DUS IZ NIES

“I don’t speak because I have the power to speak; I speak because I don’t have the power to remain silent.” Rav Kook z"l

Monday, February 9, 2026

Rabbi David Stav: 'Charedi draft law is all a bluff'

 


Rabbi David Stav, chairman of the Tzohar Rabbinical Organization and Chief Rabbi of the City of Shoham, sharply criticizes the Israeli government’s proposed legislation on the recruitment of haredi men into the Israel Defense Forces, calling the bill misleading, ineffective, and morally indefensible in the wake of Israel’s ongoing security challenges.

Speaking with Arutz Sheva-Israel National News, Rabbi Stav rejected claims that opposing the government’s proposal amounts to an attempt to topple the coalition. While acknowledging that political stability is a legitimate concern, he argued that the current legislation sacrifices fundamental values while pretending to achieve reform.

“It is a legitimate position to say: I want more haredim to serve, but I prioritize the survival of the government," Rabbi Stav said. “What is not legitimate is to present a bill as historic and transformative when everyone knows it will not draft anyone who does not already intend to enlist."

According to Rabbi Stav, the proposed law falsely promises the enlistment of tens of thousands of haredi men while quietly ensuring that no real change will take place. He accused politicians of privately admitting the bill’s ineffectiveness while publicly promoting it as a breakthrough.

“No one who does not intend to go to the army will go because of this bill," he said. “Everyone knows this."

Charedi rabbi: Ashkenazic Charedim are racists


 A senior haredi rabbi harshly attacked the attitude of Ashkenazi haredi society toward marriages between different ethnic communities.

In an interview on Kol Barama Radio, Rabbi Aharon Butbul, son-in-law of the late Sephardic Chief Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, was asked by a teacher from the Religious Zionist sector to advise him on how to respond to religious students who ask why there is such a large gap in inter-ethnic marriages between Ashkenazim and Sephardim in the haredi sector.

In his response, Rabbi Butbul, who also serves as regional rabbi of the Hevel Modi’in area and heads the “Yabia Omer" rabbinical court in Modi’in Illit, spoke bluntly.

“The Ashkenazi public is racist - this is the absolute truth," he said. “There is no way to sugarcoat reality."

He also noted that significant changes have taken place in other parts of religious society.

“In the Religious Zionist public, racism has been abolished, and also in the Chabad hasidic community," he said, adding, “In the haredi public, they are still living in the era of Antiochus the Wicked."

7 (guess who?) detained for allegedly defrauding state war-relief funds

 



Officers from the National Economic Crime Unit at Lahav 433, together with National Insurance investigators, this morning detained seven suspects (guess who?) involved in a large-scale fraud network.

The seven are suspected of pocketing millions of shekels from the state treasury while impersonating residents of northern border communities.

The undercover investigation, conducted over recent months, uncovered a corrupt method of operation: according to suspicion, the suspects bribed an employee at the Population and Immigration Authority to make false changes to their addresses in government databases.

Using the falsified northern addresses, the suspects created the false impression that they were eligible for relocation and assistance grants provided by the National Insurance Institute to citizens forced to leave their homes due to the war. In reality, according to the investigation, the suspects had never lived in those communities.

In a joint statement by the police and National Insurance, the severity of the actions was emphasized, noting that they cynically exploited a national emergency:

"These are serious suspicions that caused damage to the public coffers amounting to millions of shekels, particularly given that the actions were carried out during a national emergency and a state of war."

The investigation, which includes suspicions of bribery, aggravated fraud, and conspiracy to commit a crime, is still in its early stages. According to developments, the police are expected to bring the suspects to a hearing for an extension of their detention at the Petah Tikva Magistrate’s Court.

Lahav 433 and the National Insurance Institute clarified that they will continue to act firmly against anyone attempting to exploit state resources intended for war victims.

The cost of Human Life in Iran is rising Because of Trump's wavering

 


Kushner, Witkoff giving Trump ‘bad ideas,’

 

A senior Israeli government minister warned over the weekend that some of President Donald Trump’s top advisers are pushing him into making major policy mistakes regarding the Gaza Strip.

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir spoke Monday morning with the country’s public radio broadcaster, Kan Reshet Bet, about Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s upcoming trip to the United States, during which he will meet with President Trump to discuss plans to demilitarize the Gaza Strip and American talks with Iran.

Ben-Gvir, a hawkish member of Netanyahu’s government who has often criticized the 76-year-old premier, praised Netanyahu during the interview, emphasizing that the prime minister is well positioned to present Israeli concerns to Trump regarding the Iran talks.

“The prime minister is acting excellently on the Iran issue. I think his demands are very clear. He has proven that he knows how to speak with Trump. This time as well, he will bring achievements,” Ben-Gvir said.

However, Ben-Gvir added that Netanyahu needs to do more to highlight Israeli objections to the present situation in the Gaza Strip, noting the failure of the Trump administration to secure the disarmament of Hamas.

Ben-Gvir blamed Trump’s chief negotiators for the issue, White House special envoy to the Middle East Steve Witkoff and the president’s son-in-law, Jared Kushner.

“The Americans are very naive, especially Kushner and Witkoff. They are feeding Trump incorrect ideas. I am not willing to accept a situation in which there are tens of thousands of armed terrorists in Gaza, driving around in pickup trucks with Kalashnikovs.”

On Saturday night, the Prime Minister’s Office announced that Netanyahu will meet with Trump next Wednesday, adding that the two will discuss American negotiations with Iran.

“The prime minister believes that any negotiation must include restrictions on ballistic missiles and an end to support for the Iranian axis,” the Prime Minister’s Office said.

Sunday, February 8, 2026

Long-lost rivers of the Bible found in satellite images point to the Garden of Eden


Complementing this, Iran's Karun River, a twisting waterway flowing through the Zagros Mountains, may correspond to the Gihon


 For centuries, the Garden of Eden has been a symbol of paradise in the Bible,  a lush, perfect world where Adam and Eve once walked. 

Many have dismissed it as a myth, but now, resurfaced satellite images have suggested that the story may have a very real geographical basis.

A series of orbital scans has revealed an ancient, now-dry riverbed in Saudi Arabia that some scholars believe aligns with the biblical description of Eden's main river, the Pishon.

The Book of Genesis describes Eden as a paradise watered by a single river that split into four: Pishon, Gihon, Tigris, and Euphrates. 

While the Tigris and Euphrates are well-known rivers in modern-day Iraq, the Pishon and Gihon have long been lost to history, until now.

The dry riverbed, called Wadi al-Batin, stretches from the western highlands of Hejaz near Medina northeast to the northern Persian Gulf near Kuwait. 

Its winding course corresponds closely with the biblical description of the Pishon, which Genesis states 'compasseth the whole land of Havilah, where there is gold; and the gold of that land is good: there is bdellium and the onyx stone.' 

Modern satellite imagery spotted Wadi al-Batin's delta near the Gulf, with dunes and depressions marking the river's former grandeur.

Complementing this, Iran's Karun River, a twisting waterway flowing through the Zagros Mountains, may correspond to the Gihon. The Hebrew word 'sabab,' meaning to circle or twist, aptly describes the Karun's meanders. 

Historically, the river ran through the Kassite territory, identified by some scholars as the land of Cush mentioned in Genesis.

The discovery of Wadi al-Batin as a potential Eden riverbed dates back to the early 1990s, when Boston University geologist Farouk El-Baz analyzed radar images from NASA's Space Shuttle Endeavor. 

However, the images were revisited on Patheos this month, reigniting attention to what had been lost for thousands of years.

The data revealed a fossilized river up to three miles wide, active during a wetter Holocene era before drying between 2000 and 3500 BC due to climate shifts.

'These satellite images give us a window into landscapes that have vanished over millennia,' said Dr El-Baz. 

'We can now trace rivers that once shaped human settlement and perhaps even inspired ancient biblical narratives.'

The alignment of these rivers with biblical text is striking, as together with the Tigris and Euphrates, Wadi al-Batin and the Karun would have converged into the Persian Gulf, forming a fertile cradle of civilization. 

James A Sauer, a biblical archaeologist who analyzed the satellite data, said that the dry riverbed’s features best match the biblical description of the Pishon, though he stops short of declaring this proof of Eden itself.

However, according to archaeologist Juris Zarins, satellite imagery showing ancient riverbeds near the Persian Gulf corresponds with descriptions from Genesis, suggesting the Eden narrative may reflect real ancient geography even if its spiritual elements remain interpretive. 

Environmental data has also supported this theory, showing Arabia's arid transformation after the last Ice Age and rising sea levels that may have submerged parts of Eden's delta.

Not all scholars agree, however. Some argue the land of Cush may refer to regions in Africa, connecting the Gihon to the Nile instead. 

Others cautioned that biblical texts blend spiritual allegory with historical memory, making precise mapping speculative.

Despite these debates, the discovery has reignited interest in the geography of Genesis. 

Satellite maps of the Fertile Crescent, including Wadi al-Batin's path, reveal a landscape that once supported early human settlements. 

The ancient rivers' courses align with archaeological evidence of early farming communities and trade networks, providing a tantalizing glimpse of a pre-flood world described in biblical texts.

There have been many theories about where the Garden of Eden was located, with a recent suggestion putting it in Africa.

Mahmood Jawaid, a chemical engineer based in Texas, argued Eden was actually in Bahir Dar, a fertile region in northwestern Ethiopia near the southern end of Lake Tana, where the Blue Nile begins.

Jawaid based his research on a careful reading of both the Bible and the Quran, analyzing descriptions of Adam and Eve, the rivers and the garden itself.

The 2025 study, which has not been peer-reviewed, noted the Blue Nile could correspond to the Biblical Gihon, and Lake Tana's outflows divide into multiple waterways, potentially forming the four rivers described in Genesis.

Early human evolution also played a role in this theory, proposing that Adam may have evolved from Homo habilis or a late form of Australopithecus in the East African Rift Valley near Olduvai Gorge, a region considered a cradle of humanity.

From there, Adam and Eve could have been 'placed' in the highlands of Bahir Dar, a paradise at a higher elevation, before descending, what the Quran describes as 'habata,' to settle in the Rift Valley.

This is because the region sits about 6,000 feet above sea level, boasting lush vegetation, abundant wildlife and the flowing Blue Nile, features that align with both the Biblical description of Eden's rivers and the Quranic concept of a garden on Earth.

DIN Sets Up Tzedakah Account!

 



Dear Readers,

Many people have asked how they can donate to DIN. Baruch Hashem, at this time the Ribbono Shel Olam is providing for us, and I am deeply grateful to my Creator.

What you can do, however, is support a fund I established for widows and orphans of IDF families.

This fund will provide:

  • Wholesome Shabbos food

  • Tefillin for children who need them

  • And, as the need grows, Hachnasas Kallah for children reaching marriage age

Right now, I am in the process of purchasing 15 pairs of tefillin that are urgently needed.

You can give whatever amount you feel comfortable with — and you can be confident that every shekel goes exactly where it should. It can be as low as $5.00

The following is just a guide! 

A meal for Shabbos for 5 is: $200.00

Tefillin: $1,800 

The link is on the upper right in the side bar! 

UPDATE: If you have a smartphone, you need to scroll down until you see "View Web Version," click on that, and you will be able to access 

ברצוני להודות מעומק הלב לכל התורמים היקרים
,הקב״ה יברך אתכם בשפע ברכה והצלחה, בריאות, נחת ושמחה.

תזכו תמיד להיות מן הנותנים
ותראו רק טוב וחסד כל ימיכם
באהבה
דאת איז נייעס


Charedie Transformation to Chilonie 13 year old to 38

 Unfortunately, there are thousands like him, and the Chardeie leadership better start dealing with it !

Click on the arrow on the left of the photo 

Let the morally and financially bankrupt UN perish


 “Imminent financial collapse,” United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres hysterically predicted in a Jan. 29 letter to all UN member states, saying his reputationally challenged organization is so cash-strapped that it will run out of money by July, close its iconic Manhattan headquarters in August and cancel its annual General Assembly meeting in September.

Most UN functions, including its Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, which claims to coordinate responses to global emergencies, may also sunset in the coming months due to lack of funds.

This gushing cavalcade of good news sounds more like a promise than a warning.

The institution in December foolishly approved a $3.45 billion budget it can’t afford, and less than a month later Guterres lamented “the urgency of the situation we now face.”

Cuts and layoffs are already underway. Morale is reportedly low.

“It’s now or never,” one UN spokesman told The New York Times. “We do not have the sort of cash reserves and the sort of liquidity to keep functioning.”

Paring down the diplospeak and cushy coverage in the former paper of record, Guterres and his broke lackeys sound more like spoiled teenage girls who maxed out their dads’ credit cards than competent leaders of the world’s largest diplomatic organization.

Yet the only solution that can keep the privileged globalist caste dipping fondue at average and, often, tax-free salaries of $95,600 with generous benefits (while not having to suffer the indignity of paying millions in city parking tickets) is an urgent influx of cold, hard cash — your cold, hard cash.

A towering 95% of its projected $2.2 billion shortfall is money the UN says the United States owes in unpaid dues from 2025 and as-yet-unpaid dues for 2026, per a senior UN official who briefed the press on the would-be world government’s rapidly impending insolvency.

On top of that, the official said without a trace of embarrassment, American taxpayers owe his fellow overpaid third-world bureaucrats another $1.9 billion to fund those oh-so-successful peacekeeping missions, $528 million for “closed missions” and, incredibly, a $43.6 million tab for the International Court of Justice and the International Criminal Court, global judicial bodies whose jurisdictions we do not accept and in the ICC’s case we don’t even belong to.

Seeing international organizations for the corrupt, inefficient piles of waste they usually are, the Trump administration has wisely scaled down American involvement.

On his first day back in office, President Trump pulled us out of the World Health Organization by executive order, in part because it demanded “unfairly onerous payments from the United States, far out of proportion with other countries’ assessed payments.” 

Days later, he withdrew from the UN Human Rights Council, a laughably ineffective body whose current members include top human-rights violators China, Cuba and South Africa.

Trump also cut funds to the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, which is supposed to help needy Palestinians but employed dubious locals who were accused of fighting with Hamas during the Oct. 7 attack on Israel.

Trump in July pulled out of UNESCO, the UN’s educational and cultural organization, which is openly antisemitic, blames world conflict on “patriarchal masculinities” whose “mindsets” its programs seek to “change” and advocates “systemic changes” to solve “structural racism.”

In early January, Trump withdrew from 66 other international organizations and agreements determined to be “contrary to the interests of the United States.”

“I’ve always felt that the UN has tremendous potential,” Trump said when withdrawing from the Human Rights Council last year. “It’s not living up to that potential right now.”

If that was true then, when the UN was at least solvent, it’s still true now that it’s broke.

If the UN can’t survive without billions more in handouts from the American taxpayer, the time has come to let this failed 80-year embarrassment in world governance succumb to its own mismanagement.

After the likes of Guterres have squandered whatever “potential” Trump saw in their disastrous organization, the president might well consider that the UN headquarters’ six celebrity-architect-designed buildings offer 2.6 million square feet of easily convertible space across 18 acres of prime Manhattan real estate in a city with a notorious housing shortage.

With a $2.15 billion renovation completed as recently as 2015, surely the complex could be put to better use under the brand of a certain well known New York developer.

And those late September traffic jams would be a thing of the past.

In any case, the do-nothing United Nations will not be missed.

Paul du Quenoy is Palm Beach Freedom Institute president.

Is Chamberlain’s “Peace for our Time" resurrected in President Trump’s Gaza Peace Plan ?


 by Gerald A. Honigman

The setting for Trump's Peace Plan is today's Middle East:

Iran

President Trump is currently engaged in yet more useless “dealings" (aka, negotiations) with the Islamic Republic of Iran’s tyrannical mullahs, who’ve mastered the art of deliberate lying and obfuscation, known in a variety of manifestations, such as taqiyya and kitman.

The aim is simply to deceive one’s enemies for any number of reasons.

In this case, with despised kafir infidels, it will involve President Trump’s lackluster Middle East point man, Steve Witkoff and his team, being bamboozled into permitting the Ayatollah Supreme Leader to stall for more time.

This will certainly result in the slaughter of tens of thousands of additional Iranian civilians who believed Trump when he said real help was on the way, tens of thousand of dead martyrs ago. The mullahs will surreptitiously assign the IRGC’s special terror and executioner unit, fanatic Basij henchmen, to do the murdering.

No good can result from these negotiations.

With scores of thousands of Iranians eliminated already, and with many more yet to come, the time for blowing hot air is over.

We’ve been doing this with the mullahs since they kidnapped sixty six Americans in the Iranian Embassy, were responsible for their Hezbollah proxies blowing up hundreds of American marines in Lebanon, etc. since 1979. Each time, they outmaneuvered America.

This time the people of Iran are pleading and crying out for America to end the violence As Hamas will never consent to disarm on its own, despite being required to do so in Trump’s Gaza “deal," with powerful Chinese, Russian, and North Korean friends supplying the mullahs with additional ballistic missiles and perhaps even ICBMs along with replacement anti-aircraft radar and missiles, what incentive do the mullahs have to make any true concessions at all this time around?

None.

That’s why it’s time for this game, which taqiyya-practicing mullahs excel in, to come to an end, and for Iran to once again become the great nation, with the forced Arabization and Islamization noose removed from around its various peoples’s necks, to return to tthe great nation (kingdom, future democracy) that existed for thousands of years prior to the jihadi invasions.

Arab hordes spreading jihad (Islamic religious war) poured into Iran and numerous other places from a fast desiccating Arabian Peninsula literally in search of other peoples’s greener pastures fourteen centuries ago, and began, stealing, settling, and colonizing hundreds of millions of native, non-Arab peoples’s homelands, claiming them as “purely Arab patrimony," solely for themselves, and forever part of the Dar ul-Islam.

This moment in history will not likely come again anytime soon, if at all, and the current American President, unless he wants to repeat what President Obama did in 2009, with Iranian civilians outraged over a stolen election being slaughtered while Obama did nothing.