“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

Sunday, August 24, 2025

Ben-Gvir: 'Benny Gantz can not join the government'

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir published a video statement on Sunday, calling on the leaders of the coalition factions to clarify that MK Benny Gantz and his Blue and White party will not join the government.

"We made great achievements without Gantz against Iran, we made great achievements without Gantz with Hezbollah, we made achievements on several fronts. And if we want to make achievements in Gaza, Benny Gantz can not join the government."

On Saturday night, Blue and White chairman MK Benny Gantz called for the formation of a temporary emergency government focused on returning the hostages and drafting a fair national service plan, including for the haredim.

Gantz proposed that the emergency government - dubbed the “Hostage Recovery Government” - would serve for six months, culminating in general elections

 

The Faces Behind Skver Terrorism Exposed

 


New Square askanim sat down with R’ Shabbos and promised a resolution within two weeks. That deadline came and went, not once, but several times, with nothing. In the meantime, more homes were quietly purchased and converted into SROs. It’s the same stall tactic they’ve played before, and this time the community refused to sit back.

Complaints were escalated, patrols increased, and when agencies began digging into the addresses we flagged, the truth became impossible to ignore: the ownership trail all led back to New Square. Under pressure, officials reached out to New Square leadership. And that’s when the mask slipped.

Mendel Berger, widely seen as the enforcer of the “air-mile exclusion zone,” called R’ Schabes in a fury, screaming “Mesirah.” Soon after, a 6½-minute Yiddish recording surfaced (not from Mendel), dripping with curses and vulgarity directed at anyone daring to speak out.

The only response we got so far. Listen at your own risk.

Then came the latest move: a letter being spread by Avrohom Hersh Eisenberger (son of the Skver Dayan) with the names of three Rabbanim, declaring that the issue belongs in Beis Din. It was quickly exposed. Both Community Connections Magazine and The Monsey View checked with Ichud Kehillos Rockland, and confirmed that the letter was not approved. The publishing houses refused to print it, further exposing the tactics at play. We thank these publications for verifying the letters in the name of our Rabbanim before publication.

Skver askanim plead, stop the lashon hara. But conveniently ignore and forgot that hurting Yiddishe families in many ways including deliberately planting pritzus in our streets, bringing crime into once safe neighborhoods is not ok and it is asur!

On September 15th, the Town of Ramapo will hold a public hearing on whether to hand over more properties to New Square. With every expansion comes the creeping spread of the “air mile policy”, a deliberate effort to push out Yidden and make entire neighborhoods Yidden free.

As long as the exclusion zone exists and is enforced, we cannot allow the Village of New Skver to expand.

The stall game is ending. And our escalation is only just beginning!!!


U.S. Prepares for Possible Middle East Strike


 American sources confirm advanced THAAD air-defense systems are being transferred from U.S. bases in the region to Israel amid growing signs of a potential military strike.

Iran Issues Direct Warning
Tehran has threatened that any country aiding or supporting Israel in an attack on Iran “will face severe punishment.”

Analysts:
 A Potential Decisive Blow
Regional assessments suggest that if the strike takes place, it could be unprecedented in scale — described by some as a possible “final and decisive blow.”

Saturday, August 23, 2025

Bnei-Brak Chareide to IDF Soldier "I hope you Die While Serving"

 

Israel used money 1,500 years before coins were invented, study reveals

A study released by the University of Haifa showed that silver functioned as money in the Land of Israel as early as 3,600 years ago, roughly 1,500 years before the first coins.

Published in Journal of World Prehistory, the research drew on a systematic analysis of Bronze- and Iron-Age silver hoards and indicated that a market economy flourished in the region earlier than previously believed.

The team led by Dr. Tzilla Eshkol of the university’s School of Archaeology and Maritime Cultures reviewed dozens of hoards dated from the 20th to the 6th centuries BCE. Although the area lacked natural silver deposits, the study documented numerous hoards that pointed to a sustained silver economy.

The study implies that silver played an economic role for about 1,500 years. By the 17th century BCE, weighed pieces already served as systematic currency in Israel, earlier than comparable evidence from Egypt or Greece.

Researchers assessed each hoard by burial date, architectural context, socioeconomic setting, and contents. Items ranged from standardized ingots to broken jewelry and cut pieces clearly meant to be weighed in trade. The frequency of broken or clipped items showed that the metal was valued for its weight rather than adornment.

Roughly 230 objects from 19 hoards underwent chemical testing to trace changes in purity. Early samples were largely pure, but from the 12th to the 10th centuries BCE alloys containing copper and arsenic appeared - possible attempts to reduce value or mask declining purity.

“Although there were no coins, silver was in regular use as a means of payment that people saved for future transactions,” said Eshkol. “The first coins were invented only in the 7th century BCE, but principles of a monetary system operated here hundreds of years earlier - with standards of uniformity, control of value, and even phenomena of counterfeiting.”

The investigation challenged earlier views that Near-Eastern silver hoards were jeweler surplus or foundation offerings; instead they functioned as active payment. Trade-oriented hoards from Shiloh and Gezer confirmed early use of weighed silver. A brief shift to gold occurred in the Late Bronze Age, but silver again dominated from the 13th century BCE onward.

Storage patterns also evolved: hoards were first hidden in public buildings and later in private homes during the Iron Age, showing silver’s penetration into daily life. From the 12th century BCE, the number of hoards, their geographic spread, and total metal weight all rose, signaling the expansion of a market economy.

“The continuous use of silver indicates an economy that developed gradually from within the society itself,” emphasized Eshkol. By tracing purity shifts and occasional counterfeiting across fifteen centuries, the Haifa team provided evidence that monetary principles were firmly established in the Land of Israel long before coins appeared.

The preparation of this article relied on a news-analysis system.

 

Leviah Ehrlich a Jewish Long Island nurse disciplined for posting, ‘You either stand with Israel or you stand with terrorism

 

A Jewish nurse from Long Island claims bosses at NYU Langone Hospital in Mineola reprimanded her and cut her pay after she voiced support for Israel, according to a lawsuit.

Staff nurse Leviah Ehrlich posted on her private Instagram after Hamas terrorists killed 1,200 people in their surprise Oct. 7, 2023 attack on Israel.

“You either stand with Israel or you stand with terrorism,” Ehrlich, 27, wrote in a message that included two symbols: the Star of David and the emblem of terror group Hamas 

A second post the same day included a photo of an Israeli soldier kidnapped by Hamas — who happened to be her former high school classmate, she said in court papers.

About a month later, the hospital’s human resources reps hauled her in and claimed someone complained about Ehrlich’s post for being “wrought with bias and hatred,” she said in the Brooklyn Federal Court filing.

In December, they summoned her again and gave a written warning — and forced her to make an apology post using their “prescribed language” — which included phrases like “innocent people from both Israel and Palestine,” she said in legal papers.

Adding the ultimate insult, NYU Langone bosses waited until January to tell Ehrlich that her post would cost her a $6,000 raise she’d been given a month before the Hamas attack — and that she would have “to repay the compensation previously awarded.”

Ehlrich, who was asked to give back more than $11,000 to her employer, “did not engage in hateful or biased behavior, but was in fact, the subject of discriminatory treatment and animus based on her religion,” according to the lawsuit.

She’s seeking unspecified damages.

NYU Langone declined comment on the lawsuit.

Here’s why FBI raided John Bolton’s home and office: ‘Nothing to do with the book’

 

John Bolton’s wife Gretchen Smith Bolton outside of their Bethesda, Md. home on Aug. 22

FBI agents raided the Maryland home and Washington, DC office of President Trump’s former national security adviser John Bolton Friday morning in a high-profile probe of allegations that he sent “highly sensitive” classified documents to his family from a private email server while working in the White House.

Federal investigators went to Bolton’s house in Bethesda, Md., at 7 a.m. in an investigation ordered by FBI Director Kash Patel, a Trump administration official told The Post. Agents later went to Bolton’s office in downtown DC, but did not enter until a judge signed a warrant for that location late Friday morning.

“NO ONE is above the law… @FBI agents on mission,” Patel said in a cryptic post to X shortly after the raid began.

Bolton has not been arrested and is not currently charged with any crimes, the administration official added.

“He’s not a smart guy, but he could be a very unpatriotic guy,” President Trump told reporters of Bolton Friday morning. “We’re going to find out.” 

Investigators reopened a dormant probe into Bolton’s alleged use of a private email to send classified national security documents to his wife and daughter from his work desk before his dismissal by Trump in September 2019, according to a senior US official.

“While Bolton was a national security adviser, he was literally stealing classified information, utilizing his family as a cutout,” this person charged.

Friday, August 22, 2025

Zera Shimshon Parshat Re´e

 


Hundreds of Chareidim in Beit Shemesh at a Kumzitz to Support the Religious Battalion in the IDF!

 

צפו ▪︎ מאות משתתפים כעת בקומזיץ 'ליל שישי' הגדול ברמה ד' יחד עם חיילי חטיבת חשמונאים החרדית
Hundreds of Chareidim in Beit Shemesh at a Kumzitz to Support the Religious Battalion in the IDF!


A Different Haredi Voice:
 Beit Shemesh rally backs IDF’s Hashmonaim Brigade 

Communities in Beit Shemesh announced an evening support event for soldiers of the Hashmonaim Brigade—with prayers, letters, and care-package prep—presented as “a different voice” inside the Haredi public.

The Hashmonaim Brigade is the IDF’s first all-Haredi combat formation, launched this year with strict kashrut, fixed Torah-study times, and rabbinic coordination. 

The brigade’s first beret march concluded near the Western Wall earlier this month.

While extremists block highways and rail against enlistment, Beit Shemesh residents are choosing to show up for Haredi soldiers who are already serving.

Israel and Syria to sign security agreement on September 25

The Saudi-owned newspaper Independent Arabia reported early Friday morning, citing "senior Syrian sources," that Israel and Syria are expected to sign a security agreement on September 25 under American auspices. The agreement is slated to be signed a day after Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa delivers his first speech at the United Nations General Assembly.

According to the sources, the agreement will be a security arrangement aimed at reducing tensions between Jerusalem and Damascus. However, a comprehensive peace deal between the two countries is not expected "in the near future."

Furthermore, Sky News Arabia reported, citing its sources, that the US is working to facilitate a meeting next month between President al-Sharaa and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, with US President Donald Trump expected to participate. The report noted that the recent appointment of a new Syrian representative to the UN, with negotiation authority, was made "in this context."

Sky News Arabia also reported progress in talks held this week in Paris between Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer and Syrian Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shibani. However, the main point of contention remains Israel’s desire to maintain an IDF presence at several strategic sites in Syria, including the radar station on the Syrian Hermon and Tel al-Hara in the Quneitra province.

The reports have not yet been officially confirmed by either Israel or Syria.

Syria’s official news agency reported late Tuesday night that al-Shaibani held a meeting in Paris with an Israeli delegation, though it did not mention that Dermer headed the Israeli delegation.

According to the report, the talks were mediated by the United States and centered on measures to strengthen stability in southern Syria and the wider region.

The discussions reportedly addressed several key issues: de-escalation along the border, adherence to the principle of non-interference in Syria’s internal affairs, regional stability, monitoring the ceasefire in the Druze Mountain area, and the renewal of the 1974 disengagement agreement.

The Syrian report emphasized that these contacts form part of a wider international diplomatic initiative aimed at safeguarding Syria’s security and territorial integrity.

The report was highly unusual, marking the first time in more than 25 years that an official Syrian media outlet has acknowledged direct contact between the Syrian government and Israel.