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Trump Is Planning Militarized Zone on Calif.-Mexico Border

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In a sweeping escalation of the border strategy launched at the start of President Donald Trump’s term, the administration on Wednesday unveiled yet another federally controlled defense zone—this time covering a wide expanse of California’s boundary with Mexico. The decision adds the Golden State to a rapidly growing network of militarized sectors along the southern border.

According to the Department of the Interior, responsibility for most of California’s borderlands will now shift to the Navy, a move the agency says reinforces “the historic role public lands have played in safeguarding national sovereignty.” Officials characterized the region as a corridor heavily used by those attempting to cross into the United States unlawfully, making it, in their view, a logical addition to the expanding defense grid.

The designation hands on-the-ground authority to military bases situated near the border. Troops stationed there will now be able to detain individuals who cross illegally—powers that would normally be restricted by federal law preventing the military from engaging in civilian law enforcement. The administration maintains that the national emergency declared by President Donald Trump on his first day in office provides the legal foundation for this shift.

This California zone follows the blueprint introduced earlier this year, first along a 170-mile section of New Mexico’s frontier and later extended into parts of Texas and Arizona. The newest stretch spans nearly the entire length from the Arizona border westward to the Otay Mountain Wilderness, cutting through the Imperial Valley and passing communities such as Tecate, California, directly across from its Mexican counterpart.

More than 7,000 troops are currently positioned along the southern border, supported by drones, helicopters, and broad surveillance systems. Under the rules governing these militarized areas, U.S. forces are allowed to detain people accused of trespassing onto Air Force, Army, or Navy installations. Individuals picked up within these zones may also face enhanced criminal penalties, including possible jail time.

Federal officials argue that the additional layers of military oversight are essential for tightening weak points in border security and disrupting human smuggling operations and powerful drug cartels. As Interior Secretary Doug Burgum said, “By working with the Navy to close long-standing security gaps, we are strengthening national defense, protecting our public lands from unlawful use, and advancing the President’s agenda.”

The announcement came just hours after a federal judge ruled that the Trump administration must halt its deployment of California National Guard troops to Los Angeles, ordering that control of those forces revert to state leaders. That legal battle erupted after more than 4,000 California Guard members were activated in June without the approval of Gov. Gavin Newsom, a move the state argued was an unlawful attempt to draw them into federal immigration enforcement efforts.

{Matzav.com}

Watch: Congressional Leaders Unite for Chanukah Menorah Lighting at Capitol

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A pre-Chanukah reception in the U.S. Capitol brought shared purpose to Washington, as lawmakers from both parties stepped away from political crossfire to mark the occasion together.

Hosted by House Speaker Mike Johnson in the Rayburn Room, the gathering expressed solidarity with the Jewish community.

The ceremony was conducted by Rabbi Levi Shemtov, who led the crowd in the traditional lighting as participants listened and reflected while the brachos were recited.

The moment drew a diverse group of senior figures from across government. Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer stood alongside House Democratic Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

Republican Representatives Craig Goldman and Randy Fine were among the many lawmakers, staff members, and invited guests who joined the celebration.

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{Matzav.com}

‘Largest One Ever’: US Seizes Iran-Linked Oil Tanker Off Venezuela

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A dramatic maritime operation off Venezuela’s shoreline has become the latest flashpoint in Washington’s escalating enforcement campaign, after President Donald Trump acknowledged that U.S. forces intercepted a massive oil tanker earlier Wednesday. CBS News reported the confirmation shortly after Trump referenced the mission during a White House roundtable.

Bloomberg broke the story of the intercept, and Trump alluded to it in striking terms, describing the action as “seized for a very good reason.” He emphasized the scale of the operation, remarking, “As you probably know, we’ve just seized a tanker on the coast of Venezuela, a large tanker, very large. Largest one ever seized, actually. And other things are happening, so you’ll be seeing that later and you’ll be talking about that later with some other people.”

When pressed about the fate of the crude aboard the vessel, Trump responded without hesitation: “Well we keep it, I guess. I assume we’re going to keep the oil.”

The ship at the center of the action—The Skipper—was boarded just after dawn in a coordinated military and federal strike supported by two helicopters and a combined deployment of Coast Guard personnel, Marines, and special operations forces. The early-morning maneuver unfolded at 6:00 a.m.

U.S. officials said The Skipper has been on Treasury’s sanctions list since 2022, accused of serving networks linked to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps and Hezbollah. The tanker, now two decades old, has carried multiple identities over its lifespan, previously bearing the names Adisa and, in 2005, The Toyo.

Attorney General Pam Bondi released footage of the seizure, underscoring the tanker’s alleged role in prohibited oil movement. She wrote that the ship was “used to transport sanctioned oil from Venezuela and Iran” and confirmed the coordinated effort by the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, and the U.S. Coast Guard, “with support from the Department of War.” Bondi added, “For multiple years, the oil tanker has been sanctioned by the United States due to its involvement in an illicit oil shipping network supporting foreign terrorist organizations.”

Senior officials signaled that the administration is now exploring additional missions modeled on Wednesday’s high-profile operation. Trump has openly warned that the U.S. is prepared to broaden its efforts, even suggesting that the ongoing crackdown on drug-running vessels in the Caribbean and Pacific may soon extend to land-based targets inside Venezuela.

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{Matzav.com}

President Trump Sends Personal Letter to Satmar Rebbes in Honor of Chof Alef Kislev

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President Donald Trump sent a personal letter to the Satmar Rebbe of Kiryas Yoel, Rav Aharon Teitelbaum, and the Satmar Rebbe of Williamsburg, Rav Zalman Leib Teitelbaum, extending his warm wishes to the community as they marked the annual Chof Alef Kislev celebrations.

Chof Alef Kislev commemorates the miraculous rescue of the Satmar Rov, Rav Yoel Teitelbaum, from the horrors of the Holocaust in 1944. His escape allowed him to rebuild Satmar from the ashes of Europe. The annual celebration is one of the most significant dates on the Satmar calendar.

In his letter, President Trump praised the enduring legacy of the Satmar Rov and the vibrant faith of his followers. “This time of remembrance does not just commemorate Rabbi Joel Teitelbaum’s escape from the Holocaust—it also celebrates the triumphant faith that continues to inspire the flourishing Satmar community in the United States and around the world,” he wrote. He noted that generations of Satmar families “are guided by his teachings and rooted in a commitment to faith and scholarship.”

The president also highlighted the role of the community in shaping future generations. “Through instilling the importance of faith, prayer, and conviction in tomorrow’s leaders, you help forge a promising future that will continue to guide and uplift generations to come,” he said. Trump emphasized his administration’s commitment to protecting religious liberties, ensuring that “all people may live out their faith freely, openly, and without fear of persecution.”

The letter concluded with his heartfelt blessing: “May the Almighty bless you, and may He continue to bless the United States of America.”

Trump’s outreach to both Satmar courts came on a night when tens of thousands of chasidim gathered at parallel events led by the two brothers, the Kiryas Yoel Rebbe at the Waterfront in Williamsburg and the Williamsburg Rebbe at the Brooklyn Armory in Crown Heights.

{Matzav.com}

Mehadrin Yidden

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By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz Every year, as the nights grow long and the air carries the quiet promise of winter, Klal Yisroel reenters the world of Sefer Bereishis—its stories, its struggles, its beauty. With each passing week, we trace the footsteps of Avrohom, Yitzchok, and Yaakov, witnessing how their faith carved out a path of light in a world that was often dark. It is no coincidence that these parshiyos escort us directly toward Chanukah. Yaakov’s battles, Yosef’s dreams, and the faith that pulsated through their journeys become the spiritual prologue to the lights that would one day illuminate the desecrated Bais Hamikdosh. In their footsteps, the Chashmonaim found their courage. In their light, the menorah found its spark. Echoes of Chanukah reverberate through the Torah. Hidden within the pesukim, woven into stories we have known since childhood, lie whispered foreshadowings of Chashmonaiuvonov, sparks of Chanukah light flickering long before the menorah ever burned. Among the most wondrous revelations of these connections is the bond between Yaakov Avinu and Chanukah, two stories of light in darkness, of purity amid contamination, of spiritual defiance against overwhelming odds. In the vastness of the Torah, we find astonishing connections between seemingly unrelated situations. The parallels between Yaakov Avinu and Chanukah are a prime example. We are taught that Yaakov Avinu was niftar on the first day of the Yom Tov of Sukkos, and we know that Mitzrayim enacted seventy days of mourning for him. Thus, the mourning period ended on the 25th day of Kislev, the first day of Chanukah. Let us explore the connection between Yaakov Avinu and Chanukah. The posuk (Bereishis 32:11) states that when Yaakov left the house of Lovon, he thanked Hashem for His blessings. “Katontimikolhachassodimumikolha’emesasherosisu es avdecha, ki vemakliovarti es haYardeinhazehve’atahoyisilishneimachanos—When I crossed the Yardein River to escape from Eisov, all I had was my stick, and now as I return to Eretz Yisroel, I am large enough to encompass two encampments,” Yaakov said. What is the significance of Yaakov crossing the Yardein with his stick? The simple explanation is that Elifaz, the son of Eisov, robbed him of all his possessions, leaving him only with his walking stick. We can examine the depth concealed in these words. The posuk (Bereishis 28:12) states that when Yaakov awoke from his dream, he anointed the stone upon which he had slept with oil and called the place Bais El. But if Elifaz had taken all his possessions, from where did Yaakov obtain oil? The PirkeiD’Rebbi Eliezer teaches that Hashem sent that oil down from heaven, and Yaakov used some of it to anoint the stone. The Daas ZekeinimMiBaaleiHaTtosafos gives a different explanation, saying that Yaakov hollowed out his stick and filled it with oil, ensuring that he would always have light with which to learn Torah wherever he wandered. He used some of that oil to consecrate the stone. This answer of the Daas Zekeinim offers us an understanding of why Yaakov used the words “ki bemakliovarti es haYardein.” By saying that he crossed the Yardein with his stick, Yaakov was indicating that the only possession he was left with was Torah, because he had the oil, which enabled him to study Torah. Yaakov spent fourteen years in the yeshiva of Sheim v’Eiver studying Torah. Then he spent an even longer period in Lovon’s spiritually hostile house. But even there, he testified that he observed the mitzvos, as he stated, “ImLovongarti, vetaryagmitzvosshomarti.” Not only did he not emerge impoverished, but he came out richly blessed. Chanukah was established to commemorate the miracle that occurred when a small flask of oil was found with the seal of thekoheingadol and burned for eight nights instead of one. Before that, for fifty-two years, Am Yisroel was oppressed by the mighty Hellenists. A small army of tzaddikim rose up, fought them, and triumphed. They restored Torah study and observance to the nation. Why, then, does our celebration center more on the miracle of the oil than on the stunning military victory? Acharonim, notably the Pnei Yehoshua (Shabbos 21b) point out that after the war, the oil used for the menorah did not actually require a special seal due to tumahhutrab’tzibbur. Halachically, they were permitted to use oil that had been defiled. But the Chashmonaim insisted on purity and searched for pure oil. They yearned to perform the mitzvah in its most beautiful form. In response to their striving, Hashem brought about a miracle, guiding the righteous Chashmonaim to a single pure flask bearing the seal of the koheingadol and then causing that oil to burn for eight days, long enough to prepare new, pure oil. Heaven met their longing with radiance. This is why the mitzvah of Chanukah uniquely contains levels: basic, mehadrin, and mehadrin min hamehadrin. Chanukah celebrates the yearning of Am Yisroel to serve Hashem with hiddur, to elevate mitzvos, to go beyond the minimum. At the time of the miracle, that dedication shone brightly, and that spirit continues today. History has no shortage of voices telling Jews, “Why bother? Why strain? Why go beyond the requirement?” Why seek perfect haddasim? Why exert effort for the finest Pesachmatzos? Why recite Shema so slowly and with careful intention? Why insist on hiddur when the basic halacha suffices? Why be like the Briskers or Chazon Ish-nicks? There is no need for that. On Chanukah, we celebrate the joy of hiddur mitzvah and the strength of ignoring the mockers, scoffers, and apologists. We know that what brings honor inShomayim is not always what generates admiration down here, nor is it always a feel-good cause or something that appeals to the masses. We need never apologize for being ehrlicheYidden. Chanukah is a celebration of those who devote themselves to Torah and avodas Hashem with effort, intensity, and beauty. The menorah is an eternal symbol of the Jewish people, for it reminds us of Hashem’s closeness to us and our dedication to Him. It reminds us of the glory of the Mishkon and Bais Hamikdosh, and of the transformative miracle as the Jews triumphed over the oppressive Yevonim. A businessman once told his son’s rosh yeshiva that he was removing his son from learning and placing him in the family business. “He’ll never become the Chazon Ish anyway,” the father said. “Let’s be realistic.” The rosh yeshiva smiled. “Why bring him into business? I, too, know your son. And I can assure you, if he goes into business, he will never become anything close to Elon Musk!” The light of that small, precious flask continues to illuminate the Jewish soul, reminding us that Hashem cherishes those who strive, who yearn, who elevate, and who seek to bring their avodas Hashem to its fullest beauty. The lesson of Chanukah is simple yet profound. Even a small amount of pure oil, guarded, treasured, and protected, can illuminate the entire world. The tiniest spark of spiritual devotion can defeat empires. And the light produced by hiddur mitzvah continues to glow long after the flames have gone out. Chanukah invites us to step into that light, to strive, to beautify, to elevate, and to allow our inner DNA, our individual oil, passed down from Yaakov, to shine brightly. Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach once overheard a man in shul proudly displaying his beautiful esrog. As people admired its color, symmetry, and perfection, he eagerly challenged them to guess how much he had paid for such a stunning cheftzahshel mitzvah. The guesses rose higher and higher, but none approached the truth. Finally, with a triumphant smile, the man announced that he had paid only twenty-five dollars. “How did you manage that?” they asked in amazement. With satisfaction, he explained, “I know that demand is highest before Yom Kippur. As Sukkos approaches, vendors worry about being left with unsold merchandise. So I waited until the very last moment, late on Erev Sukkos, before buying my daled minim. My strategy worked, and I got this esrog at a bargain.” After davening, Rav Shlomo Zalman sat down with the man and showed him the Gemara in MasechesBeitza (16). He read him the machlokes between Bais Shammai and Bais Hillel. If Shammai saw a nice cut of meat early in the week, he purchased it for Shabbos, reasoning that he might not find a nicer one. The Gemara states that Hillel was different—“middahachereshoysah lo”—as he always had faith that he would find what he needed before Shabbos. Why, asked Rav Shlomo Zalman, does Chazal call this a “middahacheres, another way”? It would seem that Hillel had traditional bitachon, which led him to believe that things would work out well and that he would be able to obtain the best foods for Shabbos. Rav Shlomo Zalman gently explained that Chazal are teaching that Hillel didn’t only use this approach when it came to mitzvos, like honoring Shabbos. It wasn’t a lackadaisical approach. It was a middahacheres. It was Hillel’s personal attribute. He always assumed that Hashem would help. “Someone who lives that way can use the same approach for mitzvos, too. But if you spent time selecting the right suit for your daughter’s wedding, and you booked the hall early, or you invested time planning the perfect vacation, then apparently you don’t have that middah. So why, for an esrog, is it okay to wait for the last minute?” His point was clear: A person’s real priorities are revealed not by what he claims to value, but by what he puts the most effort into. Chanukah arrives to reset those priorities. It calls us back to the inner core of Jewish identity, to become mehadrinYidden, who invest in mitzvos with heart, care, and dignity. When the Chashmonaim searched for oil sealed with the stamp of the koheingadol, they were making a declaration, telling the people that our priority is to perform each mitzvah in the way in which it shines most. This is why the miracle of the pachshemen is the centerpiece of Chanukah. The military victory was very impressive. It was an inspiring miracle that freed the Jewish nation from tyrannical rule by an evil nation. But its message for us is secondary to the lesson from the miracle involving the flask of pure, holy oil. The willingness to toil for a mitzvah, to labor for taharah, to hold out for kedusha and spiritual excellence is a legacy that remains from the Chashmonaim. And so we return to Yaakov. He crossed the Yardein with nothing but a staff holding oil, symbolizing his dedication to Torah and mitzvos. He lived with uncompromising fidelity even in Lovon’s home. And because of that loyalty, he was blessed with family, success, and Hashem’s protection. Similarly, Chazal established the eight days of Chanukah to remind us that our greatness does not emanate from military might nor from political triumphs, but from commitment to Torah. In the days of the Yevonim, the Misyavnim mocked those who stubbornly clung to mitzvos. They viewed themselves as sophisticated, modern, and enlightened. The loyal Jews were called primitive, rigid, and old-fashioned. But the chachomim wanted that moment in history engraved forever in our consciousness. More important than outside approval of the world is the steadfast pursuit of dikdukb’mitzvos and limudhaTorah. Chanukah’s light continues to illuminate this. My grandparents were mocked by the people of their town and by their irreligious relatives, who claimed that by sending their son away from home to learn in yeshiva, they were dooming him to a life of privation and ensuring that nothing would come of him. He would grow up to be a shlepper, they said. As it turned out, he was the only boy of his generation from that town who remained religious. In our day, there is no religious family that doesn’t send their sons to learn in yeshiva. Torah study is accepted and appreciated by everyone in our world. But many in the big world out there mock those who study Torah, and especially those who dedicate their lives to pursuing Torah study and greatness. At the same time, there are many outside our community who do not share those values. We would hope that the lighting of the menorah and the celebration of the Yom Tov’s miracles would remind those who are removed from Torah of its centrality to our lives and purpose. Despite all of Yaakov’s challenges, he maintained his lofty shlichus as the ish tam yosheivohalim. Lovon and Eisov surely wondered what good Yaakov was doing for society. They wondered why he didn’t open a yeshiva, as his father and grandfather did. They questioned why he was so protective of his children, keeping them separated from the world and culture of the day. We know the questions. We are still getting them. After all, we are Yaakov’s people. Chanukah provides us with renewed resolve. The parsha gives us strength to remain loyal to what we learned from Yaakov. Yaakov set out to build a nation with a makel in his hand. He had nothing but his faith, Torah, and hidden oil. His son Yosef, in this week’s parsha, had his dreams, with which he lived when all else was taken from him and he was sold into slavery. One year, at the annual Chanukah gathering at Yeshivas Mir Yerushalayim, the rosh yeshiva, Rav Nosson Tzvi Finkel, entered. The crowd knew that their rosh yeshiva was weak from his illness. They were so enthused that they burst out in song. The scene was surreal. The dancing talmidim shouted themselves hoarse with devotion to the rosh yeshiva. Rav Nosson Tzvi himself, barely able to speak, exuded such love for the talmidim. A question hung over the room: How? How could a man so limited by illness be able to say shiurim and shmuessen, give chizuk and advice, spearhead programs, and raise many millions of dollars to keep the yeshiva going? How was he constantly building and expanding? How could he inspire such enthusiasm? Rav Yitzchok Ezrachi took the microphone and answered the question in everyone’s hearts. Looking at the rosh yeshiva, he quoted a posuk from the haftorah read on ShabbosChanukah. The novi (Zechariah 4:6) says, “Lo bechayil velo bekoach ki imberuchiamar Hashem… Not with strength, nor with might, but with My spirit, Hashem says.” That is the secret of how we accomplish what we do. That is how we survive in golus as the screws tighten upon us. Yaakov had only a makel. Yosef had nothing except the Torah his father taught him and his faith in Hashem. They had nothing, and yet Yaakov founded a nation, Yosef ruled over and sustained the world, and the Chashmonaim beat the most advanced army on earth. Chanukah is a time to allow our spirits to soar, courageous and proud to give honor to the mitzvos and the One who commanded us to fulfill them, lemehadrin min hamehadrin. The Yevonim epitomized the seductive power of external beauty and sophisticated culture, and our generation is perhaps living through that influence at its highest resolution. We inhabit a world overflowing with distraction, superficiality, and spiritual dilution. Each one of us today faces tests and challenges. Through our dedication to limudhaTorah and kiyumhamitzvos, we can excel despite all the enticements. We are not asked to fight empires or split seas. We are asked to guard the little flame inside us, the one that remains pure, the one that carries Yaakov’s legacy, Yosef’s resilience, and the Chashmonaim’s devotion, and the one that will lead us to the coming of Moshiach speedily in our day.

{Matzav.com}

House Holds Hearing On Judea and Samaria

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The House Foreign Affairs Committee heard testimony on Wednesday about the “historical, strategic and political dynamics” of Judea and Samaria and that territory’s relationship to the term “West Bank.”

Eugene Kontorovich, a fellow at the Heritage Foundation, pointed to the international law doctrine of uti possidetis, which holds that international boundaries of a successor state revert by default to whatever territory the preceding sovereign boundaries included.

“When Israel gained independence, the preceding geopolitical entity was Mandatory Palestine, which included Judea and Samaria. That’s not in dispute,” said Kontorovich, who is also a professor at George Mason University’s Antonin Scalia Law School and executive director of its Center for the Middle East and International Law.

Judea and Samaria is the biblical and contemporary administrative name in Israel for the territories that Israel captured from Jordan in 1967, excluding eastern Jerusalem. It is commonly referred to as the “West Bank,” a name promulgated by Jordan during its occupation of the territory to refer to the lands it held west of the Jordan River.

More than 2 million Palestinians live in the area, which, along with Gaza, would make up the core territory of any future Palestinian state, even as many Israelis and some American supporters of Israel assert that it is the heartland of biblical Israel and that parts of the territory should be annexed into Israel proper.

Rep. Brad Sherman (D-Calif.), acting ranking member of the subcommittee, said that he rejected maximalist territorial claims on both sides of the question.

“If we turn to any nationality and say, ‘You define your borders based on the maximum you ever controlled in history,’ then Mongolia would control half of the world, the Greeks would control Anatolia, the Germans would be restored to East Prussia and the Chumash would own my condo in the San Fernando Valley,” Sherman said. (The Chumash are a Native American people in California.)

Sherman asked Kontorovich and Morton Klein, national president of the Zionist Organization of America, about comments from Heritage’s president, Kevin Roberts, defending Tucker Carlson following Carlson’s interview with the neo-Nazi influencer Nick Fuentes and calling Carlson’s critics part of a “venomous coalition” of the “globalist class.”

“Are you part of a venomous coalition of the globalist class when you call for the denunciation of Mr. Fuentes?” Sherman asked Klein.

“Yes,” Klein said. “Mike Huckabee is part of the venomous coalition—President Trump, Mark Levin. This was an outrageous statement.”

Asked if he is comfortable remaining at Heritage, Kontorovich said that there was no dispute at Heritage about denouncing Fuentes and that “our work to combat antisemitism has vastly expanded in the past couple years.”

None of the experts on Wednesday’s panel believed that either full annexation of Judea and Samaria or a two-state solution creating a Palestinian state would be viable at this time.

“I think that we have to think less about, ‘How do we draw the border?’ and we have to think more about, ‘How do we create a two-state solution that changes the meanings of some phrases?’” said Jon Alterman, of the Center for Strategic and International Studies. “The phrases you have to change are ‘two’ and ‘state’ and ‘solution.’”

“Nobody in Israel is talking about annexing the West Bank,” Kontorovich said. “There have been proposals to extend Israeli civil law to those areas where Jewish communities are, in other words to incorporate under Israeli law parts of Judea and Samaria.”

The otherwise staid proceedings of the hearing briefly devolved into shouting when Sherman accused the subcommittee chairman, Rep. Mike Lawler (R-N.Y.), of taking additional time to comment on Sherman’s questions and the responses from witnesses.

“Mr. Chairman, I will insist upon an equal amount of time,” Sherman shouted. “Mr. Chairman, you cannot seize time. Each side of this aisle gets the same time. I’ve been on this committee for 29 years. You should know the rules.”

“No,” Lawler replied.

After the hearing, Rep. Tim Burchett (R-Tenn.) posted on social media about the “fireworks” in the hearing.

“You got the paid protesters. They’re there to disrupt, and they do their thing, and anyway, and you got the committee chairman getting into it with the ranking member and the usual hijinks,” Burchett said.

“I don’t know that we’re ever gonna solve this problem,” he said, of the West Bank. JNS

{Matzav.com}

Watch: NYC Mayor-Elect Zohran Mamdani Attends Satmar Chof Alef Kislev Gatherings

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[Videos below.] New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani made an appearance at both major Satmar Chof Alef Kislev celebrations tonight, marking a notable moment in his outreach to the Chassidic Jewish community in New York.

Mamdani first arrived at the celebration held by the Satmar Rebbe of Kiryas Yoel, Rav Aharon Teitelbaum, at the Waterfront on Kent Avenue in Williamsburg.

Later in the evening, he traveled to Crown Heights to attend the gathering led by the Satmar Rebbe of Williamsburg, Rav Zalman Leib Teitelbaum, at the Brooklyn Armory.

Chof Alef Kislev is one of the most significant annual celebrations in the Satmar community. It marks the rescue and liberation of the Satmar Rebbe, Rav Yoel Teitelbaum, from Nazi-controlled Europe in 1944. His miraculous escape—facilitated through the now-famous Kastner transport—allowed him to rebuild Satmar in the United States, shaping the future of one of the largest Chassidic groups in the world. Every year, tens of thousands gather at parallel events led by the two Satmar Rebbes to give thanks and reaffirm the community’s continued growth.

Mamdani’s presence at both events comes after weeks of intense debate surrounding his candidacy. During the election campaign, many questioned whether meeting with him was appropriate due to his outspoken anti-Israel positions and statements that were widely viewed as hostile to the Jewish state. Community members and activists sharply disagreed on whether engaging with him would legitimize those views or whether building a working relationship with the incoming mayor was a pragmatic necessity for addressing local concerns such as public safety, education, city services, and neighborhood infrastructure.

Despite the controversy, leaders in both Satmar courts extended invitations, emphasizing that engagement with elected officials is a longstanding communal priority.

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{Matzav.com}

Attorney General’s Office: “Bismuth’s Draft Plan Serves the Yeshivos, Not National Security”

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A sharply worded legal opinion issued Wednesday by two senior deputies to the Attorney General asserts that the draft bill advanced by Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee Chairman MK Boaz Bismuth prioritizes yeshivos over the military’s needs, eliminates enforcement against draft evaders, restores funding that the High Court forbade, and fails every constitutional standard.

Dr. Gil Limon and Adv. Avital Sompolinsky, the deputies who authored the opinion, released a detailed document spanning dozens of pages in which they warn that the proposal now before the committee “does not provide a response to the urgent security needs” and in fact creates a “negative incentive for enlistment.” According to them, the bill dismantles enforcement tools and reinstates benefits for yeshivos that were explicitly struck down by the High Court.

The legal advisers note that since the expiration of the previous draft law, all eligible chareidim are subject to individual and equal conscription, with thousands already classified as draft evaders. The High Court’s rulings require the government to apply criminal and civil enforcement measures and to cease all direct and indirect funding to those who do not regularize their status. The new bill, they argue, reverses course—canceling warrants and indictments, reviving disqualified funding channels, and re-creating a sweeping service-deferral framework.

At the core of the criticism lies the bill’s “group target” model, which replaces a universal and individual draft obligation with a communal decision structure. Under the proposal, chareidi young men could choose collectively whether to enlist or remain in yeshiva until exemption age. The enlistment targets themselves, the opinion notes, fall dramatically short of the Israel Defense Forces’ needs—about 12,000 soldiers are currently lacking—and even below the IDF’s own stated absorption capacity. Some targets could even be met through a lenient security-civilian service track open exclusively to chareidim.

The deputies further warn that the sanctions outlined in the bill are illusory. Personal sanctions would cease at a relatively young age and are significantly weaker than those under existing law. Collective sanctions, they add, depend on targets that could be retroactively amended and easily circumvented through alternative funding routes for Torah institutions. As a result, they conclude, these penalties are “sanctions in name only, incapable of motivating a chareidi youth to choose enlistment.”

The procedural flaws, they say, are no less severe. The bill promoted by Bismuth is not a continuation of the government bill to which continuity was applied, nor is it based on professional staff work by the defense establishment or the Finance Ministry. According to the letter, the professionals themselves oppose the proposal. This, they write, reflects a fundamental procedural defect in addition to constitutional problems.

In their conclusion, the Attorney General’s Office writes that a balanced and lawful framework is possible—one that recognizes the value of limud haTorah on the one hand, while ensuring significant and effective enlistment of chareidi men through meaningful personal and institutional sanctions and a real answer to security needs. Bismuth’s proposal, they state, does not meet constitutional requirements, deepens the violation of equality, and would not withstand judicial review.

Committee chairman MK Boaz Bismuth fired back, saying: “Nice try, Attorney Maara, to deflect the discussion with your legal opinion, on the very day dark questions arise regarding your involvement in the Sde Teiman affair. Nice try, but not this time.”

Shas also launched its first full-blown attack on the Attorney General, releasing a blistering response: “In a transparent and humiliating maneuver, the ousted Attorney General is attempting to strike at the Torah world to divert attention from one of the gravest scandals in the country’s history, in which she is suspected and which severely harmed Israel’s security and IDF soldiers.

“Her opinion is detached from reality and does not reflect the army’s position. The shrill political tone of her letter exposes her objective: to topple the right-wing government and prevent her dismissal.

“The Knesset’s legal adviser has accompanied the bill throughout the entire process and will represent it as needed. Unlike the Attorney General and her cohort, who pursue every expression of Jewish identity, the Jewish people will continue to honor those who learn Torah and safeguard our heritage for generations.”

{Matzav.com}

Satmar Philanthropist Yoeli Landau Hosts Special Sheva Brachos for Orphans of the Community

Matzav -

In honor of the wedding of the grandson of the Satmar Rebbe, a unique and heartfelt celebration took place this week in Williamsburg. Renowned philanthropist Mr. Yoeli Landau hosted an elegant sheva brachos in his home, dedicating the event to the orphans of the Satmar community.

The Satmar Rebbe himself attended the celebration, offering personal chizuk and brachos to each child.

In a moving gesture, the Rebbe presented every orphan with a newly published zemiros sefer, Divrei Yoel, specially inscribed with a personal dedication.

Each child also received a $100 bill alongside the sefer.

The beautifully arranged sheva brachos featured singing, divrei Torah, and an atmosphere of uplifted spirits, with badchanus by Rav Avrohom Mordechai Malach.

PHOTOS:

{Matzav.com}

Eidah Hachareidis Issues Strong Prohibition Against Concerts, Even With Separate Seating

Matzav -

A sharply worded public notice released by the Badatz of the Eidah Hachareidis warns the chareidi public against participating in so-called “Ervei Shira,” or concerts, which the Badatz describes as a growing and deeply troubling breach in communal standards of kedushah and tznius.

The proclamation expresses profound concern over the rapid expansion of these events. According to the notice, organizers have begun presenting such gatherings in polished, professional formats and marketing them within the frum community, efforts which, the Eidah states, pose significant spiritual danger.

The Badatz notes that it has previously decried the phenomenon, but given recent trends, it is now issuing a renewed and unequivocal directive: Attendance at such events is strictly forbidden, even when they are advertised as have separate seating or being only for men.

In addition, the proclamation states that performers and organizers who participate in these forbidden programs may not be invited to appear at any other events. The purpose, the notice explains, is to ensure that “those who breach the standards of holiness and tznius should not be elevated or given platforms within the community.”

The Badatz further emphasizes that the prohibition extends far beyond the specific “Evening of Song” format. The notice declares a blanket ban on participating in any event involving musical performance or public gatherings where men and women are present together.

{Matzav.com}

As Per His Tzavaah: “Dropouts” and “At-Risk” Carry the Aron of the Breslover Mashpia

Matzav -

A deeply moving scene unfolded today at the levayah of the Breslover mashpia, Rav Binyomin Ze’ev Knopelmacher zt”l, who passed away this morning at age 75. In accordance with his final request, it was specifically the bochurim hanoshrim—the struggling youth, those who considered themselves “dropouts” or “at risk”—who were honored with carrying his aron.

The heartfelt instruction appeared in the handwritten tzava’ah the mashpia left behind. In it, Rav Knopelmacher wrote explicitly that the honor of escorting him on his final journey should belong to “the noshrim, who are far more precious in Heaven than the ‘fine mentchen.’”

During the levayah, which began at the Breslover shul, a large crowd accompanied the mashpia on his last path. Among them were many who, over the years, felt seen, uplifted, and embraced by him despite — and often because of — their struggles. They regarded it as a profound privilege to fulfill his final wish.

The full text of his powerful instruction reads:

“I wish to write to you something, and it is possible you will not understand at all why this is my desire. At another time I will explain it to you very, very well.

A. At my levayah, the ones to carry my bier must be specifically the noshrim. They are greater than all the ‘fine people.’

B. As for my kever: although it should be among shomrei Shabbos, it is even more preferable for it to be near the noshrim or the simple folk—truly simple people. The reason is that in Heaven they are considered extremely important, far more than ordinary chassidim and those dressed in fine clothing. At another opportunity I would explain why.”

Those present described an emotional procession, with many tearfully recalling the mashpia’s unwavering love for every Jew, especially those who felt overlooked or left behind. His final act of elevating them, even in death, was seen as the ultimate expression of the message he preached throughout his life.

{Matzav.com}

Border War Between Thailand and Cambodia Escalates as 400,000 Flee Fighting

Yeshiva World News -

Renewed border fighting between Thailand and Cambodia showed no signs of abating Wednesday, with hundreds of thousands of displaced people in strained conditions as more flooded into temporary shelters. Associated Press reporters on the Thai side of the border heard outgoing fire. The fighting triggered by longstanding territorial disputes followed a skirmish Sunday that wounded two Thai soldiers and derailed a ceasefire […]

Teen Injured in Protest Car-Ramming Arrives by Ambulance to File Complaint; Police Say He Was “Summoned for Questioning”

Matzav -

A 16-year-old boy who was run over during Monday’s protest by the Peleg Yerushalmi faction was forced to arrive by ambulance at the police station on Wednesday evening in order to provide testimony, according to a report by Army Radio correspondent Tuvia Yeglnik.

Police stated that the injured teen had been summoned for coordinated questioning on suspicion of disorderly conduct and that his arrival was arranged together with his parents. His family sharply disputes that claim, insisting that they spent the past two days pleading with police to come take his statement, with no response. They say police refused to collect testimony at the hospital and only afterward informed them that the teen would be questioned for alleged disorderly behavior.

The incident stems from Monday’s demonstration near the Geha Interchange, where a 24-year-old driver from Bnei Brak was arrested after allegedly accelerating into the crowd and striking the teen.

On Tuesday, the driver was released to house arrest after the court noted that no formal complaint had yet been filed and no testimony was taken from the victim or other witnesses. The judge rejected the police request to extend the suspect’s detention by six days and ordered his release until December 14. During the hearing, police said the driver had “lost patience” in the traffic jam created by the protest.

In his interrogation, the suspect admitted being involved in the incident but maintained that he drove cautiously. “I didn’t notice that I hit anyone, and only later did I realize there had been contact,” he said.

Medical officials reported that the teen suffered injuries to his abdomen, pelvis, and limbs, and was evacuated in moderate condition to Schneider Children’s Medical Center. Police say that at this stage it remains unclear whether the ramming was intentional.

{Matzav.com}

U.S. To Unveil Gaza “Board of Peace” By Month’s End As Trump, Netanyahu Prepare Mar-A-Lago Summit

Yeshiva World News -

The Trump administration’s long-delayed rollout of its Gaza stabilization plan is finally moving forward, with Washington now eyeing the end of this month to formally announce the creation of the “Board of Peace,” according to a senior European official briefed on the discussions. The board, envisioned as the top international authority overseeing management of the […]

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