“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 3, 2025

Petira Of World Famous Chazan R’ Bentzion Miller Z”L


DIN regrets to inform you of the Petira of Chazzan Bentzion Miller Z”L, one of the greatest and most prestigious Chazzanim in the world in the past 45 years. He was 77.

On a personal note, this is a very sad day for my family as we grew up together and our families were very close! My mother a"h was R' Ben-Zion mother's best friend! 

Reb Bentzion, a longtime resident of Boro Park, was born in a displaced persons (DP) camp in Ferenwald, Germany. Like his father Reb Aharon Daniel Z”L, he eventually became a Shochet, Mohel and a Chazzan, and was from a family of Bobover Chassidim.

He held held positions in Montreal at Sheves Achim Synagogue on Côte-des-Neiges, then in Toronto at Shaarei Tefillah Synagogue on Bathurst Street, in Canada. In 1981 he became Chazan of Temple Beth El of Boro Park in Brooklyn, a pulpit served by Mordechai Hershman, Berele Chagy, Moshe Koussevitzky, and Moshe Sterm, and continued as Chazan of the Shul, now Congregation Young Israel Beth El, after its merger with Young Israel of Boro Park.

His beautiful, well-trained voice, uplifted the souls of hundreds of thousands of Yidden around the globe over his career spanning many decades, as he preformed around the globe, and appeared on many recordings. He was very instrumental in strengthening the genre of Chazzanus over the past 25 years, to which there is now a very large audience.

A few months ago, he suddenly took ill overseas. He was eventually flown back to New York, where he was Niftar on Monday morning.

The Levaya will be held at Shomrei Hadas Chapels at 12:30PM.

Boruch Dayan HaEmmes…

Watch Video of Funeral 

https://webcast.funeralvue.com/events/viewer/109293/hash:D7E09E7B25CFA333
 

Democrats waging ‘holy war’ as Trump ends 50 years of affirmative-action tyranny

 


When President Donald Trump last week fired two Democratic commissioners of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, Charlotte A. Burrows and Jocelyn Samuels, along with EEOC General Counsel Karla Gilbride, The New York Times predictably howled it was a “late night purge.”

Democrats will likely launch a legal holy war to overturn Trump’s action — because it was a dagger strike at his effort to once and for all end affirmative action.  

The EEOC firings followed Trump’s executive orders canceling federal diversity, equity and inclusion mandates and prohibiting federal agencies from imposing racial, ethnic or gender quotas.

For more than half a century, the EEOC has been dishonestly dictating quotas to American businesses, schools and other institutions.  

Trump would send Gaza’s people to Egypt, Jordan — and that makes perfect sense

 

President Donald Trump recently floated a fantastic idea: Arab nations, he said, should accept large numbers of Gazans as refugees, a move that “could be temporary or long term.” 

The accommodation would allow Israel to eliminate the remnants of Hamas, which, in turn, would allow the international community to rebuild Gaza.

Not only would such a policy enhance the prospects of peace, but it’s also humane. 

While Gazans shouldn’t be compelled to move from their homes, they should be allowed to escape the generational tragedy foisted on them by the Arab world and their nihilistic leaders. And Israelis should monetarily incentivize them to move to safer environs.

Because one of the prevailing myths of the Israel-Arab conflict is that Palestinians have a deep historic connection to the land that goes back centuries. 

It’s debatable, considering evidence shows that most Arabs immigrated to British Palestine from Egypt, Syria, Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the late 19th and early 20th century, lured by the prosperity created by returning Jews.

But Gaza? There are over 2 million people in Gaza. There were perhaps 50,000 people there when Arab nations rejected the partition plan in 1947. 

For years after that, the Arabs of Gaza lived under Egypt, which used it as a launching site for Fedayeen terrorists into Israel. (Oct. 7 was the culmination of a long tradition.)

Even today, you can hear Gazans talking about how they merely bide their time to return to their homes in Jaffa or elsewhere within Israel proper. The United Nations runs an entire organization devoted wholly to the “Palestine Refugees in the Near East,” even though no such country has ever existed.

How long is a Palestinian considered a refugee in Gaza by the UN? As long as possible. 

The UN creates permanent “camps” — in reality, bustling cities — for the descendants of people dislocated by wars that Arabs started over 70 years ago. By contrast, there are over 2 million ethnic Arabs living as citizens in the Jewish state. 

OK, then. If Gazans are just refugees, why can’t they move to other Arab nations? 

Because they are never going to be able to return to Israel. Convincing them otherwise, as the Western left and others do, only creates a perpetual state of angst and war.

“Our rejection of the displacement of Palestinians is firm and will not change. Jordan is for Jordanians, and Palestine is for Palestinians,” the nation’s foreign minister said after Trump’s comments.

Well, the biggest problem with the statement is that it reminds us that Jordan is “Palestine.”

Jordan, with a population of over 70% Palestinians, sits principally on land set aside during the British Palestine Mandate to create a new Arab state that was to sit next to the Jewish one. 

We already have a two-state solution. We just choose to ignore it.

But why should Western nations be the only ones compelled to absorb people fleeing Middle East wars? 

When Muslims stream into Europe or the United States, it is celebrated as a great moral imperative. Israel is home to Jewish refugees from Asia and Africa and Europe. 

Arab nations should partake in this great cause by welcoming back their own people. And Western powers should pressure them into doing the right thing.

Henry Kissinger once noted that Donald Trump, though he may not do it knowingly, was “one of those figures in history who appears from time to time to mark the end of an era and to force it to give up its old pretenses.”

And it is undeniable that many of Trump’s declarations, perhaps because they are unfettered by the norms of policy debate, end up changing the dynamics of policy.

Over the years, through revisionist histories and DC “expertise,” we have been programmed to accept the notion that a Palestinian state is inevitable. It’s not. 

There are hundreds of stateless minorities in the world. Most of them have far stronger claims to nationhood. 

So proposing that Gazans would be better off in their historic homelands makes perfect sense.

David Harsanyi is a senior writer at the Washington Examiner. Twitter @davidharsanyi

Trump is sending the Deep State to the outhouse as he cleans house at the FBI and DOJ

 

It’s galling to hear sleazy Democrats like Rep. Jamie Raskin and self-serving government bureaucrats whine about “due process” as Donald Trump sets about cleaning house in the out-of-control administrative state.

Last time Trump was president, he and his appointees were sabotaged and obstructed by Machiavellian Deep-Staters who perverted concepts such as “due process” into protective shields around wrongdoers and turned them into weapons against their adversaries — that is, anyone trying to carry out the wishes of the democratically elected president.

That won’t be happening again. It’s called democracy.

The FBI raided Trump’s home and rummaged through his wife’s underwear drawer. They tried to lock him up and bankrupt him. They rounded up his supporters and advisers and threw them in jail.

He was forced to spend 60% of his time and tens of millions of dollars fighting the lawfare waged against him.

Heads are spinning in Washington at the shock and awe tactics of Trump 2.0. You can hear the panic in the high pitch of Deep State voices as they run squealing to CNN and MSNBC.

Search for missing man in Jerusalem region

 

An extensive search is underway in the Jerusalem region for Avishai Teitelbaum, aged 24, last seen on 29.01.2025.

The search is centered on prominent religious locations such as synagogues, yeshivot, and the graves of prominent sages.

The Israel Dog Unit, a nonprofit specializing in working dogs that is assisting in the search, has asked the public's help in locating Avishai. He has been missing for several days an is considered in danger.

Any person having any information regarding his whereabouts, or any detail that may assist in locating him, is requested to contact the search hotline at 0544876709.

Thousands Stream To Tziyon Of The Baba Sali On His Yom Hilula


 Thousands of people from across Israel and beyond streamed to daven at the tziyon of the famed Baba Sali on his Yom Hilula on Sunday, 4 Shevat.


Arab Countries Reject Trump’s Gaza Relocation Plan..Seems Like all know that Gazans are Terrorists!

 

 Arab countries and the Palestinian Authority published a joint statement on Saturday rejecting U.S. President Donald Trump’s proposal to relocate Gazans to Egypt and Jordan.

The foreign ministers of those countries and of Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates published the statement following a summit meeting in Cairo, according to the Associated Press. The statement also represents the official position of the Arab League, a regional organization with 22 member states, the document said.

“We affirm our rejection of [any attempts] to compromise Palestinians’ unalienable rights, whether through settlement activities, or evictions or [annexations] of land or through vacating the land from its owners … in any form or under any circumstances or justifications,” the statement read.

The move could “threaten the region’s stability, risk expanding the conflict, and undermine prospects for peace and coexistence among its peoples,” the text continued.

Last week, Trump said he had asked Jordan’s King Abdullah II to take in more Palestinians from Gaza, where entire neighborhoods have been destroyed during the 15 months of fighting between Hamas and Israel.

“I said to him that I’d love you to take on more, because I’m looking at the whole Gaza Strip right now and it’s a mess, it’s a real mess,” he told reporters aboard Air Force One.

“It’s literally a demolition site right now. Almost everything’s demolished, and people are dying there, so I’d rather get involved with some of the Arab nations and build housing in a different location where I think they could maybe live in peace for a change,” he continued.

He added that he had also asked Egypt to take in Gazans.

The proposal was immediately rejected by Egypt and Jordan, with Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi saying: “Our refusal of displacement is a steadfast position that will not change. Jordan is for Jordanians, and Palestine is for Palestinians.”

Palestinians currently account for more than 70% of the population of Jordan, which is ruled by the Hashemite royal house, whose origins are in the Arabian Peninsula.

Trump Halts all Aid to South Africa ""one of the most hostile countries to Israel."

 


Trump calls out  South Africa, calling it "one of the most hostile countries to Israel."
 He accuses the country of land seizures, human rights violations, and other serious actions.

 "We will halt all aid to them until we fully understand what is happening there."

US Attorney Ed Martin has sent a letter to Chuck Schumer Asking him to Clarify his threatening statements towards Supreme Court Justices.

 




Egypt’s Increasing Military Poses Direct Threat to Israel

 

Recent developments have heightened tensions between Israel and Egypt, as Israel has formally requested explanations from Egypt regarding a substantial increase in Egyptian military activity within the Sinai Peninsula. In early January of this year, All Israel News reported that according to Channel 14, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) have identified significant breaches of the 1979 peace treaty, including the construction of anti-tank barriers, extensive logistical preparations, and the deployment of entire armored divisions in central Sinai.

The 1979 peace agreement between Israel and Egypt mandated the demilitarization of the Sinai Peninsula, a region that Israel returned to Egypt as part of the treaty’s terms. However, the emergence of ISIS as a significant threat in the area led Israel to permit Egypt to amass considerable military forces near their shared border to combat the jihadist insurgency, as was reported by AllIsrael.com in early January. This cooperation was intended to address mutual security concerns without undermining the foundational principles of their peace accord.