Matzav

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Mir Yeshiva Announces: Talmidim Will March Together With Rabbonim to the Yerushalayim Rally

As final preparations are underway for the historic atzeres tefillah scheduled to take place at the entrance to Yerushalayim tomorrow protesting the arrest of bnei yeshiva for the offense of learning Torah, Yeshivas Mir Yerushalayim has announced that its talmidim will walk together with the roshei yeshiva and rabbonim from the yeshiva campus in the Beis Yisroel neighborhood to the site of the gathering.

Mir, the largest yeshiva in Eretz Yisroel with thousands of bochurim and avreichim, issued a special notice detailing the plan. According to the announcement, the talmidim will depart on foot from the yeshiva courtyard at 2:10 p.m., led by the roshei yeshiva and rabbonim. They will proceed to the intersection of Malchei Yisroel and HaTurim Streets, where they will join the masses of participants for the tefillos and recitation of Tehillim at the massive demonstration.

The yeshiva’s official notice reads: “For all bnei hayeshiva hakedoshah—the avreichim and bochurim, may they be protected. In response to the call of Maranan gedolei Yisroel and our rosh yeshiva shlit”a to take part in the atzeres tefillah in the streets of the city, to cry out to Hashem over the affront to the honor of Torah—for we have none to rely on but our Father in Heaven—on Thursday, 8 Cheshvan, bnei hayeshiva hakedoshah, together with the roshei and rabbonim of the yeshiva, will gather in unity at the corner of Malchei Yisroel and HaTurim Streets at 2:30 p.m. The procession from the yeshiva courtyard, led by the roshei and rabbonim, will depart at 2:10 p.m.”

{Matzav.com}

More On the Draft Conscription Bill: Loss of Driver’s License, Scholarships, and Ban on Leaving the Country

The latest draft of the Chok HaGiyus (Conscription Law) prepared by MK Boaz Bismuth (Likud), chairman of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, introduces a series of personal sanctions aimed at yeshiva students who receive a draft order and fail to report for service, as reported yesterday by Matzav.com. 

According to the proposal, those who evade enlistment will face the loss of several rights and benefits. They will be barred from obtaining a driver’s license until the age of 23—by which time many in the yeshivah community are already married—prohibited from leaving the country, and denied access to scholarships, state employment, housing subsidies, and other financial benefits if annual recruitment targets are not met.

Committee legal adviser Adv. Miri Frankel-Shor submitted initial comments to the chairman, though she stated that her full position will be presented at the official hearing next week. Among her key recommendations is raising the first-year draft target from 4,800 to 5,760 recruits, arguing that the earlier figure applied to the previous year and no longer reflects 2025 demographics.

The plan sets out a gradual recruitment ladder: 5,760 recruits in the second year, 6,840 in the third, 7,920 in the fourth, and within five years, the conscription of half of each chareidi age cohort.

One significant change is the removal of the combat-service quota. The IDF clarified that it cannot control the precise number of soldiers assigned to combat roles, leading lawmakers to drop the requirement. The definition of “national-security service” will be expanded to include volunteering in rescue organizations and other emergency-response agencies.

The bill also narrows the definition of who qualifies as chareidi for legal purposes: anyone who studied in a yeshivah for at least two years will be counted within the chareidi population. Lawmakers said this definition was intended to include dropouts from yeshivah frameworks who still identify with the community.

The proposal limits the scope of the driving ban: it will apply only to new draft dodgers, meaning those who already hold a driver’s license will not have it revoked, in order to avoid retroactive punishment. The travel ban will also be capped—applying only until age 26—after concerns were raised that indefinite restrictions on leaving Israel could violate basic legal rights.

Public debate on the bill has been postponed to next week. Officially, the delay was made at the request of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, who asked to review the text. However, sources said the decision was also influenced by appeals from chareidi factions who did not want discussions to coincide with Thursday’s massive “Million-Man Rally” in Jerusalem.

As previously reported by Matzav.com, the IDF chief of staff will establish a special committee to oversee implementation of the law. Members will include a retired dayan from the Chief Rabbinical Court, a former IDF chief rabbi, a representative from the Human Resources Directorate, and two senior officers appointed by the chief of staff.

The committee’s mandate will be to assess whether the IDF is meeting its commitments to create service tracks suitable for chareidim and to monitor compliance with the recruitment benchmarks.

{Matzav.com}

Trump Warns: “If Hamas Does Not Behave, They Will Be Terminated”

During a conversation with reporters aboard Air Force One on Tuesday, President Donald Trump firmly defended Israel’s right to strike Hamas following an attack on IDF troops in Rafah. Describing Hamas as a “limited factor” in the broader Middle East equation, Trump made clear that restraint was not Israel’s obligation. “They killed an Israeli soldier. So the Israelis hit back. And they should hit back,” he declared. “If Hamas does not behave, they will be terminated.”

Trump’s remarks followed a fresh outbreak of violence in Rafah, where Hamas gunmen opened fire on Israeli forces, breaching the fragile ceasefire once again. The confrontation prompted a swift Israeli counterattack, including artillery fire and an IAF flyover of the area, signaling that Jerusalem would not allow such provocations to pass unanswered.

In the aftermath of the exchange, Hamas declared that it would withhold the body of an Israeli hostage it had previously agreed to return, accusing Israel of “violations” of the ceasefire. The statement marked another deliberate act of defiance by the terror group, which has repeatedly flouted the terms of the US-brokered agreement.

Despite the renewed clashes, Vice President JD Vance voiced confidence that the overall peace framework would remain intact. Addressing reporters at the Capitol, Vance remarked, “The President achieved a historic peace in the Middle East. The ceasefire is holding. That doesn’t mean that there aren’t going to be little skirmishes here and there.” He continued, “We know that Hamas or somebody else within Gaza attacked an IDF soldier. We expect the Israelis are going to respond. But I think the President’s peace is going to hold despite it.”

{Matzav.com}

Today: Connect and Be Inspired on Rav Meir Shapiro’s Yahrtzeit

Today, 7 CheshvanKlal Yisroel marks the yahrtzeit of Rav Meir Shapiro zt”l, the visionary founder of Daf Yomi and Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivas Chachmei Lublin. His dream — that every Yid learn the same daf each day — continues to unite tens of thousands of lomdei Torah around the globe, binding us together through shared learning and achdus. To honor his enduring legacy, Agudas Yisroel of America’s Siyum HaShas Committee invites you to connect and be inspired through two special presentations available today: A Fascinating Documentary
Experience a captivating portrayal of Rav Meir Shapiro’s life, leadership, and vision — a glimpse into the passion and perseverance that gave birth to Daf Yomi and forever transformed the Torah world. Watch it here. A Livestream from Har Hamenuchos Join us virtually at the kever of Rav Meir Shapiro on Har Hamenuchos in Yerushalayim, where continual shiurim are being delivered in his memory, a powerful expression of the Torah he so deeply cherished. Click here to watch. As we reflect on Rav Meir Shapiro’s extraordinary impact, let us rededicate ourselves to his dream that every Yid take part in Daf Yomi, ensuring that Torah remains the heartbeat of Klal Yisroel. If you, as an individual lomeid, or your Daf Yomi shiur have not yet registered, now is the time. Be counted among the lomdei Torah who carry forward Rav Meir Shapiro’s vision every single day. Register here. {Matzav.com}

Payless and Grounded: Shutdown Chaos Leaves Air Traffic Controllers Broke and Travelers Stalled

The nation’s air traffic system is teetering under the weight of a deepening crisis as the government shutdown drags into its second month. Controllers across the country opened their pay stubs Tuesday to find zeroed-out checks — even as they continue managing America’s skies under crushing overtime and severe understaffing.

“The system is already short-staffed, shutdown or no shutdown, and has been for a very long time,” said Ian Petchenik, communications director for the real-time flight-tracking website Flightradar24. The mounting strain, he explained, is pushing many controllers to their breaking point.

“Even at full staff, it’s a very stressful job. Then there’s a government shutdown where you aren’t being paid anymore. This sets the backdrop for an increase over time of air traffic controllers calling out and saying look, I’m not getting paid, so maybe a six-day week and mandatory overtime right now isn’t something I can do.”

Federal Aviation Administration data shows the shortages are already taking a toll. The agency has flagged major staffing gaps at control centers overseeing airports in Denver, Philadelphia, and throughout much of the western United States.

Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy confirmed Tuesday that the impact has been swift and severe. According to Duffy, “44% of Sunday’s flight delays, and around 24% on Monday, were a direct result of air traffic controller staffing issues.” Those numbers mark a dramatic spike from just 5% of delays earlier this year.

The ripple effect has stretched far beyond domestic terminals. At New York’s JFK International Airport, international passengers are facing grueling customs wait times — now reaching as long as one hour and fifteen minutes, roughly half an hour longer than before the shutdown began.

Petchenik warned that other major hubs may soon face similar chaos. “Right now the facilities that are impacted vary from day to day, and are scattered throughout the country. We’re dealing with delays and a few cancelations here and there, but if it continues along this path, if there are fewer air traffic controllers working at more facilities then we start to get into real systematic issues,” he said.

And if the stalemate in Washington persists, Petchenik said, travelers should brace for even greater disruption. “It could mean travelers not getting to where they need to go, because you have a national airspace system that deals with making sure we can get roughly 50,000 scheduled flights where they need to go in a day,” he cautioned.

“If you’re adding delays on top of that because controllers can’t safely move that number of flights, something has to give. Either scheduling or something else.”

Meanwhile, frustration continues to mount on Capitol Hill. Democrats again voted Tuesday — for the 13th time — against reopening the government, keeping hundreds of thousands of federal workers in limbo.

“These are all federal employees,” Senate Majority Leader John Thune said of the unpaid controllers and other essential workers. “They want to get paid, and the way to get them paid is to open up the government.”

“With the military and our troops, law enforcement, TSA, ATC, there are some really, really bad consequences to have the government shut down,” Thune added, blasting the political gridlock. “Which is why I said nobody wins, and it seems like the Democrats have been making a calculation from day one that this is about who wins and who loses politically, and if their far left base is happy, they’re happy even if the majority of Americans are paying the price for it.”

{Matzav.com}

EARLY VOTING: Who’s Been Participating In The NYC Mayor’s Race So Far? Data Shows Some Surprising Trends

Early voting in New York City’s mayoral election is already drawing massive participation, with over 223,000 ballots submitted in just three days — and the numbers reveal a clear tilt toward older and Democratic voters, according to an amNewYork analysis of unofficial Board of Elections data.

Those demographics could spell opportunity for Andrew Cuomo, 67, who’s running as an independent but remains a registered Democrat. Polls show him performing best among older voters, while his 34-year-old opponent, Assembly Member Zohran Mamdani — the official Democratic nominee and current frontrunner — commands strong loyalty from younger progressives, amNewYork reports.

Between Oct. 25 and Oct. 27, about 74% of early voters were registered Democrats, the Board of Elections reported. Registered Republicans represented nearly 13%, while another 11% were unaffiliated or declined to list a party.

Both leading contenders have been chasing the city’s large Democratic base, but Cuomo has made a visible effort to attract Republicans and independents frustrated with the direction of city politics.

Generationally, amNewYork says, the early turnout skews gray. New Yorkers aged 55 and up — encompassing Baby Boomers, the Silent Generation, and what remains of the Greatest Generation — make up 41% of ballots cast. Generation X accounts for roughly 24%, while voters aged 18 to 38, including Millennials and Gen Z, total just 34%.

Those statistics mirror findings in a Gothamist report suggesting that the weekend’s turnout was heavily weighted toward older residents.

Cuomo said Tuesday he’s feeling optimistic about that trend. “I think as long as the voters are smart, I’m in very good shape,” he told reporters after earning the endorsement of former Governor David Paterson.

Despite Cuomo’s confidence, the contest remains tight. Mamdani has consistently topped recent polls, though the margins have narrowed as Nov. 4 approaches. His campaign says it’s relying on a vast network of more than 85,000 volunteers to ensure supporters reach the polls. The assemblyman expressed calm determination, saying he remains “confident in our campaign.”

Brooklyn currently leads the city’s early-voting tally with 67,608 ballots cast, narrowly edging out Manhattan’s 67,075. Queens follows with 52,062, while the Bronx and Staten Island trail with 19,094 and 17,059 respectively.

Early voting runs through Sunday, Nov. 2, at designated polling sites across the five boroughs. On Election Day, Tuesday, Nov. 4, voting will take place from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. City residents can confirm their polling location at vote.nyc.

{Matzav.com}

Bombshell House Report: Biden’s Putrid Debate Performance Sparked Civil War Among Embattled Prez’s Top Brass

The fallout from President Biden’s disastrous debate with Donald Trump sent shockwaves through his inner circle, triggering days of chaos, panic, and finger-pointing, according to a damning new report from the House Oversight Committee, the NY Post is reporting.

The report paints a picture of senior aides torn between loyalty and political reality as doubts over the president’s future reached a boiling point.

Behind closed doors, Biden’s most trusted advisers admitted to investigators that the June 27, 2024, debate had shattered morale and forced urgent conversations about whether he could continue as the Democratic nominee. “It is fair to say within a few days after the debate, he was aware of my view that I thought it was prudent to consider getting out of the race,” testified Jeff Zients, Biden’s former White House chief of staff.

Zients said his concerns weren’t about Biden’s capacity to govern but about whether the aging incumbent could realistically defeat Donald Trump in a grueling general election. As questions about his mental sharpness intensified, Zients revealed that other top officials quietly began to share the same doubts.

Among those alarmed were then–Secretary of State Anthony Blinken, National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan, Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo, and Veterans Affairs Secretary Denis McDonough, according to Zients. Their private misgivings added to the growing tension engulfing the administration.

“The fact of the matter was that President Biden was underwater across his administration, the caucus, donors, and the American people,” the House GOP report declared, summarizing the grim political outlook that gripped the White House.

Zients went on to acknowledge that Biden’s memory lapses had become more noticeable over time. “I think it’s always been a challenge, as it can be for a lot of busy people,” he told the committee. “He might have that challenge more than others. And I would say, like the stumbling over words, I’d say there’s been some trend of that being more common across time.”

Even as some aides began to waver, Biden’s most devoted loyalists refused to entertain the idea of withdrawal. Senior adviser Mike Donilon and counselor Steve Ricchetti urged him to stay the course, believing the storm would eventually pass.

Zients said Anita Dunn, one of Biden’s most influential communications strategists, expressed concern about his electability but ultimately sided with those who believed he could still win. “She was worried about whether he could win re-election,” Zients recalled. “But I don’t recall — in fact, I’d be very surprised if there was any absolute statement that he can’t, because she believed he could.”

As the internal fight raged, aides agreed that Biden had to appear in public more often to calm the electorate’s fears. “The plan was about, ‘How do we get him out there more?’” Zients explained. “He did a lot of different things, but — were meant to build back public confidence that he was the right person to be the next President of the United States.”

Others tried to downplay the disaster altogether. “It isn’t how the country perceived it. That just isn’t true,” Ricchetti insisted, rejecting claims that the debate exposed deep cognitive decline. Donilon — who admitted he earned $4 million for his work on Biden’s campaign and stood to receive another $4 million if Biden won reelection — defended his boss, saying, “I do not believe with the voters that it produced a substantial change in the horse race.”

Still, the damage proved irreversible. On July 21, 2024, just over three weeks after the debate, Biden bowed out of the race, ending his campaign in an extraordinary moment of political collapse.

The Oversight Committee’s report didn’t stop at recounting the chaos; it also accused White House physician Dr. Kevin O’Connor of helping conceal Biden’s mental deterioration. Along with deputy chief of staff Annie Tomasini and Anthony Bernal, Jill Biden’s chief of staff, O’Connor invoked the Fifth Amendment and declined to answer key questions about the president’s cognitive state.

The committee’s scathing findings, released as part of its broader investigation into Biden’s use of an autopen for official documents, recommended that O’Connor face a probe by the D.C. Board of Medicine for what it called a “coordinated” cover-up of the president’s decline.

{Matzav.com}

Zohran Mamdani Faces Criminal Referrals To DOJ Over Alleged Illegal Campaign Donations From Foreigners

New York City mayoral frontrunner Zohran Mamdani is facing serious legal trouble after a campaign finance watchdog accused him of accepting thousands of dollars in prohibited foreign donations. Two criminal referrals were submitted Tuesday, charging that his campaign repeatedly violated both federal and state election laws.

The Coolidge Reagan Foundation filed the complaints with the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division and with Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg’s office. The organization alleges that Mamdani’s campaign violated the Federal Election Campaign Act and the New York Election Code by knowingly accepting money from overseas contributors.

The move follows a report by The New York Post earlier this month revealing that Mamdani’s campaign had collected nearly $13,000 from about 170 donors listing foreign addresses — including one contribution from his own mother-in-law in Dubai.

“These are not isolated incidents or clerical errors,” said Dan Backer, a nationally recognized campaign finance attorney and president of the Coolidge Reagan Foundation.

“This was a sustained pattern of foreign money flowing into a New York City mayoral race which is a clear violation of both federal law and New York City campaign finance rules,” Backer continued. “Mamdani’s campaign was on notice for months that it was accepting illegal foreign contributions, and yet it did nothing meaningful to stop it.”

The watchdog organization, known for pursuing high-profile campaign finance cases — including complaints against Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Hillary Clinton’s presidential campaign, and the Democratic National Committee — has urged both the DOJ and DA Bragg to pursue criminal charges. According to the group, money tied to contributors in countries including Australia, Turkey, France, Canada, and Germany flowed into Mamdani’s campaign in violation of clear prohibitions.

Under federal law, it is illegal to “accept or receive” political donations from foreign nationals in any election, whether federal, state, or local. Violations can carry steep fines and possible prison terms for candidates or treasurers who knowingly accept such funds.

“The law is crystal clear that foreign nationals may not participate in American elections, and that includes making contributions,” Backer said. “Yet Mamdani’s campaign repeatedly accepted donations from individuals abroad, some even tied to regions and individuals openly sympathetic to hostile actors.”

He warned, “Whether through negligence or intent, this conduct undermines the integrity of the democratic process.”

Although Mamdani’s team has reportedly refunded a portion of the questionable donations, records indicate that at least 88 foreign contributions totaling $7,190 remain unreturned.

Mamdani’s campaign has amassed around $4 million in private contributions and received an additional $12.7 million in public matching funds, leaving about $6.1 million in cash with less than a month before election day.

Campaign spokesperson Dora Pekec defended their fundraising practices, insisting that some of the donors in question may be American citizens who reside abroad.

“All US citizens and permanent residents, including those who live outside the US, are legally permitted to donate to New York City mayoral campaigns under federal campaign finance law and New York State and City law,” Pekec said in a statement to Fox News Digital.

“The Campaign has a rigorous compliance process in place to ensure compliance with these laws, including a protocol to confirm whether donors with foreign addresses are U.S. citizens or lawful permanent residents,” she added. “The Campaign will promptly issue refunds for any donations that are found to be impermissible.”

{Matzav.com}

Dov Hikind: Mamdani Win Would Be Victory for Hamas

Dov Hikind, chairman of Americans Against Antisemitism and longtime New York activist, sounded an urgent alarm over the deepening antisemitism in America and the political danger posed by New York City mayoral candidate Zohran Mamdani. Speaking with Arutz Sheva-Israel National News, Hikind said the wave of antisemitic attacks has reached levels unseen in his lifetime.

“Things are worse than ever in terms of antisemitic incidents,” he said. “But a great number of them involve assaults. Most of them do not get any coverage, so we don’t hear about them, but they’re happening, being reported to the police. A great number are not even being reported.”

He described an environment where Jews are afraid to report attacks. “I know cases where people have been assaulted, bloodied, and I have to beg and plead with them to go to the police, and many times they don’t want to. They’re afraid it’s not going to make a difference, so the atmosphere is out of control. Jew hatred with no consequences for the perpetrators.”

Reflecting on his decades in public service and activism, Hikind said the current situation is unprecedented. “It’s a situation that I have never witnessed in my life, going back to my days in the Jewish Defense League and as an elected official for 36 years… things are bad, but this is the worst it’s ever been, no question about it.”

He recalled a chilling phone call that underscored the sense of fear gripping ordinary Jews. “A woman, an elderly woman… called me to ask me ‘How will we know when it’s time to leave?’ She was asking me very seriously, ‘Is someone going to announce it? Is there going to be an announcement?’ This is what she wanted to know, and this was a year and a half ago, and things have just progressively gotten worse.”

Hikind sharply criticized major Jewish organizations for failing to act decisively. “There’s a lot of talk about antisemitism… but at the end of the day, there is no plan on how to deal with it… and as far as consequences for people who have been arrested for committing acts of violence against Jews, nothing happens to them. There’s a revolving door of justice in New York. The perpetrators, they commit 10 acts, 20 acts, they continue to commit crimes, and they just walk out without consequences. So, it’s not a good situation, and I and [other] people are worried about the future. The big question is what’s going to be?”

Turning to the New York mayoral race, Hikind warned that Mamdani represents a threat unlike anything the city’s Jewish community has ever faced. “We’ve had elections and have been candidates that were problematic for the Jewish community and the community at large, that’s nothing new, but what we are faced with now… We have someone running for office who has not found any place in his rhetoric to condemn Hamas, plain and simple. He has not been able to say that ‘globalize the intifada’ is about murdering Jews.”

He quoted Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer’s explanation of that slogan: “Globalizing the intifada means the murder of every Jew in Israel… and the murder of Jews everywhere.”

Despite this, Hikind noted with outrage that Mamdani enjoys backing from major political figures. “He’s being supported by the governor of New York, Hochul, being supported by people like Jerry Nadler, a Jewish congressman who, by the way, went to yeshiva, not that that matters, but I think we’re watching the spectacle of Jews supporting someone whose best friends are radical Islamists.”

What disturbs Hikind even more is that much of Mamdani’s support base comes from within the Jewish community itself. “Many of these supporters, a great percentage of these supporters are young Jews, educated. They’re educated. They’re from Ivy League universities, from Columbia, you know, top universities. And they march in the streets of New York and the streets of America in support of our enemies. One needs to wonder, you know, what happened at home? What kind of education did they get in terms of their Jews and their commitment to the Jewish people? Something is so terribly wrong.”

Discussing his own political shift, Hikind explained why he chose to back Andrew Cuomo after previously supporting Curtis Sliwa. “I was supporting Curtis Sliwa, who’s a very good guy, and he would have been a very good mayor, but it’s not about being a nice guy and just supporting somebody and sticking with them. The goal of every single person needs to be defeating Mamdani. It is so clear.”

He said that Sliwa’s campaign had lost steam. “The fact was that Curtis Sliwa was not going anywhere. There was a poll just now where he’s down from where he was. He’s only at 11%, and I think it will be even less than that. The goal needs to be to defeat Mamdani. And let me say that I think that’s very doable. The latest poll has Cuomo, who I’m supporting, and I’m not a fan of him, I don’t like him. In fact, it’s even more than that. But forget it. You’ve got to support the guy, period. Because between Cuomo and Mamdani, it’s, you know, it’s living or God forbid being in hell. I’m not exaggerating. I have never seen anything like this, a candidate like Mamdani, who could potentially be the mayor of a city with over one million Jews.”

Hikind shared a story that captured the mood among many reluctant Cuomo voters. “She said, I’m voting for Cuomo, because I recognize for the greater good, how dangerous Mamdani is.”

Pointing to high early voter turnout among senior citizens, Hikind voiced cautious optimism. “If this continues at this level, Cuomo is actually going to win.”

He ended with a grave warning for Jewish voters. “People need to vote for Cuomo, period. End of the story. Because Mamdani winning [means] Hamas in Gaza will celebrate. Our enemies all over the world will see this as a victory against the Jewish people. So we have to do the right thing, period.”

{Matzav.com}

Vance: Ceasefire Will Hold Despite Hamas Attacks and Israeli Retaliation

Vice President JD Vance said Tuesday that he believes the ceasefire between Israel and Hamas will endure, even as Hamas continues to violate it and Israel responds militarily. Speaking to reporters on Capitol Hill, Vance expressed confidence in the stability of the peace deal brokered by President Trump.

“The President achieved a historic peace in the Middle East. The ceasefire is holding. That doesn’t mean that there aren’t going to be little skirmishes here and there,” Vance said, acknowledging the tension but maintaining optimism about the agreement’s durability.

He continued, “We know that Hamas or somebody else within Gaza attacked an IDF soldier. We expect the Israelis are going to respond. But I think the President’s peace is going to hold despite it.”

The vice president’s remarks came just hours after Hamas terrorists opened fire on IDF soldiers conducting operations in Rafah, sparking an exchange of fire in what Israel described as another blatant breach of the ceasefire by the terror organization.

In immediate retaliation, the IDF launched artillery fire at Hamas positions, while Israeli Air Force jets carried out low-altitude flyovers above Rafah as a warning and show of strength.

Later in the day, Hamas issued a statement claiming it would not return the body of an Israeli hostage, accusing Israel of “violations” of the ceasefire — a charge Israel flatly rejected.

{Matzav.com}

Reservist Yonah Ephraim Feldbaum Fell In Gaza

The Binyamin Regional Council confirmed Tuesday night that reserve soldier Yonah Ephraim (Efi) Feldbaum was killed during a confrontation with Hamas terrorists inside the Gaza Strip. Feldbaum, a 37-year-old resident of Zayit Raanan-Neria, leaves behind his wife, Shulamit, and their five children.

“With deep sorrow, we announce the death in battle of Yonah Ephraim (Efi) Feldbaum, a resident of Zayit Raanan-Neria in Binyamin. Efi, 37, a father of five, lived in the community and worked as a contractor in the area. During the war, he dedicated his skills to meaningful reserve service in the Gaza Strip. Efi is the 59th fallen soldier from the Binyamin Regional Council,” the council’s statement read.

Feldbaum was remembered by neighbors and friends as a man whose devotion to his people and his land defined every part of his life. “Efi was well known and deeply loved throughout the region. He was heavily involved in developing young communities. Efi was deeply connected to the land of Israel and fell while defending it,” members of his community shared, describing him as both a builder in life and a defender in battle.

Yisroel Gantz, who heads the Binyamin Regional Council and serves as chairman of the Yesha Council, offered a moving tribute. “Efi fought on the front lines of the war in Gaza and continued even after the ceasefire was declared – despite repeated violations by Hamas terrorists. On behalf of all Binyamin residents, I extend my condolences to his wife Shulamit, his children, and the entire family. Thanks to Efi’s bravery and sacrifice, the people of Israel will prevail.”

Military officials said Feldbaum was part of an IDF engineering team operating in Rafah when terrorists ambushed their unit. The attackers reportedly emerged from a tunnel system in the Jenina neighborhood and began firing, including RPG rounds, directly at the soldiers.

{Matzav.com}

North Korea Fires Cruise Missiles As Trump Eyes Meeting With Kim

On the eve of President Donald Trump’s arrival in South Korea, North Korea launched a salvo of sea-to-surface cruise missiles from its western coastline, reigniting tensions across the region. State media confirmed the launch took place Tuesday morning, adding that the missiles were fired from the Yellow Sea and remained in flight for more than two hours.

The country’s KCNA news agency reported that top military figure Pak Jong Chon supervised the operation, hailing “important successes” in the regime’s efforts to strengthen its “nuclear forces” for deterrence. The statement underscored Pyongyang’s ongoing determination to advance its weapons program even as diplomatic efforts remain frozen.

Observers noted the conspicuous absence of Kim Jong Un, who did not attend the test. KCNA made no reference to the North Korean leader in its reports—just as it omitted his name during coverage of last week’s hypersonic missile launch—an unusual move that has sparked speculation about his whereabouts and level of involvement.

Trump, who is expected in Seoul on Wednesday, has said he would “love to meet” Kim Jong Un during his visit. The two leaders met three times during Trump’s first presidency—first in Singapore, then in Hanoi, and later at the demilitarized zone between the two Koreas. While their encounters made headlines around the world, they ultimately failed to produce a lasting agreement on denuclearization.

So far, Pyongyang has offered no official reaction to Trump’s overture for a possible meeting. Analysts note that the timing of the latest missile test may be a calculated message to Washington and Seoul as Trump’s trip approaches.

Over the past year, North Korea has dramatically ramped up its missile activity. In early November, the regime fired a ballistic missile toward the East Sea, following an announcement that it had successfully tested an intercontinental ballistic missile—a move that drew sharp condemnation from South Korea, the United States, and Japan.

Despite the diplomatic overtures of years past, Kim Jong Un’s rhetoric has grown increasingly hostile since the end of Trump’s first term. Still, last month, he struck a rare personal tone, remarking that he has “good memories” of Trump—but firmly reiterated that his nation will “never lay down our nuclear weapons.”

{Matzav.com}

Hamas Announces: Bodies of Hostages Amiram Cooper and Sahar Baruch Located

Hamas’s military arm announced on Tuesday that it had supposedly uncovered the bodies of two Israeli hostages, Amiram Cooper and Sahar Baruch, somewhere inside the Gaza Strip. The terror group released the statement hours after a new wave of confusion surrounding its ongoing manipulation of hostage information.

Just hours earlier, Hamas had reneged on its pledge to return the body of an Israeli hostage. The group claimed the decision was in response to an IDF airstrike that followed an incident in Rafah, where Hamas gunmen opened fire on Israeli soldiers engaged in engineering work near the border area.

On Tuesday morning, Israeli authorities confirmed that the body transferred by Hamas the previous night was not that of a newly identified hostage at all. Instead, the remains were determined to belong to Ofir Sarfati, a hostage who had already been retrieved and laid to rest nearly two years ago, exposing yet another act of deceit by the terror organization.

Following a thorough forensic investigation at the Abu Kabir Institute of Forensic Medicine, Israeli experts confirmed that the remains indeed matched those of Sarfati, closing the loop on what officials described as another cruel Hamas fabrication meant to sow confusion and pain.

{Matzav.com}

Agudas Yisroel Party Slams Draft Bill: “Atias’s Nonsense”

A senior Agudas Yisroel party official sharply criticized the newly revealed draft of the government’s proposed conscription law on Tuesday night, deriding it as “Atias’s nonsense.”

Speaking to B’Chadrei Chareidim, the senior figure said, “This isn’t a draft law — it’s nonsense. Atias wrote a draft for Bismuth just to create the illusion that there’s progress, but in practice, it’s an extremely problematic proposal we can’t possibly accept.”

He accused the move of being politically motivated: “The goal of publishing this draft is to bring Shas back into the government. The law imposes sanctions on yeshiva students and sets unrealistic enlistment targets. It doesn’t even have the attorney general’s approval and will end up being canceled within three years. So what will we have accomplished? They want us to lend our support to a bad law, only for an even worse one to replace it in a few years. Netanyahu must fulfill his commitment and present the version he promised us.”

Backlash Across the Political Spectrum

Criticism of the bill was not limited to the chareidi parties. Likud MK Yuli Edelstein, a former chairman of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, quipped: “When I look at this law, I realize those who dismissed me were right — I don’t have the talent to invent a draft-dodging scam in the middle of a war for our survival while our reservists are collapsing.”

Likud MK Dan Illouz also blasted the proposal: “This isn’t a Likud law — it’s a Shas law. It won’t draft chareidim, it will alienate the serving public that votes for us, and it will hurt Likud heading into the next elections. The only law we should be promoting is simple: whoever serves gets benefits from the state; whoever doesn’t — doesn’t. Across all sectors, from day one, for life. Period. I still hope Bismuth will present a true Likud law on Monday, not one that caves to chareidi politicians.”

Opposition leader Yair Lapid was even harsher: “This isn’t a draft law — it’s a disgraceful draft-dodging law in full. If this draft moves forward, not one chareidi will enlist. It’s a slap in the face to soldiers, families, the wounded, and the fallen. If they continue pushing this through, in the next government every chareidi who doesn’t show up at the induction center won’t get a single shekel from the state.”

Details of the Controversial Proposal

The draft law, prepared by Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Chairman Boaz Bismuth (Likud), includes a system of personal and gradual sanctions for those who receive a draft order and fail to report. Under the proposal, those who evade service would immediately lose state benefits, be barred from obtaining a driver’s license until age 23, and be prohibited from leaving the country. They would also lose eligibility for academic scholarships, government employment, housing subsidies, and other benefits if annual enlistment targets are not met.

The committee’s legal adviser, Attorney Miri Frenkel-Shor, sent Bismuth initial feedback, including a recommendation to raise the first-year enlistment target from 4,800 to 5,760 recruits, arguing that the previous target was outdated.

The draft outlines increasing recruitment benchmarks — 5,760 in the second year, 6,840 in the third, 7,920 in the fourth, and ultimately half of each chareidi age cohort after five years.

While the clause setting quotas for combat roles was removed, the bill expands recognition of “civil-security national service,” such as volunteering with rescue organizations, as part of the annual service targets.

The definition of “chareidi” was also narrowed: anyone who studied in a yeshiva for at least two years would be counted within the chareidi population under the law — a move intended to include dropouts still associated with the community.

Restrictions such as the driving license ban would apply only to new draft evaders, not retroactively. Travel restrictions abroad would also end at age 26, to address legal objections to a broader ban.

Debate Delayed Amid Mass Rally Plans

The public debate on the law was postponed to next week — officially at the request of Prime Minister Binyomin Netanyahu, who asked for more time to review the draft, but also due to a request from the chareidi parties not to hold the discussion alongside the massive “Million Man Rally” scheduled for Thursday in Jerusalem.

Meanwhile, the IDF is expected to establish a special committee to oversee implementation of the new draft law, composed of a retired rabbinical court judge, a former IDF Chief Rabbi, and several senior army officers. The committee will review whether the army is meeting its obligations to create appropriate service tracks for chareidim and to reach the targets established in the law.

The law specifies that biometric fingerprint enforcement will not be used.

{Matzav.com}

President Trump Sends Historic Letter of Bracha to the Bobov-45 Rebbe

In a rare gesture, President Donald Trump sent a personal letter of bracha to the Rebbe of Bobov-45 in honor of the inauguration of the Chassidus’s massive new bais medrash in Boro Park, which was dedicated just before the Yamim Noraim.

The letter, which reached the Rebbe during Chol Hamoed but was only revealed publicly this week, was delivered through Rabbi Dovid Katz, a close associate of the president.

In his message, President Trump extended warm congratulations to the Rebbe and his chassidim upon the milestone inauguration, noting that the new bais medrash stands as a continuation of the legacy of the Rebbe’s illustrious grandfather, Rav Shlomo of Bobov zt”l. The president praised the enduring impact of Rav Shlomo’s efforts in rebuilding chareidi Judaism in America after the devastation of the Holocaust.

{Matzav.com}

INCREDIBLE EMUNAH: “My Son Is in the Hands of the Creator”: Hostage’s Mother Silences Hamas Terrorist

While recounting his harrowing months in Hamas captivity, released hostage Bar Kuperstein revealed a chilling yet extraordinary exchange between his mother and one of his captors, an encounter that left the terrorist speechless.

Kuperstein held up a bracelet his mother had worn throughout his imprisonment — engraved with the words, “My son is always in the hands of the Creator.” He explained that during his captivity, “one of the terrorists called my mother and told her she was not doing enough to free me and that if she wanted to see me again she needed to go out, file complaints at The Hague and really fight.”

The militant’s attempt to terrify her failed completely. “He tried to frighten her with psychological warfare and expected her to answer stammering or in fear,” Kuperstein said. “And she simply told him the following sentence: ‘My son is not in your hands but always in the hands of the Creator – and you are also in the hands of the Creator.’”

According to Kuperstein, the Hamas member was caught off guard. “There was a moment of silence because the terrorist did not know what to answer and then he replied, ‘Well done, madam.’ Since then that has been the slogan that accompanies us.”

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Ben Gvir: ‘Hamas Is Abusing Hostages Because of Me? Give Me a Break!’

A broadcast debate turned explosive after the Israel Police released a controversial video likening rowdy soccer fans to Palestinian rioters, igniting sharp reactions and a fiery exchange between journalist Josh Breiner and National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir.

Breiner accused the police of intentionally inflaming tensions with the video, calling it “provocative.” His remarks quickly drew a direct and angry response from Ben-Gvir, who joined the live discussion to defend his policies and blast what he viewed as distorted reporting.

Tensions escalated when Breiner cited comments made by released hostages who had said, “We were beaten because of Minister Ben-Gvir.” Ben-Gvir immediately fired back, charging that “Josh isn’t the only one adopting the Hamas narrative,” before shouting, “I’m not willing to let Hamas spokesmen go on air.” Moments later, the live segment was abruptly cut off.

Defending his approach to managing security prisoners, Ben-Gvir scoffed at the suggestion that his policies had hardened Hamas’s stance. “There’s a narrative that because of me Hamas became tougher. Really? Without me, they’d be giving the hostages manicures and pedicures, and the terrorists would be swimming in a swimming pool all day. Give me a break.” He added emphatically, “Terrorists were treated in prisons like it was a five-star hotel – I changed the rules.”

When the discussion turned to racist chants at soccer matches, the minister brushed off the criticism. “I’ve heard Beitar Jerusalem fans chant against Ahmad Tibi – and they’re right. What’s racist about that? Ahmad Tibi – it’s good that fans shout against him. I’m not saying to attack anyone, but if they shout ‘This is Eretz Yisrael’ at Ahmad Tibi, there’s no problem. That’s not racism.”

Outraged panelists accused him of fueling division and incitement, but Ben-Gvir refused to back down. “Absolutely not. I stand by what I said. Ayman Odeh supports terror – period. I would expect the Attorney General to indict them, and personally, I’d send them to Syria.”

Addressing the uproar over the police video that started the controversy, Ben-Gvir claimed ignorance of its content but defended the force. “I haven’t seen the video. Don’t hate the police – they work day and night for you, for me, for all our children. The police are allowed to release a video against those who throw flares and fireworks at them.”

As the debate wound down, Ben-Gvir offered a message aimed at unity — albeit on his own terms. “Come to the soccer games, come enjoy yourselves. In the end, we are all brothers – religious, secular, right-wing, left-wing – we’re all brothers. Ayman Odeh is not my brother; he’s a terror supporter, I’m sorry.”

{Matzav.com}

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