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
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Kamala Harris holds talks with Mamdani and Pro-Palestinian activists ahead of potential 2028 bid
When My Son Was Rejected From A Lakewood Yeshiva, the Public School System Welcomed Him
So this is a pretty vulnerable post, and I am happy I can advocate for myself.
My 8-year-old was removed from his school for behavioral challenges (the principal said he was not following directions or was disruptive). In February, we had a face-to-face meeting, and the principal decided that my kid should be removed from the school until he is eligible for their ABA program.
I was devastated.
How can a school just reject a child like that?
We were proactive and did what needed to be done to start the process—insurance, get the diagnosis, evaluate, etc. Suffice it to say, the whole process was extremely tedious and took 3 months to complete.
In the meantime, this is happening, and my kid is becoming more and more disengaged and withdrawn.
6 months went by, and we had no idea what to do. As a licensed therapist, I could see the potential risks already being observed by my now 8-year-old, and certain symptoms were concerning to me.
I had people advocating for me and calling the school and pleading for my son to come back temporarily while everything is being completed.
The principal did not budge.
We were rejected and dismissed.
We needed to get an assessment to rule out anything we can. We contacted our local Board of Education, and they guided us by having our son enrolled in the system.
When asked why this assessment needed to be completed, we had to tell them the truth.
Well, fast forward to a few days before, and my husband got a call for confirmation, and the person said that if we don’t enroll our child, the DOE would send a summons.
We did not get in trouble legally.
My kid, as a young 7-year-old, was being enrolled in public school.
I had very mixed feelings, but we know what is best for our child.
He was lacking, for a few months, the structure and routine. He did not have the social and emotional piece that was missing from school.
I could not sit back and watch my child suffer.
The first day happened, and he was nervous, but by the end of the day, I saw that glow on his face and smile. I was beyond happy to see what I was missing.
He was there for a month.
He was treated with respect as far as his observances.
I was so happy to see that.
Fast forward, he has been rejected by a local Lakewood school that I will not mention.
I write this not to offend people but to advocate for the system in general.
Once we were rejected, someone said, “Do you have pull?”
Why should someone have to plead or bargain for a school to accept their child?
I am all for rules, but I believe in authenticity.
I do not believe “dressing the part” is authentic for an interview.
We gave it our authentic selves, and to see us being rejected as well as dismissed is a horrible feeling.
People are afraid my kid will lose his Yiddishkeit, but I believe quite the opposite, as the foundation is in our home.
I do believe his sense of loss for his Jewish values is because of how he has been treated by other schools.
Will this system change?
Timing is everything, and I believe it is time to say goodbye to Lakewood.
I loved some of the people, but my kid’s happiness and values are a much bigger priority, and I do not think he will find them here.
I want my family to be loved and recognized for their true and authentic selves.
I write this to give a voice to the people who were also rejected or dismissed.
Thank you.
Name withheld upon request.
The Sanzer Einikel that Sued Her Parents in Secular Court to get a secular education
At the turn of the 20th century, just like today, the expectations for a young woman born into a Hasidic family were rigid: marry young, have many children, and take care of your home. Higher education was not on the table. But Anna Kluger refused to accept that destiny.
Born on June 24, 1890, in Podgórze, Anna (or Chaya, as her family called her) was the daughter of Wolf Kluger, a millionaire steam mill owner, and Simcha Halberstam, a direct descendant of the founder of the Sandz Hasidic dynasty. Despite her family's immense wealth and elite status, Anna was not interested in luxury, but instead had a fierce passion for learning. While Hasidic girls today attend religious schools like Beis Yaakov, those schools didn't exist then. Anna had a taste of secular knowledge at a non-Jewish primary school and didn't want to stop. Instead of getting married young, she desperately wanted to pass her matriculation exams and attend university.
To her family, this ambition was an existential threat. What followed was a harrowing campaign of domestic abuse. Her parents destroyed and burned her school books, physically punished her for reading, and even brought a lawyer to the Jagiellonian University library to demand the director ban her from borrowing books. When this all failed, they tried marriage. They betrothed her at fifteen to a teenage Hassid named Zacharias Arak.
In August 1909, Anna and her younger sister Leonore escaped from their family home, carrying valuables worth 20,000 crowns to fund their survival. They hid in a convent abroad to evade their family's search parties.
Instead of converting to Catholicism to sever ties, the sisters doubled down on their civil rights. They hired Dr. Siegmund Marek, a prominent Social Democrat lawyer, and sued their father in civil court. They petitioned to be released from their father's legal custody, demanding the right to study, the permission to live independently, and a legal mandate forcing their millionaire father to pay for their living expenses.
When a local Kraków court initially ruled against them, the sisters appealed to the Viennese Supreme Court in a highly publicized, dramatic legal battle. What follows is Anna’s own voice. Written in June 1910 as a personal statement for the Supreme Court, this document lays bare her fight for intellectual autonomy amidst abuse and resistance from her family.
Anna Kluger's Personal Statement in Her Supreme Court Appeal
Wednesday, July 1, 2026
Satmar Bochur in Manhattan Has no idea what Oct 7 is,,,and says that even when Moshiach comes they won't go back to Israel
You guys may think that this guy is an anomaly, but unfortunately he is not, this is one of the core beliefs of Satmar that they will not go to Eretz Yisrael should Moshiach comes, unless Moshiach comes "with God"
I don't know what that means. But God is already in Israel and doesn't need "to come with him" so they are going to wait in KY Uganda even after the 3rd Bais Hamikdash is built!
Kabbalist murdered in Netanya in his Bais Medrish by a follower! Breaking: Murderer Arrested
HaRav Amos Guetta ZT”L, a well-known mekubal, was R”L stabbed to death in Netanya today (Wednesday) by a talmid inside the beis medrash where he taught on Rechov Shimon Bar Yochai. HaRav Guetta HY”D was 75 years old.
WATCH: Israelis turn quiet wedding proposal by Latinos into raucous celebration
Israeli tourists in New York City spotted a man proposing to his partner and burst into song and dance, with even the groom-to-be joining in the unplanned festivities.
🇮🇱 THE REAL ISRAELIS — NOT THE EVIL CARICATURES
— 🔯 Monotheistic Zionist 🔯 (@Zionist_faithfu) June 30, 2026
A Mexican couple visited New York City for what they thought would be a private rooftop proposal.
But the groom-to-be had no idea what was waiting for him. As he got down on one knee, a huge group of Israelis suddenly witnessed the… pic.twitter.com/ZcCRR0aKdT
Itche Meir Brim just appointed Deputy Mayor of Yerushalyim is the leader and organizer of all Chardeie Protests that paralized the country!
Laura Wharton לורה ורטון
I am ashamed!
As a veteran member of the city council, I know that sometimes compromises must be made—especially in a mixed and complex city like Jerusalem. This is how I managed to achieve many of my accomplishments over the years, across a wide range of issues. In politics, it is rare to get 100% of what you want.
But sometimes your stomach turns at what is happening. Yitzhak Meir Brim was appointed Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem—one day after the large chaeredi public protest that blocked roads across the country in support of draft evasion.
What is Brim’s connection to the protest?
Brim is one of the leaders and organizers of the demonstrations nationwide, and particularly in Jerusalem. He personally led the convoys from the city to Prison 10. During the protest, Brim gave interviews expressing his support for the deserters who were arrested and for maintaining a situation in which an entire sector ignores the burden placed on others.
There is a thin line between political compromise and moral collapse. With this appointment, the most extreme voices were rewarded. Representatives who call to break the law (while avoiding punishment), evade service, and still expect privileges—while others are required to sacrifice everything for the defense of the state—are infuriating and immoral. Jerusalem deserves leadership that respects those who uphold it, not those who weaken it.

