|                               |                                           |   Live In The Present      For many people, sadness and suffering is not a result of present  experiences. Rather it is pain caused by regretting and resenting the  past, or worrying about the future.  Living in the present saves you from needless emotional pain.  Additionally, keeping one's mind on the present is necessary to  concentrate on the important tasks of the day. Be aware of your failure to keep your mind on the present. This will help increase your ability to do so. Love Yehuda Lave Below I have a story from a visiting American Rabbi and his experience on the Temple mount. This morning at 7:45 I plan to make my own ascent to the Temple mount. Report tomorrow. |  |                                |                                           |                                                                        What will Happen if You Drop Dry Ice in the Boiled Water?                                                                           https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdwygLeiF70 |  |                                |                                           |                                                                        100 Science Experiments You Can Do at Home Compilation                                                                           https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2n9ZZVHx_iI |  |                                |                                           | KAHANE ON THE PARSHA VAYAKHEL Rabbi Binyamin Kahane 
 THE PITFALLS OF POWER 
 Two years after the Jews left the suffering, slavery, and humiliations of Egypt, they began constructing the Tabernacle – the place where G-d's Presence was to rest in this world and the pipeline by which all the Jewish people's prayers would reach their Father in Heaven.  Considering the historic nature of this event, one would have expected the leaders of the Jewish people to set an example and play a key role in contributing toward the Tabernacle's construction. Instead, we find (Exodus 35:27) that the princes donated the onyx stones – which were the very last items needed in the Tabernacle.  Rashi writes, "Rabbi Nathan said: Why did the princes contribute at the beginning of the dedication of the altar but not at the beginning of the construction of the Tabernacle?  Because they said:  Let the community contribute what it will contribute, and we will complete whatever is lacking.  And since they were slothful at first, 'yud' is missing from their name {the world neis'm'}is spelled missing a 'yud'."   Rabbeinu Bechaya adds:  "For it is the way of princes to look down on the rest of the nation. . . These princes, who not long ago were lowly slaves, immediately started looking down on their brothers after receiving their high appointment.  About this the Talmud says, "Four people are intolerable . . .  {One is} the public appointee who looks down at the rest of the community for no reason' (Pesachim 113b)." The Torah's concern for someone's high position affecting his ego is clearly evident in its laws regarding kings.  The Torah state, "He shall not multiply horses for himself . . .  Neither shall he multiply for himself wives so that his heart turns away; nor shall he greatly increase silver and gold for himself. . .  And he shall write a copy of this Torah. . . . And it shall be with him, and he shall read therein all the days of his life that he may learn to fear the L-rd, his  G-d. . .that his heart not be lifted up above his brethren" (Deuteronomy 17:16-20).   And the Rambam in Hilchot Tefillah (5:10) adds:  "One must bow five times during every Shemoneh Esrei. . . .  But a king should remain prostrated from the very beginning of Shemoneh Esrei and not raise his head until the conclusion."  We see the arrogance, corruption, and egoism of Israeli politicians most overtly during election seasons.  Every party steps on the fresh blood of Jewish victims to further its political advantage, though none of them possesses an iota of a solution to the problem.  We have observed our "leaders" basking in the glory of Nobel Peace Prizes and the friendship of gentile leaders and Arab murderers, so engrossed with themselves, their declarations of peace, and their place in history that no amount of Jewish blood can budge them from their "vision."   May it be G-d's will that these politicians be replaced by leaders guided by the Torah, leaders who know that "it is not high appointment I give you, but rather servitude: (Hariyot 10a).  May we merit leaders who follow the path of Moses our Teacher, who not only was not concerned about his place in history, but even was willing to have his name stricken from the Torah("Erase me please from Your book" – Exodus 32:32) in order to save the Jewish people from annihilation.  We need leaders who possess self-sacrifice to serve the community – not exploit it. Darka she Torah 1994   |  |                                |                                           | Israeli Dog and Arab Dog The Israelis and Arabs realized that, if they continued fighting, theywould someday end up destroying the whole world. So they decided to settle
 their dispute with an ancient practice: a duel of two, like David and Goliath.
 This "duel" would be a dog fight.
 The negotiators agreed each side would take 5 years to develop the bestfighting dog they could. The dog that won the fight would earn its people the
 right to rule the disputed areas. The losing side would have to lay down
 its arms for good.
 The Arabs found the biggest, meanest Dobermans and Rottweilers in theworld. They bred them together and then crossed their offspring with the
 meanest Siberian wolves.
 They selected only the biggest, strongest puppy of each litter, fed it thebest food and killed all the other puppies. They used steroids and
 trainers in their quest for the perfect killing machine. After the 5 years were
 up, they had a dog that needed steel prison bars on its cage. Only expert
 trainers could handle this incredibly nasty and ferocious beast.
 When the day of the big dog-fight finally arrived, the Israelis showed upwith a very strange-looking animal, a Dachshund that was 10 feet long!
 Everyone at the dogfight arena felt sorry for the Israelis. No one thereseriously thought this weird, odd-looking animal stood any chance against
 the growling beast over in the Arab camp. All the bookies took one look and
 predicted that the Arab dog would win in less than a minute.
 As the cages were opened, the Dachshund slowly waddled toward the centerof the ring.
 The Arab dog leaped from its cage and charged the giant wiener-dog. As he got to within an inch of the Israeli dog, the Dachshund opened itsjaws and swallowed the Arab beast whole in one bite. There was nothing left
 but a small puff of fur from the Arab killer dog's tail floating to the
 ground.
 The stunned crowd of international observers, bookies and media personnellet out a collective gasp of disbelief and surprise.
 The Arabs approached the Israelis, muttering and shaking their heads indisbelief. "We do not understand," said their leader, "Our top scientists and
 breeders worked for 5 long years with the meanest, biggest Dobermans,
 Rottweilers and Siberian wolves, and they developed an incredible killing
 machine of a dog!"
 The Israelis replied. "Well, for 5 years, we have had a team of Jewishplastic surgeons from Boca Raton working to make an alligator look like a
 Dachshund.
 |  |                                |                                           | 	 	  	By:		Moshe Feiglin 		 	  		Published: March 3rd, 2016 				Latest update: March 2nd, 2016
 
  			  
  								MK Moshe Feiglin 		 "What is wrong with our country? We have an enemy and he has declared war against us. Every day he tries to kill us. We bury our dead, at least one funeral a week. But we simply refuse to fight back. Why? Why? Why? What is happening here? Have we been bewitched? The ministers eulogize, wail, participate in the sorrow of the families. And what about fighting back?? That's it? This is our fate? To be murdered by the blade, one after another, quietly and politely. Until we have no more strength and we will be booted out of this country?" (A reader's comment on the Ynet article on the funeral of Eliav Gelman, HY"D) I went to Ma'aleh Michmash yesterday. I wanted to pay a  condolence call to Yael, the young widow and mother of the baby of First  Sergeant Yanai Tuviah Weisman, who was murdered in the supermarket at  Sha'ar Binyamin. I don't manage to get to all the mourners' houses, but  the picture of Yael's beaming face next to her husband Tuviah's – didn't  give me rest. I felt compelled to visit. Tuviah's parents were sitting there, next to Yael, who was ensconced  within herself. The chief rabbi was there, attempting to comfort the  family with heartwarming words. When he left, everybody rose out of  respect for the Torah. The Chief of the Southern Command and senior  officers of the Nachal Brigade, where Tuviah served, remained. The effort and caring of the senior echelons of the IDF were very  impressive. The general said what he said. The officers, who knew Tuviah  personally, talked about the amazing person who was taken from us. I  said nothing. Orly, Tuviah's mother, nobly turned to the general. With great  empathy she asked him to take care of two problems that she witnesses  daily as she travels the road to Ma'aleh Michmash. One – the fact that  both male and female soldiers serve together on guard duty at the  intersection distracts them from their duties and reduces their combat  readiness. "I see it all the time," said Orly. "I have nothing against  women serving in the army, but not together with men at an intersection  where full combat preparedness is necessary. The second problem that  Orly mentioned was that the soldiers at the intersection are always busy  with their smartphones. Smartphones should not be allowed while the  soldiers are on duty. The truth is that Orly's points didn't really speak to me. What do I  care about women in the army or smartphones? What concerns me is how we  got to the point at which we have to have soldiers at the intersection  in the first place. But women are often more grounded in reality than  men. And it was very special that Orly preferred to speak with the  general about battle readiness and not ideology. "As to the telephones," the general answered, I accept your point and  we will take care of it. As to the joint service of men and women, I do  not agree. On the contrary, we will add more and more mixed-gender  units." In other words, the problem that the commander can take care of  without stepping out of the bounds of the thought paradigm expected of  him will be solved immediately. But as soon as the bereaved mother  (naively) prodded him to recognize the problem that the IDF's political  correctness had created, the general refused to relate. He did not  tackle the reality on the ground as Orly witnesses it daily. He did not  even attempt to argue with her or point out her error (as he perceived  it). He simply and abruptly ended the discussion and went on to a new  topic. And that leaves no one surprised. "What is happening here? Have we been bewitched?" asked the Ynet reader. In a way, we have… Armies of broadcasters, multitudes of journalists, authors, teachers,  lecturers, officers of glorious fame, enlightened rabbis, High Court  justices, research institutes, respected politicians and, of course,  Shimon Peres – all of the brave and beautiful and all those who dream to  be like them, all the flunkeys and yes-men – have bewitched us. And now, truth does not matter. All that matters is the truth that someone would like to see. What did you expect, dear bereaved mother? That the general would  say, "You know what, I never thought of that"? After all, it is clear  that any normal male soldier serving on combat duty with a female  soldier will be distracted. Did you expect that he would say, "Let's  check it out. For one month only male soldiers will be on combat duty at  the intersection"? Is that what you expected? On the very next morning,  Karen Neubach on the morning news would have crucified him. MKs Merav  Michaeli and Michal Rozin would have submitted an urgent query to the  Knesset. Count on all the news editors and commissars of public consciousness.  The issue would have been in the headlines for two weeks. The defense  minister would have courageously stood up for the buttered side of the  bread, the chief of staff would have hurriedly scolded the general and  amended his remarks – and the general's chances of inheriting the chief  of staff's job would have gone straight off the cliff. What were you thinking, dear bereaved mother? Yes, Ynet reader, we have been bewitched. You write that we are in a  war – but they cannot admit it. It's even worse than that. They also say  that we are in a war, but they act as if we are playing a game of  soccer against an uncultured team. It's a form of double-speak. They use  Zionist terminology from the past – "We are strong, we will triumph" –  but in practice they do just the opposite. They flee responsibility  instead of shouldering it. Like the general, the chief of staff, defense minister, and prime  minister will never dare think outside the borders that will endanger  their next step up the ladder. They will never say, "We made a  navigation error, let's make a U-turn, let us return to our lost sense  of justice. This is our land and whoever doesn't accept that and rises  to kill us will be killed first." Instead, they look at the attorney  general from the corners of their eyes – at the TV news and the  blacklists in London. What do they need it all for? Let's put another  million soldiers at the intersection. Is it any wonder that people are  killed by friendly fire? Yes, the ministers will eulogize the latest victim and continue to  recite the exact same empty clichés from the same bleeding peace  industry (of which the Right has become an integral part). In exchange,  the "industry" will continue to preserve their status and promote them. In your comment, dear Ynet reader, you asked how there can be such  quiet while people are being slaughtered. It is really very simple. The  Right won the elections. If the Right had lost, then for issues much  less serious than murder in supermarkets and bus stops, everyone would  already have been out in the streets. Bibi and Bennett and the Yesha  Council would all be leading stormy protests. But the Right won the victory of its life. So we can have no  expectations and we are all being slaughtered – "quietly and politely." Afterwards, we will all vote again for the same shrewd politicians –  as if it really matters how many goals the Right wins. And then we will  continue to be slaughtered and they will come to comfort the bereaved  family and wail and dish out the same, meaningless hash. I remained silent. What could I say? You sit in the mourners' home.  Everybody loves and respects the IDF. Such an amazing family, so  unifying. What could I have done? Start to argue with all the officers  in front of the bereaved family? I remained silent a bit longer and  left. Outside, they told me that the officer who had been wounded at the Gush Etzion junction had died of his wounds. About the Author: Moshe Feiglin is the former Deputy Speaker of the Knesset. He is the founder of Manhigut Yehudit and Zo Artzeinu and the author of two books: "Where There Are No Men" and "War of Dreams." Feiglin served in the IDF as an officer in Combat Engineering and is a  veteran of the Lebanon War. He lives in Ginot Shomron with his family. |  |                                |                                           | By:		JNi.Media 		 	  		Published: March 3rd, 2016 			 
  			  
  								3,850 year old wine jugs. Courtesy Division of Communications and Media Relations  |  University of Haifa 		 For the first time in excavations of ancient Near Eastern sites, a  winery has been discovered within a Canaanite palace. The winery  produced high-quality wine that helped the Canaanite ruling family to  impress their visitors – heads of important families, out-of-town  guests, and envoys from neighboring states. "All the residents of the  Canaanite city could produce simple wine from their own vineyards. But  just before it was served, the wine we found was enriched with oil from  the cedars of Lebanon, tree resin from Western Anatolia, and other  flavorings, such as resin from the terebinth tree and honey. That kind  of wine could only be found in a palace," says Prof. Assaf Yasur-Landau  of the Maritime Civilizations Department at the University of Haifa, one  of the directors of the excavation. The full findings of the 2015 excavation season was presented at the  conference "Excavations and Studies in Northern Israel," which took  place at the University of Haifa, and in May 16 will be presented at the  Oriental Institute in Chicago. The excavations at the Canaanite palace at Tel Kabri, which was  established around 3,850 years ago during the Middle Bronze Age (around  1950-1550 BCE), are continuing to yield surprises and to provide  evidence of a connection between wine, banquets, and power in the  Canaanite cities. Two years ago, around 40 almost-complete large jars  were found in one of the rooms, and chemical analysis proved that they  were filled with wine with special flavorings, such as terebinth resin,  cedar oil, honey, and other plant extracts. "This was already a huge  quantity of jars to find in a palace from the Bronze Age, and we were  really surprised to find such a treasure," says Prof. Yasur-Landau, who  is directing the excavation together with Prof. Eric Cline of George  Washington University, and Prof. Andrew Koh of Brandeis University. Tel Kabri, named for the abundance of its perennial springs, is  located at the eastern end of the Western Galilee coastal plain, on the  grounds of Kibbutz Kabri. In this early excavation the researchers have already found openings  leading into additional rooms. They devoted 2014 to analyzing the  findings from the excavation, particularly the chemical analysis of the  wine residues. During the 2015 excavation season, conducted in the  summer, the researchers returned to the ancient rooms, not knowing what  awaited them. The northern opening led to a passage to another building. Both sides  of the passage were lined with "closets" containing additional jars.  The southern opening led to a room that was also full of jars buried  under the collapsed walls and roof. This was clearly an additional  storeroom. "We would have happily called it a day with this discovery,  but then we found that this storeroom also had an opening at its  southern end leading to a third room, and it, too, was also full of  shattered jars. And then we found a fourth storeroom" relates Prof.  Yasur-Landau. But the surprises kept on coming. As in the previous seasons, each of  the new jars was sampled in order to examine its contents. The initial  results showed that while all the jars in the first storeroom were  filled with wine, in the other storerooms some of the jars contained  wine, others appear to have been rinsed clean, while others still  contained only resin, without wine. "It seems that some of the new  storerooms were used for mixing wines with various flavorings and for  storing empty jars for filling with the mixed wine. We are starting to  think that the palace did not just have storerooms for finished produce,  but also had a winery where wine was prepared for consumption." Prof.  Yasur-Landau added that this is the first time that a winery has been  found in a palace from the Middle Bronze Age. |  |                                |                                           |                                                       | By:		Guest Author 		 	  		Published: March 4th, 2016 			 
  			  
  								Temple Mount 		 My wife and I, currently vacationing In Israel, almost earned a  spot in the news today–or at least on a police blotter. And I was mostly innocent. Since 1969 when my brother and I freely and unafraid explored all of  the Muslim holy sites on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, I have wanted to  revisit it; and with recent excitement about who controls the area, my  wifeand I decided that this visit would have to include it.
 Non-Muslim visiting hours are limited to 2 1/2 hours in the morning,  and one hour, from 12:30 to 1:30 in the afternoon. At12:30 we arrived at  the end of a long queue of people anxious to climb the long ramp from  the plaza level of the Kotel to the Temple Mount. We saw people from  every nook and cranny of the world and enjoyed listening to all of their  languages as we waited for the gate at the front to open. Naturally,  security is very tight. After the roughly 100 others had filed through we brought up the  rear. My wife placed her purse on the table and walked through the  metal detector to the other side without arousing as much as a blink  from the police. I emptied my pockets, set my two cell phones, Bluetooth  ear bud, and pens on the table and two of the guards motioned for me to  remove my Stetson. A gasp and hurried instructions to one another were immediate, and  our passports were demanded. There, to the shock of every guard, perched  on my head, was a kippah. The chief of the micro-police force receded  into a small office, emerging about five minutes later, still holding  the passports and glaring at me. Obviously I was a troublemaker. "Calm down," he rasped at me when I asked him if we should leave or  if my wife could go up on her own. "Do you want to go to jail?" (Over the past few months, several Jews have been arrested for making  outward signs of praying while up on the Temple Mount, in violation of  an agreement by Israel and the Palestinian authority that no Jew would  ever be allowed to engage in religious activity or wear any religious  paraphernalia, in order to avoid arousing riotous passions among the  Muslim population. This notwithstanding the historical fact that the  site has been a holy destination for Jews for thousands of years.) About twenty minutes later, after a few more office retreats and  whispered conversations with the other guards, he strode over to me. "Where is your Kippah?" demanded the burly chief of these police. I  showed him that I had removed it and placed it in a carry bag and would  be content to wear only the Stetson to avoid looking Jewish; I shared  with him my business card identifying me as a rabbi, to further assure  him that I was aware of the delicate situation and would act  responsibly. That was a mistake: he was now convinced that I was intending to do  "something religious" up on the mount and retreated once again into his  office, ostensibly to check with "the office" to determine if I was  previously known to the police as an agitator. With only a few minutes left in the one hour allotment, he finally  reemerged, handed back my business card, and told me to put on my  kippah. "Come, go up," he groused at me. My wife and I began the trek  up the ramp, a bit surprised but glad nevertheless. A young Haredi guard  – kippah, tzitzit , long peyyot and unarmed – joined us. Halfway up we  were greeted and flanked by two heavily armed policemen. At the top of the ramp, as we approached the holy ground, several  more police surrounded us in a very tight circle. In this formation we  begin a slow march onto the grounds. Our circle was immediately approached and followed by several  Palestinians who stared at me, my wife, and the Haredi man. One  policeman told us that we could feel free to take pictures, and guided  us to good vantage points to take great snapshots. I asked, "how many of you are out here right now guarding those other  tourists who came in ahead of us?" imagining that the number would have  had to have been staggering, although I couldn't see any. He answered,"  None. They aren't Jews; you are." In a sudden rush of anger I continued silently until the end of our time there. We Jews, who have given the world the most peaceful and accessible  holy sites to all the peoples of the region, are restricted in our own  land and treated as criminals for the slightest offense caused by being  ourselves. I was aware of reports of the arrests of other men who had  deliberately caused incidents on the Temple Mount by assuming prayerful  poses, but discounted the stories as inaccurate, incomplete; surely an  incompetent editor had omitted the details of some egregious action by  those who were arrested. Now I had had this bitter experience. I tried to imagine the furor that would rise if Muslims were  prevented from freely visiting a mosque anywhere in Israel. Yet here, in  this absurdly upside-down world of the Middle East, these behaviors  are accepted as normal. Little, genuinely moral and desperate-for-peace  Israel is forced to behave badly to its own people in deference to the  sensitivities of its sworn enemies. On this Shabbat, when we read in the Torah about the exuberance of  our ancestors who were given the opportunity to build the Mishkan, let  us pray for the peace of Jerusalem and all Israel; and resolve to do our  part to dispel the influence of misinformation and the growing darkness  that seems to be overtaking the Western world. |  |  |                                |   |                  |  |  | 
        
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