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Netanyahu’s CBS Interview Was Filmed at Yerushalayim Home of Billionaire Donor

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Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s new interview with CBS’s “60 Minutes” was filmed at the Yerushalayim home of billionaire businessman and longtime Netanyahu family associate Simon Falic, according to a report aired by Kan News.

The interview, which aired last night, was reportedly recorded inside Falic’s private residence in Yerushalayim.

Sources cited in the report claimed that Netanyahu spends a significant amount of time at the home of the Jewish-American businessman and donor.

The Prime Minister’s Office did not respond to requests for comment regarding the report.

Simon Falic and his family are well-known Jewish-American philanthropists and business figures who have donated extensively to causes and political figures in both Israel and the United States.

During the early months of the war, reports surfaced that Prime Minister Netanyahu and his wife had temporarily moved into the Falic family’s Yerushalayim residence.

Last year, Netanyahu also hosted the סעודת שביעי של פסח together with U.S. Ambassador Mike Huckabee and his wife at the Falic home. Although members of the Falic family were present at the gathering alongside Netanyahu and the ambassador, their names were omitted from the official government statement released afterward, which focused only on Netanyahu and Huckabee.

The Falic family has maintained close ties with numerous public figures and organizations in Israel over the years. In November 2023, right-wing activist Berale Crombie reportedly conducted a tour of Kfar Aza for Falic while dressed in military uniform.

In the “60 Minutes” interview, Netanyahu discussed the ongoing war against Iran and indicated that Israel believes additional military and strategic objectives still remain.

“I think we accomplished a great deal, but it’s not over. Because there’s still nuclear material, enriched uranium that has to be taken out of Iran. There are still enrichment sites that have to be dismantled. There are still proxies that Iran supports, and ballistic missiles that they still want to produce. Now, we damaged a lot of that, but all of it is still there, and there’s work to do,” Netanyahu said.

Netanyahu’s remarks appear to reflect growing concern in Israel surrounding any potential agreement with Iran, particularly regarding the removal of enriched uranium from Iranian territory.

The prime minister also hinted at conversations with President Donald Trump regarding possible next steps.

“I’m not going to talk about military means, but what President Trump told me is, ‘I want to go in there.’ And I think it can be done physically — that’s not the problem. If you have an agreement, and you go in and take it out — why not? That’s the best way,” Netanyahu told CBS.

{Matzav.com}

Democrats in Panic: GOP to Gain 10 House Seats

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Democrats are increasingly alarmed over a series of recent court decisions and redistricting developments that Republicans now believe could help secure continued GOP control of the House in the 2026 elections, Newsmax reports.

Political analysts say several major rulings tied to congressional maps and voting laws may give Republicans a realistic opportunity to gain roughly 10 additional House seats nationwide, dramatically shifting what many Democrats only recently viewed as a favorable electoral landscape.

The sudden reversal follows a string of legal and political developments that have energized Republicans and left Democrats scrambling to reassess their strategy heading into the midterms.

Among the most significant blows for Democrats was a ruling issued this week by the Virginia Supreme Court, which struck down the state’s newly approved congressional map. That decision came shortly after the U.S. Supreme Court narrowed the application of portions of the Voting Rights Act, a move expected to affect congressional districts across several Southern states.

Together, the rulings have altered the outlook for the battle over control of Congress and sparked concern among Democratic operatives nationwide.

House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries responded by promising that Democrats would explore “all options to overturn this shocking decision,” while party strategists privately conceded the consequences could be severe.

“I think we still take back the House, but it’s a major setback,” Democrat strategist Adrienne Elrod told reporters. “We have to just win at the ballot box. And we can do it.”

Republicans say the changing political terrain represents a major turnaround in a redistricting conflict that intensified after the 2023 election cycle.

That year, Republicans unexpectedly flipped 11 congressional seats around the country, including several in New York, catching Democrats off guard and prompting aggressive responses from blue-state lawmakers.

In response, Democrats in Albany moved to redraw New York’s congressional lines in ways that threatened multiple Republican-held districts, setting off a broader nationwide push by both parties to reshape congressional boundaries ahead of the next census cycle.

For much of the past year, Democrats believed they held the advantage.

Virginia Democrats, for example, approved congressional maps that were expected to create four additional Democratic-leaning seats. But Friday’s ruling by the Virginia Supreme Court wiped out those projected gains and restored a map more favorable to Republicans.

At the same time, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis introduced new congressional lines that could add four more GOP-friendly districts to Florida’s already Republican-heavy delegation.

Another major development came when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that part of the Voting Rights Act could no longer be used to require the creation of majority-minority congressional districts.

That decision is expected to allow Republican-led states including Alabama, Louisiana, and Georgia to redraw districts that had previously been protected under federal law.

Election experts believe the ruling could have long-term implications for congressional representation throughout the South.

In Tennessee, Republicans have already advanced a revised map aimed at weakening the state’s only Democratic-held district, while lawmakers in other Southern states are reportedly considering similar efforts.

Democratic consultant Trevor Southerland acknowledged the growing unease within the party, saying, “Rigged maps can overcome a lot.”

Republicans, meanwhile, are openly celebrating the legal victories and the new opportunities they believe are emerging from them.

“I thank the Supreme Court for its courage in standing up for what is right,” said Rep. Jen Kiggans, R-Va., whose district would have shifted heavily toward Democrats under Virginia’s now-invalidated map.

Rep. Richard Hudson, chairman of the National Republican Congressional Committee, declared: “This win is yet another sign Republicans have the momentum heading into November. We’re on offense, and we’re going to win.”

The developments are especially notable because many Democrats entered the 2026 cycle believing national political conditions favored them.

President Donald Trump has faced political headwinds tied to inflation concerns, rising energy costs, and ongoing tensions involving Iran. Historically, the president’s party often loses House seats during midterm elections.

Democrats still argue that voter frustration over economic issues could help propel them back into the majority.

However, party officials now worry that unfavorable district maps could offset those advantages.

One Democratic strategist acknowledged that the party may now be forced to spend heavily simply to remain competitive in key House races.

“Dems are going to have to double down on winning the House — even if that means being unable to expand the map in the Senate,” the strategist said.

The cost of the legal and political fight has already climbed sharply. Democrats reportedly invested more than $65 million into Virginia’s redistricting effort before the courts struck the maps down.

Republicans say much of the current strategy originated with advisers close to Trump who advocated for aggressive mid-cycle redistricting efforts across multiple states.

James Blair, a Trump ally involved in promoting the approach, reacted to the recent court decisions with a short post on X: “Lord grant me humility.”

Trump campaign manager Chris LaCivita praised Blair’s tactics, writing: “Always initiate contact — never wait for it to come to you.”

Some Democrats now fear the redistricting conflict could escalate even further before the 2028 elections, with both parties embracing increasingly aggressive gerrymandering strategies in states they control.

Rep. Terri Sewell, D-Ala., suggested Democrats could retaliate in heavily blue states.

“I take 52 seats from California and 17 seats from Illinois,” Sewell said. “We’re going to play their game, and we’re going to beat them at it.”

At the moment, though, Republicans increasingly believe they have seized the advantage in a redistricting fight that may shape the balance of power in Congress for years to come.

{Matzav.com}

Forced To Dance For Mengele At Auschwitz, She Was Called To Help Others Heal

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For years, Edith Eger kept quiet, refusing to speak about the cattle cars or the death camps or the Nazi guard who broke her back. She never told her children how, at 16, she had been forced to dance for Josef Mengele, the “Angel of Death,” who had sent her mother to die earlier that day. Nor did she talk about the death march she endured near the end of the war, and the fact that she resorted to eating grass to survive at a time when others turned to cannibalism.

She couldn’t find the words. She didn’t want anyone’s pity. And she was determined, she said, “to be a source of life,” not pain.

But by the time she was in her early 50s, working as a clinical psychologist in the United States, she had begun to feel “like an impostor.” Dr. Eger specialized in trauma, helping combat veterans, cancer patients and victims of abuse. Yet like so many of the people who came to her for help, she had not fully dealt with her past, which threatened to consume her even as she tried to move past it.

“I could not be a good guide to my patients or take them any further than I’d gone myself,” she said. “For that, I had to go back to the lion’s den and look at the place where my mother was murdered, where I was so close to death every day.”

In 1980, Dr. Eger willed herself to return to Auschwitz, where she visited the gas chambers and crematoria. She still vividly remembered the moment a more experienced inmate had gestured toward the chimney, after Dr. Eger had been separated from her mother and father, and told her, “You’d better talk about your parents in past tense. They’re burning there.”

The trip marked the culmination of a long process in which Dr. Eger said she learned to let go of the shame and guilt that she felt as a survivor. Driven to speak out, partly as a way to honor her parents and other victims, she told her story in lecture halls and classrooms. And on the eve of her 90th birthday in 2017, she published a memoir, “The Choice.”

The book became an international bestseller and led Dr. Eger to write a young-adult edition as well as a more practical follow-up, “The Gift,” in which she offered advice for readers struggling with feelings of hopelessness, anger, resentment or fear.

“We have the capacity to hate and the capacity to love,” she wrote. “Which one we reach for … is up to us.”

Dr. Eger, who continued to see patients into her final year, has died at age 98 at home in the La Jolla section of San Diego. Her grandson Jordan Engle said she died of complications from severe scoliosis, a condition that he traced back to the war, when a guard hit Dr. Eger in the back with the butt of his rifle after she climbed over a fence to search for food.

Looking back on her war years, Dr. Eger said she was able to keep going by following advice her mother had given in the darkness of the cattle car, en route to Auschwitz: “Just remember, no one can take away from you what you’ve put in your mind.”

When she felt hungry, she imagined that she was preparing her mother’s recipes for chicken paprikash and Székely goulash. When she worried she wouldn’t be able to make it another day, she dreamed of her future wedding.

“I created my own world,” she told the Times of London. “They couldn’t touch my spirit.”

The youngest of three daughters, she was born Edith Eva Elefánt on Sept. 29, 1927, to a tailor and homemaker in what is now Kosice, Slovakia. The city was part of Czechoslovakia before being ceded to Hungary in 1938.

Dr. Eger grew up in the shadow of her talented older sisters: Klara, a violin prodigy, and Magda, a pianist. Her parents had hoped their third child would be a boy, and young Edie, as she was known, sensed their disappointment. She felt further isolated because she was cross-eyed, a condition that was corrected through surgery but left her feeling like “an ugly duckling.”

“I became kind of a little owl on a tree, watching, observing as a child,” she said in a 1992 interview for the Bay Area Holocaust Oral History Project. “And I did the same thing in Auschwitz.”

She gained confidence while attending ballet school, and by the early 1940s, she had turned to gymnastics. She trained with the Hungarian national team, dreaming of an Olympic medal. But, in what she described as one of the most devastating moments of her life, she was abruptly cut from the team, told that she no longer qualified because she was Jewish.

“I thought I could be really great. And then Hitler destroyed all that,” Dr. Eger told Ireland’s Sunday Independent.

By March 1944, when German troops marched through Kosice, Klara was studying at a music conservatory in Budapest, where she managed to hide out during the war. The rest of the family were forced from their home and sent to live at a brick factory, where thousands of Jews from the city were interned before being taken away.

Told that they would be sent to work in the fields, they boarded a train that took them across the border to Auschwitz, in occupied Poland. An orchestra was playing as they arrived.

“You see,” Dr. Eger’s father said, “it can’t be a terrible place.” He was guided into a men’s line as families were separated by gender. She never saw him again.

In another line, she had her first encounter with Mengele, a notorious SS physician who conducted medical experiments on prisoners. He pointed her mother to the right, toward the gas chambers, while sending Edie and Magda to the left. “You’re going to see your mother very soon,” Dr. Eger recalled him saying. “She’s just going to take a shower.”

When Mengele came to her barracks that night looking for entertainment, friends pushed her forward, saying that she was a dancer. Ordered to perform, she closed her eyes, imagined that she was onstage at the Budapest opera house, and danced to Tchaikovsky’s “Romeo and Juliet.” Outside, she could hear an orchestra playing “The Blue Danube.”

“I took myself into another world, in another where,” Dr. Eger said in the oral history. Her reward was a piece of bread, which she shared with the other prisoners.

An estimated 1.1 million people perished at Auschwitz, the majority of them Jews. Edie saw guards shooting a child in a tree for target practice. Once, she was beaten with a dog leash when she sneaked out from the barracks to go to the bathroom.

“I couldn’t fight or flee, but I learned how to stay in a situation and make the best of what is. I still had choices,” she told Britain’s Observer newspaper. “So when we were stripped and shorn of our hair, Magda asked me, ‘How do I look?’ She looked like a mangy dog, but I told her: ‘Your eyes are so beautiful. I never noticed when you had all that hair.’ Every day, we could choose to pay attention to what we’d lost or what we still had.”

As the war neared its end, the sisters were shuffled between concentration camps. Allied troops were closing in when the sisters and other prisoners were forced to march to Gunskirchen, in Austria. Those who fell behind were killed. When Edie stumbled, she said, she was rescued by friends who “formed a chair with their arms,” carrying her along and enabling her to survive.

By the time U.S. soldiers liberated Gunskirchen in May 1945, she was sick and starving. She was nearly left for dead before a GI spotted her in a pile of bodies. The following year, at age 19, she married Béla Eger, a Jewish underground fighter whom she met while recovering at a tuberculosis hospital in the Tatra Mountains.

“We were like shipwrecked, lonely people,” she recalled.

The couple moved to Béla’s childhood home in Presov, in what was then eastern Czechoslovakia, only to flee the country’s communist authorities and immigrate to the United States in 1949. They lived in Baltimore, where Dr. Eger did piecework at a garment factory, and then in El Paso, where she went to college and became a high school teacher while her husband worked as an accountant.

Dr. Eger said she began to reckon with her experiences after reading “Man’s Search for Meaning,” a 1946 book by psychiatrist and Holocaust survivor Viktor E. Frankl. They struck up a correspondence, and a friendship, as Dr. Eger went on to earn a PhD in clinical psychology from the University of Texas at El Paso, writing her dissertation on the way concentration camp stress affects survivors.

Some survivors became her patients, including a twin on whom Mengele had experimented at Auschwitz.

Dr. Eger was predeceased by her husband, who died in 1993, and her sisters, who settled in Baltimore and Sydney after the war. Survivors include three children, Marianne Engle, Audrey Thompson and John Eger; five grandchildren; and 10 great-grandchildren.

Even in her 90s, Dr. Eger said that hardly a day went by when she didn’t find herself “vividly” back in Auschwitz, transported into her memories by the sight of barbed wire or the shout of a bus driver.

“But it’s fleeting,” she told the Times. “I don’t get stuck. … Part of me is in Auschwitz. But not the bigger part. Not the better part.”

(c) 2026, The Washington Post · Harrison Smith 

Trump Administration Launched Moms.gov on Mother’s Day

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The Trump administration unveiled a new federal website on Mother’s Day aimed at providing assistance and information for pregnant women, new mothers, and families facing unexpected pregnancies.

The new platform, Moms.gov, was introduced as a centralized hub offering guidance and resources related to pregnancy, parenting, health care, adoption, nutrition, breastfeeding, mental health, and financial programs for families.

According to the site, its mission is “addressing the needs of mothers and fathers who face difficult or unexpected pregnancies and ensuring the well-being of mothers and the health of American families.”

The website also includes information on Trump Accounts and other federal programs intended to support parents and children.

Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. praised the initiative in a statement released Sunday, describing it as part of the administration’s broader public health agenda.

“Moms.gov delivers critical tools and support to help parents foster healthy pregnancies, strengthen young families, and create brighter futures for their children,” Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said in a statement.

“This is how you Make America Healthy Again,” he added.

The launch comes at a time when abortion policy and maternal health issues remain major topics in Washington. The Supreme Court is currently considering a case involving the legality of prescriptions for abortion pills being distributed through the mail.

The announcement also follows a tense congressional hearing last month during which Rep. Summer Lee (D-Pa.) sharply questioned Kennedy about the administration’s handling of Black maternal mortality rates.

According to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Black women in the United States face a significantly higher risk of dying from pregnancy-related causes than white women.

During the hearing, Lee repeatedly pressed Kennedy over the administration’s policies concerning diversity and health disparities.

“How we could solve the Black maternal mortality crisis if we can’t say ‘Black’?” Lee asked.

The congresswoman pointed to the administration’s efforts to roll back diversity, equity, and inclusion programs throughout the federal government, including initiatives focused on researching and addressing health gaps among specific populations.

Administration officials, however, said maternal health remains a priority.

In comments accompanying Sunday’s announcement, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Women’s Health Dr. Dorothy Fink highlighted recent improvements tied to federal maternal care initiatives.

“Through our Perinatal Improvement Collaborative, we have reduced maternal mortality by 41.5 percent.”

She added, “We remain committed to supporting women’s health throughout motherhood and at every stage of life.”

{Matzav.com}

Trump Slams Coney Barrett, Gorsuch Over Tariff Decision

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President Donald Trump sharply criticized Supreme Court Justices Amy Coney Barrett and Neil Gorsuch on Sunday over their role in a ruling earlier this year that blocked his tariff policy and required the federal government to return billions of dollars collected through the duties.

In a lengthy Truth Social post, Trump expressed frustration that two justices he nominated joined a decision he said caused major financial damage to the United States.

“They were appointed by me, and yet have hurt our Country so badly! I do not believe they meant to do so, but their decision on Tariffs cost the United States 159 Billion Dollars that we have to pay back to enemies, and people, companies, and Countries, that have been ripping us off for years,” Trump wrote.

“It’s hardly believable!” he added.

The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in February against the administration’s attempt to invoke emergency powers to impose higher trade tariffs. At the time, Trump publicly singled out Barrett and Gorsuch for siding against the administration.

In Sunday’s remarks, the president expanded on those criticisms, questioning why the Court determined that the United States must reimburse importers and foreign entities for tariff revenue already collected.

The issue resurfaced last month after Customs and Border Protection disclosed that more than 330,000 importers had paid the tariffs imposed under Trump’s trade policies. Trump later warned that he would “remember” companies that sought refunds from the government.

During Sunday’s post, Trump also voiced disappointment over what he described as a lack of loyalty from officials he elevated to top positions.

“I’m working so hard to, MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, and then people that I appointed have shown so little respect to our Country, and its people. What is the reason for this?” Trump wrote.

“They have to do the right thing, but it’s really OK for them to be loyal to the person that appointed them to ‘almost’ the highest position in the land, that is, a Justice of the United States Supreme Court,” he continued.

Trump also used the post to address another pending legal battle involving his executive order seeking to end birthright citizenship. He urged the Court not to rule against the administration on that issue as well.

“Well, maybe Neil, and Amy, just had a really bad day, but our Country can only handle so many decisions of that magnitude before it breaks down, and cracks!!! Sometimes decisions have to be allowed to use Good, Strong, Common Sense as a guide,” Trump wrote.

“A negative ruling on Birthright Citizenship, on top of the recent Supreme Court Tariff catastrophe, is not Economically sustainable for the United States of America,” the president added.

{Matzav.com}

Cleared for Publication: Alexander Glovanyov Hy”d Killed Near Lebanon Border

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The IDF announced Monday morning that Command Sergeant Major (Res.) Alexander Glovanyov, 47, of Petach Tikva, was killed in a Hezbollah drone attack near the Israel-Lebanon border.

Glovanyov served as a heavy transport vehicle driver in the 6924th Transport Battalion of the Transportation Center.

According to the IDF, the fatal incident took place Sunday at approximately 4:00 p.m., when multiple explosive drones crossed from Lebanon into Israeli territory and detonated near the border area. Glovanyov was struck directly by one of the drones and was killed in the attack.

The deadly strike came amid continued fighting and military operations along Israel’s northern front, where Hezbollah terrorists have repeatedly targeted Israeli positions and communities near the border.

The IDF stated Sunday that troops from the 91st Division carried out extensive operations over the weekend in southern Lebanon aimed at removing immediate threats to Israeli forces.

As part of those operations, soldiers struck more than 40 Hezbollah terror infrastructure sites and eliminated over 10 Hezbollah terrorists who were operating in proximity to IDF troops in the area.

Among the targets attacked were military compounds used by Hezbollah operatives, weapons depots, launchers, and additional terror infrastructure.

The military said the sites targeted by Israeli forces had been used by Hezbollah terrorists to plan and execute attacks against IDF soldiers operating in southern Lebanon.

“The IDF will continue to operate against threats directed at Israeli civilians and IDF soldiers, in accordance with directives from the political echelon,” said the IDF Spokesperson’s Unit.

{Matzav.com}

WATCH: Rav Aharon Teitelbaum of Satmar Speaks Out Against “Disgusting” Wedding Music at Frum Chasunos

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[Video below.] Rav Aharon Teitelbaum, the Satmar Rebbe of Kiryas Yoel, delivered sharp words of criticism last week regarding what he described as the increasingly inappropriate atmosphere that has become commonplace at many contemporary weddings within the frum world, calling it “ekeldig,” or “disgusting.”

The remarks were delivered during a gathering in Williamsburg last Tuesday, where the Rebbe addressed a range of concerns affecting the broader tzibbur. A central focus of his comments was the changing style and tone of contemporary chasunos, particularly the growing dominance of nightclub-style music and behavior that many ehrliche Yidden feel has drifted far from the spirit of a traditional Jewish wedding, calling it “ekeldige negginim mit ekeldige tantzeray” (disgusting songs with disgusting dancing).

The rebbe lamented what he described as a steady erosion of the kedusha and dignity that once defined a chasunah. He expressed pain that weddings, which are meant to be sacred occasions centered around building a bayis ne’eman b’Yisroel, have increasingly become centered around spectacle and goyishe noise.

The rebbe joins the chorus of rabbonim who decry scenes now commonly witnessed at weddings, where guests dance to booming DJ-driven music that resemble secular nightlife culture far more than a traditional simcha shel mitzvah.

WATCH:

{Matzav.com}

Anti-Semitic YouTuber Tyler Oliveira Heads to….Israel

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Anti-Semitic YouTuber Tyler Oliveira is reportedly on his way to Israel aboard El Al Flight LY26, raising concern among many in the frum world following a series of highly controversial videos in which he portrayed Orthodox Jewish communities in an inflammatory and deeply negative light.

Oliveira, a YouTube personality with millions of followers, has become known for producing provocative “investigative” videos in which he enters insular or controversial communities and creates highly dramatized content built around confrontation, shock value, and controversy.

Over the past year, Oliveira sparked widespread outrage in frum communities after releasing videos focused on Orthodox Jewish populations in places such as Kiryas Joel and Lakewood. He deliberately frames frum Jews through the lens of longstanding antisemitic stereotypes while ignoring the broader reality of Torah life, family values, chessed, and community infrastructure.

Among the strongest criticisms leveled against Oliveira is that his videos focused obsessively on government assistance, poverty, large families, and political influence in a way many felt was designed to provoke hostility toward religious Jews. Community members have shown how the editing, narration, thumbnails, and titles painted frum communities as parasitic, secretive, manipulative, and alien, themes with deep historical antisemitic roots.

Oliveira selectively edits interviews and interactions to maximize controversy while minimizing nuance and context. Several people featured in the videos later claimed they were misrepresented or used to create a predetermined narrative.

The backlash intensified as antisemitic comments flooded social media platforms beneath the videos, with many commenters openly attacking Jews and repeating classic anti-Jewish tropes. Oliveira either knowingly fueled that reaction or was reckless in creating content that predictably encouraged such hostility.

Now, with Oliveira reportedly heading to Israel, concern is growing that he may attempt similar content involving chareidi neighborhoods, protests, the draft issue, poverty, or tensions between secular and religious Israelis.

{Matzav.com}

China’s Undersea Cable Threat Raises $10T Fears as Trump-Xi Talks Loom

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A former US intelligence and Pentagon official warned Sunday that adversaries such as China and Russia could trigger massive economic disruption by targeting the undersea cable network that powers global communications, financial systems, and military infrastructure.

The warning comes as President Donald Trump prepares to meet with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing for high-stakes discussions expected to center on trade, artificial intelligence, and Taiwan.

According to experts, undersea cables carry approximately 99% of the world’s data traffic and support as much as $10 trillion in global financial transactions every day.

Andrew Badger, chief strategy officer at defense technology startup Coalition Systems, said hostile nations increasingly view the ocean floor as a strategic battlefield.

“America depends on the fragile nervous system of subsea cables for modern life,” Badger told Fox News Digital before warning that U.S. adversaries “seek to turn the bottom of the ocean into a battlefield.”

Badger argued that China and Russia have invested far more heavily in offensive undersea capabilities than the United States and its allies have invested in defense.

“The asymmetric threat — China and Russia are devoting far more resources to attacking undersea infrastructure than the U.S. or its allies are to defending it,” Badger said.

According to Badger, Beijing and Moscow have identified a critical vulnerability in Western infrastructure.

“They’ve identified one of our greatest vulnerabilities, and we haven’t caught up. A coordinated strike on American undersea infrastructure could fundamentally disrupt our way of life — the internet, banking, energy markets and military communications all run through these cables. The dollar cost is almost incalculable, and the real damage would be the chaos and political instability that would follow,” he said.

His remarks came amid growing concern in Washington over the security of critical subsea infrastructure.

In April, Senate Republican Whip John Barrasso and Sen. Jeanne Shaheen introduced bipartisan legislation known as the Strategic Subsea Cables Act of 2026, designed to improve protection and resilience for underwater cable systems.

“Undersea cables are important for a variety of reasons. They carry 99% of the world’s internet traffic. They also support $10 trillion in financial transactions each and every day,” Barrasso said in a statement.

Concerns intensified after reports emerged in April that China had successfully tested advanced deep-sea cable-cutting technology.

According to reports, China’s Ministry of Natural Resources confirmed a mission involving an “electro-hydrostatic actuator,” a device reportedly capable of severing armored submarine cables at depths of 3,500 meters.

Suspicious cable disruptions have also occurred in Europe and other regions, fueling fears of coordinated “gray-zone” operations intended to pressure Western countries while avoiding outright military confrontation.

“This is hybrid warfare in its purest form, designed to weaken the adversary below the threshold of declared war,” Badger said, noting that incidents such as anchors dragging across the seabed can provide plausible deniability.

Badger warned that the ability to damage undersea infrastructure gives America’s adversaries enormous leverage.

“Cables give Beijing and Moscow the ability to inflict devastating economic chaos almost at will,” Badger warned. “This gives both nations tremendous strategic leverage over the U.S.”

He also suggested China could potentially use attacks on American undersea infrastructure to discourage US military involvement in a Taiwan conflict.

“Beijing could simultaneously target cables landing in the U.S., not to win militarily, but with the goal of breaking the American public’s will to intervene in Taiwan,” he said.

China continues to claim Taiwan as its territory, while the United States — Taiwan’s largest unofficial ally — continues providing military assistance under longstanding US law requiring support for Taiwan’s self-defense capabilities.

The Taiwan Strait has also become increasingly critical because of its importance to the global artificial intelligence industry and related technologies.

Anniki Mikelsaar of the Oxford Internet Institute noted that expanding AI infrastructure is increasing demand on submarine cable networks worldwide.

According to Mikelsaar, growth in artificial intelligence means “rising capacity requirements on submarine cables.”

At the same time, she cautioned that not all cable disruptions are linked to hostile activity.

“Not all recent cable damage incidents can be attributed to foreign adversaries: the ICPC estimates 150 to 200 cable breaks occur per year around the globe, most of them accidents,” she said.

{Matzav.com}

WATCH: Netanyahu On 60 Minutes: Toppling The Iranian Regime Is Possible, But Not Guaranteed

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[Full video below.] Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu said Sunday that although Israel has made major advances against Iran and its regional network, the broader conflict remains unresolved and will continue until Tehran’s nuclear infrastructure and proxy forces are fully neutralized.

Speaking during a wide-ranging interview on CBS’s “60 Minutes,” Netanyahu stressed that key Iranian nuclear assets still remain in place despite recent military successes.

“I think it accomplished a great deal, but it’s not over, because there’s still nuclear material, enriched uranium that has to be taken out of Iran. There are still enrichment sites that have to be dismantled. There are still proxies that Iran supports.”

When asked how Israel or its allies could physically remove enriched uranium from Iranian territory, Netanyahu answered bluntly: “You go in, and you take it out.”

“I think it accomplished a great deal, but it’s not over,” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu tells 60 Minutes about the war in Iran. Netanyahu says highly enriched uranium must be removed from Iran and believes “it can be done physically.” pic.twitter.com/N5XbvzpYa0

— 60 Minutes (@60Minutes) May 10, 2026

Although the prime minister declined to discuss operational details or possible future military coordination with the United States, he made clear that he and President Donald Trump remain aligned on preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

“President Trump and I, that if necessary, we can reengage them militarily, if it’s necessary,” Netanyahu stated.

Netanyahu argued that Iran represents a uniquely dangerous threat because of what he described as the regime’s extremist ideology and hostility toward America and Israel.

“You don’t want a fanatic regime like that, that hates America… you don’t want them to have nuclear weapons. That’s what prompted President Trump and me to go out and stop them.”

The prime minister also addressed Israel’s ongoing military operations against Hezbollah in Lebanon, saying Israeli forces have significantly degraded the terror group’s missile capabilities.

According to Netanyahu, Israel has destroyed more than 90% of Hezbollah’s estimated stockpile of roughly 150,000 rockets and missiles, though he warned that thousands of projectiles still remain.

“Hezbollah is basically a proxy of Iran. Iran holds Lebanon. We have no quarrel with Lebanon,” Netanyahu explained.

He further claimed Hezbollah had been preparing an assault in northern Israel that would have exceeded the scale of Hamas’ October 7 massacre, which he said justified Israel’s efforts to establish a “security belt” to protect Galilee communities.

Netanyahu also described the Iranian regime as being in its weakest condition since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, citing economic deterioration, growing public dissatisfaction, and internal fractures within the government.

When asked whether the Islamic Republic could ultimately collapse, Netanyahu said such an outcome remains possible, though uncertain.

“I think that you can’t predict when that happen. Is it possible? Yes. Is it guaranteed? No. But I can tell you, it’s like bankruptcy, you know? It proceeds gradually, and then it falls.”

Despite ongoing security threats, Netanyahu expressed optimism regarding Israel’s strategic standing in the Middle East and its relationships with regional countries.

He argued that Israel has transformed itself from a nation facing existential danger into a dominant regional force and a reliable ally of the United States.

According to Netanyahu, Israel’s confrontation with Iran has also strengthened ties between Israel and several Arab nations.

“The fact that we face down this neighborhood bully that these this killer regime in Iran, that’s brought quite a few of the Arab countries closer together with Israel. That’s good for peace.”

WATCH IN FULL:

{Matzav.com}

Graham Urges Trump to ‘Change Course’ on Iran

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Sen. Lindsey Graham on Sunday called on President Donald Trump to reconsider his current approach toward Iran following reports that Tehran rejected the latest American proposal aimed at ending the war.

Responding to Trump’s Truth Social post declaring Iran’s response to the US proposal “unacceptable,” Graham said the time may have come for Washington to pursue a tougher strategy against the Islamic Republic.

“I appreciate President Trump’s earnest efforts to seek a diplomatic solution to change the behavior of the Iranian terrorist regime. However, between their constant attacks on international shipping, the persistent attacks on our Middle Eastern allies and now a totally unacceptable response to America’s diplomatic proposal, it is in my view, time to consider changing course,” Graham wrote.

The South Carolina senator also referenced “Project Freedom Plus,” the proposed expanded US maritime operation in the Strait of Hormuz that Trump delayed last week to allow negotiations with Iran to continue.

“Project Freedom Plus sounds pretty good right about now,” he added.

Later Sunday, after Iranian media reported that Tehran had officially rejected the American proposal, Graham issued another warning regarding Iran’s nuclear infrastructure.

“The idea that Iran would not completely destroy all their enrichment facilities as part of a negotiated solution makes no sense. The moratorium – without complete dismantlement of the enrichment facilities and capabilities – truly becomes the JCPOA.”

“I am certain that Iran’s refusal to destroy their enrichment capability will be soundly rejected,” said Graham.

Iranian state-linked media reported Sunday night that Tehran had formally rejected the US-backed proposal intended to end the conflict.

According to the report, Iranian officials argued that “the American proposal is equivalent to a surrender by Tehran to Trump’s excessive demands.”

Earlier in the day, an Iranian official dismissed Trump’s criticism of Tehran’s response and indicated that Iran was not concerned by the president’s objections.

Speaking to the Tasnim news agency, the senior Iranian official stated, “No one in Iran drafts plans to please Trump. The negotiating team draft is solely for the rights of Iran, and naturally, it is better if Trump is dissatisfied with them.”

{Matzav.com}

Trump: “Palestinian Chuck Schumer” Task Force Plotting Election Interference

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President Donald Trump on Sunday sharply criticized Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and several prominent Democratic attorneys, accusing them of attempting to influence future elections through a newly announced Democratic election task force.

In a Truth Social post, Trump reacted to Schumer’s recent announcement that Senate Democrats were assembling a legal and political operation aimed at protecting upcoming midterm elections from what Schumer described as threats posed by Trump and MAGA Republicans.

“Palestinian Chuck Schumer is hiring Eric Holder, famous for handing guns to Mexican cartels under the Barack Hussein Obama administration, as part of a Democrat-led ‘Election Integrity Group’ that will no doubt try to suppress Republican voters, and interfere in our Elections,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

Trump also targeted Democratic attorney Marc Elias for his role in the effort.

“Furthermore, Marc Elias, a terrible lawyer with a horrible track record, is also involved,” Trump said.

Trump then revisited longstanding complaints regarding investigations connected to the 2016 election.

“This is the same disgusting individual who was responsible for the fake Russia dossier from a foreign nation to meddle in the 2016 Election, which I won in historic fashion,” he added. “The Democrats are totally unhinged and we will not allow them to threaten the integrity of our Elections.”

Schumer announced the election task force during remarks on the Senate floor last week, saying Democratic senators would work alongside Elias, former Attorney General Eric Holder, and other election lawyers in preparation for what he characterized as possible threats to future elections.

Holder served as attorney general during the Obama administration from 2009 through 2015.

Conservatives have frequently criticized Holder over the Justice Department’s “Fast and Furious” operation, an ATF gun-trafficking investigation connected to Mexican drug cartels.

Following his tenure as attorney general, Holder became chairman of the National Democratic Redistricting Committee, an organization involved in redistricting litigation and election map disputes.

Elias has emerged as one of the Democratic Party’s most prominent election attorneys and founded the Elias Law Group, which states that its mission is to help “Democrats win” and “citizens vote.”

He previously worked as general counsel for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign and was linked to the financing arrangement surrounding the Steele dossier.

Trump also argued that Democrats are preparing broader election operations ahead of future races and pledged that Republicans would significantly expand their own election-integrity efforts in response.

“During my Historic Election in 2024, when I won every single Swing State, and decisively won both the Electoral and Popular votes by wide margins, the Republicans had an Election Integrity Army in every single State to preserve the sanctity of each legal vote,” Trump wrote.

Trump said Republican election-monitoring operations heading into 2026 would be even larger.

According to Trump, Republican efforts next cycle will be “much bigger and stronger,” while promising that “this Election will be fair.”

In recent years, Republicans have increasingly focused on election oversight initiatives following disputes surrounding the 2020 election. Several Trump-aligned organizations previously announced plans to deploy attorneys and volunteers across the country to monitor polling places and challenge suspected voting irregularities.

{Matzav.com}

Knicks Sweep Eliminates Potential Scheduling Conflict for Adirei HaTorah Event at Xfinity Mobile Arena

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With the New York Knicks completing a four-game sweep of the Philadelphia 76ers this afternoon, organizers of the upcoming Adirei HaTorah gathering at Xfinity Mobile Arena in Philadelphia can now breathe easier, as there is no longer any possibility of a scheduling conflict with a potential 76ers playoff home game.

The Adirei event — the fifth of its kind — is scheduled to take place on Sunday, May 31, 2026, at Xfinity Mobile Arena, formerly known as the Wells Fargo Center, and concerns had lingered in recent weeks that a deep playoff run by the 76ers could potentially complicate arena availability.

Those concerns were erased today after the Knicks dismantled Philadelphia 144-114 to complete the second-round series sweep and eliminate the Sixers from the postseason.

The Knicks delivered a historic offensive performance in front of a heavily pro-New York crowd inside the Philadelphia arena, setting an NBA playoff record with 11 three-pointers in the first quarter. New York finished with 25 three-pointers overall and recorded the highest-scoring playoff game in franchise history. They will face either the Detroit Pistons or the Cleveland Cavaliers in the Eastern Conference Finals.

The New York Knicks were led by Jalen Brunson, while Deuce McBride erupted for seven three-pointers and 25 points. The Knicks advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals for the second consecutive season.

Knicks fans once again overtook the Philadelphia arena in massive numbers, waving brooms and “Always Knicks” towels throughout the game as the Sixers’ season came to an end.

A significant number of members of the frum community were on hand at Xfinity Mobile Arena for the Knicks victory, including noted Adirei supporter and baal tzedakah Mr. Shimi Jacobovits, Owner and Principal of Censible Marketing. Other in attendance included noted music producer, composer, and arranger Matt Dubb.

Meanwhile, preparations continue for what is expected to be one of the largest Torah gatherings in North America this year. The featured guest arriving from Eretz Yisroel for Adirei HaTorah will be Rav Yitzchok Soloveitchik. The keynote address will be delivered by Rav Uri Deutsch.

Matzav.com has extensively covered each of the first four Adirei HaTorah events, publishing full reports, photographs, and detailed coverage of the gatherings, which have drawn tens of thousands in support of the lomdei Torah of Lakewood.

{Matzav.com}

‘Doesn’t Matter At All’: Iran Fires Back After Trump Rejects Its Response

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Iran has reportedly turned down the latest American proposal aimed at ending the war, with officials in Tehran dismissing the plan as unacceptable and accusing the United States of demanding Iran’s surrender.

According to Iran’s IRIB news agency, Iranian officials argued that “the American proposal is equivalent to a surrender by Tehran to Trump’s excessive demands.”

The rejection came after President Donald Trump publicly criticized Iran’s response to the American proposal and declared it unacceptable.

“I have just read the response from Iran’s so-called ‘Representatives.’ I don’t like it – TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE! Thank you for your attention to this matter. President DONALD J. TRUMP,” Trump wrote Sunday on Truth Social.

An Iranian official later responded by minimizing the significance of Trump’s criticism and insisting that Tehran’s negotiating team was not interested in satisfying the American president.

Speaking to the Tasnim news agency, the senior Iranian official stated, “No one in Iran drafts plans to please Trump. The negotiating team draft is solely for the rights of Iran, and naturally, it is better if Trump is dissatisfied with them.”

Trump’s remarks followed a separate Truth Social post earlier in the day in which he accused Iran of deceiving the United States and the international community for decades while benefiting from policies implemented during the Obama administration.

According to Trump, Iran spent 47 years “playing games” with America and “the rest of the World” while repeatedly delaying negotiations.

Trump also sharply attacked former President Barack Obama over his handling of relations with Tehran.

“He was not only good to them, he was great, actually going to their side, jettisoning Israel, and all other Allies, and giving Iran a major and very powerful new lease on life,” Trump wrote of Obama.

The president further claimed Iran received massive financial benefits from the United States during that period.

Trump alleged that Tehran obtained “Hundreds of Billions of Dollars” from the US, including “1.7 Billion Dollars in green cash, flown into Tehran.”

He added that the funds were “handed to them on a silver platter” and claimed the money arrived “in suitcases and satchels.”

“They had never seen money like this, and never will again,” Trump stated, adding that Iranian officials “finally found the greatest SUCKER of them all, in the form of a weak and stupid American President.”

Trump also accused Iran of being responsible for the deaths of Americans through roadside bomb attacks and condemned the regime for crushing internal protests and “wiping out 42,000 innocent, unarmed protestors.”

He concluded the post with a warning directed at Tehran, writing: “They will be laughing no longer!”

{Matzav.com}

Yaakov Shwekey: “They Listen to Shabbos Songs in the White House”

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Singer Yaakov Shwekey said he chose to return to Israel for his concert in Yerushalayim despite the tense security situation, explaining that he felt a responsibility to the many fans who had been waiting for the event.

Ahead of his performance at Binyanei HaUma, Shwekey appeared on the “Zman Avir” radio program hosted by Menachem Toker and spoke emotionally about returning to the country during such a sensitive period.

“To come once again to Yerushalauyim, to this holy place, and sing for all the people who have really been waiting such a long time — it’s truly going to be warm,” Shwekey said.

During the interview, Toker referenced the singer’s previous trip to Israel, when Shwekey became stranded in the country because of escalating security tensions. This time, however, the singer decided to come despite the concerns.

Shwekey said he viewed the trip as a genuine mission.

“I promised people that we would do this, and there’s a real responsibility in doing something like this,” he explained.

The singer added that during times of war and uncertainty, people need music and joy more than ever.

“We need more singing, more music, and more joy. To add morale and all these things. People are truly under tremendous pressure and stress, and music is the remedy — our remedy, spiritually as well.”

One of the more intriguing moments of the interview came when Toker raised the subject of President Donald Trump’s warm attitude toward Israel and Shabbos observance.

Toker jokingly wondered whether Trump himself may have heard Shwekey’s Shabbos songs through the singer’s popular “Project Shabbos” initiative.

Shwekey responded that he had heard from people working inside the White House that Jewish music is indeed played there.

“I actually spoke with a few people who work there… and they listen to Shabbos songs,” Shwekey said.

“There are a lot of Jews working there, so who knows,” he added.

Shwekey also said his “Project Shabbos” initiative has generated unexpected reactions around the world.

“I see with the Project Shabbos that it’s managing to accomplish things, that this is really entering every place in the world,” he said.

According to the singer, the fact that Shabbos songs are now being heard in surprising places creates a powerful feeling of Kiddush Hashem and strengthens Jewish identity and connection.

{Matzav.com}

Police Arrest Chevron Resident Suspected of Stealing Mezuzos From Homes in Cholon and Bat Yam

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Israeli police arrested a 25-year-old resident of Chevron on suspicion of stealing dozens of mezuzos from residential buildings in Cholon and Bat Yam over the past week.

According to police, the suspect — described as an illegal infiltrator — was apprehended in an apartment in Yaffo following a targeted operation carried out by security forces.

The investigation was launched after multiple reports were received regarding mezuzos being removed from the doorposts of homes throughout the two cities.

Officers from the Cholon police station conducted an undercover investigation that included the use of advanced technological equipment in an effort to identify those responsible for the thefts.

As investigators gathered evidence and carried out additional investigative activity, police said they were able to uncover the suspect’s identity and locate him.

Authorities stated that at the time of the arrest, the suspect was found in possession of numerous mezuzos believed to have been torn from the doorframes of homes in Cholon and Bat Yam.

The suspect was taken to the Cholon police station for questioning as investigators continue examining whether he may have been involved in additional incidents and work to gather further evidence connected to the case.

Police said that the suspect is expected to be brought before the Tel Aviv Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday, where investigators will request an extension of his detention in order to continue the investigation.

{Matzav.com}

Putin Says US Blocked ‘Secret’ Plutonium Deal With Iran

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Russian President Vladimir Putin said Saturday that negotiations involving Iran’s enriched nuclear material fell apart after the United States allegedly reversed an earlier understanding and insisted the material be transferred exclusively to American control rather than Russia.

Speaking at a lengthy press conference in the Kremlin following Russia’s Victory Day commemorations in Moscow, Putin described the failed discussions as a lost diplomatic opportunity that could have eased tensions surrounding Iran’s nuclear program and the broader crisis in the Persian Gulf.

During the exchange with reporters, Putin disclosed what he described as previously undisclosed details about negotiations involving Iran, Israel, Russia, and the United States.

“We didn’t just propose it; we already did it once, in 2015,” Putin said.

According to Putin, Russia had previously handled transfers tied to the international nuclear agreement with Iran and had earned Tehran’s trust in the process.

“Iran trusts us completely … and it has good reason to trust us, because, firstly, we’ve never violated any agreements.”

Putin said that during the latest round of discussions, all sides initially supported the idea of sending Iran’s enriched nuclear material to Russia.

“And initially, and this is sort of a secret, everyone agreed — representatives of the United States agreed, Iran agreed, Israel agreed,” Putin told the press about more recent negotiations.

He claimed the negotiations later collapsed after Washington toughened its demands and insisted the material be transferred only to the United States.

According to Putin, “the United States hardened its position and demanded that the uranium be transported only to the United States.”

Putin said Iran subsequently withdrew support for exporting the material overseas.

The Russian president said former Iranian official Ali Larijani later informed Moscow that Tehran no longer backed the plan to transfer the uranium abroad.

Instead, Putin said Iran proposed “creating a joint venture, but on Iranian territory, and diluting the uranium together there.”

Putin stated that Russia remained willing to accept that compromise if it helped reduce regional tensions.

He said Moscow responded to Tehran by saying: “Go ahead, we’re not against it. The main thing is that this defuses the situation.”

At the same time, Putin indicated he doubted the revised proposal would be accepted by either Washington or Jerusalem, describing the negotiations as having reached “a dead end.”

Despite Putin’s comments, a source within Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government reportedly told Newsmax that Israel still supports the concept of transferring Iran’s nuclear material to Russia provided international inspection safeguards are included.

Putin argued that the Russian proposal would have ensured transparency through international supervision by the International Atomic Energy Agency.

“Everyone would see what it is, how much of it, and where it is,” Putin said. “Secondly, it would all be placed under IAEA control.”

He also said the process of diluting the uranium would have remained under international oversight as well.

According to Putin, “the work of liquefying this uranium would also be organized under IAEA control and would be transparent and safe.”

The Russian leader additionally defended Iran against accusations that it is actively pursuing nuclear weapons capability.

Putin asserted that “the IAEA has never said that there’s evidence that Iran is pursuing nuclear weapons,” while also citing religious rulings issued by Iranian leaders opposing nuclear weapons development.

Throughout the press conference, Putin repeatedly portrayed Russia as acting primarily as a mediator attempting to lower tensions rather than seeking strategic advantage in the region.

“We simply want to make some small contribution, if it suits everyone, to defusing the situation,” he said.

Although the negotiations failed, Putin maintained that a diplomatic breakthrough remains achievable.

He insisted that “compromises are possible” and said Russia would back “any solution that will break this deadlock and make it possible to move toward a peaceful resolution.”

Putin’s remarks came amid continued tensions across the Persian Gulf tied to Iran’s nuclear activities and ongoing instability throughout the Middle East.

The Russian president warned that any further escalation would ultimately harm all sides involved and argued that there were “no longer any interested parties in continuing this standoff.”

Saturday’s press conference followed Russia’s annual Victory Day celebrations commemorating the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany in World War II. This year’s events were noticeably reduced in scale because of ongoing security concerns linked to the war in Ukraine.

{Matzav.com}

Tefillos for Rebbetzin of Rav Moshe Hillel Hirsch Following Hospitalization

Matzav -

As first reported by Matzav.com, Rav Moshe Hillel Hirsch, Slabodka rosh yeshiva, was unable to join Keren Olam HaTorah’s fundraising mission to Brazil and Argentina, which departed on schedule on Motzaei Shabbos, due to unforeseen developments involving the health of his rebbetzin.

The rosh yeshiva remained in Eretz Yisroel in order to stay at the side of the rebbetzin, who has been hospitalized and is in need of rachamei Shomayim and tefillos.

Sources involved with the mission said that upon hearing of the rebbetzin’s condition, leading South American nedivim strongly urged Rav Moshe Hillel to remain with her and pledged to intensify their support for Keren Olam HaTorah l’zechus a complete recovery.

All are asked to daven for the refuah sheleimah of Avigayil Gittel bas Chaya Miriam.

Despite Rav Moshe Hillel’s absence, the mission is proceeding under the leadership of Rav Yaakov Hillel, Rav Avrohom Salim, Rav Chaim Peretz Berman, Rav Malkiel Kotler, Rav Shimon Galei, and Rav Yosef Chevroni, who are traveling on behalf of the urgent campaign to support the Torah world in Eretz Yisroel and strengthen the future of its yeshivos and kollelim.

{Matzav.com}

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