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IDF Set to Issue Tough New Cellphone Rules After October 7 Security Failures

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The IDF is preparing to roll out sweeping restrictions on cellphone use among its senior ranks, a move driven by the security lapses exposed during the October 7th Massacre and a broader push to tighten information-security standards across the army.

A report from Galei Tzahal revealed that, until now, officers holding the rank of Colonel and above were issued military cellphones. In recent years, the army phased out Android devices altogether, supplying only iPhones based on the belief that they offered stronger protection and were more difficult for enemy intelligence to breach or track.

Following a fresh internal review, the IDF has decided on two major shifts. The tightened limitations will now apply not only to Colonels and generals, but will be expanded to include Lieutenant Colonels as well.

Along with the broader reach, the guidelines will also prohibit the use of any military device that is not an iPhone. Android phones may still be owned and used personally by officers, but they will be strictly barred from all operational, command, or mission-related activity.

The updated order is expected to be issued in the near future.

{Matzav.com}

I Thought I Knew Conventions – Until I Walked Into This One

Yeshiva World News -

My first-time experience at the Torah Umesorah Convention As a first-time attendee walking into the Torah Umesorah Convention at the Kalahari Resort last week, I didn’t have such high expectations, perhaps an enjoyable Shabbos given as a bonus from my school—nice hotel, decent amenities, a few sessions, and that’s it. Within minutes, I realized this […]

I thought I knew Conventions – until I walked into this one

Yeshiva World News -

My first-time experience at the Torah Umesorah Convention As a first-time attendee walking into the Torah Umesorah Convention at the Kalahari Resort last week, I didn’t have such high expectations, perhaps an enjoyable Shabbos given as a bonus from my school—nice hotel, decent amenities, a few sessions, and that’s it. Within minutes, I realized this […]

I thought I knew Conventions – until I walked into this one

Matzav -

[COMMUNICATED]

As a first-time attendee walking into the Torah Umesorah Convention at the Kalahari Resort last week, I didn’t have such high expectations, perhaps an enjoyable Shabbos given as a bonus from my school—nice hotel, decent amenities, a few sessions, and that’s it. Within minutes, I realized this was something entirely different, which made me wonder: What exactly is the purpose of this Convention?

From the energy alone—hundreds of mechanchim moving, talking, learning—I understood that the purpose is to strengthen the people who build the next generation of Klal Yisrael. Every part of the program is designed to elevate what we do in the classroom every day. (And every attention to detail made us feel royally treated!)

I went from session to session, amazed at how much practical knowledge was being shared: uplifting drashos and spirited shailos u’teshuvos panels from Gedolim on chinuch’s burning issues, preschool strategies, general studies techniques, leadership tools—real, usable ideas. The Chinuh Expo was filled with resources I never knew existed, and I kept thinking, “If this didn’t exist, how would any of us find these things?”

I was attuned to the buzz in the hallways, too. Everywhere I went, I overheard reactions that confirmed what I was experiencing. “Torah Umesorah has its finger on the pulse of chinuch,” someone said. “Learning to converse with my talmidim—even more than teach—was eye-opening.” Another remarked, ”I heard Rav Elya Brudny’s clarity on AI—that even as technology changes from ‘Tuesday to Shabbos,’ Hashem is makdim refuah l’makkah and gives us the tools to handle whatever arises.” And every hallway was buzzing with chinuch discussions—swapping strategies, brainstorming. No, not your average Convention by far!

I met educators from across the world—Portland, Las Vegas, Baltimore, Montreal, Manchester, Panama, Brazil—each one eager to share and learn. Hearing Hebrew echo from the South American delegation showed me just how far the reach of Torah Umesorah extends. I met many veteran attendees who told me that every year brings new experiences—which is why they return annually without fail.

The Executive Directors had a powerful panel with Rabbi Aaron Kotler, Reb Chaim Rajchenbach, and Reb Shmuel Boruch Tress, who spoke about their fathers’ askanus and the enduring lessons that continue to guide chinuch.

The Gedolim—Rav Elya Brudny, Rav Aharon Feldman, Rav Hillel David, Rav Yosef Eichenstein, Rav Chaim Y. Hoberman, Rav Aharon Dovid Goldberg, Rav Yaakov Bender and Rav Reuven Feinstein—were present and remarkably accessible. I felt privileged to approach them directly with questions, just as so many others did, and to receive such personal hadracha. This is where the chinuch industry standard is set—where approaches shift and systems across the country are recalibrated to meet the needs of our dor; there is truly no other address for this.

The guest speakers brought the fire: Rav Ephraim Wachsman, Rav Uren Reich, Rav Uri Deutsch, Rav Noach Orlowek, Rav Nechemia Grama, and Rabbi Dovid Perets from Panama—each delivering messages that felt immediately usable. Every time I walked out of a session, I had something to bring back to my students. And the tefillos—hundreds of voices rising together—gave me chizuk that I am part of a greater whole, full of yearning and kedusha.

I received a clear and insightful answer to the question I had when I first registered: What does this Convention actually accomplish? It creates a space where pressing issues—struggling students, building character, inspiring pride in Yiddishkeit—are addressed with real solutions. It channels the wisdom of our Gedolim directly to thousands of teachers and sends us home with clarity and direction that we cannot get on our own.

I heard a mechanech say, “This is my chinuch vitamins for the entire year,” and I understood exactly what he meant. Conversation after conversation reminded me that we’re part of a global mission to raise the next generation of Klal Yisrael. By the end, it was clear that the Convention doesn’t just inspire; it tangibly elevates the chinuch of each of our children.

At some point, I realized something else: even those who never stepped foot into the Kalahari Resort were, in a sense, “in attendance.” Because the ideas, the guidance, the clarity, the solutions—what every mechanech takes home—flow directly into classrooms across the country. The future of Klal Yisrael sits in those classrooms. When you strengthen the mechanchim, you strengthen every child. And when you strengthen every child, you strengthen all of Klal Yisrael.

Which led to a final question: If this Convention didn’t exist, what would be missing? We would still be teaching, but without this infusion of hadracha, achdus, knowledge, and solutions that lift everything we do. Walking out, I understood that Torah Umesorah isn’t hosting an event—they’re elevating the chinuch of tens of thousands of children. In that sense, Klal Yisroel itself is the real attendee—and the real beneficiary.

And as a first-time attendee, I left saying, “How did I ever do chinuch without this?”

Here’s a glimpse of some of the insights that shaped my first time at the Torah Umesorah Convention:

The Power of a Rebbi’s Connection (Rav Elya Brudny)

The foundation of all chinuch is having a deep, personal kesher with every talmid. Reb Feivel, a Holocaust survivor, became a beloved melamed in Yeshivas Eitz Chaim, he once said, “I speak with the talmidim even more than I teach them.” As a bochur, Rav Brudny watched Rav Avraham Pam, zt”l, spend the week after Rav Aharon Kotler’s petirah not immersed in more learning, but speaking to talmidim about what a Rebbi is, what an Adam Gadol is, and what ahavas haTorah looks like. He recalled visiting his Zayde in Bnei Brak, who remembered a certain day as a Yom Tov, because thirty years earlier, Reb Chatzkel Levenstein, zt”l, told him after getting the aliyah of Birchas Yaakov, “You are gebensht.” That is the lasting imprint of a Rebbi’s words.

Strength Without Drama: Lessons From Home (Rav Yaakov Bender)

My mother, a young widow, never raised her voice. Her strongest rebuke was, “Yankel, I’m disappointed in you.” During the shiva for my father, after thieves stole our tefillin bags, she told us crying children, “We don’t cry about what can be replaced with money.” I am reminded of Rav Elchonon Wasserman delivering his drasha in the Ninth Fort shortly before his murder, anchored in absolute menuchas hanefesh.

“Just a Rebbi? You Built Worlds.” (Rav Uren Reich)

When a Rebbi goes to shomayim after 120 and says, “I was just a Rebbi,” the response will be: “Just a Rebbi?! You built worlds.” The Chazon Ish said that helping even a single Rebbi creates more zechus than supporting many others through a large gemach.  When a bochur asks his Rosh Yeshiva to be mesader kiddushin when he is already a metzuyan. But the sixth-grade Rebbi—the one who took a struggling boy and built him into that metzuyan—often doesn’t even receive a wedding invitation. The melamed creates him; the Rosh Yeshiva receives him.  And building means seeing the glow in every child.  Yitzchak could have missed who Eisav really was: Eisav’s exceptional kibbud av created a constant spiritual “glow” whenever he stood before his father. Yitzchak always saw Eisav in that glow. And the brachos? Hashem ensured they went where they belonged. For mechanchim, the lesson is to identify the mitzvah or strength where each child “shines,” focus on that point of light, and trust Hashem with the rest.

The Hidden Light of the Melamed (Rav Yosef Eichenstein)

Torah belongs to those with refined middos, and the chinuch must instill a sense of tzelem Elokim—the child’s true spiritual self. When Moshiach comes, every melamed will step forward and say, “Shalom aleichem,” and when Moshiach asks who he is, he will respond, “Me?  I brought you here.” Like the hidden light of stars, a Rebbi’s impact is often unseen but eternal. He stressed the centrality of kriah—not just literacy but the ability kriah gives a talmid to connect deeply with Torah. Even capable students may feel detached because of gaps in skill or comfort. Rebbeim must help them access the “light” in the letters themselves, enabling genuine menuchas hanefesh through being able to open a sefer and easily learn Torah.

Two Roles, One Chinuch (Rav Reuven Feinstein)

Parshiyos Vayeira and Chayei Sarah teach the complementary roles of father and mother in chinuch. The mother often notices the issue; the father decides how to act. One may give discipline while the other offers warmth—this isn’t undermining, but completing the process. Children need both firmness and comfort to grow.

Gashmiyus Covers, Ruchniyus Shines (Rav Aharon Feldman)

A Jew does not take pride in gashmiyus. Our dignity is the neshama. After the cheit, Hashem clothed Adam and Chava in kosnos or to show that physical needs are covered because true glory is within. Chinuch is not merely the transfer of information but the transmission of identity. A Rebbi who lives humbly and is uninterested in materialism shows that true greatness is the neshama serving Hashem, that pride belongs in Torah and refined middos, and that our purpose is to bring Hashem into the world. When a talmid sees this lived reality, he internalizes: “I am a Yid with a purpose in this world.” This is the essence of chinuch and its greatest gift.

Guarding What Is Hashem’s (Rav Chaim Y. Hoberman)

It’s been a turbulent year for Klal Yisrael—missiles, global anti-Semitism, and rising danger—but one of extraordinary resilience of Torah. The recent gathering of 500,000 in Yerushalayim was reminiscent of ancient aliyos l’regel. He quoted Chazal comparing Torah to a princess entrusted to us: “If you guard what is Mine, I will guard what is yours.” Teachers are entrusted to safeguard both Torah and the neshomos of their students. True love grows from being loved; for talmidim to love Torah, their Rebbeim must show love, model middos, and create joy in learning. 

Mesirus Nefesh Creates Mesorah (Rav Dovid Perets, Panama)

There has been a dramatic transformation of chinuch in Panama through Torah Umesorah, with a clear rise in yiras Shamayim, hashkafas haTorah, and overall school culture. True chinuch requires mesirus nefesh, just as Yitzchak Avinu gave the berachos with total commitment. Chinuch delivered with self-sacrifice secures the netzach Yisrael and transmits Torah across generations. Stressing the importance of mesorah, he told a story about a man who did not marry the non-Jewish woman he lived with for two years, simply because he missed his mother’s cholent.  

Seeing Each Child With the Eyes of the Neshama (Rav Uri Deutsch)

True menuchas hanefesh is when a Jew’s neshama intuitively resonates with Hashem’s will.  A  Rebbi must truly see each child individually. That kind of attention shapes a talmid for life. Mechanchim must strive with all their strength while recognizing human limitations, to be aware of the deep, yet subtle impact they can make on every neshama.

The Hidden Greatness of Our Generation (Rav Ephraim Wachsman)

Although our generation may appear spiritually weak, it carries the accumulated strength of earlier generations and is uniquely prepared to greet Moshiach. The core of chinuch is not technique but genuine Yiddishkeit. “When talmidim see the fire and passion in their teachers… this is a critical aspect of chinuch.”

If You Don’t Use Your Brain, You Lose Your Brain (Rav Nechemia Grama)

In answering how we can reach students in a generation distracted by digital stimulation and instant gratification, Rav Grama said we must be careful not to feed the problem—for example, with comic books or overused visual aids. “If you don’t use your brain, you lose your brain.” Students need to think. The key to keeping them engaged is to teach by asking questions and to end each lesson with one—it draws them in and makes the learning stick.

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Trump Bars South Africa From 2026 G20, Citing Abuse of Whites and Diplomatic Snub

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President Donald Trump declared on Wednesday that South Africa will be excluded from next year’s G20 gathering in Miami, announcing at the same time that the United States will halt all financial support to the country. His decision followed what he described as violent targeting of white citizens in South Africa and what he viewed as improper conduct by South African officials during this year’s G20.

Trump explained his position in a series of comments on Truth Social, beginning with his assertion that “the United States did not attend the G20 in South Africa, because the South African Government refuses to acknowledge or address the horrific human rights abuses endured by Afrikaners, and other descendants of Dutch, French, and German settlers.”

He sharpened the accusation further, writing, “To put it more bluntly, they are killing white people and randomly allowing their farms to be taken from them. Perhaps, worst of all, the soon-to-be-out-of-business New York Times and the fake news Media won’t issue a word against this genocide. That’s why all the Liars and Pretenders of the Radical Left Media are going out of business!”

The president also tied his decision to the summit’s closing moments, saying that South Africa rebuffed a routine diplomatic transition. “At the conclusion of the G20, South Africa refused to hand off the G20 Presidency to a senior representative from our US Embassy, who attended the closing ceremony. Therefore, at my direction, South Africa will not be receiving an invitation to the 2026 G20, which will be hosted in the great city of Miami, Florida, next year.”

In his final statement, Trump announced a complete financial cutoff, stating, “South Africa has demonstrated to the world it is not a country worthy of membership anywhere, and we are going to stop all payments and subsidies to them, effective immediately. Thank you for your attention to this matter!”

{Matzav.com}

Gunfire Near White House Leaves National Guard Troops Wounded

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Two National Guard members were struck by gunfire in downtown Washington on Wednesday, an attack that unfolded only a few blocks from the White House and left one of the soldiers fighting for his life, according to law enforcement sources familiar with the scene.

Authorities say the shooting took place in the area of Farragut Square, a busy stretch of Northwest DC less than half a mile from the White House. Images captured immediately after the incident showed one of the victims with an apparent head wound. DC’s Metro Police confirmed the location at 17th and I Street, NW, and noted that a suspect had already been taken into custody. Agents from the FBI, ATF, and the Secret Service also rushed to the area.

At the moment of the attack, both President Trump and Vice President JD Vance were out of Washington — Trump in Florida and Vance meeting with troops stationed in Kentucky.

Shortly after being briefed, Trump posted a strongly worded message on Truth Social: “The animal that shot the two National Guardsmen, with both being critically wounded, and now in two separate hospitals, is also severely wounded, but regardless, will pay a very steep price.” He followed it with another statement reading, “God bless our Great National Guard, and all of our Military and Law Enforcement. These are truly Great People. I, as President of the United States, and everyone associated with the Office of the Presidency, am with you!”

Emergency crews secured the plaza, which sits amid restaurants, offices, and shops between the Farragut West and Farragut North Metro stations. According to initial accounts, CPR was administered to at least one of the wounded soldiers. The suspect was transported to a DC hospital.

The shooting rippled into the broader region as security officials issued a temporary ground stop at Ronald Reagan National Airport for departing flights. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said in a statement, “The White House is aware and actively monitoring this tragic situation. The President has been briefed.”

Photographs showed Secret Service personnel sprinting toward the square moments after multiple rounds were fired. Early indications pointed to National Guard troops as the intended targets, and witnesses relayed to one bystander that they heard no fewer than seven shots.

{Matzav.com}

FINALLY: Judge Dismisses Georgia Election Case Against Trump After New Prosecutor Declines to Pursue Charge

Yeshiva World News -

A judge on Wednesday dismissed the Georgia election interference case against President Donald Trump and others after the prosecutor who took over the case said he would not pursue the charges, ending the last effort to punish the president in the courts for his efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss. Pete Skandalakis, executive director of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ […]

Georgia Drops 2020 Election Case Against Trump, Allies After New Prosecutor Declines To Pursue

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A sweeping challenge to President Trump and a group of his allies over the 2020 election came to an abrupt end on Wednesday, when the newly installed prosecutor announced he was abandoning the case entirely. Within minutes, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee signed off on the request, bringing the long-running prosecution to a full stop.

Judge McAfee issued a brief ruling granting the motion almost immediately after it was filed, writing simply: “This case is hereby dismissed in its entirety.”

The move came from Peter Skandalakis, who had stepped in to run the case after a year-long ordeal in which he attempted — unsuccessfully — to find an outside attorney willing to take over following the removal of District Attorney Fani Willis. In a 23-page explanation, Skandalakis admitted that the sprawling prosecution “is on life support and the decision [on] what to do with it falls on me and me alone.”

He went on to argue that the matter never belonged in state court to begin with. Skandalakis pointed directly to Jack Smith’s decision to abandon the federal version of the Georgia allegations after Trump’s 2024 victory, noting that the special counsel had concluded the case was barred by Department of Justice policy prohibiting charges against a sitting president. “If Special Counsel Jack Smith, with all the resources of the federal government at his disposal… concluded that prosecution would be fruitless,” Skandalakis wrote, “then I too find that, despite the available evidence, pursuing the prosecution… would be equally unproductive.”

Trump’s attorney Steve Sadow welcomed the development and praised the prosecutor, saying, “The political persecution of President Trump by disqualified DA Fani Willis is finally over. This case should never have been brought. A fair and impartial prosecutor has put an end to this lawfare.” Sadow described Skandalakis as “a fair and impartial prosecutor.”

Skandalakis had announced earlier this month that he was assuming responsibility for the case after being unable to secure “another conflict prosecutor,” warning that the deadline to appoint someone was reaching its end and risked dismissal if no replacement was found.

The original indictment, issued on Aug. 14, 2023, named Trump and 18 others on charges ranging from racketeering to conspiracy. Nine days later, Trump traveled to Atlanta for booking, becoming the first president in American history to sit for a mugshot. The roster of co-defendants included figures such as Rudy Giuliani, John Eastman, Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis, Kenneth Chesebro, Mark Meadows, Jeffrey Clark, Michael Roman, Scott Hall, Cathy Latham, David Shafer, Ray Smith, Robert Cheeley, Shawn Still, Harrison Floyd, Misty Hampton, Stephen Lee, and Trevian Kutti. Four of them — Chesebro, Ellis, Hall, and Powell — entered guilty pleas in late 2023, receiving probation and other penalties.

But the case’s momentum had already been severely damaged by the scandal involving Willis and Nathan Wade, whom she had appointed as a special prosecutor. After revelations that the two had been in a personal relationship, Wade was pushed off the case in March 2024. The Georgia Court of Appeals then barred Willis and her office from any further involvement on June 3. Her final attempt to stay on the matter ended in September 2025, when the state’s Supreme Court refused to hear her appeal.

In his dismissal motion, Skandalakis laid out several reasons the case could not responsibly continue. He pointed out that the trial might not begin for a decade, given that Trump is not due to leave office until January 2029. He also emphasized that his office lacks the staff and resources required to manage a massive RICO prosecution of this size, and questioned the entire theory of the indictment. Actions listed as part of the alleged conspiracy — he wrote — were nowhere near sufficient to support a racketeering charge. “Overt acts such as arranging a phone call, issuing a public statement, tweeting to the public to watch the Georgia Senate subcommittee hearings… are not acts I would consider sufficient to sustain a RICO case,” Skandalakis wrote.

With Wednesday’s ruling, all criminal cases against Trump have now been closed. The only remaining courtroom battle is his appeal of the Manhattan verdict on 34 counts related to business records, for which he was given no punishment at sentencing.

{Matzav.com}

Rav Dovid Yosef: Hitting Your Wife Is a Serious Sin

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A forceful public letter was released today by the Chief Rav of Israel, Rishon LeTzion Rav David Yosef, addressing the frightening rise of domestic abuse and urging Klal Yisroel to eradicate this destructive behavior from our midst.

In strong language, the Chief Rav wrote that any form of assault within the home is a grave aveirah that runs counter to the very foundations of Torah life. He stressed that batei din are obligated to deal with such cases immediately and without leniency.

Rav Yosef lamented that “Sadly, we sometimes hear about severe cases of fighting and violence within families, even to the point of raising hands. Such acts are like those of the gentiles, devoid of manners and values, who have lost all human dignity. Our holy Torah calls such a person: ‘a wicked man.’” He described these episodes as foreign to a Jewish home and contrary to every value embedded in halachah.

He invoked the powerful warnings of his father, Rav Ovadia Yosef zt”l, who repeatedly denounced anyone who dares strike his wife. As he wrote, “As is known, my revered father, Rav Ovadia Yosef zt”l, warned many times and said sharp and precise words against the ‘wicked’ man who dares to raise his hands, especially against his wife, the queen of his home. ‘Cut off the hand of anyone who raises a hand against his wife. This is a serious sin, this is the act of gentiles, not the act of a Jew.’”

The Chief Rav made clear that the psak in batei din is unequivocal: “Any manifestation of violence, of any kind, is handled immediately, with great severity and seriousness by the esteemed judges.” He stressed that there is no tolerance or delay when dealing with such behavior.

Turning to the rabbanim and leaders in the field, Rav Yosef urged them to take an active role in helping victims and guiding them toward proper support. He wrote, “From here, I call on all community rabbis and public leaders in their respective areas, to stand by the victims, guide and direct them, and at times even immediately involve treatment agencies and law enforcement authorities, and to eradicate this scourge from among us, as it is a matter of life and death.”

Rav Yosef closed his powerful letter with an appeal to every member of Klal Yisroel: “To all our brothers and sisters, all the children of Israel, I send this call with affection: honor and cherish your wives. The woman is the crown of the home; she is the blessing of the home. Woe to the soul of anyone who does not know how to respect the honor of his wife, as this is one of the foundations of our Judaism.”

{Matzav.com}

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