Feed aggregator

Chassidic Groups in Talks with Ministry of Education to Join State Religious Education

Matzav -

Ahead of the upcoming school year, multiple large Chassidic communities are in talks with the Israeli Ministry of Education to join the State Religious Education.

These discussions have been talking place between the Ministry of Education officials and representatives of senior Chassidic leaders, aiming to integrate the educational institutions of the Chassidic communities into State Religious Education.

According to sources involved in the matter, this marks the culmination of many processes with the institutions’ managers and representatives of the communities.

The communities expected to join the State-Religious Education are Belz, Sanz, Vizhnitz, Boyan, Biala, and Karlin. An estimated 18 schools with 5,000 to 7,000 students would be integrated.

By joining the State Religious Education, students would receive full core curriculum studies, including standardized tests, and would receive supervision by the Ministry of Education. Teachers would become state employees. The current Israeli Minister of Education is Yoav Kirsch, of the Likud party.

Religious subjects will remain the exclusive responsibility of institutions’ management.

{Matzav.com}

3 Dead After Drunk Driver Rams Pedestrians at NYC 4th of July Barbeque

Matzav -

On Thursday evening, at least three people were killed and 6 others injured after a drunk driver rammed a group of people at a Manhattan 4th of July Barbecue.

Multiple families with enjoying barbecues in Corlears Hook Park in the Lower East Side, when a Ford F-150 sped into the park, hitting 9 people, including a mother and her two young children.

At least two women and a man were killed, with a fourth in extremely critical condition. An additional three people are in critical condition.

When first responders arrived at the scene, the truck was on top of four of the victims. Two victims were pronounced dead at the scene, and third at the hospital.

The drunk driver was taken to the hospital as well. Police have said that the officers smelt alcohol on him.

{Matzav.com}

Hungarian Leader Viktor Orban Visits Moscow, Angering E.U. Allies

Matzav -

Fresh off his first visit to Ukraine since Russia invaded, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban arrived in Moscow on Friday to meet Russian President Vladimir Putin – a striking break with the European Union’s collective foreign policy just days after Hungary took over the bloc’s rotating presidency.

Even before Orban’s plane touched down Friday, the trip drew sharp disavowals from Brussels.

Josep Borrell, the E.U.’s top diplomat, preemptively noted that the Hungarian leader’s travel is not official E.U. business and “takes place exclusively in the framework of bilateral relations between Hungary and Russia.”

But with Hungary now holding the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union, the trip represented a diplomatic triumph for Putin, who has repeatedly accused NATO nations, particularly the United States, of prolonging the war he started. Putin has also blamed them for not forcing Ukraine to negotiate a surrender of territory that Russia has seized by force.

Greeting Orban at the Kremlin, Putin immediately stressed his guest’s leadership role in the E.U.

“‘Welcome to Moscow, to Russia.” Putin said. “I understand that you have come this time not only as our long-standing partner, but also as the president of the European Council. I hope we will have the opportunity to exchange ideas on building bilateral relations in this difficult situation and, of course, to talk about the prospects for the development of the biggest European crisis, I mean, on the Ukrainian track.”

On Thursday, Putin reiterated his call for negotiations that would force Ukraine to surrender a large chunk of its sovereign territory. Speaking at a meeting of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Astana, the capital of Kazakhstan, Putin suggested resuming negotiations that took place in Istanbul in 2022 shortly after Russia’s invasion when Ukraine was in a perilously weak position.

Those talks broke down after Russian forces retreated from their attempt to capture Kyiv, leaving behind evidence of atrocities against Ukrainian soldiers and civilians in Bucha, Irpin and other suburbs of the Ukrainian capital. Putin on Thursday accused Britain and the United States of directing Ukraine to end the negotiations – a charge that U.S. and British officials deny.

The six-month rotating presidency of the Council of the E.U. typically involves convening meetings and overseeing legislative minutiae in Brussels, not shuttling between foreign capitals at war. But Orban, a right-wing leader who prides himself as a proponent of “illiberal democracy” and has long clashed with other European leaders, is clearly intent on using the role as a platform.

Orban has repeatedly broken with other E.U. and NATO leaders by calling on Ukraine to consider making concessions to Russia, and he has refused to allow donated weapons to be transferred to Ukraine through Hungary, which shares a long border with Ukraine. Orban also has repeatedly slow-rolled the E.U.’s efforts to aid Kyiv and advance Ukraine’s application to join the bloc.

A spokesperson for Orban described Friday’s trip as a “peace mission” but did not offer other details on his purpose or plans.

Earlier Friday, Orban sought to justify his travel, writing on X, formerly Twitter, that you “cannot make peace from a comfortable armchair in Brussels.”

“Even if the rotating EU-Presidency has no mandate to negotiate on behalf of the E.U., we cannot sit back and wait for the war to miraculously end,” he wrote. “We will serve as an important tool in making the first steps toward peace.”

Borrell, in his statement, stressed that Orban could not speak for the E.U.’s 26 other member countries. “The E.U. position on Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine is reflected in many European Council conclusions,” he said. “That position excludes official contacts between the E.U. and President Putin. The Hungarian Prime Minister is thus not representing the E.U. in any form.”

When Orban visited Zelensky in Kyiv on Tuesday, there were no such clarifications. Instead, the E.U. flag was positioned prominently behind him along with the Hungarian and Ukrainian flags.

During the visit in Kyiv, Orban suggested that Ukraine should agree to a cease-fire with Russia as part of an effort to begin negotiations to end the fighting.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has put forward a 10-point peace plan that does not include agreeing to a cessation of hostilities while Russian troops are still occupying Ukraine.

The cease-fire proposal that Orban pitched would leave Moscow in control of roughly one-fifth of Ukraine, potentially giving Moscow a chance to rearm and renew its efforts to seize more territory. Russia first invaded and illegally annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula in 2014. Eight years later, in February 2022, Putin launched a full-scale invasion seeking to capture Kyiv.

A number of European officials and leaders have dismissed the notion that Orban can play peacemaker, particularly on behalf of the E.U.

“The European Council is clear,” Charles Michel, president of the European Council, posted Thursday. “Russia is the aggressor, Ukraine is the victim. No discussions about Ukraine can take place without Ukraine.”

– – –

Ilyushina reported from Berlin. Serhii Korolchuk in Kyiv and Kate Brady in Berlin contributed to this report.

(c) Washington Post

Mossad Chief Goes to Qatar for Cease-Fire Talks with Hamas

Matzav -

The head of Israel’s Mossad will travel to Qatar on Friday to try to finalize a cease-fire deal with Hamas, according to a person familiar with the matter.

David Barnea, who leads the Israeli external-intelligence agency, will meet Qatar’s Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman Al Thani, the person said, asking not to be named discussing private matters.

The development comes after Israel received a fresh proposal from Hamas that could lead to the release of some hostages held in Gaza and a pause in the war between the two sides, still raging after almost nine months.

It’s the clearest sign in weeks that a truce is possible after months of indirect negotiations between Hamas and Israel.

Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu’s cabinet discussed Hamas’ latest offer on Thursday. He then held a 30-minute call with US President Joe Biden, whose administration proposed a three-part peace plan in late May.

A Hamas official, who asked not to be identified, said the group is sticking to longstanding demands, including the retreat of Israeli forces and the return of displaced civilians to their homes in Gaza. However, the new offer doesn’t insist on a full withdrawal of Israeli troops in the initial stage, Israel’s Channel 13 said.

Biden hasn’t been able to get an agreement on his plan, partly because Hamas insisted on the permanent departure of Israeli soldiers from Gaza.

Israel has resisted that, saying the military won’t end its campaign until Hamas is eradicated as a military and governing organization. Netanyahu has committed to the idea of a temporary cease-fire – perhaps lasting several weeks – as a way to release hostages seized on Oct. 7, when Hamas fighters attacked the country’s south and triggered the conflict.

US officials have said they hope a cease-fire could turn into a permanent halt in fighting. The war has caused turmoil in the wider Middle East and huge political divisions globally, even hurting Biden’s bid for re-election in November.

Qatar hosts many of Hamas’ political leaders and is a key mediator, along with the US and Egypt, between the Iran-backed group and Israel.

Hamas, designated a terrorist organization by the US, killed 1,200 people and took 250 hostage during its attack.

(c) Washington Post

Record-Breaking Heat to Test Electric Grids in US West

Matzav -

Withering temperatures are spreading from western Canada to Mexico this week, setting records across the entire US West as a heat dome sears millions of residents, tests electric grids and threatens to topple an all-time high in Las Vegas.

The city could see record heat Tuesday when temperatures are forecast to hit 118F (48C). There is a 67% chance Las Vegas reached 117F (47C) on Sunday, which would tie the all-time high first set in the city in 2005 and 2017, said Jenn Varian, a National Weather Service meteorologist.

“The entire forecast period looks above average, well above average,” Varian said.

High temperatures boost air conditioning use and drive up energy demand. That can impact the electric grid. Wilting heat in recent years has caused disruptions to electricity delivery in California, Texas and across parts of Mexico, risking blackouts. The hot, dry air also elevates the chance of wildfires, which can be devastating.

The heat dome anchored along the US West Coast will drift inland in the coming days, which is driving the pattern, said Frank Pereira, a senior branch forecaster at the US Weather Prediction Center. Through Tuesday across the US, 205 daily record highs will be threatened, tied or broken with most of them along the West Coast, but handful in the eastern US where it will also be hot.

As temperatures rise and dry out the land, winds will also start to rise, which means any fires that start threaten to spread out of control.

There will be an elevated risk of wildfires from Oregon to western Colorado with critical conditions breaking out in Idaho Saturday, the US Storm Prediction Center said. There are red flag fire warnings posted across parts of Oregon, Washington and California.

California is currently battling several blazes, including the Thompson Fire near the Oroville Dam north of Sacramento.

The high pressure system will shift around next week, “but it is not going to mean much,” Pereira said. Heat will set records across the West through at least Tuesday.

(c) Washington Post

Biden Allies Abroad Think It’s Untenable for Him to Stay On

Matzav -

There was a time when US President Joe Biden’s allies abroad would make allowances for his age, let the slip-ups slide, gently bring him back to the fold when he appeared to wander off. No longer.

His calamitous presidential debate performance changed the calculus. Now even Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva – a leading South American leftist who wants a Democrat in the White House and is hosting the next G-20 summit – is saying the quiet part out loud.

“I think Biden has a problem,” Lula – who like Republican presidential challenger Donald Trump is 78 – told a local radio station. “He’s moving more slowly, he is taking longer to answer questions. The US elections are very important for all the world.”

The chorus of voices that want the oldest American president (he’s 81) to step aside is growing louder, not only at home but also among nations that in the past months and years made excuses for the president’s wobbly syntax and gaffes. That’s because the prospect of Trump returning to the White House was seen by Western capitals as the bigger threat.

European officials are now saying privately – and more forcefully – that Biden should step aside for someone with a better shot at beating Trump and preserving allied unity on Ukraine and NATO, people familiar with the matter said. There is anxiety about how Biden will present at a NATO summit he is due to host in the US next week, where his every move, gesture and word will be scrutinized in an unforgiving light.

In this environment, any potential miscues that he makes in closed door meetings will surely be made public by attendees and fuel demands for him to go. One G-7 official, who had seen Biden up close, described him as a loose cannon in an unscripted setting, without the help of a teleprompter.

The people, who asked not to be identified discussing private assessments, said the octogenarian’s performance at the debate only exposed what they had witnessed for months, from a D-Day commemoration in France – where a frail-looking Biden was awkwardly trying to sit down while his wife and France’s Emmanuel Macron were standing up – to a Group of Seven summit in Italy, where viral social media clips showed him straying away from the group during a skydiving demonstration and needing to be guided back by Giorgia Meloni.

There is anger too at the small close-knit team that concealed the true state of his health, these officials say, and that it’s now longer possible to hide the fact that the president is a shadow of his former self and may not even be able to govern or set policies.

That age was taking its toll was simply no longer up for debate – in spite of forceful pushback from the White House about clips being cropped by conservative media that have it in for Biden. The reality is that in several summits, going back to a 2022 gathering in the Bavarian Alps, it was apparent that the president’s schedule was kept thin and his advancing years were being accounted and accommodated for in the planning.

One G-7 official at the Italy meeting said an air of worry hung in the room around his cognitive health. That was less than two weeks before the catastrophic campaign debate between Biden and Trump. Biden went on to blame jet lag and a grueling travel schedule for his performance.

Biden heads into a make-or-break weekend that could end his political career if the lapses keep multiplying. On July 4, in an interview with the Philadelphia WURD radio station, he flubbed again and seemed to mix himself up with Vice President Kamala Harris, who is emerging as a clear alternative to Biden and unlike some other potential Democrat contenders already has both a national and international profile.

A top official from a European country described Biden’s disastrous June 27 debate as the ending of a foretold film that few people wanted to see. The president is seen a a great guy, but obviously finished politically. The fear is that road is now wide open for Trump – and even if Democrats were to find a replacement, it would come too late anyway, the person added.

In an ideal world, Europeans want a continuation of Biden’s “America’s Back” approach instead of the 45th president’s “America First” stance. But after watching Biden in last week’s debate, many officials are being less deferential and more open about how the protective bubble wrap around him has to be removed.

One senior NATO diplomat said US counterparts have acknowledged they can’t afford such moments from the president and their priority is to ensure the summit is not overshadowed by the spotlight on Biden – versus the issues many of them want to focus on, such as how to counter Russia’s aggression in Ukraine.

Allies were already uneasy about the prolonged Congressional fight over funding for Ukraine that delayed crucial military aid and opened the door to Russian battlefield advances.

And then there is the challenge of how to counter China’s growing clout. A person familiar with the French thinking said tensions between Washington and Beijing are likely to continue regardless of who wins the election, which would reverberate across the world and further harm EU-US trade ties.

One European official pointed also to the Supreme Court ruling that Trump has some immunity from criminal charges for trying to reverse the 2020 election results. The sense is the traditional system of checks and balances in the US is broken, the official said.

Ivo Daalder, the former US ambassador to NATO, pointed to a moment in last week’s debate that was largely overlooked at home but jolted US allies: When Biden asked Trump if he’d defend a NATO country against Russian President Vladimir Putin, Trump responded with a shrug.

“That’s not a comforting answer for countries who have, for 75 years, depended on America’s security commitment to their defense, as core their security,” Daalder said in an interview.

–With assistance from Iain Marlow, Courtney McBride, Josh Wingrove and Simone Iglesias.

(c) Washington Post

Jewish Agency Project to Strengthen Gaza Border Towns

Matzav -

Kibbutz Nir Am, situated approximately two kilometers (1.2 miles) from the northeastern Gaza Strip, is a pastoral haven set against the dramatic landscape of the Negev Desert. It has two main economic branches, agriculture and a factory that produces cutlery, pots and kitchen utensils.

On Oct. 7, as Hamas-led terrorists invaded the communities near Gaza, Nir Am was one of the few that avoided casualties. The kibbutz’s rapid-response squad managed to repel the terrorists. The story is nothing less than extraordinary.

“It was because of the rapid-response squad and pure luck that we did not suffer destruction and casualties,” Noam Rodman, a member of the squad, told JNS.

To date, Nir Am remains a closed military zone, but 30 members who do not have children have been allowed back to work in the kibbutz’s agricultural fields.

Responding to the needs of these communities, the Jewish Agency for Israel launched Communities2Gether, which aims to pair 25 Israeli communities with communities around the world.

Jewish Agency CEO Amira Ahronoviz said, “We will work to strengthen Gaza border communities and ensure that no town, kibbutz or moshav will be left alone. Communities2Gether is the tangible expression of the fact that today the Jewish people stand behind the State of Israel and its citizens, while Israel is committed to the well-being of the Jewish people, wherever they may be.”

The project will pair impacted Israeli towns or kibbutzim with a Jewish community abroad that is committed to offering sustained support for at least three years. This will work through funding, sharing resources and personal connections.

It is hoped that these partnerships will help rebuild infrastructure, mend social bonds and foster long-lasting connections. The Jewish Federations of North America and Keren Hayesod—United Israel Appeal support Communities2Gether.

Long-term needs

“We initiated Communities2Gether only days following October 7—a response empowered by the relationships and infrastructure we’ve developed over the past 30 years,” said Lori Klinghoffer, partnerships chair on the Jewish Agency’s Board of Governors.

“I am proud to say we are uniquely positioned to meet the unprecedented needs of our beloved communities in the western Negev who suffered extensive damage during the war.”

Each pairing will have a team composed of two representatives from the Israeli community, the Diaspora community and the Jewish Agency to help determine each community’s needs. The idea of these joint teams, beyond solidarity, is to encourage the Israeli communities who are still in survival mode to plan ahead.

While their immediate needs are understandably urgent, this three-year partnership will help these communities devise a road map to recovery so that their long-term needs will be supported as well. It is assumed that the needs of these communities will grow once they can return home.

The Jewish Agency is providing the infrastructure for Communities2Gether and is working with the Tekuma Authority as well as local municipalities to ensure there are no duplicate efforts and to coordinate rebuilding.

(The state’s recently-created Tekuma (“Revival”) Authority has been tasked with rehabilitating and developing the Gaza Strip-adjacent “Tekuma” region and its population.)

Noam Rodman, like all parents, wants to feel that his children will be safe again, that the horrific images seared into their minds when they left their homes can start to heal and the sound of their laughter rings through the fields and the kibbutz. Communities2Gether is a strong step towards that healing.

“The rockets started at about 6:30 a.m. My wife and I rushed our children and our big dog into the shelter. I put my kids in a closet in the shelter, my wife held the door and I left to go and defend the kibbutz at the fence,” Rodman related.

“We fought until about 10 p.m. Much later, we found the bodies of Hamas terrorists with maps on them. Over 300 had planned to enter Nir Am, almost double the amount that attacked Be’eri.”

Nir Am is much closer to Gaza than Kibbutz Be’eri, which experienced some of the worst carnage on that black Sabbath.

In the days and weeks that followed, Rodman and others from the kibbutzim would check the horrific images and footage on Telegram to see if they recognized anyone murdered or taken hostage.

Those who survived the massacres remain evacuated from their kibbutzim. The most pressing issue for them is feeling safe enough to return to their homes.

{Matzav.com}

New House Bill Would Impose ‘Lofty Financial Punishments’ On Schools Lenient On Jew-Hatred

Matzav -

Colleges and universities that receive “generous” tax benefits from the federal government “should be doing more than simply giving a slap on the wrist to perpetrators of hate,” according to Rep. Nicole Malliotakis (R-N.Y.).

The congresswoman introduced legislation earlier this week “to hold these institutions accountable with lofty financial punishments that would encourage them to investigate and crack down on instances of antisemitism and help foster a safer a safer academic environment for all students, regardless of their gender, race or religion,” she stated.

The University Accountability Act, H.R.8914, was cosponsored by Rep. Elise Stefanik (R-N.Y.), the chair of the House Republican Conference, and nine other House members. A member of the Committee on Education & the Workforce, Stefanik has been on the forefront of the House’s investigations of schools for allegedly not doing enough to combat Jew-hatred.

“I will continue to lead the efforts ridding our higher education institutions of antisemitism,” Stefanik stated. “Hardworking taxpayers have no interest in funding institutions that fail to protect their students from antisemitic rhetoric and behavior and this bill puts their tax-exempt status on the chopping block.”

“Universities have a responsibility to protect their students from violence and discrimination and instead we’re seeing a disturbing increase in antisemitic attacks and rhetoric on college campuses,” Malliotakis said.

Although violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 “can result in the loss of federal funds,” they often result “in a mere corrective action that would bring the college or university back into compliance,” Stefanik’s office stated.

“The University Accountability Act would require colleges and universities that meet the penalty criteria to pay a fine of either 5% of the school’s aggregate administrative compensation as reported on the school’s Form 990, or $100,000, whichever is greater,” the congresswoman’s office said.

“After three civil rights violations, the Internal Revenue Service would be required to review the college or university’s tax-exempt status for possible revocation,” it added.

{Matzav.com}

SNOOZER-IN-CHIEF: Biden Admits He Needs More Sleep, Can’t Do Night Events

Yeshiva World News -

In a candid admission during a meeting at the White House on Wednesday night, President Joe Biden told nearly two dozen Democratic governors that he needs to get more sleep and work fewer hours, even suggesting he should avoid events held after 8 p.m., the New York Times reported Thursday. The 81-year-old president’s remarks come amid previous reports that his most effective working hours are between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. During the gathering, Biden also responded to a health-related question from Hawaii Gov. Josh Green by humorously saying, “just my brain,” a comment that was not recognized as a joke by at least one governor present. “President [George W.] Bush went to bed at 9, and President [Barack] Obama made dinner at 6:30,” Biden-Harris campaign spokesman Kevin Munoz said in a statement to the Times. “Normal presidents strike a balance, and so does Joe Biden. Hardly the same rigor as Donald Trump who spends half of his day ranting on Truth Social about plans that would cause a recession and the other half golfing.” However, it’s notable that Bush was 62 when he left office in January 2009, and Obama was 55 when he completed his terms. In contrast, Biden, already the oldest president in US history, would be 86 if he completes a second term. In a separate report published Thursday by New York magazine, longtime friends of the first family revealed that Biden has struggled with remembering names. On at least one occasion, First Lady Jill Biden had to assist him by “feeding” a greeting to a Democratic mega-donor at a White House reception. “It hasn’t been good for a long time, but it’s gotten so much worse,” said a witness to the exchange. Additionally, journalist Olivia Nuzzi reported that Biden has become increasingly difficult to reach and is often “cocooned within mounting layers of bureaucracy, spoken for more than he was speaking or spoken to.” These disclosures come as Biden continues to publicly insist on running for a second term, despite a challenging debate performance against presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump on June 27 in Atlanta. The president reportedly opened the governors’ meeting by reaffirming his campaign, prompting some attendees to complain that this preempted any serious discussion about the state of the race. Earlier this week, Biden attributed his debate performance to extensive foreign travel, though he had been in the Eastern Time Zone for 10 days prior, including a week of preparation at Camp David. Initially, the White House cited a “cold” as the cause of Biden’s struggles on stage, though he was seen greeting patrons at a Waffle House after the debate. Following the debate, Axios reported that Biden is prone to gaffes and fatigue during events held outside his peak hours. That same weekend, the Biden campaign held a fundraiser at the home of New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy, aimed at reassuring wealthy donors about the president’s reelection campaign. “In total, his [Biden’s] remarks would last for exactly ten minutes,” Nuzzi wrote, “long enough to inspire confidence in his abilities, advisers hoped, but not so long that he was at increased risk of calling those abilities further into question.” “The worry is not that Biden will say something overly candid,” the reporter added, “or say something he didn’t mean to say, but […]

Netanyahu Honors Brother Yoni, Who Fell Rescuing Hostages at Entebbe

Matzav -

Israeli Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu, his wife, Sara, and their son Avner attended a ceremony on Friday at the Mount Herzl Military Cemetery in Yerushalayim honoring Lt. Col. Yonatan Netanyahu, who died while commanding soldiers in the operation to free 102 hostages at Entebbe airport in Uganda on July 4, 1976.

The prime minister and his brother Ido recited the kaddish mourning prayer and laid a memorial wreath on the grave of their older brother. They laid an additional wreath together with Yonatan’s IDF General Staff Reconnaissance Unit (Sayeret Matkal) colleagues.

Also attending the ceremony were Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana, Cabinet ministers, MKs, former and current IDF commanders and friends of the family.

On June 27, 1976, Arab and German terrorists hijacked an Air France plane en route from Israel to Paris with 248 passengers onboard and forced it to fly to Uganda’s main airport in Entebbe. Uganda’s government provided cover for the hijackers, who were welcomed personally by dictator Idi Amin.

Initially, the terrorists separated the Israelis and Jews from the larger group of hostages and forced them into another room. On the first day, 47 non-Israeli hostages were released. The next day, 101 more non-Israeli hostages were allowed to leave.

Dora Bloch, 74, an Israeli-British dual citizen, was taken to Mulago Hospital in Kampala after choking on a chicken bone. After the raid, Uganda Army officers murdered her and doctors and nurses who apparently tried to intervene.

More than 100 Israeli and Jewish passengers remained as the hijackers threatened to kill them if their demands were not met.

Israel’s response was “Operation Thunderbolt,” led by Lt. Col. Yonatan Netanyahu. His 29-man Sayeret Matkal unit was given the primary task of attacking the airport terminal and rescuing the hostages.

A paratroopers force was tasked with securing the civilian airfield, clearing and securing the runways, and protecting and fueling the Israeli planes. A group from the Golani Infantry Brigade secured the C-130 Hercules aircraft for the hostages’ evacuation, getting as close as possible to the terminal to board the hostages.

Another elite commando unit was tasked with destroying the squadron of MiG fighter planes on the ground to prevent any possible interceptions by the Ugandan Air Force and holding off hostile ground forces.

The operation took place under cover of night and rescued 102 hostages. Yoni Netanyahu was killed and five Israeli commandos were wounded.

“Operation Thunderbolt” was renamed “Operation Yonatan” in his memory.

{Matzav.com}

FBI Offers $10,000 for Tips Leading to Arrest of Ohio Cemetery Vandals

Matzav -

The FBI is offering a reward of $10,000 for information that leads to the arrest of the vandal or vandals, who desecrated graves at two Ohio Jewish cemeteries.

“The vandalism of nearly 200 graves at two Jewish cemeteries near Cincinnati is despicable,” U.S. President Joe Biden wrote on Wednesday. “This is antisemitism and it is vile.”

“I condemn these acts and commit my administration to support investigators in holding those responsible accountable to the full extent of the law,” the president added.

Earlier in the week, Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio), who is Jewish, told JNS that “the current explosion of antisemitism is real, and it has no boundaries” and that “these headstones will stand again, and I hope those responsible will be caught and brought to justice.”

Jonathan Greenblatt, CEO and national director of the Anti-Defamation League, wrote that “targeting Jewish cemeteries and desecrating headstones is heartless, sacrilegious and vile.”

“Those responsible must be held accountable for this hateful act of vandalism,” he wrote.

{Matzav.com}

Israeli Treated for Brain-Eating Amoeba in Second-Ever Case

Matzav -

An Israeli patient is being treated for Naegleria fowleri, an extremely rare brain-eating amoeba. It is the second case ever reported in Israel and the first time it has been discovered in a living patient.

The 26-year-old male was admitted on Tuesday to HaSharon Hospital at Rabin Medical Center in Petach Tikvah with fever, headache and vomiting. His condition rapidly deteriorated and following a series of comprehensive tests, the diagnosis was made.

On Wednesday evening, he was transferred to the intensive care unit within the neurological department at Beilinson Hospital, which is also part of Rabin Medical Center.

The Naegleria fowleri amoeba thrives in warm waters ranging from 35 to 42 degrees Celsius (95 to 108 Fahrenheit). Only in rare cases is a human infected.

“This disease is so rare and it is often only identified post-mortem. The rapid diagnosis by Dr. Tamar Gutsman, head of the infectious disease unit at HaSharon Hospital, and the microbiological laboratory at Beilinson Hospital, allowed us to start treatment quickly with several medications,” said Beilinson Hospital’s Dr. Ayana Dvir.

“Our team is working around the clock to save this young patient’s life. His condition is critical but stable, he is still in life-threatening danger. Given that this is only the second case in Israel and the global cases are not many, the diagnosis is even more remarkable. Currently, we are focused on saving the patient’s life, but there is no doubt that this case will be studied further,” she added.

The first case of Naegleria fowleri in Israel was diagnosed in August 2022 at Poriya Medical Center near Tiveryah in a patient who had died. The very rare amoeba is only diagnosed about 10 times per year in the United States.

{Matzav.com}

Biden Appears Confused, Loses Train of Thought at White House July 4th Events: ‘Probably Shouldn’t Even Say That’

Matzav -

President Biden made several unusual errors and misstatements during the official White House Fourth of July celebration, appearing confused at times and unexpectedly greeting the crowd with a jovial “Ho ho ho! Happy Independence Day!”

The 81-year-old president and First Lady Jill Biden shared the stage with Vice President Kamala Harris and Second Gentleman Doug Emhoff. Harris introduced the “extraordinary” President Biden, who then gave a brief holiday greeting.

Biden appeared more energetic than during his heavily criticized June 27 debate performance. However, his statements remained just as incoherent, albeit louder.

“We gotta do what our founders did: show the world we’re a nation of dignity, honor, and just devotion to one another,” he declared before encouraging the audience to enjoy the fireworks.

At one point, Biden hesitated mid-step, unsure of whom to hand the microphone to. After a few slow steps alone, he eventually passed the mic to a stagehand. He then carefully descended a short flight of stairs before mingling with the crowd.

Earlier in the day, Biden seemed to lose his train of thought during a very brief speech at a White House barbecue, oddly claiming that highway congestion no longer exists and nearly referring to his rival Donald Trump as his “colleague.”

“I probably shouldn’t even say that … anyway,” the president remarked after the latter slip to a crowd of military service members and their families.

Biden trailed off multiple times in his four-minute speech, which was riddled with slurred words, despite having a teleprompter. He focused his remarks on his visit to Normandy last month to commemorate the 80th anniversary of D-Day and honor the “heroes” who sacrificed their lives for democracy.

Comparing World War I to the modern presidential race, Biden questioned whether Americans would make the same sacrifices in his race against Trump. He began to criticize the presumptive Republican nominee before abruptly stopping.

“By the way, I was in that World War I cemetery in France, and one that my colleagues, the former president, didn’t want to go and be up there,” Biden said before conceding that he shouldn’t have made the comment.

He also made the strange claim that he was “in and out of battle” during the trip, another statement he cut short before pivoting with his usual segue: “Anyway.”

Biden then left the stage to applause but grabbed the microphone for an additional 30-second encore in which he claimed traffic is no longer an issue—a statement that would surprise New Yorkers.

“One last thing, and I used to think when I was a senator, there were always congestion on the highways. There’s no congestion anymore. We go on the highway, there’s no congestion,” Biden said.

“And so what? The way they get me to stop talking, they’ll say, ‘We just shut down all the roads, Mr. President, you’re gonna lose all the votes if you don’t get in. But anyway, I’ll be back out,” he nonsensically added.

These disjointed speeches come amid rumors from establishment Democrats that the party is considering replacing the aging president.

Former Obama presidential adviser Van Jones stated Thursday that the party is now in “full-scale panic” following Biden’s poorly received debate performance against former President Donald Trump last week.

Biden made a series of gaffes during the 90-minute debate, including incorrectly stating that his son Beau “died in Iraq” and that he “beat Medicare,” while also appearing to freeze at one point.

{CB Frommer – Matzav.com}

Soldier Killed in Gaza, Raising IDF Toll Since Oct. 7 to 679

Matzav -

An Israel Defense Forces soldier was killed in action on Thursday during fierce battles in Gaza City’s Shuja’iyya neighborhood.

The slain soldier was named as Staff Sgt. Eyal Mimran, 20, of the Paratroopers Brigade’s 101st Battalion, from Ness Ziona.

On Wednesday night, the IDF announced the death of Capt. Elay Elisha Lugasi, 21, a team commander in the 7th “Storm from the Golan” Armored Brigade’s 75th Battalion from Kiryat Shmona.

Lugasi died during a raid in the Shuja’iyya neighborhood, the Hamas terror stronghold the IDF conquered in December but which has since seen a resurgence in hostile activities.

Two additional soldiers were killed in action in separate incidents in Shuja’iyya earlier in the week.

On Thursday morning, the IDF made public the death of Capt. Roy Miller, 21, a platoon commander in the Givati Infantry Brigade’s Rotem Battalion from Herzliya, during another incident in northern Gaza.

The death toll among Israeli troops since the start of the Gaza ground incursion on Oct. 27 now stands at 323, and at 679 on all fronts since the Hamas-led Oct. 7 massacre, according to official military data.

Additionally, Ch. Insp. Arnon Zamora, a member of the Border Police’s Yamam National Counter-Terrorism Unit, was fatally wounded last month during a mission to rescue four hostages, and civilian defense contractor Liron Yitzhak was mortally wounded in May.

{Matzav.com Israel}

The Intriguing Real-Life Story of Keir Starmer, U.K.’S Next Prime Minister

Matzav -

LONDON – He was a lefty lawyer who defended vegan anarchists before prosecuting terrorists on behalf of the British crown. He was an editor of a Trotsky magazine in his youth, yet he delighted capitalists by putting “wealth creation” at the heart of the Labour Party platform this year. He was an anti-monarchist who was then knighted as “Sir Keir” and now will meet with the king once a week.

It all makes for a complex, messy, real-life story. It also makes it tricky to anticipate what sort of prime minister Keir Starmer will be.

One of his biographers confessed that Starmer is “hard to pin down” – and he had total access to his subject.

Starmer, 61, has used that ambiguity to his advantage. People have been able to project onto him what they want to believe.

Being many things to many people may have helped Starmer deliver a big win on Thursday. His center-left, social democratic Labour Party is poised to return to power after 14 years in the wilderness, while voters have banished the Conservatives to the opposition. (The results for the London constituency that Starmer represents in Parliament aren’t expected until early morning, though his is considered a safe seat.)

But what is Starmer’s mandate, really, other than his self-evident campaign slogan of “Change”? In Ipsos polling last month, half of respondents said they didn’t know what he stood for.

Starmer didn’t give foreign press interviews during this election. That’s typical for party leaders. But close colleagues also call him a “very private man.” He has a wife, Victoria, and two teenage children, whose names he has never made public, and a cat, whose name he was willing to reveal as Jojo. He has expressed worry about the impact a move to Downing Street will have on his family.

He’s not a flash politician. As an orator, he’s no Winston Churchill. But his friends say he can be ruthless, which might be what a stumbling-along Britain needs.

“He is very, very driven, quite relentless,” said Tom Baldwin, a journalist and former Labour spin-doctor, who recently published a well-received biography of Starmer. “He has an oversized view of his capacity to bring change. He is not going to inspire people with big speeches. What he might do is fix things.”

– – –

Starmer’s working-class roots

Starmer will be the most working-class leader of Britain in a generation – coming in after a prime minister who by some counts was richer than the royals.

On the campaign trail, Starmer introduced himself by saying, “My mum was a nurse, my dad was a toolmaker.” He talked about growing up with unpaid bills and the phone being cut off. Pasta “was a foreign food” in his home, his biographer Baldwin wrote. The family did not travel abroad.

Starmer scored well on tests and gained entry into an elite high school. He was the first of his line to attend a university – Leeds, and then a year at Oxford.

He has said he wants to help young families get their first mortgage, knowing that his parents’ modest semidetached stucco home “was everything to my family – it gave us stability, and I believe every family deserves the same.”

He cites his mother’s work as a nurse, and the care she received for a debilitating inflammatory syndrome, for instilling his reverence for Britain’s National Health Service. His wife works for the NHS, too, in occupational health, which Starmer says has given him “insight” into the struggles of the underfunded, backlogged system.

Starmer says that his father felt “very disrespected” for working at a factory, that he was emotionally distant. As a dad himself, Starmer says he tries to “carve out really protected time for the kids.” He tries to stop work on Fridays at 6 p.m. Although an atheist himself, he has said they often do Shabbos dinner in keeping with his wife’s Jewish heritage.

– – –

Starmer as a lawyer

Colleagues who knew Starmer before his entry into politics say clues to how he will govern can be found in his extended life chapter as an attorney.

They say he was never a “jury’s lawyer” – the cinematic advocate who makes an impassioned closing argument – but a “judge’s lawyer,” who built the case with precedent, law, facts. Indeed, when he represented the opposition during the weekly Prime Minister’s Questions in the House of Commons, the Starmer style was often described as “forensic.” His cross-examination managed to deflate even the bombast of Boris Johnson.

Early in his career, Starmer joined Doughty Street Chambers, known for taking on big, controversial human rights cases. He fought the death penalty in Commonwealth countries – defending, as the tabloids put it, “baby killers and axe murderers.” He was part of a legal team that got Uganda’s Constitutional Court to invalidate the sentences of all 417 people on death row.

Starmer also worked pro bono for a pair of vegan anarchists who passed out leaflets accusing McDonald’s of low wages, cruelty to animals and support of deforestation. The burger maker sued for libel, and the case and its many appeals lasted a decade, one of the longest legal fights in British history. It ended in a kind of draw.

London media lawyer Mark Stephens, who worked on cases with Starmer, said he was “always looking 10 miles down the road,” at how a seemingly unwinnable case could be won on appeal to the Supreme Court or the European Court of Human Rights.

Starmer surprised – and upset – some of his legal colleagues when he became the country’s top prosecutor.

He oversaw the first British prosecution of al-Qaeda terrorists. He brought forward charges against Tory and Labour politicians caught up in an explosive expenses scandal, first revealed by the press. He and his prosecutors were accused of heavy-handed bias when they came down hard in arrests and charges for people who rioted in London after a black man named Mark Duggan was shot dead by police in 2011.

His knighthood came in 2014, in recognition of his work for the Crown Prosecution Service.

In Baldwin’s biography, a former partner of Starmer’s, Phillippa Kaufmann, says that “law was never going to be enough for him.”

– – –

Starmer as a politician

Starmer didn’t get into electoral politics until he was 52. That was just nine years ago, in a country where many members of Parliament began plotting their rise to power in university days.

He was elected to represent the London district of Holborn and St. Pancras in 2015 and served as a “shadow minister” in the opposition, given the thankless job of negotiating Labour’s shaky position on Brexit. Starmer was against leaving the European Union, but many blue-collar Labour voters were for it. The party’s inscrutable compromise was that it was neither for Brexit nor against it, but wanted a second referendum. This mush – and Starmer, too – probably contributed to Labour’s colossal loss to the Conservatives in 2019.

But after that election, Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn was out, and Starmer was in. He set out to remake the Labour Party.

Critics who were bested by Starmer in intraparty brawls call him an opportunist. His allies credit him with purging members who had contributed to the public sense that Labour had “an antisemitism problem.” Starmer also tracked to the center to make the party electable once again.

“What Keir has done is taken all the left out of the Labour Party,” billionaire businessman John Caudwell, previously a big Tory donor, told the BBC. “He’s come out with a brilliant set of values and principles and ways of growing Britain in complete alignment with my views as a commercial capitalist.”

The Labour Party highlighted his endorsement.

– – –

Starmer as prime minister

Starmer’s supporters dare hope that he will be a transformative leader – a kind of 2024 version of Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair, without the baggage of the Iraq War – if he is not undone by the deep divisions in his own party.

“I think he’s proved he’s quite ruthless in terms of changing his party,” said Tony Travers, a politics expert at the London School of Economics. But will that ruthlessness carry forward into government? “We’ll have to wait and see,” Travers said.

What does Starmer believe in? “He believes in pragmatism, in developing policy by solving problems, not through grand theory. And he doesn’t come to the table with ideological presuppositions,” said Josh Simons, who ran the centrist think tank Labour Together.

Starmer has his critics in the party – for the very same reason.

“I think he actually stands for very little,” said James Schneider, former director of strategic communications for Labour and a Corbyn ally.

“He seems to reflect the ideas of the people that are around him,” Schneider said. “He has shifted or been shifted more and more into the establishment position,” and his government will be an attempt to restore the establishment’s authority, not challenge it.

“He seems like a middle manager scolding his workers, or an unpopular stepdad who’s lost control of the kids,” Schneider said.

Critics on the left suspect Starmer will not be bold, but will hew to a soft middle.

Much of his focus will be on domestic politics – trying to shore up the British economy and address people’s sense that everyday costs have become unmanageable. He wants to cut soaring electricity costs – with a new state-run green utility company. He wants to cut wait times for medical and dental appointments.

Britain’s foreign policy hardly ever changes under a new government, and Travers said foreign policy would remain “amazingly unaltered” by a shift from Conservative to Labour rule. Starmer has said Britain will remain a strong member of NATO; will back Ukraine in its war against Russia; and will support Israel’s right to defend itself against Hamas, while calling for a cease-fire.

Although Brexit is seen as a flop, and there is no enthusiasm for another referendum, Britain under Starmer will probably seek a closer relationship with the European Union.

Critics have described Starmer as dull. He is not. What will be most interesting – to Britain and the world – is what he does now that he and his party have power.

(c) 2024, The Washington Post · William Booth, Karla Adam 

WATCH: UK’s Keir Starmer Officially Becomes Prime Minister, Promises ‘Age of National Renewal’ As Labour Party Celebrates Landslide Victory

Matzav -


It’s official — Britain has a new prime minister.

Sir Keir Starmer has pledged to usher in “an age of national renewal” following the Labour Party’s decisive victory, ending the Conservatives’ 14-year reign.

Starmer, the Labour Party leader, led his team to a historic landslide win on Friday morning, marking the worst defeat in the Conservative Party’s history.

Starmer and his wife, Victoria, visited Buckingham Palace on Friday for a private audience with King Charles. During this meeting, the 75-year-old monarch requested that Starmer form a new government.

During the “kissing hands” ceremony, King Charles officially appointed Starmer as Britain’s new prime minister, following Rishi Sunak’s resignation earlier that morning.

In a brief victory speech at London’s Royal Festival Hall, the 61-year-old Starmer expressed his satisfaction with the win, stating that it “feels good.”

“Four and a half years of work, changing the party. This is what it is for. A changed Labour Party, ready to serve our country, ready to restore Britain to the service of working people,” said Starmer, who has been steering the party towards its first general election triumph since 2005.

Starmer, a former public prosecutor and human rights lawyer who has led Labour since early 2020, vowed that the effort to “rebuild our country” would commence immediately.

“The sunlight of hope was shining once again in a country with an opportunity after 14 years to get its future back,” he said, adding that the British public will be “relieved that a weight has been lifted, a burden finally removed from the shoulders of this great nation.”

The Conservatives, under Sunak’s leadership, suffered their worst defeat since the modern party’s establishment in 1834.

Labour secured 410 out of 650 seats in the House of Commons, while Sunak’s Conservatives managed to win only 118 seats, though they were projected to claim 131 seats.

In a brief speech, Sunak acknowledged that it had been a “difficult night” for his party, with a record number of cabinet ministers losing their seats.

“The British people have delivered a sobering verdict tonight, there is much to learn… and I take responsibility for the loss,” he said.

“To the many good, hard-working Conservative candidates who lost tonight, despite their tireless efforts, their local records and delivery, and their dedication to their communities. I am sorry.”

Sunak assured that the transfer of power would occur “in a peaceful and orderly manner, with goodwill on all sides.”

Appointed as prime minister in October 2022 following Liz Truss’s resignation after her historically brief 44-day tenure, Sunak is expected to formally announce his resignation on Friday morning. Subsequently, Starmer will visit Buckingham Palace for the “kissing hands” ceremony with King Charles III.

Thursday’s general election was the first to be held during the reign of the 75-year-old monarch, who ascended the throne in September 2022 following the death of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II.

{CB Frommer – Matzav.com}

LISTEN: Rav Gershon Ribner: Share Your Wealth With Your Children

Matzav -

Rav Gershon Ribner, rosh kollel of Kollel Nesivos Hatorah and son-in-law of Rav Shneur Kotler, has succeeded in applying classical Talmudical analysis and methodology to understanding all areas of Yiddishkeit, bringing out its profundity and sense.

LISTEN:

Brazilian Police Indict Ex-President Bolsonaro In Undeclared Diamonds Case

Yeshiva World News -

Brazil’s Federal Police have indicted former President Jair Bolsonaro for money laundering and criminal association in connection with undeclared diamonds the far-right leader received from Saudi Arabia during his time in office, according to a source with knowledge of the accusations. A second source confirmed the indictment, although not for which specific crimes. Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly. Brazil’s Supreme Court has yet to receive the police report with the indictment. Once it does, the country’s prosecutor-general, Paulo Gonet, will analyze the document and decide whether to file charges and force Bolsonaro to stand trial. This is Bolsonaro’s second indictment since leaving office, following another in May for allegedly falsifying his COVID-19 vaccination certificate. But this indictment dramatically raises the legal threats facing the divisive ex-leader that are applauded by his opponents but denounced as political persecution by his supporters. Bolsonaro did not immediately comment, but he and his lawyers have previously denied any wrongdoing in both those cases, as well as other investigations into the former president. One is probing his possible involvement in inciting an uprising in capital Brasilia on Jan. 8, 2023 that sought to oust his successor from power. Last year, Federal Police accused Bolsonaro of attempting to sneak in diamond jewelry reportedly worth $3 million and selling two luxury watches. Police said in August that Bolsonaro received cash from the nearly $70,000 sale of two luxury watches he received as gifts from Saudi Arabia. Brazil requires its citizens arriving by plane from abroad to declare goods worth more than $1,000 and, for any amount above that exemption, pay a tax equal to 50% of their value. The jewelry would have been exempt from tax had it been a gift from Saudi Arabia to Brazil, but not Bolsonaro’s to keep for himself. Rather, it would have been added to the presidential collection. The investigation showed that Mauro Cid, Bolsonaro’s former aide-de-camp who allegedly falsified his COVID-19 records, in June 2022 sold a Rolex watch and a Patek Philippe watch to a store in the U.S for a total $68,000. They were gifted by Saudi Arabia’s government in 2019. Cid later signed a plea bargain with authorities and confirmed it all. Flávio Bolsonaro, the former president’s eldest son and a sitting senator, said on X after Thursday’s indictment that persecution against his father was “blatant and shameless.” In addition to Bolsonaro, police indicted 10 others, including Cid and two of his lawyers, Frederick Wassef and Fábio Wajngarten, according to one of the sources. Wassef said in a statement that he didn’t have access to the final report of the investigation, and decried selective leaks to the press of an investigation that is supposed to be proceeding under seal. “I am going through all of this solely for practicing law in defense of Jair Bolsonaro,” he wrote. On X, Wajngarten said police have found no evidence implicating him. “The Federal Police knows I did nothing related to what they are investigating, but they still want to punish me because I provide unwavering and permanent defense for former President Bolsonaro,” he said. Bolsonaro retains staunch allegiance among his political base, as shown by an outpouring of support in February, when an estimated 185,000 people clogged Sao Paulo’s main boulevard to […]

WATCH THIS: In Podcast Interview, Ivanka Trump Discusses Lashon Hara and Asher Yotzar

Matzav -


Ivanka Trump, the daughter of President Donald Trump who converted to Judaism, made her podcast debut on the Lex Fridman show, providing a rare and intimate look into her personal beliefs and emotions.

During the conversation, Fridman explored various subjects, including how Ivanka managed to stay resilient and composed in the face of relentless criticism. She specifically mentioned “lashon hara.”

“There’s a concept in Judaism called Lashon Hara, which means evil speech. The idea is that speaking poorly of another is almost the moral equivalent to murder, because you can’t really repair it. You can apologize, but you can’t repair it.

She continued: “Another component of that is that it does as much damage to the person saying the words than it does to the person receiving them. And I think about that a lot. I talk about this concept with my kids a lot, and I’m not willing to pay the price of that fleeting and momentary satisfaction of sort of swinging back because I think it would be too expensive for my soul. And that’s how I made peace with it, because I think that feels more true for me.”

She also spoke about the bracha of Asher Yotzar: “There’s a prayer in Judaism you’re supposed to say every morning, which is basically thanking God for your body working. It’s something so basic, but it’s when it doesn’t that we’re grateful. So just reminding ourselves every day the basic things of a functional body, of our health, of access to water, which so many millions of people around the world do not have reliably, is very clarifying and super important.”

WATCH ABOVE.

{Dov T. Heller – Matzav.com}

Parent Company Of Saks Fifth Avenue To Buy Neiman Marcus For $2.65 Billion

Yeshiva World News -

The parent company of Saks Fifth Avenue has signed a deal to buy upscale rival Neiman Marcus Group, which owns Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman stores, for $2.65 billion, with online behemoth Amazon holding a minority stake. The new entity will be called Saks Global, creating a luxury powerhouse at a time when the arena has become increasingly fragmented with different players, from online marketplaces that sell luxury goods to upscale fashion and accessories brands opening up their own stores. The new organization will comprise the Saks Fifth Avenue and Saks OFF 5TH brands, Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman, as well as the real estate assets of Neiman Marcus Group and HBC, a holding company that purchased Saks in 2013. The stores will continue to operate under their own brand names. HBC has secured $1.15 billion in financing from investment funds and accounts managed by affiliates of Apollo, and a $2 billion fully committed revolving asset based loan facility from Bank of America, which is the lead underwriter, Citigroup, Morgan Stanley, RBC Capital Markets, and Wells Fargo. The deal was announced Thursday after the two department store chains had been in negotiations for about a year. But the twist is Amazon’s minority stake, which adds “a bit of spice” to an otherwise anticipated pact, according to Neil Saunders, managing director of GlobalData, a research firm. Amazon will be working with Saks Global to offer its expertise in logistics and personalization technology. Salesforce, a cloud-based software powerhouse, will also become an investor at closing. The Wall Street Journal first reported the impending deal Wednesday. “For years, many in the industry have anticipated this transaction and the benefits it would drive for customers, partners and employees,” said Richard Baker, HBC executive chairman and CEO in a statement. “This is an exciting time in luxury retail, with technological advancements creating new opportunities to redefine the customer experience, and we look forward to unlocking significant value for our customers, brand partners and employees.” Marc Metrick, who is CEO of Saks’ e-commerce business, will become CEO of Saks Global. He told The Associated Press on Thursday during a phone interview that consumers are increasingly demanding more access to designer product, easier ways to shop and more personalized experiences. “This type of combination was the next move to make in order to put Saks, Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman where they need to be for the consumer, ” he said. Both Saks and Neiman Marcus have struggled as shoppers have been pulling back on buying high-end goods and shifting their spending toward experiences, like travel and upscale restaurants. The two iconic luxury purveyors have also faced stiffer competition from luxury brands, which are increasingly opening their own stores. The deal should help reduce operating costs and create more negotiating power with vendors. The new entity will also give shoppers better access to more designers, particularly up-and-coming ones as it will have more financial flexibility. Shoppers will also see their experiences more personalized through improved use of artificial intelligence, Metrick said. Saks Fifth Avenue currently operates 39 stores in the U.S., including its Manhattan flagship. In early 2021, Saks spun off its website into a separate company, with the hopes of expanding that business at a time when more people were shopping online. Neiman Marcus filed for […]

Pages

Subscribe to NativUSA Portal aggregator