“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, December 15, 2025

Jewish Lady "Whose family was murdered in the Holocaust" disrupts Bondi Beach terror attack vigil with bizarre Palestine comments

 

Police have removed a woman from a memorial vigil for the Bondi Beach terror attack after she launched into a pro-Palestine protest and made anti-Israel comments

As officers escorted her away, she shouted accusations that others were politicizing the tragedy and demanded Israeli flags be taken down. 

The protester, who was wearing a Palestinian keffiyeh scarf, was heckled by hundreds in the crowd, with chants of 'get her out.'

She later told the media that she was Jewish and believed she had a right to protest at the vigil. 

'I came here today because I'm a Jewish person. My family was murdered in the Holocaust... This community has politicized this tragedy,' she said.

Governor-General Sam Mostyn called the woman's intervention 'incredibly disrespectful'. 

'It was a disgrace and I know the community here reacted how they should.'

One mourner told Daily Mail: 'This was meant to be a quiet moment of reflection, people were grieving, and suddenly it just descended into chaos.’ 

The vigil drew many from the Jewish community following a deadly attack where two gunmen killed 16 people at a Hanukkah event being held at the beach.

Two heavily armed men, allegedly Naveed Akram, 24, and his 50-year-old father Sajid Akram stood on a pedestrian footbridge and opened fire with military-grade weapons into the crowds of locals, holidaymakers and families. 

So far 16 people have died, including alleged gunman Sajid Akram, while a further 42 people, including four children, were taken to hospital. 

Police confirmed 14 people had died at the scene, while two others died overnight in hospital, with the victims ranging in age between 10 and 87 years old. 

As of Monday, there were five people in critical condition, including two police officers - a constable and a probationary constable who was repeatedly shot in the face. 

Naveed Akram is in hospital under police guard after being shot by police. 

Netanyahu to Supreme Court: Don't interfere in ministerial appointments

 

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday evening submitted his response to petitions filed with the Supreme Court against the continued tenure of National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir.

“The petitions must be dismissed outright, or alternatively, rejected on their merits. This is primarily due to the complete absence of any legal grounds for such an extraordinary and extreme intervention in the foremost constitutional act - the formation of the elected government, as determined by law through the Knesset, the government, and its leader. Such intervention would carry anti-democratic implications, undermining the separation of powers, principles of proper governance, the law, and judicial precedent,” the response stated.

It further noted, “The Honorable Court must not accede to petitions that seek to establish a precedent of judicial interference in the appointment of government ministers based on ideological opposition to the policies advanced by the minister.”

“The petitions before us are nothing more than an unconstitutional attempt to remove a government minister and must be dismissed outright,” the response submitted to the Supreme Court declared.

Rare 1,300-year-old lead pendant decorated with a menorah uncovered on Temple Mount

 

A rare, 1,300-year-old lead pendant decorated with a menorah symbol was uncovered during an archaeological excavation beneath the southwestern corner of the Temple Mount, north of the City of David


The excavation has been conducted in recent years by the Israel Antiquities Authority in cooperation with the City of David Foundation and the Company for the Restoration and Development of the Jewish Quarter. The find was discovered in the Davidson Archaeological Park of Jerusalem.
Only one other ancient lead pendant bearing the Menorah symbol is known in the world.

How did an ancient pendant made of cast lead, decorated on both sides with a seven-branched menorah, come to Jerusalem at a time when Jewish presence in the city was restricted?

A very rare personal necklace pendant from the 6th - early 7th centuries CE (Late Byzantine period) was recently discovered in a large-scale archaeological excavation in the Davidson Archaeological Park of Jerusalem, conducted by the Israel Antiquities Authority in cooperation with the City of David Foundation and the Company for the Reconstruction and Development of the Jewish Quarter. The rare find is decorated on both sides with an identical image of a seven-branched menorah and was apparently worn by a Jew who arrived in Jerusalem during the Byzantine period, when Jews were prohibited from entering the city.

“One day while I was digging inside an ancient structure, I suddenly saw something different, gray, among the stones”, says Ayayu Belete, a City of David worker. “I picked up the object out and saw that it was a pendant with a menorah on it. I immediately showed the find to Esther Rakow-Mellet, the area director, and she said it was an especially rare find. I was deeply moved and excited!”

Chilling Testimonies From Sydney: “4 Police Officers Fled, Didn’t Return Fire”


 Harrowing testimonies from the massacre at a Chabad Chanukah event in Sydney, Australia, on Sunday revealed the extent of the police failure, with one witness saying, “Even the police started running away—they just didn’t understand what was happening.”

Roni Asaraf, who escaped with his children from the inferno at Bondi Beach, recounted the moments of terror under fire in an interview with Channel 14.

Asaraf said that the fact that his family arrived at the event about half an hour late probably saved his life and the lives of his six children.

“We arrived at 6:30 p.m. instead of 5 p.m.,” he said. “The moment we entered, the chaos started. Even the police started running away—they didn’t understand what was happening.”

“We heard gunshots and started running like crazy with the children away from the beach. We are experienced, and we quickly understood that this was not fireworks but a terror attack. We managed to escape while helping other families with children.”

“We were extremely close to the terrorists. They came to shoot us even along our escape route out of the party, on the bridge.”

Asaraf said that his children were traumatized. “We’re shaken. There is hatred here, but we never imagined it would reach this level.”

Shmulik, another survivor, provided a particularly chilling description. “There were two terrorists—one on the bridge and one below it. They just shot non-stop for about 20 minutes. They shot, changed magazines, and continued shooting. There were four policemen there—no one returned fire. Nothing. They just froze.”

According to him, one of the terrorists slowly approached the crowd and opened fire. “I was watching him the entire time. I was with two babies—I was lying on top of them. I saw how he aimed, took his time, and opened fire. It was an attempt to hurt all Jews—men, women, children and the elderly.”

Another survivor, Ronen Toina, described the overwhelming sense of helplessness: “They surprised us and started shooting like madmen—this was a very severe terror incident. I feel like some kind of ‘Yehudon’ in the Golah here, without security and helpless. I send my daughter to a Jewish school, and I don’t know what will happen tomorrow.”

Pro-Israel Candidate José Antonio Kast, the Son of a Nazi Official, Wins Presidency in Chile

 

José Antonio Kast, a far-right firebrand and vocal supporter of Israel, has secured the Chilean presidency after winning Sunday’s runoff election with 60% of the vote, marking a dramatic rightward turn for one of Latin America’s most politically polarized nations.

Kast, the son of a former Nazi officer, will succeed President Gabriel Boric, a progressive who made headlines for severing diplomatic ties with Israel in the wake of the October 7 Hamas attacks. The president-elect has long criticized Boric’s foreign policy as ideologically driven and “irresponsible,” vowing throughout his campaign to restore ties with Jerusalem and recalibrate Chile’s global posture.

“Chile’s foreign relations are too relevant to prioritize the whims of a president over the interests of the Nation,” Kast posted on X earlier this year, referencing Boric’s exclusion of Israel from a major air show.

Kast’s victory comes despite his uncompromising stance on Israel in a country with the largest Palestinian diaspora outside the Middle East. His rhetoric on the Hamas attack, Iran’s aggression, and Chile’s national security struck a chord with voters anxious about global instability and domestic unrest.

Rob Reiner & His Wife Found Murdered in Los Angeles Home

 

Acclaimed actor and director Rob Reiner and his wife, Michele Singer Reiner, were found dead Sunday in their Brentwood home, according to law enforcement sources cited by TMZ.

The Los Angeles Fire Department responded to a medical aid call at the residence around 3:30 p.m. and discovered the bodies of a man, approximately 78, and a woman, approximately 68 — ages matching those of Reiner and his wife.

Sources told TMZ the couple suffered multiple knife wounds. The Los Angeles Police Department’s Robbery-Homicide Division is investigating the deaths as a homicide.

Authorities have not officially confirmed the identities of the deceased or released details on the cause of death.

Reiner, 78, gained fame as Michael “Meathead” Stivic on the groundbreaking 1970s sitcom “All in the Family,” earning two Emmy Awards. He later directed classic films including “This Is Spinal Tap,” “The Princess Bride,” “Stand by Me,” “When Harry Met Sally…” “Misery” and “A Few Good Men.” He also appeared in Martin Scorsese’s “The Wolf of Wall Street” as the father of Leonardo DiCaprio’s character.

Reiner was born Jewish and has spoken in past interviews about maintaining a cultural connection to Judaism, observing some Jewish holidays, though he described himself as not religious.

He met Singer, a photographer, while directing When Harry Met Sally…. The couple married in 1989 and had three children: Jake, Nick and Romy.

The investigation remains ongoing.

The Priest That Was "Marbitz" Torah

 


A Phone Charger, a Bus Ride, and a Love Story That Began in Jerusalem

 

Love at First Charge



Moshe was riding Jerusalem’s Bus 67 when he asked Miriam if he could use her phone charger.

One conversation turned into something more — and the rest is history.

They got married 💍

When the bus company heard their story, they sent Bus 67 to the wedding so the newlyweds could ride it home together.

Only in Israel! 

Names Released of Victims Murdered in Sydney Terror Attack


 
So  far, the names of five of the 16 people murdered in the brutal terror attack in Sydney have been released: 


Rabbi Eli Schlanger 
Alex Kleitman 
Dan Elkayam 
Rabbi Yaakov Halevi Levitin 
Reuven Morrison 

May their memory be a blessing.

When the "Impossible" become possible!