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Jewish Woman Once Held Up by Nazis as ‘Aryan Ideal’ Dies at 91

Matzav -

Hessy Levinsons Taft, a Jewish woman whose baby photograph was once promoted across Nazi Germany as a supposed model of Aryan perfection, died last week at her home in San Francisco, according to a report by The New York Times. She was 91.

Taft was just six months old in 1934 when her parents, Latvian Jewish opera singers living in Berlin, brought her to a studio for a professional portrait. The photographer, Hans Ballin, later submitted the image to a Nazi-sponsored competition seeking the ideal Aryan infant.

The photograph was ultimately chosen by Joseph Goebbels, the regime’s propaganda minister, and featured prominently on the cover of Sonne ins Haus, a publication aligned with Nazi ideology.

From there, the image was reproduced extensively, appearing in magazines, advertisements, postcards, and private homes throughout Germany as a visual endorsement of Nazi racial doctrine.

According to Taft’s obituary in The Times, when her parents confronted Ballin after discovering what had happened, he told them that he was fully aware the child was Jewish and had entered the photo deliberately, intending it as a subversive act to ridicule Nazi racial theories.

In a 2014 interview with Reuters, Taft said she later expressed gratitude to the photographer for taking that risk, even though he himself was not Jewish. “It was an irony that needed to be exposed.”

For her parents, however, the episode was terrifying. Afraid that the truth could lead to their execution, they kept their daughter largely confined indoors and avoided public outings, determined to prevent anyone from uncovering her identity.

Taft eventually made the story public in 1987 through the book Muted Voices: Jewish Survivors of Latvia Remember by Gertrude Schneider. Over time, she came to view the incident with a sense of defiance, describing it as an act of “good revenge.”

Reflecting on it years later, she told Tablet magazine in 2022: “I can laugh about it now, but if the Nazis had known who I really was, I wouldn’t be alive.”

Although the Levinson family was living in Berlin when the photograph was taken, they were not initially subject to Nazi anti-Jewish laws because they were Latvian citizens rather than German nationals.

As the Nazi grip on Germany tightened, the family chose to leave in 1937. Their journey took them through Latvia, Paris, Nice, and Cuba before they ultimately made their way to New York City in 1949.

Taft later pursued a career in science, earning degrees in chemistry from Barnard College and Columbia University. She spent more than three decades at the Educational Testing Service in Princeton, New Jersey, where she supervised Advanced Placement chemistry exams for high school students.

At 66, she began a new chapter as an adjunct professor at St. John’s University in Queens, where she taught chemistry and conducted research focused on water sustainability.

In 1959, she married Earl Taft, who died in 2021. She is survived by her sister, Noemi Pollack; her two children, Nina and Alex Taft; and four grandchildren.

{Matzav.com}

Sen. Mark Kelly Sues Pentagon Over Move to Downgrade His Military Retirement

Yeshiva World News -

Sen. Mark Kelly (D-Ariz.) filed a lawsuit against Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and the Pentagon over efforts to downgrade his military retirement rank and pay. * Hegseth said the move followed what he called Kelly’s “seditious statements,” after the senator released a video urging service members not to follow illegal orders. * Kelly’s lawsuit says […]

Scott Bessent: 10% of US Budget Stolen Annually

Matzav -

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent says the federal government is bleeding hundreds of billions of dollars every year due to waste, fraud, and abuse — money he argues could be redirected to national priorities without increasing taxes or debt.

In an interview with journalist Christopher Rufo that aired Sunday, Bessent said the annual cost of federal mismanagement ranges from $300 billion to $600 billion. He explained that the estimate is grounded in figures from the Government Accountability Office, which has calculated that fraud alone accounts for roughly 10% of the federal budget and between 1% and 2% of gross domestic product.

According to Bessent, even a partial reduction of those losses would unlock significant funding for national defense, aligning with President Donald Trump’s push to rebuild the U.S. military after what the administration views as years of neglect.

“If we can get rid of this waste, fraud, and abuse, we can finance a safer, sounder U.S. … without taking on more debt,” Bessent said during the Rufo interview.

The GAO analysis Bessent cited estimates that fraud costs the federal government between $233 billion and $521 billion each year, based on data collected from fiscal years 2018 through 2022.

Beyond outright fraud, the GAO has also warned about the enormous cost of so-called “improper payments,” a category that includes mistakes, overpayments, and other errors. Over time, those losses have added up to trillions of dollars, underscoring what watchdogs describe as deeply flawed oversight mechanisms in Washington.

Bessent also discussed the administration’s Department of Government Efficiency initiative, which aims to rein in federal waste. While he said he shares Elon Musk’s objective of eliminating inefficiency, he made clear that his strategy differs sharply.

Rather than Musk’s well-known Silicon Valley ethos of “move fast and break things,” Bessent said his philosophy is “move deliberately and fix things,” indicating that Treasury-led probes will focus on meticulous investigations designed to withstand legal scrutiny.

That enforcement-oriented approach is spreading across the administration.

At a White House briefing on Thursday, Vice President JD Vance announced the establishment of a new assistant attorney general position dedicated to pursuing fraud involving taxpayer funds, with authority extending nationwide.

Vance’s remarks came amid growing attention on alleged large-scale fraud operations in Minnesota, which has emerged as a focal point in the national conversation about oversight and accountability in blue-state governments.

Bessent said Minnesota will serve as a testing ground for broader enforcement efforts, adding that the administration plans to “take this … map to the other 49 states,” signaling an aggressive expansion of federal investigations.

The interview also highlighted another major fiscal problem: unpaid taxes.

Internal Revenue Service estimates indicate that the net “tax gap” — the difference between taxes legally owed and those actually collected on time — reached approximately $606 billion for the 2022 tax year.

Bessent’s broader argument is that before Washington looks to raise taxes or increase borrowing, it must first demonstrate that it can clamp down on fraud, inefficiency, and weak enforcement — and then channel recovered funds into essential priorities such as national defense and border security.

{Matzav.com}

Kashrus Mystery Sparks Debate: Is a Chicken With a Gallbladder in the Leg Kosher?

Matzav -

A surprising discovery in a kosher poultry package has set off widespread discussion across the kashrus world after a consumer found what appeared to be a gallbladder embedded inside the thigh of a chicken. The unusual finding prompted confusion and concern, raising a fundamental question: How could an organ normally located near the liver end up in the leg and does such a chicken remain kosher?

Rav Yochanan Reichman, a well-known kashrus expert who fields halachic questions from around the world, said he never anticipated the reaction the image would generate. “I never imagined what kind of storm this picture would cause in the rabbinic world in general and in the kashrus world in particular,” he said.

The incident began when a woman opened a package of mehadrin-certified chicken legs in preparation for a Shabbos meal and was startled to find a greenish sac attached inside the thigh. She photographed the finding and sent it to Rabbi Reichman for clarification.

“At first glance, it was very puzzling,” Rabbi Reichman explained. “The gallbladder in a chicken is attached to the liver and sits right next to it, toward the front of the body. The thigh is located at the back, near the pelvis. The distance between the liver and the thigh can be several inches. So how did it get there?”

Recognizing the seriousness of the question, Rabbi Reichman consulted leading experts in shechitah and kashrus systems in Israel and abroad. Among those he turned to was Rav Shaul Askel, a senior shochet and bodek at the Oif Oz slaughterhouse in Shegev Shalom, which operates under strict mehadrin supervision.

What followed was an unexpected wave of inquiries. Rabbonim from Europe and North America—including the Netherlands, Antwerp, Chicago, and New York—requested to see the image themselves. Many noted that they had never previously encountered such a case.

After extensive halachic research and a close examination of the industrial poultry-processing process, a clear explanation emerged.

According to Rabbi Askel, the gallbladder does not grow in the leg. Rather, during automated processing, the internal organs are removed by machines. In many chickens, the gallbladder remains attached not only to the liver but also to ducts that connect to the intestines, which run close to the thigh area. When the machinery pulls the organs free, the gallbladder can detach from the liver while remaining connected to intestinal tissue and fat near the leg, causing it to appear embedded in the thigh.

“There is no change in the organ’s natural location,” Rabbi Askel explained in his written halachic response. “It is a result of the mechanical separation process. The gallbladder is pulled along with surrounding fat and connective tissue and can remain lodged near the thigh.”

From a halachic standpoint, the ruling was unequivocal: the chicken is kosher. There is no concern that the gallbladder changed its place of growth, nor is this a case of an additional gallbladder, which could raise halachic problems. Salting, cooking, or roasting the chicken does not create an issue, provided the gallbladder itself is removed, as usual, to avoid bitterness.

Rabbi Reichman emphasized that while the sight may be unsettling to consumers unfamiliar with poultry anatomy, there is no halachic reason for concern. “This is not a defect, not a sign of treif, and not a reason to discard the chicken,” he said. “Once the facts are understood, the ruling is clear and reassuring.”

{Matzav.com}

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EU Parliament Bars Iranian Officials from All Premises Over Crackdown

Yeshiva World News -

European Parliament President Roberta Metsola announced that Iranian diplomats, government officials, and regime representatives are now barred from entering all European Parliament premises in Brussels, Strasbourg, and Luxembourg, in response to Tehran’s crackdown on protesters. The move takes effect immediately and includes all staff of Iranian diplomatic missions. Metsola said the decision is meant to […]

Venezuelan Leader María Corina Machado to Meet Trump at White House

Yeshiva World News -

Venezuelan opposition leader and 2025 Nobel Peace Prize winner María Corina Machado is scheduled to meet President Trump at the White House on Thursday, a senior White House official told CNN. * The meeting comes after U.S. military strikes in Caracas and the capture of Nicolás Maduro, whose vice president Delcy Rodríguez has been sworn […]

GM Recalls 80,000+ Chevy Equinox EVs Over Pedestrian Alert Defect

Yeshiva World News -

General Motors is recalling more than 80,000 2025–2026 Chevy Equinox EVs due to a defect in the pedestrian alert sound system. NHTSA said the alert sounds can vary in volume and may not meet federal requirements, making it harder for pedestrians to tell whether a vehicle is accelerating or slowing down, which could increase the […]

Bild Leak Case: Police Declare Overseas Suspect As A “Fugitive Criminal”

Yeshiva World News -

Israel Police on Monday declared Yisrael Einhorn, a former adviser to Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, as a “fugitive criminal” for his suspected role in the Bild classified documents leak case. Einhorn lives in Serbia. The police previously issued an arrest warrant against him for his alleged role in the case. The police declaration was made […]

NVIDIA and Eli Lilly Launch $1B AI Drug Discovery Lab

Yeshiva World News -

NVIDIA, ELI LILLY LAUNCH $1B AI DRUG LAB Nvidia and Eli Lilly said they will jointly invest $1 billion to create an AI-powered drug discovery lab in San Francisco, with the lab’s work set to begin early this year. * The money will be spent over five years on infrastructure, computing and talent, with Nvidia […]

Matzav Inbox: The Screen Problem We Pretend Is Only About Teenagers

Matzav -

Dear Matzav Inbox,

We love talking about kids and screens. Phones are ruining them. Screens are destroying their attention. Technology is poisoning the next generation.

And then we check our phones.

We tell teens to put their devices away while answering messages during supper. We complain about boys zoning out while scrolling through WhatsApp. We warn about addiction while saying, “I just have to check something quickly,” ten times an hour.

Children learn more from what they see than what they’re told. And what they see is very simple: Adults who can’t sit still without a screen.

A father tells his son to focus while his phone buzzes on the table. A mother lectures about limits while reading messages late into the night. A therapist speaks about self-control while glancing at updates between sessions.

Then we’re shocked when kids don’t take us seriously.

We banned phones. We made rules. We gave speeches. But we never looked in the mirror.

Teenagers aren’t inventing this behavior. They’re copying it. They see adults who are anxious without their phones, distracted during conversations, and irritated when interrupted from scrolling. They hear complaints about “this generation,” while watching the previous one refresh group chats over and over.

We say kids can’t handle responsibility. But how responsible do we look when we can’t leave our phones in another room for an hour?

The problem isn’t that teens love screens. It’s that they grew up watching adults love them first.

If we want our children to have boundaries, we need to show them what boundaries look like. If we want them present, we need to be present. And if we want them to believe that phones are tools—not lifelines—we have to prove it with our own behavior.

Otherwise, all our warnings sound hollow. And kids don’t rebel against hypocrisy. They tune it out.

Dovid Nachman

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{Matzav.com}

Amar’e Stoudemire Gets Bracha from Rav Dovid Yosef During Chief Rabbi’s Miami Visit

Matzav -

Amar’e Stoudemire, the former NBA star who has embraced Orthodox Judaism, met Monday night with Rav Dovid Yosef, the Chief Rabbi of Israel, during the Rishon L’Tzion’s trip to Miami.

During their meeting, Rav Yosef offered Stoudemire a warm bracha, encouraging him to persevere in his spiritual path and public example, telling him: “Continue to strengthen yourself and sanctify God’s name in the world of sports.”

The Chief Rabbi also bestowed a special bracha upon Stoudemire’s newborn son, expressing the hope that the child should be raised to a life of Torah, chupah, mitzvos, and maasim tovim.

Stoudemire, who enjoyed a long and accomplished career in professional basketball, has in recent years undergone a personal journey of geirus and growth in Yiddishkeit. He is now known by his Hebrew name, Yehoshafat ben Avraham.

That journey culminated in August 2020, following years of Torah learning in yeshiva, when he formally completed his geirus through the Beis Din Tzedek in Bnei Brak founded by Rav Nissim Karelitz.

He now spends most of his day learning Torah.

{Matzav.com}

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