will not be removed from the search lists, as exploitation “does not end at adulthood.”

{Matzav.com}

Eisenkot Warns Netanyahu Over Draft Law as Polls Show His Party Stalling

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With recent polling showing his party losing momentum, MK Gadi Eisenkot is sharpening his criticism of the government’s proposed draft legislation, sending a pointed letter to Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu urging him to halt the process.

Eisenkot, who leads the Yashar party, has been struggling to regain ground after earlier surveys projected a double-digit showing. The latest polling places him at just eight seats, down from a peak of twelve, a decline that political observers say is prompting him to intensify his attacks on the draft bill, which he and others in his political bloc label “the draft-dodging law.”

The letter follows his appearance earlier this week before the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, where he issued vocal warnings about what he described as dangerous flaws in the legislation.

Eisenkot, a former IDF chief of staff, wrote that he attended the hearing “out of a sense of urgency and the magnitude of the moment,” but left convinced that the government is intent on advancing the law “at any cost.”

He argued that the current version of the security service bill represents a fundamental threat to Israel’s defense structure. “The Security Service Law being rushed forward these days in a feverish blitz in the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee is a law that endangers the security of the State of Israel. The law dismantles the framework of the people’s army, for which and through which the IDF exists,” he wrote.

Drawing on his decades in senior military leadership, Eisenkot declared, “As a military man most of my life, as chief of staff under your government, and as someone who sat at the junctions of security decision-making for years, I state unequivocally that the draft law now under discussion harms the IDF’s sole mission: defending the State of Israel, ensuring its existence, and winning wars.”

He insisted that the law would fail to supply the IDF with the manpower it requires. “There is no doubt that the law in its current form will not bring the IDF the number of soldiers and fighters it needs, certainly not in wartime, and it does not address the IDF’s needs at all.”

Eisenkot warned against compounding what he called past mistakes. “We must not fix a historic mistake with another historic mistake that may not be reversible, and which will be a calamity for generations — both security-wise and socially.”

He emphasized that the burden carried by IDF soldiers and reservists cannot continue as it has. “IDF soldiers, regular and reserve, who always bear the security burden — and in the past two years more than ever — cannot carry it alone any longer. It is not possible militarily, and it is not legal, equal, or proper personally or socially.”

Eisenkot urged Netanyahu to halt the legislation and bring forward a different version. “In the current situation I call on you personally — stop before destruction. Bring to the Knesset a law that will draft everyone: whether to military, national, or civilian service; return the authority of granting exemptions from rabbis to the state; reward those who serve; punish draft evaders; and allow a deferral of up to 3 percent per draft cycle (about 4,500 students a year). This is possible, and this is the right thing to do.”

He concluded with a stark warning, invoking his earlier caution ahead of October 7. “I view the current proposal as one over which a black flag flies, and therefore I present to you this severe strategic warning for Israel’s security and the values of Israeli society, similar to the one I sent you in August 2023, nearly two months before the failure of the seventh of October.”

{Matzav.com}

Home of Rav Matisyahu Salomon zt”l in Lakewood Placed on the Market

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An iconic Lakewood, NJ property with deep communal significance has quietly entered the real estate market: The longtime residence of Rav Matisyahu Salomon zt”l, mashgiach of Beth Medrash Govoah, has been listed for sale.

The home, located at 637 6th Street, down the block from Beth Medrash Govoah, is being offered for $1,799,000.

Situated on one of the most sought-after blocks in Lakewood, the listing highlights the rare opportunity to purchase a large residence on an oversized lot in a prime location just steps from the heart of the yeshiva community.

According to the listing, the property features ten bedrooms and five full bathrooms, along with a large amount of living space totaling 6,656 square feet. The entryway includes a vestibule-style front door opening into a foyer, with a study to the right and a newer, spacious kitchen leading into a comfortable family room and an extra-large dining room. The home also includes a large enclosed porch, a main-floor suite with two bedrooms and two full bathrooms, and its own private exterior entrance.

The basement is fully finished and offers extensive additional space. The house sits further back on the lot, allowing for a sizeable side and backyard area. The listing describes the property as particularly well suited for a large family or multigenerational living.

The home served for years as the residence of Rav Salomon, who became one of the most influential mashgichim of the contemporary Torah world after joining Beth Medrash Govoah in 1998. Thousands of talmidim and visitors passed through its doors over the years, seeking guidance, chizuk, and direction from the mashgiach and his rebbetzin.

{Matzav.com}

U.S. Presses Israel to Cover Gaza Rubble Removal as Rebuilding Debate Intensifies

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American officials have reportedly informed Israel that Washington expects Israel to shoulder the enormous task of clearing the mountains of wreckage in the Gaza Strip, according to Ynet, which cited a senior Israeli source familiar with the discussions.

The report says Israel has agreed to the demand, a commitment that could carry a price tag of up to one billion shekels, though the Prime Minister’s Office has declined to address the matter publicly.

International assessments highlight the scale of the challenge. The Wall Street Journal noted that UN Development Program data points to roughly 68 million tons of debris scattered throughout Gaza.

Funding for broader reconstruction has already sparked diplomatic friction. Earlier this week, Qatari Prime Minister Mohammed Abdulrahman Al Thani made clear his country will not bankroll the rebuilding effort, stating, “We are not the ones who are going to write the check to rebuild what others destroyed,” and adding, “When you are talking about Gaza, Israel flattened this land.”

The Ynet report also says the United States is sending Ambassador to Turkey Tom Barrack to meet Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu next week. Barrack is expected to push Israel to allow Turkish forces into Gaza — a proposal Israeli leaders have consistently rejected.

According to the senior Israeli official, U.S. discussions with Jerusalem have increasingly centered on what reconstruction will look like and far less on operational plans to neutralize Hamas. The source adds that Netanyahu has been telling associates privately that dismantling Hamas will ultimately be an Israeli military responsibility.

{Matzav.com}

THE FULL FOOTAGE: How The Six Hostages Tried To Hold On To Hope

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[Full video below.] Fresh video segments delivered to the Hostages Families Forum Headquarters by the IDF on Thursday brought the public face-to-face with the final months of six captives who were murdered in Rafah in August 2024: Hersh Goldberg-Polin, Eden Yerushalmi, Ori Danino, Alex Lubanov, Almog Sarusi, and Carmel Gat. The material captures the group’s attempts to cling to routine and emotional stability deep underground.

The clips, filmed at various points during their imprisonment, show the hostages trying to normalize the unbearable. They sit together over chessboards and decks of cards, snack on whatever food they are given, trim each other’s hair, and offer physical closeness and encouragement in the cramped tunnel space.

In one scene, Alex Lubanov is seen buzzing a fellow hostage’s hair while joking, “You could enlist today.”

Another moment shows Hersh celebrating a small victory, announcing, “I won at Rummy,” to the amusement of Eden and Carmel. Hersh then turns serious, declaring, “Let all of Israel know that I am alive, healthy, and everything is fine.”

As the 2024 New Year approached, the group tried to mark the moment by filming a cheerful joint message. They counted down in unison, ending their brief celebration with a spirited, “Happy New Year.”

Eden looks directly into the camera and offers her own message: “Happy New Year to all the families. We are waiting to come home. Happy birthday to my little sister, May – may you be happy and healthy. With God’s help, soon, this year, as they say.”

Another recording shows Hersh, whose hand had been amputated on October 7, attempting to reassure loved ones: “We are healthy, alive, they are taking care of us, we are okay. We want to come home. Happy New Year.”

Almog follows with a message full of longing and resolve: “Happy New Year to everyone at home. We will come back to you healthy and whole. Don’t worry. We are here, and we are here to return.”

Chanukah brought its own bittersweet exchange. As they tried to recreate the holiday underground, Eden asks, “Where are the sufganiyot (doughnuts)?” Laughter follows, and someone replies, “We should have asked for a dreidel too.” Hersh chimes in with a craving for normal life: “We’re waiting for Roladin back in Israel.” During their makeshift candle lighting, the hostages expressed their hopes for “miracles” and pledged, “We will continue to believe.”

Ori Danino, wrestling with the impossibility of observing the mitzvah properly, is heard saying, “We are in a place where we cannot truly light Hanukkah candles, because of bandits, wild beasts, and enemies. What we are doing now is a mitzvah. We are trying to fulfill the commandment – but we cannot.”

Another video shows the immense pressure of captivity pressing in. Carmel Gat, in a quiet but firm voice, pleads with one of the terrorists about Almog’s deteriorating condition: “It’s been too long like this, it’s not good. He needs treatment.” She adds, “I’m not a doctor,” emphasizing that he requires real medical help.

Additional footage reveals the six making their way through the damp tunnel passages where they were ultimately killed. At one point, a hostage takes in a rare moment of ventilation and exclaims, “Finally, fresh air.”

WATCH:

{Matzav.com}

Israel Probes New Intelligence on Burial Site of Last Hostage Ran Gvili Hy”d

Yeshiva World News -

Israel has received multiple new leads in recent weeks pointing to the possible burial site of St.-Sgt.-Maj. Ran Gvili, the last remaining hostage from the October 7 attacks, according to the Jerusalem Post. The leads, described by officials as credible but still unverified, center on the Zeitoun neighborhood of Gaza City. Hamas and Palestinian Islamic […]

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent: Working Americans Will Soon Get ‘Very Large Refunds’ Of Up To $2K Per Household

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Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said this week that millions of American wage earners should brace for unusually large tax refund checks at the start of 2026, crediting the surge to the tax provisions embedded in President Donald Trump’s One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

Bessent explained that the measure’s tax cuts will translate directly into a significant round of refunds during the year’s first quarter, with households poised to receive substantial payouts once filings are processed.

“I think we’re going to see $100-$150 billion of refunds, which could be between $1,000, $2,000 per household,” Bessent said Wednesday.

He attributed the expected cash influx to several components of the law, noting that features such as automatic deductibility and the elimination of taxes on tips form the backbone of next year’s financial boost.

A major factor, Bessent continued, is that working Americans have not yet updated their withholding to reflect the tax changes. As a result, many will have overpaid throughout the year and will get the money back once they file.

After receiving their refund checks, he predicted, people will adjust their withholding so that more of their earnings stay in their paychecks throughout the year.

Workers should then notice what he described as a “real increase” in their take-home pay, Bessent said.

Earlier in the week, Kevin Hassett, who heads the White House National Economic Council, offered a similar projection. He estimated that taxpayers would likely gain an additional $1,600 to $2,000 next year, largely in the form of refunds, according to CNBC.

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act, which cleared Congress in July, has drawn intense pushback from critics who argue the sweeping tax package disproportionately advantages the wealthy while slashing key programs such as Medicaid and food assistance.

{Matzav.com}

TWO YEARS LATE: Amnesty Accuses Hamas of Crimes Against Humanity in Sweeping Report on October 7 Massacre

Yeshiva World News -

Amnesty International on Thursday issued its most extensive investigation to date into the October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel, accusing Hamas and other Palestinian armed groups of committing crimes against humanity, including extermination, murder, torture and violence against women. The 173-page report asserts that the mass killing of civilians in southern Israel meets the threshold […]

Minister Weighs Preserving Oct. 7–Ravaged Be’eri Homes Despite Residents’ Vote To Raze Them

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Heritage Minister Amichay Eliyahu is exploring the possibility of declaring several destroyed homes in Kibbutz Be’eri as protected national heritage sites, even as the community itself has just voted to remove nearly all of the structures shattered in the October 7, 2023 Hamas massacre. His office signaled this week that the option is on the table.

The kibbutz held an emotional internal referendum two years after the attack reduced entire neighborhoods to ruins. Residents ultimately supported tearing the homes down, approving the measure by a margin of 196 to 146.

Be’eri experienced some of the worst horrors of the onslaught. The small community of roughly 1,000 lost 101 civilians and 31 security personnel that day. Thirty residents and two additional civilians were abducted, and widespread destruction left dozens of homes burned, shot through, or totally collapsed during the battles that followed.

Channel 12 reported that Eliyahu is reviewing a rarely used provision in the Antiquities Law that empowers him to preserve modern buildings—not only ancient ones—if he deems them historically meaningful.

Under the law, the heritage minister can designate any post-1700 structure for national preservation status provided its significance is deemed clear and substantial.

Responding to inquiries, Eliyahu’s office issued a statement that all but confirmed the idea is actively under debate, saying it would be considered only “a last resort.”

According to the ministry, “many requests… from families of those murdered in the towns and kibbutzim” have been submitted, urging the government to use this legal mechanism to safeguard particular homes as national heritage sites. The office added that “the Heritage Ministry has been working tirelessly for over two years to reach broad agreements with each community and kibbutz according to its unique character and needs.”

On Monday, Be’eri publicly announced the results of its vote: every damaged home in the two most devastated neighborhoods will be razed, except for a single house that will be kept standing as the community’s chosen memorial to the tragedy.

The selected house will remain untouched for a period of five years, though the kibbutz has not revealed which home was chosen for preservation.

Be’eri’s community director, Ofer Gitai, explained that the decision is meant to “preserve the memory of the October events, in a way that respects the narrative that the community chooses for itself, and will leave it in full control of the story.”

Some residents argued during the debate that living among the ruins would trap them emotionally. One person declared that they “don’t want to go back to living in Yad Vashem,” invoking the famous Holocaust museum in Jerusalem. Another resident told Ynet, “We don’t want to live in Auschwitz. We need to recover and move on.”

Still, a portion of the kibbutz felt differently, insisting that demolition would wipe away an important physical reminder of Be’eri’s history and the trauma it endured.

A spokesperson for the kibbutz told The Times of Israel that the 62 homes slated for demolition were largely either burned or structurally compromised, and that all would be removed except the single house designated as a memorial. The community does not intend to rebuild in that area.

Meanwhile, construction is progressing on the opposite side of Be’eri. Eighty new homes are being built there with support from the Tekuma Directorate, the state body overseeing reconstruction of the Gaza-envelope communities. Roughly eighty residents have already returned to Be’eri. The majority, however, remain temporarily housed at Kibbutz Hatzerim in the Negev while they await the completion of the new neighborhood, with hopes of returning next summer.

{Matzav.com}

Agudah Leads New Jersey Delegation to Washington, D.C. for Key Advocacy Meetings

Yeshiva World News -

Agudath Israel of America’s New Jersey office led a group of delegates from across the state to the nation’s capital for a full day of high-level advocacy, meeting with nearly the entire New Jersey congressional delegation to advance issues of critical importance to the Jewish community. Throughout the day, delegates highlighted several top federal priorities. […]

Trump: We’re Working Very Strongly On Gaza

Matzav -

President Donald Trump, speaking Thursday, tied the current dynamics in Gaza and across the region to what he described as a transformed strategic landscape following U.S. action against Iran’s nuclear program. In his view, the stability now taking shape stems directly from the blows dealt to Tehran.

During the exchange with reporters, Trump was asked about the selection of a general to oversee stabilization efforts in Gaza. He responded by emphasizing Washington’s ongoing involvement, saying, “Well, we’re working very strongly on Gaza. Yeah, we’re working very much on Gaza.”

From there, Trump shifted to a sweeping description of regional diplomacy, arguing that unprecedented cooperation is now taking hold. “We actually do have a real piece in the Middle East,” he said. “We have 59 countries supporting it which is, you know, never happened before. We have countries that want to come in and take care of Hamas. We have countries that want to come in and take care of Hezbollah in Lebanon…we have countries that are volunteering to come in and literally take care of the whole thing. We have a great peace in the Middle East. It’s never happened before and I think it’s very strong actually.”

He linked that posture to the airstrikes in Iran, asserting that the operation fundamentally altered the balance of fear in the region. Describing the mission, he said, “When we went in with those B2s and we – and now I could use the word because it’s been confirmed by the Atomic Energy Commission – we obliterated their nuclear capability, their potential and their nuclear capability would have been there in about two months…they were very close to having massive nuclear weapons and these guys went in and they did a job and that made peace possible, because everybody was afraid of Iran and now they’re not afraid of Iran anymore.”

Trump stressed repeatedly that the United States alone could have carried out such a strike. “No other country could have done that,” he asserted. “No other country has weapons like we do. We have the best weapons in the world. We have the best military in the world, and when we took out Iran, that allowed for peace. There’s no way they could have done a deal if Iran was not really nullified. To a large extent, Iran is not the same country. Iran was a country that was feared by everybody. Now it’s a country that’s been very much downgraded.”

Looking ahead, he warned Tehran against any attempt to reconstitute its nuclear infrastructure. If Iran tried to rebuild, Trump said, “we’re going to obliterate that one [too]. You know, we can knock out their missiles very quickly. We have great power and we helped Israel a lot. We were shooting down the drones. We were doing a lot of things for Israel. We did a good job for Israel, but Israel did a good job. They fought and they all fought bravely.”

Trump then noted that he still sees room for diplomacy, insisting that Iranian leaders remain interested in talks with him. “They would love to be able to make a deal with me,” he said. “They would love to be able to make a deal with me and I’d love to make a deal with them if we could. We were reasonably there for a deal with Iran before the bombing, and they would have been much better off if they made a deal. They could have had a deal. They could have had a deal where they would have been much better off. Look at what we’ve done. Their place is blown up. Forget about the nuclear the nuclear is gone, but look at the damage they’ve suffered, the death that they’ve suffered. They could have had a deal – nobody would have died, no buildings would have been down, nothing would have happened. But they missed that opportunity, but they would like to make a deal right now. Iran would like to make a deal with me.”

{Matzav.com}

Cabinet Approves: 19 New Communities In Judea and Samaria

Matzav -

Israel’s Security Cabinet signed off Thursday night on a sweeping decision to formally authorize and regulate nineteen communities throughout Judea and Samaria, moving forward with one of the most extensive expansion steps in years.

The move came in response to a joint initiative advanced by Ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Israel Katz. Among the newly approved locations are Ganim and Kadim, two communities in northern Samaria that were cleared nearly two decades ago during the Disengagement and are now slated for renewed development.

The authorization package covers a mix of longstanding neighborhoods seeking formal status as well as newly emerging sites still in the early phases of construction. The breadth of the decision underscores a significant political milestone in expanding Israel’s presence across the region.

The communities included in the government’s approval are: Esh Kodesh, Allenby, Givat Harel, Ganim, Har Bezek, Ya’ar El-Keren, Yatziv, Yitav West, Kadim, Kochav HaShachar North, Kida, Mishol, Nachal Doron, Pnei Kedem, Reihanit, Rosh HaAyin East, Shalem, and Tamun.

{Matzav.com}

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