Matzav

Netanyahu the Only Foreign Leader Invited to Trumps’ New Year’s Eve Gala

The New Year festivities at Mar-a-Lago on Wednesday featured a notable international presence, as Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu and his wife, Sara, joined the celebrations at the personal invitation of US President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump.

The gathering was especially distinctive in diplomatic terms, as Netanyahu was the sole foreign head of government invited to attend the President’s Gala.

According to those familiar with the event, Netanyahu’s appearance also marked a unique milestone, as he remains the only international leader ever to have taken part in the President’s Gala at Mar-a-Lago.

{Matzav.com}

State Department Warns US Citizens In Iran To ‘Exercise Increased Caution’ Amid Protests

The U.S. State Department issued an advisory urging U.S. citizens in Iran to “exercise increased caution” due to ongoing protests in the country.

“The Department of State advises U.S. citizens in Iran to exercise increased caution due to ongoing and escalating protests in Iran,” the U.S. Virtual Embassy in Iran stated. “Demonstrations have resulted in heightened security presence, road closures, disruptions to public transportation and internet blockages. Protests can turn violent, leading to arrests and injuries.”

It advised U.S. citizens in Iran to “avoid crowds and keep a low profile,” follow local media reports for the latest and to “have a plan for departing Iran that does not rely on U.S. government help.” The State Department currently lists Iran under a “do not travel” advisory “due to the risk of terrorism, unrest, kidnapping, arbitrary arrest of U.S. citizens and wrongful detention.”

The protests, which have entered their fifth day, reportedly stem from a worsening economy and have featured chants of “death to the dictator,” a reference to Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the supreme leader of Iran.

The State Department, from its Farsi-language social-media account, stated that the protesters are “demanding respect, access to services and the right to self-determination.”

“Their resolve demonstrates the power of people who refuse to remain silent,” it stated. “The United States stands in solidarity with the people of Iran in their pursuit of their fundamental rights.” JNS

{Matzav.com}

Israel Military Speeds Up War Preparations Amid Iran Protests

The Israel Defense Forces is expediting preparations for a multi-front war with Iran in light of the internal unrest in the Islamic Republic, Hebrew media reported.

The preparations, which are part of the military’s multi-year plan extending roughly to 2030, anticipate conflict involving Iran, Lebanon and Judea and Samaria, according to Israel’s Channel 12 News.

A senior Israeli official told the outlet that while Israel was refusing to comment on the protests in Iran, which entered their fifth day on Thursday, the political echelon sees it as a “dramatic event.

“It is too early to know the consequences,” the official told the outlet.

The report said that Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu held “discussions and consultations” regarding the demonstrations during his visit to the United States, which is scheduled to end on Thursday.

The IDF’s developing war plans reportedly include the possibility that the Islamic regime’s leaders will decide to attack the Jewish state to prevent their overthrow at the hands of the Iranian people.

A large-scale “surprise war” with Tehran and its regional terror proxies could for the first time also include Israeli attacks “in and from” outer space, according to the report.

Netanyahu told Newsmax on Tuesday that Iran’s leaders have “robbed their people of the future” and that change would “come from within.”

“It’s up to the Iranian people, and we understand what they’re going through, and we’re very sympathetic to them,” he told the channel.

The regime’s leadership is cracking down on expressions of widespread dissent over the country’s spiraling economic crisis, which has left the national currency at an all-time low of 1.4 million rials to a U.S. dollar.

Iran International reported that the crackdown on protesters continued on Thursday morning, with regime forces opening fire and deploying tear gas at Tehran’s central fruit and vegetable market.

Iranian authorities confirmed on Thursday that a member of the Basij, a paramilitary force within Tehran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, was killed during a rally in the country’s western Lorestan province.

The Basij member was “martyred … at the hands of rioters during protests in this city in defense of public order,” a local official said. Another 13 Basij members and police officers reportedly suffered injuries.

A government building in the country’s south was also vandalized by demonstrators on Wednesday, Iranian authorities told local media.

Iran has seen repeated waves of protests since 2009 over a host of issues, including the religious oppression practiced by its theocratic rulers. The latest have reportedly become the biggest protests since 2022, when the death of Mahsa Amini, 22, in regime custody triggered mass rallies.

Ali Shamkhani, an adviser and representative of Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, earlier this week alluded to an attack in the wake of the meeting between Netanyahu and U.S. President Donald Trump.

“Under Iran’s defense doctrine, some responses are determined even before the threats reach the implementation stage,” Shamkhani wrote in Hebrew on X. He added: “Iran’s missile and defense capabilities are uncontrollable and do not require authorization. Any aggression will be met with a severe, immediate, and unexpected response.”

It appeared shortly after Trump said he would “knock the —- out of” Iran if the regime attempted to rebuild nuclear sites targeted in June. JNS

{Matzav.com}

Gafni: “I Don’t Remember a Time This Bad for the Chareidi Public; The Judges’ Wickedness Has Crossed All Limits”

MK Moshe Gafni, chairman of Degel HaTorah, voiced sharp anger following the Israeli High Court of Justice’s decision to issue an interim order freezing funding for chareidi education, warning that the move could set a precedent leading to a complete halt of education budgets for the chareidi sector.

Senior figures in the chareidi parties fear that the interim injunction could pave the way for a broader and permanent suspension of funding, as additional petitions concerning chareidi education remain pending before the court.

According to sources familiar with the discussions, Gafni spoke harshly in closed conversations overnight, saying: “I don’t remember a time this bad for the chareidi public. The wickedness of the judges has crossed all limits.”

He went on to issue a veiled threat, adding: “The judges have declared war on us, and they’re not hiding it. We cannot continue like this. We will consider responding with war.”

Meanwhile, Shas chairman Aryeh Deri also expressed fury over the court’s decision and the response — or lack thereof — from coalition partners. In private conversations, Deri sharply criticized Religious Zionism leader Bezalel Smotrich, National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, and the Likud for remaining silent following the ruling.

Deri held a tense conversation with Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, during which he expressed deep disappointment at what he described as the coalition’s indifference to the freezing of Torah education budgets.

“It’s being treated as if this were a climate budget or beach cleanup funding,” Deri said in closed talks. “The coalition partners must understand clearly: Jewish identity is the foundation of this government. Without the education of Toras Yisroel, even the struggle for Eretz Yisroel will not succeed.”

Deri added that the silence from most government ministers comes against the backdrop of preparations for elections expected to take place later this year. “The cracks and gaps within the coalition are beginning to widen,” he warned.

The High Court issued the interim order on Wednesday evening, freezing the transfer of approximately one billion shekels to chareidi educational institutions, following a petition filed by Yesh Atid. The ruling effectively halts funding for chareidi education pending further review.

In the decision, Justice Yael Wilner wrote: “After reviewing the request for an interim injunction, the responses, and the petitioners’ reply, an interim order is hereby issued, according to which no financial transfers shall be made pursuant to the decisions of the Finance Committee under discussion in the petition, until a further decision is made.”

Yesh Atid officials said they do not intend to settle for the existing injunction and plan to demand an expanded remedy that would require chareidi teachers to return funds already received to the state treasury, noting that some of the money covered by the interim order had already been transferred before the freeze took effect.

{Matzav.com}

Trump Finally Explains Mysterious Bruising — And Says He’s Sick Of Speculation Over ‘Perfect’ Health

Questions about President Trump’s health resurfaced this week following a wide-ranging interview in which he pushed back sharply against renewed scrutiny and insisted there is nothing wrong with him.

“Let’s talk about health again for the 25th time,” Trump said at the outset of the conversation, according to the Wall Street Journal. “My health is perfect.”

Speculation about the president’s physical condition has circulated throughout the first year of his second term, fueled largely by photographs showing dark bruising on his hands. The White House has previously attributed the marks to frequent and forceful handshaking, along with Trump’s long-standing use of aspirin.

Addressing the issue directly, Trump said the bruising stems from taking more aspirin than his doctors advise, a routine he said he has followed for decades. He explained that he has done so for 25 years because “I’m a little superstitious.”

The president also expressed regret over undergoing an MRI during a medical checkup in October at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, saying the test itself sparked unnecessary speculation. “I would have been a lot better off if they didn’t, because the fact that I took it said, ‘Oh gee, is something wrong?’” Trump said. “Well, nothing’s wrong.”

In July, the White House disclosed that Trump had been diagnosed with chronic venous insufficiency, a circulation condition that has caused swelling in his lower legs. Trump confirmed that he briefly tried wearing compression socks as part of the treatment but abandoned them, saying, “I didn’t like them.”

At 79, Trump is already among the oldest individuals to serve as president. If he completes his term, he would leave office as the oldest man ever to hold the position, edging past the mark set by Joe Biden, who dropped out of his reelection campaign amid mounting concerns over cognitive decline.

{Matzav.com}

Rare Seforim From Early 20th Century Recovered in Poland After Appearing in Online Auction

Polish police have recovered a collection of rare Hebrew and Yiddish seforim dating back to the early 20th century after the volumes surfaced unexpectedly in an online auction, authorities announced this week.

The seforim, which belonged to the Jewish Historical Institute Library and the Jewish community of Warsaw, were identified when an employee of the institute noticed them listed for sale on Polish auction websites. The discovery was reported to police, triggering a coordinated investigation.

According to police, the seforim came to light in early October when a 39-year-old Warsaw resident was clearing out the belongings of his late father. Among the items he found were several old seforim with original bindings, written in foreign languages. Unaware of their historical significance, the man decided to sell them through online marketplaces.

“The response was quick. The seforim were purchased by a private collector,” said junior sergeant Paweł Czemura of the Warsaw Police Headquarters in a statement.

Once alerted, officers from the Warsaw Police worked together with police from Białystok to trace the seforim and identify the collector, who specializes in acquiring antique volumes. The collector cooperated with authorities, and the entire collection was recovered.

“All of the volumes were returned to the institutions that are their rightful owners,” Czemura said. He added that the seforim were likely lost during the early 1980s or 1990s and that their authenticity was confirmed by a specialist in the field. The seforim are estimated to be worth thousands of shekels.

Meir Bulka, a Poland researcher and chairman of J-nerations, an organization dedicated to preserving Jewish heritage in Europe, commented on the case, calling it part of a broader and troubling pattern.

“Unfortunately, this is a well-known phenomenon,” Bulka said. “Many Poles return Jewish property without understanding its meaning. Sadly, this property will not return to its original owners, but will once again circulate among Jewish communities, which have only recently come to realize that their connection to Jewish heritage is often merely incidental.”

Police emphasized that no criminal charges have been filed, noting that the seforim were sold without malicious intent. The investigation focused on recovering the cultural property and restoring it to its historical custodians.

{Matzav.com}

Rep. Kiley: $32 Billion in COVID Funds Went to Organized Crime

California’s mounting fiscal troubles and governance failures are eroding public trust, Rep. Kevin Kiley said during a recent television appearance, arguing that taxpayers are paying more while receiving less in return.

Appearing on Carl Higbie FRONTLINE on Newsmax, Kiley said the state has become a magnet for fraud and mismanagement, with losses stretching into the tens of billions of dollars and little accountability to show for it.

As one example, Kiley pointed to a June report on California’s community college system that found more than one-third of applications were fraudulent. He said the scheme drained over $10 million in federal financial aid, along with millions more from state coffers.

According to Kiley, those losses do not simply disappear. “The taxpayers are losing, and the money doesn’t vanish, it ends up in the hands of fraudsters,” Kiley said, tying the problem to organized criminal activity.

He cited pandemic-era unemployment fraud as a stark illustration, estimating losses of at least $32 billion, much of it connected to criminal networks that exploited weak oversight.

Kiley also criticized California’s tax burden, arguing that residents continue to shoulder higher taxes even as basic public services and infrastructure fail to materialize.

He highlighted the state’s long-planned high-speed rail project as a symbol of dysfunction, noting that nearly two decades after it was launched and after tens of billions of dollars have been spent, no passenger rail line has been completed.

The congressman said projected costs for the rail system have exploded far beyond early estimates, now exceeding $100 billion, and referenced media reports questioning whether the project will even be finished within this century.

Turning to San Francisco, Kiley faulted city leaders for entertaining a reparations program despite facing deep budget deficits, arguing that the city cannot afford such a proposal while struggling to meet existing financial obligations.

Taken together, Kiley said, these examples reflect a broader breakdown in how California is governed, warning that taxpayer frustration is intensifying as fraud, cost overruns, and stalled projects continue without meaningful consequences.

{Matzav.com}

Matzav Inbox: The Housing Crisis Isn’t Coming — It’s Already Crushing Us

Dear Matzav Inbox,

Every year, our community celebrates thousands of chasunos. Baruch Hashem, it’s a simcha — or at least it’s supposed to be. But right after the music stops and the sheva brachos end, reality hits hard: Where are these young couples eventually supposed to live?

This is not a “housing demand” problem. Demand is obvious. Demand is predictable. Demand is built into the very fabric of a growing frum community. We know exactly how many couples are getting married every year. This didn’t sneak up on us.

The problem is supply. The problem is affordability. And the problem is that we are thinking far too small and moving far too slowly.

One lakefront project here, one glossy brochure there — and everyone pats themselves on the back as if the crisis has been “addressed.” It hasn’t. Not even close.

If a single development adds a few hundred units, but the community is growing by thousands of families every year, what exactly do we think is happening? Basic math isn’t anti-frum. It’s reality. If we need housing for 2,000–3,000 new families annually and we build housing for 300, we aren’t solving a problem. We’re falling further behind.

And affordability? Let’s be honest. “Affordable” has become a word we throw around without meaning it. When starter homes are pushing $600,000, $700,000, or more — before renovations, before furniture, before property taxes — that is not affordable for a family, even with help. Especially not in a community where tuition, groceries, health insurance, and basic living costs are already crushing.

There is no affordable place to buy. Not even for a young working couple. Not for people doing everything “right” and still watching the numbers laugh at them.

People say, “They’ll manage.” No, they’re breaking. Parents are draining retirement. Couples are living in impossible situations. Families are packing into apartments and pretending it’s temporary, while knowing deep down it isn’t.

And here’s the part we don’t like to say out loud: If we don’t create real, large-scale, affordable housing — not one project, not two, but ten or more — we will have a real problem.

This isn’t about luxury. It’s not about waterfront views or fancy amenities. It’s about roofs. It’s about dignity.

We need bold thinking. We need speed. We need leadership willing to say, “This is an emergency,” and act like it.

If we keep congratulating ourselves for baby steps while the problem grows by the year, we will look back and wonder how we let it get this bad.

The housing crisis isn’t theoretical. It’s here. And if we don’t start thinking bigger and faster — much bigger, much faster — it’s only going to get worse. Far worse.

N. G.

New York

To submit a letter to appear on Matzav.com, email MatzavInbox@gmail.com

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{Matzav.com}

Dr. Contacessa: ‘Super Flu’ Is Media Hype

Public anxiety over reports of a so-called “super flu” is misplaced, according to Florida internist Dr. Frank Contacessa, who said the label has no grounding in medicine and should not alarm the public.

Speaking Wednesday to Newsmax, Contacessa urged calm and stressed that, despite a rise in cases, this year’s influenza is not proving more dangerous than what doctors see most winters. “The symptoms are not more severe, it’s not more life-threatening,” Contacessa said. “People should not be nervous. It’s a typical flu season so far.”

Contacessa rejected the terminology fueling concern. “This really is a sensationalized term,” he said during an appearance on The Record With Greta Van Susteren. “This is not a medical term.” He continued, “The super flu does not exist in medicine. This is being used to describe the rapidity of onset of symptoms with this particular strain and the speed that it’s spread across the country.”

According to the physician, the current strain’s defining feature is how quickly symptoms can escalate, not their severity. “People typically go from, ‘I feel fine’ to ‘I think I’m coming down with something’ to ‘I can’t move out of bed within a matter of a few hours,’” Contacessa said. Common signs include a high temperature, sore throat, fever, aches, and chills.

While recommending basic precautions, Contacessa emphasized simple prevention over panic. “Keep your hands clean and keep yourself healthy,” he said.

He also raised doubts about the effectiveness of this year’s flu vaccine, describing forecasting challenges that affect its performance. “It’s a very difficult thing to predict, and they’re not very good at it,” Contacessa said. “On a good year, it’s maybe 30 or 40% effective and in a bad year, it’s single digit effective. It looks like this is going to be a bad year, because this particular strain is different from what they put into the formulation.”

Given that outlook, Contacessa said he is not broadly encouraging vaccination among his patients and does not get the shot himself. “Maybe you could make a case for an older person or somebody who has [been] immunocompromised, but for a younger, healthier person, I really don’t push it,” he said.

{Matzav.com}

Somali President Claims: Somaliland Agreed To Take Gazans For Israeli Recognition

Somalia’s president, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud, accused Israel of fueling regional instability after Israel announced last week that it recognizes Somaliland as an independent state, a move Somalia rejects as illegitimate.

Speaking Wednesday in an interview with Al Jazeera, Mohamud said the decision came as Somalia was working to reunify the country through peaceful means, and he claimed Israel was transferring the effects of the Gaza war into the Horn of Africa. According to Mohamud, Israeli recognition of Somaliland was aimed at undermining Somalia and destabilizing the broader region.

The Somali leader asserted that intelligence in his possession points to a wider understanding between Israel and Somaliland. He claimed those intelligence assessments indicate Somaliland agreed to accept displaced Gazans in return for formal recognition by Israel.

Mohamud further alleged that the same intelligence suggests Somaliland has consented to the establishment of an Israeli military base on its soil and to joining the Abraham Accords, the normalization framework between Israel and several Arab states. He added that there had already been “some Israeli presence” in Somaliland in the past.

Israel’s announcement last Friday marked the first time any country has officially recognized Somaliland, which declared independence in 1991 but is still viewed by Somalia as an integral part of its sovereign territory.

Earlier reports had linked Israel’s outreach to Somaliland to discussions about relocating Gazans, citing Israeli interest in the territory as part of President Donald Trump’s proposal for the United States to take control of Gaza and oversee its rehabilitation.

{Matzav.com}

Netanyahu in Florida: Israel “Stronger Than Ever,” Calls on Jews to Stand Firm Against Antisemitism

[Videos below.] Addressing a large crowd at a JNS gathering in Surfside, Florida, Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu said yesterday that Israel has emerged from the aftermath of the October 7 Hamas assault in a position of unprecedented strength. More than two years after the attack, he told the audience at the Shul of Bal Harbour, “Israel has come out of this war stronger than ever before.”

Netanyahu pointed to Israel’s economic performance as a key measure of that strength, highlighting major developments in energy and technology. “Stronger than ever before economically. What does strong mean? Well, we just signed a $37 billion gas deal,” he said. “That’s strong. We just had Nvidia – they decided to have a massive investment in Israel, and we welcome it.”

Turning to diplomacy, Netanyahu said Israel’s expanding network of regional ties is a direct outcome of national power and resolve. “We have opened up opportunities for peace that have never existed before. In the first term of President Trump’s office, we did the Abraham Accords that brought four historic peace accords with four Arab states,” he said. “We’re committed to do more.”

Summing up that approach, he told the audience, “It’s peace through strength. It’s prosperity through strength.”

Netanyahu also spent considerable time addressing rising antisemitism, directing a forceful message to American Jews. “I say to you, members of the Jewish community of the United States, the last thing you should do before antisemitic attacks, as they attack you – the last thing you should do is lower your head and seek cover,” he said. “That’s not what you should do. You should stand up and be counted. You should fight back.”

He urged active resistance to those who seek to marginalize the Jewish community. “You should delegitimize your delegitimizers,” he said. “Nobody will fight for you more than you fight for yourself.”

Linking Jewish confidence abroad to Israel’s standing, Netanyahu added, “When Israel is strong, others want to partner with us. You stand up and be counted, and you will see the difference.” He followed with a simple exhortation: “Don’t be afraid.”

Pressing the point further, he said, “Don’t cower. Don’t lower your head. Speak up. Stand up. Fight back. That’s the important thing: fight, fight, fight. And then shall win, win, win with God’s help.”

The prime minister also addressed ongoing efforts to recover the remains of Ran Gvili, described as the last remaining hostage in Gaza. “We shall return him and we’re working on it right now,” Netanyahu said. “He shall be back. The first one in, last one out, but he’ll be back.”

Netanyahu closed with praise for Washington, underscoring what he described as exceptional backing from the United States. He referred to the “friendship of the United States and the support of a president like no other: President Donald J. Trump.”

Reflecting on American leadership during the war, he said, “I appreciated the fact that at the beginning stages of the war President Biden came to us well. But President Trump has been unflinching, consistent. He never wavers,” adding, “His gut, his heart – we don’t say ‘gut,’ we say his kishkes – his instinctive support for the State of Israel, his understanding of what is right and what is just.”

Netanyahu concluded by emphasizing the impact of close coordination between Jerusalem and Washington. “That’s been there from day one, and we have shown what happens when the president of the United States and the prime minister of Israel have no daylight between them: Wonderful things. Wondrous things can happen,” he said.

WATCH:



{Matzav.com}

Blueprint for Golus

By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz

Parshas Vayechi brings to a close Sefer Bereishis, the account of the creation of the world and the formation of our people. It is not merely the end of a sefer, but the conclusion of a foundational era, the period in which the avos and imahos forged the spiritual DNA of Klal Yisroel. From Adam and Chava, through Noach and his descendants, and onward to Avrohom, Yitzchok, and Yaakov, Sefer Bereishis is the blueprint for Jewish existence in every generation.

This week, the circle is closed. Yaakov Avinu, the last of the avos, grows old in exile. He gathers his children, gives them brachos that echo through eternity, and prepares for his passing. His final request is that he be buried in Me’oras Hamachpeilah, in Chevron, alongside Avrohom and Yitzchok. With that request, and with his passing, the era of the avos comes to an end and the long, painful chapter of Jewish exile begins.

Yet, the Torah introduces this final parsha with a word that seems, at first glance, jarringly out of place: “Vayechi — And he lived.”

Why does the Torah describe Yaakov’s years in Mitzrayim — a foreign land, steeped in immorality and destined to become the crucible of our suffering — as life? Why is golus framed not as decline, but as vitality?

The Torah does not waste words. When it says vayechi, it is teaching us something essential about how a Jew lives — and survives — in golus.

Meforshim raise an additional question. When the Torah records the lifespan of Avrohom or Yitzchok, it gives a single number, a total. With Yaakov, the Torah does something different. It tells us that he lived seventeen years in Mitzrayim. Why isolate that period? Why highlight those specific years?

The answer given by Chazal is striking: Those years were the best years of Yaakov’s life.

Yaakov’s life had been one of unrelenting struggle. Even before birth, Eisov sought to destroy him. He was forced to flee his parents’ home, suffered under Lovon’s deception for twenty years, and endured the death of Rochel Imeinu in childbirth. He experienced anguish at the actions of Shimon and Levi, heartbreak at the sale of Yosef, and more than two decades of grief, believing that his beloved son was dead.

Only after twenty-two years of mourning did Yaakov learn that Yosef was alive, and not merely alive, but ruling over Mitzrayim. At that moment, the Torah tells us, “Vatechi ruach Yaakov avihem — And Yaakov’s spirit came back to life.” His ruach hakodesh returned. He immediately set out to join Yosef.

Before descending to Mitzrayim, Yaakov stopped in Be’er Sheva. There, Hakadosh Boruch Hu appeared to him and reassured him not to fear the descent. Hashem promised that Yaakov’s descendants would become a great nation there, that He would go down with Yaakov, and that He would ultimately bring his children back home.

Yaakov understood what this meant. He knew that his journey to Mitzrayim would trigger the fulfillment of the gezeirah foretold to Avrohom: that his descendants would be strangers in a land not their own. He knew that golus was beginning. Yet, he went anyway.

Why?

Because Yosef was there, and because at times, life demands that we move forward even when we know that the road ahead will be difficult. As long as we remain tethered to Hashem and loyal to the truth, we can succeed and flourish.

The Torah then tells us that Yaakov lived in Mitzrayim for seventeen years — years so elevated that Chazal describe them as mei’ein Olam Haba, a taste of the World to Come (Tanna Devei Eliyohu, Perek 5).

How could exile feel like Olam Haba?

Yaakov resided in Goshen, a semi-autonomous region where his family could live together. What greater joy exists than living with one’s children and grandchildren, watching them grow, guiding them, and learning with them daily? Yaakov sent Yehudah ahead to establish batei medrash, ensuring that Torah would be the axis around which Jewish life revolved. Goshen became a spiritual enclave, insulated from the decadence and corruption of Mitzrayim.

For seventeen years, Yaakov lived surrounded by Torah, family, and purpose. During those years, Hashem spoke to him again. The Shechinah, which had departed during his years of anguish, returned.

That is why the Torah says vayechi. Because there he began living again on a higher level.

Yaakov Avinu was the av of golus. He was the first Jew to live long-term outside Eretz Yisroel, and in doing so, he taught us how to live in exile without being consumed by it.

When Yaakov bowed to Yosef, Chazal tell us that he was not merely honoring political power. He was acknowledging spiritual heroism. Hu Yosef she’omeid betzidko. Despite everything he had been through and despite all those years he spent living alone in a terribly immoral country, Yosef remained Yosef. He stayed righteous.

Yaakov recognized the magnitude of Yosef’s accomplishment. Yosef had not grown up in Yaakov’s home. He had been thrust into the moral cesspool of Mitzrayim, surrounded by temptation, isolation, and power, and he emerged unscathed. He built a beautiful Jewish home in golus. He raised children who were worthy of becoming shevotim.

This recognition was not incidental. It was pedagogical.

Yaakov Avinu’s guidance to his children — and to all future generations — was to create yeshivos, batei medrash, and schools where Torah and avodah anchor life; to build homes where shemiras hamitzvos and middos tovos are nurtured; and a family life that cultivates emunah and bitachon amidst the trials of golus.

Yaakov was teaching future generations how to look at children and students: not only at where they are, but at what they are contending with. He was modeling appreciation for effort, not just outcome. He was showing that success in golus requires a different kind of strength, and that those who remain faithful under such pressure deserve admiration.

Just as Yaakov Avinu ensured that his family would flourish spiritually despite the enticements and moral challenges of Mitzrayim, so must we equip our generation to thrive amid the pressures of the modern golus with love, discipline, guidance, and example.

It is difficult to be young. Young people today face relentless schedules, intense academic and social pressures, and nisyonos that prior generations never imagined. Days begin early and end late. Expectations are high. Failures are magnified. And all of this unfolds in the midst of a culture that actively undermines restraint, modesty, and commitment.

Yet, boruch Hashem, our young people want to succeed. They want to grow. They want to do the right thing.

Since Adam and Chava, temptation has been ever-present. Overcoming the yeitzer hara has never been easy. But adults derive strength from Torah, mussar, and years of experience. Children and adolescents cannot do it alone. They need guidance — loving, patient, consistent guidance from those who came before them.

This is chinuch.

Chinuch is not indoctrination. It is transmission — transmitting our mesorah in a way that the next generation can understand, internalize, and cherish. We begin when children are young, explaining mitzvos lovingly, modeling behavior, and setting expectations that are firm but humane.

Golus complicates everything, including chinuch. The distractions are louder. The influences are more aggressive. The line between inside and outside is increasingly porous. Keeping children focused on Torah and Yiddishkeit requires intention and attention.

This week, Rav Yaakov Bender came out with a book on chinuch whose title sums up our challenge as parents and mechanchim: Chinuch with Geshmak. In order to effectively inculcate our children with the truth of Torah, we have to do it with geshmak, with happiness and the joy of purpose.

The novi Micha tells us, “Titein emes l’Yaakov.” Truth was Yaakov’s defining trait. Emes anchored him through suffering and sustained him through prosperity. It was emes — clarity about Hashem’s role in the world — that allowed Yaakov to endure tragedy without despair and success without assimilation.

This lesson is more urgent today than at any time in recent memory.

We live in a world of illusion — the illusion of control, permanence, and acceptance. Jews have achieved unprecedented comfort in golus, particularly in the United States. We have wealth, influence, political access, and religious freedom. And yet, beneath the surface, something is cracking.

Anti-Semitism is surging, not in whispers, but openly. Synagogues are vandalized. Jewish students are harassed on college campuses. Jews are assaulted in the streets for wearing yarmulkas. Protesters chant for intifada in Western capitals. Terror apologists march freely while police stand aside.

And many Jews are stunned. How could this happen? We thought we belonged.

Yaakov teaches us that golus can be livable, even productive, but only if we never forget that it is golus. We have seen the success of that path throughout the ages and until this very day.

The Haggadah tells us, “Vayogor shom — And Yaakov sojourned there.” He did not settle. The Maharal and the Vilna Gaon explain that because Yaakov never sought permanence in Mitzrayim, his descendants merited redemption. Golus is survivable only when we remember that it is temporary.

Rav Yehoshua Leib Diskin writes that as long as the Jews remained clustered in Goshen, the Mitzriyim left them alone. It was only after Yaakov’s passing, when the Jews began spreading out, becoming comfortable and assimilating, that trouble began. “Vayokom melech chadash.” Anti-Semitism followed assimilation like clockwork.

This pattern has been repeated throughout history.

The Netziv writes that when Jews maintain separation, spiritually and culturally, hostility subsides. When we blur boundaries, resentment grows.

We see this unfolding before our eyes.

Assimilation has reached unprecedented levels. Today, nearly three out of every four Jews marrying in the United States are marrying non-Jews. Many Jews have hitched their hopes to political movements that are openly hostile to Jewish values and Jewish survival.

For decades, American Jews felt safe. The United States was Israel’s staunchest ally. That began to erode under President Obama, continued during the Biden years, and has metastasized into open hostility among large segments of the Democratic Party.

President Trump reversed that trend during his first administration. He stood by Israel publicly and privately, recognized Yerushalayim, supported Israeli sovereignty, and treated Prime Minister Netanyahu as a partner. Many Jews felt secure with Trump in the White House, believing his friendship was genuine, because his actions proved it. He has continued to be a good friend to Israel in his second administration, as he demonstrated again this week at his meeting with Binyomin Netanyahu at Mar-a-Lago.

Yet now, anti-Semitism has found a foothold on the Right as well as the Left, and hostility toward Jews and Israel is becoming accepted in elite circles.

We live in an era of unprecedented Jewish comfort in the West — and unprecedented Jewish vulnerability. Anti-Semitism is no longer whispered. It is shouted through megaphones in public thoroughfares, shopping malls, and college campuses. Jews are assaulted in broad daylight. Jewish institutions are vandalized, firebombed, and require armed guards. Politicians issue statements. Police cite “free speech.” Prosecutors decline charges. The message is heard clearly by those who hate us: proceed.

Conspiracy theories fester. Crude stereotypes resurface. Figures with large followings traffic in nonsense about Jewish power and loyalty. Disturbingly, these voices are tolerated, and even defended.

The vice president, J.D. Vance, a man who has aligned himself with at least one of the loudest offenders, has made statements that should give Jews pause. His rhetoric, at times careless and at times troubling, raises serious questions about how he would wield power if elevated further. Silence in the face of anti-Semitism is not neutrality. It is complicity.

This is not about parties. It is about reality.

Yaakov teaches us that no government, no culture, and no era of prosperity exempts us from vigilance. Golus can be comfortable, but it is never permanent.

The path forward is the one Yaakov charted in Goshen: Torah-centered living, strong communal institutions, and moral clarity.

Three times a day, as we conclude Shemoneh Esrei, we ask, “P’sach libi b’Sorasecha — Open my heart to Your Torah.” Then we ask Hashem to thwart the plans of our enemies: “Vechol hachoshevim alai ra’ah meheirah hofeir atzosom vekalkel machashavtom.” These are not separate requests. They are cause and effect. When we cling to Torah and mitzvos, Hashem is there for us, regardless of where we are.

May we merit to follow in the path of Yaakov, living full Torah lives and enjoying much nachas, and may we merit to soon experience the end of golus with the geulah sheleimah.

Abbas: No One Will Stop the Establishment of a Palestinian State

In remarks released Wednesday, Palestinian Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas declared that the Gaza Strip “will return to the fold of national legitimacy,” signaling his insistence that the territory ultimately come under Palestinian Authority control as part of a broader political vision.

Abbas emphasized that Gaza’s future is inseparable from any diplomatic outcome, stating unequivocally, “There will be no Palestinian state in Gaza, and no Palestinian state without Gaza.” He said the Palestinian Authority would oversee the enclave’s reconstruction and link it to the broader goal of statehood.

The statement was issued to commemorate 61 years since the Palestinian Arab “revolution,” marking the establishment of the Fatah movement. Abbas portrayed the movement’s origins as a defining national moment, describing the start of what he termed “armed resistance” as “a significant historic development” that, in his words, “restored the national identity of the Palestinian people after the 1948 ‘Nakba.’”

Referring to long-standing political demands, Abbas asserted that efforts to block Palestinian sovereignty would fail. He said no force could stop the creation of an independent and sovereign Palestinian state with eastern Jerusalem as its capital, along with the return of the “refugees,” in line with resolutions of international bodies and the Arab Peace Initiative.

Fatah, the dominant faction within the Palestinian Authority and led by Abbas, issued its own message to mark the anniversary. The movement said the Palestinian Arab public “will not surrender to political plans aimed at eliminating their legitimate rights.”

In that separate statement, Fatah also pledged to resist what it described as Israeli efforts to annex territory in Judea and Samaria and to remove Palestinian Arabs from the Gaza Strip, framing the anniversary as a moment of continued political and national resolve.

{Matzav.com}

Watch: Rabbi Yaakov Yosef Reinman: Episode #40 – The First Schism

In this episode, Rabbi Reinman discusses the origin and effects of the Tzedoki movement.

WATCH:

Chapter Forty: The First Schism

Before we further investigate the fractious relationship between the Greek kingdoms and the Jewish homeland, it is important to consider the spiritual conditions in Judea during the first two centuries under the Alexandrian successor states. Who were the custodians of the Oral Law, and how did they perform their duties? What was the religious level of the people?

As discussed in Chapter Thirty-six, when the Persians allowed the Jewish people to return to Judea and build the Second Beis Hamikdash, the ruling body of the nascent state was the Anshei Knessess Hagedolah, a council of one hundred and twenty elite leaders, prophets and scholars. They shaped the contours of Jewish life for the rest of history. The last surviving member of this august council was Shimon Hatzaddik, the Kohein Gadol, who had multiple roles in addition to his duties in the Beis Hamikdash. He was the custodian and arbiter of the Oral Law as well as the political, judicial and spiritual leader.

After he passed away, the office of High Priest passed to members of his family, and the custodianship of the Oral Law passed to Antigonos of Socho, who presided over the Sanhedrin. He was by himself the ultimate authority on questions of law and religion, just as Shimon Hatzaddik had been, and Ezra before him, going back in a one-by-one succession all the way to Moshe Rabbeinu. Under his watch, an event occurred that would have profound effects on the Jewish people for the rest of history.

Every day, Antigonos taught the laws of the Torah to an inner circle of students, who discussed and reviewed the teachings until they became experts. Then they taught them to a wider group of students. These were the future rabbis and teachers of the Torah. Among his inner circle were two young men named Zadok and Baisus …

Read full chapter and earlier chapters at www.rabbireinman.com.

Democratic Muslim Socialist Zohran Mamdani Sworn In As NYC’s 112th Mayor

[Video below.] As the secular calendar turned to a new year, Zohran Mamdani officially assumed office as New York City’s mayor, marking the start of a new and uncertain chapter for the nation’s largest city under a self-described Muslim socialist leader.

Just after midnight Thursday, the 34-year-old Queens assemblyman was sworn in beneath City Hall Park at the long-abandoned Old City Hall subway station. State Attorney General Letitia James administered the oath, with Mamdani’s wife, artist Rama Duwaji, standing beside him as he became the city’s 112th mayor and its second-youngest ever.

“This is truly the honor and the privilege of a lifetime,” Mamdani said after completing the oath and submitting the $9 filing fee in cash.

He went on to extend New Year’s wishes to those attending the unusual ceremony. Mamdani told New Yorkers “both inside this tunnel and above” to have a happy New Year.

Looking ahead to the start of his administration, he added, “I cannot wait to see everyone tomorrow as we begin our term.”

Soon after the swearing-in, Mamdani announced his first major appointment, naming Mike Flynn as commissioner of the city Department of Transportation. Flynn previously served as a director at the agency.

“I can think of no better person,” Mamdani said of his DOT selection.

Flynn began his career at the department in 2005 as a project manager overseeing pedestrian and bicycle initiatives. He later advanced to director of capital planning and project initiation before departing the agency in 2014, according to his LinkedIn profile.

Speaking after his appointment, Flynn praised the new mayor’s team, saying Mamdani and his advisers “fundamentally understand the role that transportation plays in the day to day lives in New Yorkers.” He pledged that the department would “think big and deliver big on our ambitious agenda.”

“I’m grateful, Mr. Mayor, for entrusting me with this critical role, which I consider the job of a lifetime, and I’m ready, I’m excited, to hit the ground running and deliver real results for New Yorkers,” Flynn said.

Mamdani’s mother, acclaimed filmmaker Mira Nair, watched the proceedings at the old station and admitted she never expected her son to reach City Hall. When asked whether she would be offering him guidance, she replied: “Of course, I’m going to be the mother of New York City.”

The choice of venue was deliberate, Mamdani explained, tying the shuttered subway stop to his broader vision for the city.

“When Old City Hall Station first opened in 1904 — one of New York’s 28 original subway stations — it was a physical monument to a city that dared to be both beautiful and build great things that would transform working peoples’ lives,” he said.

He added, “That ambition need not be a memory confined only to our past, nor must it be isolated only to the tunnels beneath City Hall: it will be the purpose of the administration fortunate enough to serve New Yorkers from the building above.”

The intimate underground ceremony, attended by only a small group and limited media, was set to be followed later Thursday by a large outdoor celebration. Thousands were expected to gather outside City Hall for a block party, where Sen. Bernie Sanders was slated to swear Mamdani in once again.

Festivities aside, the new mayor now faces the reality of governing a city often described as holding the second-hardest job in America.

Mamdani, a member of the Democratic Socialists of America, succeeds Mayor Eric Adams, a conservative Democrat and former police officer whose single term was clouded by alleged corruption, even as the city made progress on crime reduction and housing issues.

Born in Uganda, Mamdani takes charge of a city still struggling with a severe housing shortage, a school system grappling with declining enrollment, and staffing gaps across multiple agencies, including the NYPD, FDNY, and EMS.

Throughout his campaign, Mamdani promised sweeping changes aimed at lowering the cost of living, including universal childcare, city-operated grocery stores, free bus service, and a rent freeze. Those proposals, which he has described as priorities for his first year in office, are projected to exceed $10 billion in cost.

The ambitious agenda comes as New York City confronts a projected budget shortfall of nearly $400 million this fiscal year and an additional $6.5 billion gap next year, with the possibility of further reductions in federal funding.

How Mamdani responds to those financial pressures may become clear early in his tenure, as his administration is expected to present a preliminary budget for fiscal year 2027 within his first 100 days.

That process could test his relationships with Gov. Kathy Hochul, his former colleagues in the state Legislature, and the City Council. Attention will also focus on his dynamic with presumptive Council Speaker Julie Menin, who is widely viewed as a more moderate figure.

Among Mamdani’s immediate responsibilities will be filling remaining cabinet vacancies, including the post of sanitation commissioner.

On public safety, the new mayor inherits a city where shootings and shoplifting — two crime trends that spiked during the COVID era — have fallen to record lows. Still, overall major felony rates remain more than 20% higher than before the pandemic, a rise Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, who will remain in her role, has attributed to the 2019 criminal justice reforms.

Mamdani’s rise to City Hall followed a contentious election cycle. He defeated former Gov. Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary and went on to win the general election in November, which saw historically high voter turnout.

Cuomo, running on a little-known third-party line, still captured 43% of the vote, leaving questions about the breadth of Mamdani’s mandate after he secured just over half of the more than 2 million ballots cast.

{Matzav.com}

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