Friday, March 27, 2026

Charedie Causes Chillul Hashem by putting on his Talis and Tefillin

What???? How could one cause a Chillul Hashem by putting on Talis and Tefillin? 

When you do it in public in Egypt!!

The Chardeie culture is a culture of "recklessness" they have no problems climbing up on crains 30 stories high! They have no issues with cramming in 25,000 people in a stadium in Meron designed for 5,000 and then blaming  the disaster on Zionists who had warned them that this was a disaster waiting to happen. They have no issues bringing their babies in strollers to their violent protests then blaming the Mishtara for turning over the carriage! They are playing the "victim" game but no one is buying this anymore! 

Here is a guy who is leaving Israel via Egypt a hostile country, and he has no qualms of displaying his Talit and Tefillin to a bunch of Jew-Hating Muslims. He was detained by the Egyptians, and who got him out of this self-inflicted quagmire?? Satmar ass'kanim? Rav Landau????

The Zionists!!!! That's who!! if it wasn't for the Zionists that he hates he would have been in Egypt during Pesach screaming ..... לשנה הבאה בירושלים!

A young Israeli man was detained at the Taba airport in Egypt on Sunday after praying with a tallit and was not allowed to board his flight. He was released and permitted to fly only after intervention by Israeli officials, according to a Ynet report.

Due to restrictions at Ben Gurion Airport, many Israelis have been using the small international airport in Taba — located about a 40-minute drive from Egypt’s Taba border crossing — to leave or enter Israel.

Aviel, an Israeli passenger on the flight, witnessed how some of his fellow Jewish passengers were treated by Egyptian security officers.

“I arrived at the airport early. It’s a very small terminal with no internet and almost nothing there. We were flying to Athens on a plane carrying 180 Israelis. Sitting next to me in the terminal was a Haredi man reading a Gemara and moving his head. Suddenly, an Egyptian security officer pounced on him and said: ‘It is forbidden to pray in this terminal. Give me your passport immediately.’”

Aviel said he stepped in and told the officer the man was not praying but reading, and the Egyptian security officer was convinced and left him alone. However, later, as passengers waited to board, another young Israeli took out a tallit and tefillin. A military officer approached him, said prayer was not allowed and demanded his passport. The young man was detained, taken away and did not board the flight.
Following intervention by Israeli officials, the young man was eventually released and allowed to board a later flight.

“In Egypt you have to be careful,” Aviel said. “It was really frightening. They don’t allow anyone to pray there. People were afraid to speak up or get involved.”

No comments:

Post a Comment