Get to Heaven Keep the Seven

Everybody wants spirituality. To be a good person means to walk in G-d's ways. How does that translate to reality? The only guidebook to spirituality that has stood the test of time is the Hebrew Bible. The Bible says that the Jews will be a light onto the nations. But if you are not a born Jew, you have to convert, which is not so easy!! If you do convert, it is a lot of work to be a Jew (three times a day prayer, keeping kosher, observing the Sabbath).

This blog will show you how to be Jewish without the work!!

Tuesday, December 31, 2019

Archaeologists Discover Table On Which Ark Of Covenant Once May have Sat and Forbes Ranks Tel Aviv 2nd Best City To Visit In The World and Happy Secular New Year with a Hassidic story about Secular New Year

Can't see images? Click here...

Yehuda Lave, Spiritual Advisor and Counselor

Yehuda Lave is an author, journalist, psychologist, rabbi, spiritual teacher and coach, with degrees in business, psychology and Jewish Law. He works  with people from all walks of life and helps them in their search for greater happiness, meaning, business advice on saving money,  and spiritual engagement

Love Yehuda Lave

No great man lives in vain. The history of the world is but the biography of great men.

Music is well said to be the speech of angels.
If you look deep enough you will see music; the heart of nature being everywhere music.

Under all speech that is good for anything there lies a silence that is better. Silence is deep as Eternity; speech is shallow as Time.

What we become depends on what we read after all of the professors have finished with us. The greatest university of all is a collection of books.

A loving heart is the beginning of all knowledge.

The greatest of faults, I should say, is to be conscious of none.

Every noble work is at first impossible.

Our main business is not to see what lies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand. Go as far as you can see; when you get there you'll be able to see farther.
Thomas Carlyle Scottish historian
Thomas Carlyle was a Scottish historian, satirical writer, essayist, translator, philosopher, mathematician, and teacher.

Archaeologists Discover Table On Which Ark Of Covenant Once May have Sat

 3,100-year-old temple uncovered near Beit Shemesh may hold a link to the Ark of the Covenant, archaeologists have said.The archaeological site at a tel on the outskirts of Beit Shemesh, 20km west of Jerusalem, which has been under excavation since 2012 has now recently yielded a fascinating discovery: a stone table, which echoes Biblical narratives of a slab on which the Ark of the Covenant is said to have been placed.
Full Story (The Jerusalem Post)

Treasury Plans Bringing Uber To Israel

In addition to Tel Aviv congestion charge, the Ministry of Finance is planning other measures, including a tax on the usage value of parking granted to employees by their employers, non-recognition of employees' congestion charges as an expense for their employers' tax purposes, and completely opening of the market for shared transport services, including Uber shared ride taxi services.

As reported in "Globes," the congestion charge alone is expected to raise NIS 1.5 billion a year for the state treasury from drivers. This money will be divided between improving public transport and reducing the annual licensing fee on cars. The Ministry of Finance is proposing earmarking 66.6% of this amount, NIS 1.1 billion, for reduction of the car licensing fee, and 33.3%, NIS 400 million,  for boosting public transport at peak hours, mainly buses, in addition to the regular budget allocation.

Full Story (Globes)

Jacob's Cry for Help and the letters "vav and "yud" (Vay)

In the portion of Vayigash Jacob, in response to Pharoh's question, summarizes his life's story. Pharoh asks Jacob "How many are the years of your life?" And Jacob responds "The years of my life are short and bad".

And indeed from the very beginning Jacob had to contend with his surroundings. First with Esau, then with Laban, then with an angel and then again with Esau.

In our portion, Vayeishev, it seems at first glance that Jacob has finally found his much deserved rest and contentment. But then, suddenly, his favorite son Joseph disappears and is presumed dead. The brothers show their father Joseph's coat of many colors. "And all his sons and all his daughters came to comfort him- "vayemaein l'henachem"- and he refused to be comforted.

The letter "vav" – the first letter in the word "vayemaein" (and he refused)- is written in an unusual manner when followed by the letter "yud" sounding the syllable "vay" which, according to Sefer Rokeiach, emphasizes the pain which Jacob felt at that moment.

It appears that this form of the letter "vav" followed by the letter "yud" is found each time where the scribe wants to emphasize the degree of sadness in the episode. For example, when Joseph cries out against the advances of Potifar's wife (the "vav" and "yud" in "vayehee k'shomo") and the letters "vav" and "yud" in the Book of Exodus where the Children of Israel cry out ("vayizaku") to G-d in their pain and anguish.

Reb Shlomo's Torah
Sharing Greatness

What is a really good friend? Maybe you think a good friend is somebody to whom we can pour out our hearts and tell everything we did wrong - and he still loves us. That's pretty good, because most of us are so afraid that maybe somebody will find out how low we really are and won't love us anymore. Imagine that you have a friend who will love you no matter what you do. That's already a very level of friendship. But it is not the highest level. It's a sweet level, but not the highest. This is not real friendship.
Now let me ask you, do you have a friend who you can really trust, to whom you can tell the good parts of you? Do you have anybody in the world whom you can tell, "Something so beautiful happened to me," and he is as happy for you as you are for yourself? Do you have that kind of friend? Do I have a friend whom I could tell, "You know, yesterday I won a million dollars," and he would answer, "I'm so glad!" Most of my friends would say, "What a chutzpah! Why him? Really whats so big about him? I'm sure G-d made a mistake - He was looking for me bu couldn't find me. I can understand five dollars, but a million... are you crazy? What is he going to do with it? G-d, I would know what to do with it, but what does this shmendrik, this fool, know?" Or imagine I tell somebody, "Yesterday I was walking down the street and I met this absolutely beautiful girl. I'm sure she is my soul mate. I love her so much that I want to get married." Maybe this this person will say, "Yes, that's very nice." But inside he's really thinking, "I can't imagine what kind of creepy girl that is. I mean let's face it - who would fall in love with you?"

And it's the same thing when it comes to my service of G-d. Imagine that there was someone in the world whom I could tell, "Thank G-d, I have reached another level in my davening and my learning." Why do we always hold back? Why can;t we tell something good to other people? Because there is so much jealousy that they can't stand it. Let's assume I finish learning the whole Talmud. So I walk up to somebody and say, "I'm happy - I know the whole Talmud." What do you think would happen? It would be the end of our friends. Do you know why? Sadly enough, people don't want me to be strong in my learning. They say to themselves, "You really think you know what the whole Talmud is all about? That's crazy - because I know you are a dope." 

When G-d created the world, He wanted it to be a place where one human being could tell another, "Something so beautiful happened to me," and the other person would be so happy  it would blow his mind. And one friend would say to the other, "I'm so glad it happened to you."
But if this isn't what the world is like, then what do I do with my light all year long? I close the doors fast; I'm afraid to show what's really inside me. I cannot tell somebody else, "Do you know how much light I have in my soul? Do you know how beautiful my home is, how much it is shining? Do you know what kind of a Shabbos I have?" I have to lock the door - I'm afraid. But on Chanuka something happens to the world. I can put my light at the door,, and I can tell the whole world, "My house is filled with light." 

Let's go one step further. Do I have one friend in the world whom I can tell how special my children are? There isn't. But on Chanukah I tell my children, "Kindle a little light and put it by the door." What am I really doing? I am telling everyone, "Do you see my child's light? What  a light...what a light!"

I want you to know, sweetest friends, when I see someone else putting on tefillin, I don't have to say a blessing over it. When I put on tefillin, I say a blessing, but I don't need to make a bracha over someone else fulfilling the mitzva. And the same thing is true of all the commandments except one - Chanuka. If I go for a walk on the street and I haven't yet kindled the light in my own house, and I pass by someone else's house and I see his Chanukah candles, I have to make a bracha. Do you know why? Because, to be honest, all year long. I don't really care if somebody else puts on tefillin. I pretend that I do, but I don't really care. But on Chanukah, when I see somebody else serving G-d, it blows my mind. I say to myself, "I knew my neighbor was beautiful , but I didn't know he was shining so much. I already kindled Chanukah lights in my house, but how does my light compare to my friend's? He is even deeper." So I make another bracha over my neighbor's light. Then maybe later that night, the same person takes a walk and passes by my  house. He sees my Chanukah candles and says, "Ribbono Shel Olam, Master of the World, I made a bracha over my light. But my neighbor's light is so much more beautiful. Thank you, G-d, for my friend's light."
Friends do you know what this is? Do you know what would happen if this was the way people were to each other? It mamesh would be the redemption of the world. 
And this was the whole thing with Yosef HaTaddik. Yosef was on such an exalted level - it was like after the coming of Mashiach. He thought he could tell his brothers, "Do you know what level I have reached? I have reached the level that I can be Mashiach, that I can be the king." But his brothers weren't on the same level yet. They were holy, but they still have jealousy inside them. They couldn't be happy for their brother. And this was the beginning of the downfall of the world. Sweetest friends, do you know ho broken your life is when you cannot stand somebody else being beautiful? Do you know how sad it is if your heart isn't deep enough to say a blessing on somebody else's light? So during the same week that we read the story of the brothers selling Yosef, we make a great fixing - by kindling Chanukah lights. 

Another Way

But he adamantly refused. (Bereishis 39:8)

You know, sweetest friends, we look at Eretz Yisrael, at the Holy Land. On the one hand there might be a ray of hope for peace, but on the other hand we see so much darkness, so much darkness. And something we think, "Ribonno Shel Olam, if You want to redeem Israel, don't You have a better way?"
I want you to know, friends, Yosef was rotting away in prison. Then the wife of Potiphar came to him and said, "Listen brother, if you will be with me just one time, I will let you out of prison. Otherwise, you will rot here forever." 

Do you know what Yosef HaTzaddik told her? "Do you know who I am? I am one of the twelve tribes, and we are so holy. If G-d wants to get me out of prison, He has to do it in a better way than this." And then Yosef HaTzaddik mamesh looked up to heaven and prayed, "Ribbono Shel Olam, thank You so much for this little ray of hope. But Master of the World, if You want me to be free, isn't there a better way?" 
Sweetest friends, we all have to look up to our Father in heaven right now and say the same thing.: Thank You for this little ray of hope. We all want Israel to live peacefully. But cant You do it in a better way? Isn't there a better way?

Forty four (44) is indeed the total number of the candles lit during Chanukah.

In Hebrew the word פח     has several meanings:

1.   snare

2.   jar  (of oil)

פח  has the numerical value (Gematria) of 88.

 

 

When it's broken (as in the above verse) into two halves then we get a half of 88 = 44.

 

Forty four (44) is indeed the total number of the candles lit during Chanukah.

Forbes Ranks Tel Aviv 2nd Best City To Visit In The World

Tel Aviv appears in second place on the list of top destinations for 2020 recommended by the editors of the Forbes Travel Guide.

"Ancient history and modern living meet in this bustling beach city along Israel's Mediterranean coast. While no day in this urban hot spot would be complete without a few hours on the golden sands (check into The Setai, Tel Aviv for a front-row seat to sea), you'll also want to make time for the newly opened White City Center. Commemorating the 100th anniversary of the Bauhaus architecture movement, the museum spotlights the city's unique look—the UNESCO-designated White City zone is home to more than 4,000 Bauhaus-style buildings, the largest such collection in the world," the entry reads.

The Forbes destination list is topped by Las Vegas, and Macau comes in third after Tel Aviv.

Full Story (Israel21C)

LIKE A PAUPER AT THE DOOR

Kahane on the Parsha

Rabbi Meir Kahane- Parshat Miketz

LIKE A PAUPER AT THE DOOR

"Pharaoh took his ring off his own hand and placed it on the hand of Joseph" (Genesis 41:42). What a divine revelation! What an open miracle! Mere minutes before, Joseph was a lowly prisoner. Now, in the blink of an eye, he had become Pharaoh's viceroy by whose command all food would be distributed in Egypt.

This sudden turnabout was a devastating response to Joseph's lack of trust in G-d when he asked the chief steward to save him. The Midrash states, "Joseph really only deserved 10 years in prison...yet because he asked the chief steward, 'Remember that I was with you...say something about me to Pharaoh' (Genesis 40:14), two years were added [to his sentence]" (Shemot Rabba 7:1).

A Jew who seeks help from a non-Jew out of despair and fear, lest G-d not help him, commits a grave sin. Had Joseph approached the steward with a DEMAND, because the steward OWED HIM A FAVOR, his act would not have been considered a sin. But instead he approached him with a REQUEST, indicating that he needed a favor from a non-Jew, and thus profaned G-d's Name by implying that he did not trust the Almighty, only flesh and blood.

From here we derive a major principle regarding aid from non-Jews: If the non-Jew offers support as part of a MUTUAL aid agreement, or payment for what he owes the Jew- we may accept it. Otherwise, we must reject it. Approaching a non-Jew or a country with a REQUEST for support- like a pauper standing at the door- demonstrates lack of faith in G-d and constitutes the ultimate Chillul Hashem.

The Jewish Idea

When Reb Levi Yitzchak of Berditchov Wished His Kehillah Blessings for The New Year, on December 31st By Rabbi Yehuda Winzelberg

It was late at night one New Year's Eve,
December 31, and the beit midrash of Rav
Levi Yitzchak of Berditchov was still filled
with his Chassidim, who were sitting and
learning. Close to midnight, the door to the
private office of the Rav, which was adjacent
to the beit midrash, opened, and the Rav
shouted out to his Chassidim : תכתבו טובה לשנה
ותחתמו' ,May you be inscribed and sealed for a
good year!' He then returned to his office and
closed the door behind him.
The Chassidim were mystified. Didn't the Rav
know, that this was the secular New Year and
not the Jewish New Year? A short time later
the same thing happened, and the Berditchover
Rebbe came out to bless them. And then this
happened again for a third time. The
Chassidim were totally baffled!
As not just anyone could approach the Rav, the
men asked an elderly Chassid to approach him
and ask for an explanation. The Rav told the
elderly man the following: The previous Rosh
Hashanah, the teffilot and shofar blowing of
the city of Berditchov were especially
beautiful and heartfelt, and went directly to
Heaven. Hashem was so taken by these teffilot
that He immediately inscribed the entire city in
the Book of Life, and bestowed on each and
every one of them, a year of health and wealth.
When Yom Kippur came, Hashem was so
taken by their fasting and crying. The people
poured out their hearts into their prayers.
Hashem was about to seal the inscription that
He had written on Rosh Hashanah, when
suddenly the Satan spoke up.
"True, the people have been praying fervently,
but, this is only one day! How can You
inscribe them favorably for an entire year,
based on their actions of only one day?"
Hashem therefore held back, and the
inscription was not sealed. Immediately after
Yom Kippur, the people started to build their
succot, in preparation of the upcoming Yom

Tov. The defending angel spoke up,
"Hashem, see how Your people are involved
in doing the mitzvah? Even the poor people
are building their succah to the best of their
abilities!"
The Satan was not to be deterred. "Again, I
object! True, they are building succot for
You. But, look at the houses they live in,
permanent structures of brick, stone and
glass. But for You, Hashem, they merely
build temporary shacks, that can barely last
the week!"
Again, Hashem held back from sealing the
inscription. Simchas Torah came, and the
shuls were filled with dancing and joyful
happiness. Again, the defending angel came
to Hashem and spoke up. "Hashem, don't
You see how your children are rejoicing for
Your Torah? Shouldn't the inscription be
sealed?"
Hashem was about to seal the inscription,
when again the Satan spoke up. "I object yet
again! True, they are rejoicing with the Torah
tonight. But, how can You inscribe them
favorably, based on their actions of one
night? When Yom Tov is over, they will go
back to their old ways! They are
undeserving!"
Hashem once again held back from sealing
the inscription. So it was, that the inscription
that was written on Rosh Hashanah, remained
unsealed through Yom Kippur, Succot,
Hoshanah Rabbah, Shmini Atzeret and
Simchat Torah.
Tonight, on New Year's Eve, however, the
defending angel spoke up. "Hashem, King of
the Universe! Do You see how non-Jews
celebrate the New Year? Shouting and
drinking in the streets, and all manner of
carrying on! Do you remember how your
children celebrated their New Year? They did
it with prayer, atonement and holiness."
"This time the Satan had no response. Rav
Levi Yitzchak concluded, "Therefore, after all
this time the inscription was finally sealed! I
felt it appropriate to bless everyone with a
Shanah Tovah!"

See you tomorrow bli neder

Love Yehuda Lave

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

PO Box 7335, Rehavia Jerusalem 9107202

LIKE TWEET FORWARD

You received this email because you signed up on our website or made purchase from us.

Unsubscribe

Monday, December 30, 2019

Warning: Jewish Jerusalem Expiration Date May Be Fast Approaching! By Hillel Fendel and Chaim Silberstein and The Claim That Jesus Was A Palestinian Is Simply An Anti-Semitic Attempt To Delegitimize Israel The Lid with Jeff Dunetz and 74% of Israelis light Chanukah Candles- Why and Happy Secular New Year

Can't see images? Click here...

Yehuda Lave, Spiritual Advisor and Counselor

Yehuda Lave is an author, journalist, psychologist, rabbi, spiritual teacher and coach, with degrees in business, psychology and Jewish Law. He works  with people from all walks of life and helps them in their search for greater happiness, meaning, business advice on saving money,  and spiritual engagement

Love Yehuda Lave

If a rock, though extremely hard, can be hollowed out by water, how much more so should it be possible for The Light, which is compared to water, to change my heart. I will begin to study it, and try to become a scholar of The Light.

Rabbi Akiva

The paper burns, but the words fly away.

Rabbi Akiva

Like a twisted olive tree in its 500th year, giving then its finest fruit, is man. How can he give forth wisdom until he has been crushed and turned in the Hand of God.

Rabbi Akiva

 

 

Warning: Jewish Jerusalem Expiration Date May Be Fast Approaching! By Hillel Fendel and Chaim Silberstein

It's been a month since the U.S. announced that it no longer considers Jewish "settlements" illegal. So far, Israel has treated this announcement like a gift certificate and is ignoring its expiration date, which could be fast approaching. We can only hope that our excuse for not taking advantage of this American gift is Israel's inability to put together a government that will make critical decisions.

In terms of Jerusalem, it would seem that the next step is obvious: Build lots and lots of Jewish homes in critically-strategic areas that were liberated in the Six-Day War. That would solve many of the city's most critical demographic and housing problems, help unite the city, and all but neutralize further talk of dividing the eternal, holy city between Israel and an Arab entity.

Even Ofer Berkovitz thinks the idea is great. Berkovitz heads the generally-left-wing Hit'orerut political faction in the Jerusalem City Council. Following the dramatic announcement by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, Berkovitz submitted a proposal to advance the construction of nearly 14,000 homes in the neighborhoods of Givat HaMatos, Atarot, and elsewhere.

The plans exist but are being held up by the government. Whether Prime Minister Netanyahu is under pressure or is possibly afraid of a unilateral game-changer that would truly prevent the division of Jerusalem, is unclear. The only thing that almost everyone in the Jerusalem Municipality agrees upon is that the freeze on Jewish construction must be thawed.

Berkovitz is not that concerned about Jerusalem remaining united under Israeli sovereignty; he has other considerations: "[Building these] 14,000 units, with the accompanying opportunities for job, culture, and education can improve Jerusalem's quality of life and decrease the crowdedness. It can allay the housing shortage and relieve the friction in mixed [Jewish-Arab] neighborhoods," he says.

The held-up plans call for some 10,000 units in Atarot (the site of the old airport in the northern tip of Jerusalem), 1,800 in Givat HaMatos (southern Jerusalem, near Talpiyot and Beit Tsafafa), and 1,500 in Givat Eliyahu (also in the south, between Gilo and Har Homa).

Mayor Moshe Leon's office was displeased with Berkovitz's attempt to hitch a ride on Pompeo's announcement. A statement by the mayor's office assailed Berkovitz for "attempting to score some points" while only "revealing his lack of integrity and experience." The mayor's office added that, "over the past year, 11,000 units were approved – compared with the decade before then, when Berkovitz was Deputy Mayor when an average of only 2,000 units were approved."

Mayor Leon added, "The data speak for themselves: I have totally thawed out the freeze implemented when Berkovitz was Deputy Mayor."

Both sides are playing politics, though. City Councilman Aryeh King told us, "If the critical Jewish projects are being held up, then the obvious question before anything else is: Why are the Arab projects not being held up? All the city has to do, led by former Likudnik and Netanyahu-aide Moshe Leon, is to declare an all or nothing quid pro quo: If there is to be a moratorium on Jewish projects, then there shall be one on Arab projects as well."

The absurdity of the situation cries out the most in Givat HaMatos. The original plan called for 2,600 apartments there, more than a third of which were to be for Arabs. Incredibly, the Arab apartments are being built, while the Jewish ones are not. Why not at least hold both of them up!?

"There is so much Arab construction," says King, "that prices are very low, and as everywhere else in the world, low housing prices bring people streaming in. As such, the demographic balance is again being tilted towards the Arab side."

The request to stop Arab projects as long as Jewish projects are on hold appears so logical that it's not clear why Mayor Leon doesn't adopt it. In fact, we addressed this precise question to him and his office. Unfortunately, no answer has yet been received. But where we failed, perhaps you, readers of this column, will succeed. Simply e-mail Mayor Lyon's office at pniyot.lishka@jerusalem.muni.il (or fax +972-2-6296014) and ask him why he allows Arab construction while Jewish construction is held up again and again.

Interestingly, a Jewish group is currently seeking to buy apartment blocks in Arab projects, such as the one in Givat HaMatos. Will it change things? Doubtful, but stranger things have happened.

In any event, Jerusalem is facing a double attack in the form of both illegal and legal Arab construction. This comes together with watered-down levels of Jewish construction in non-critical areas. The bottom line is that if not enough homes are built for Jews, and too many are built for Arabs, retaining Jerusalem's Jewish demographic majority will be very difficult.

Giuliani Claims He's 'More Of A Jew' Than George Soros: Liberals Freak (But He's Right) By Jeff Dunetz

In the latest issue of New York Magazine, former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani said he was more of a Jew than George Soros. While it is true that Soros is a Jew by birth and the former may is Catholic, there is truth to what he is saying. After all, Rudy is a good friend of the Jews, and Soros is what is commonly called a self-hating Jew (I call him a Jew-hating Jew because he doesn't hate himself).

"Don't tell me I'm anti-Semitic if I oppose him," he said. "Soros is hardly a Jew. I'm more of a Jew than Soros is. I probably know more about — he doesn't go to church, he doesn't go to religion — synagogue. He doesn't belong to a synagogue, he doesn't support Israel, he's an enemy of Israel. He's elected eight anarchist DA's in the United States. He's a horrible human being."

When CNN reported about Giuliani's statement, it emphasized that Soros was a holocaust survivor–true. They were trying to infer that because he was a Holocaust survivor doesn't mean he is pro-Jewish and Jewish caused today. They also reported the ADL's Jonathan Greenblatt said Giuliani's attack on Soros was anti-Semitic. However, despite its mission for the past decade, or so, the ADL's first priority has been progressivism and the Democratic Party. That is why I recommend that donors to the ADL give to  StopAntisemitism.org instead, or if they wish to give to the Democratic Party, send the money directly and cut out the middleman.

I disagree with Rudy on one point, attending Synagogue doesn't make someone Jewish, it makes one observant. However, he is correct in his claim that Soros supports anti-Semitic BDS supporting causes and other anti-Israel organizations.

Since 2001 the Soros network has given $2,688,561 to Adalah. According to NGO Monitor, Adelah describes itself as an "independent human rights organization."  Adelah has been instrumental in falsely accusing Israel of war crimes on numerous occasions, including contributing charges to the now-disgraced Goldstone Report and the fake 2002 report of an Israeli massacre in Jenin.  Adalah has also called on governments the world over to sever or downgrade their diplomatic relations with Israel.

Another favorite for Soros money is I'lam, is a Nazareth-based Palestinian media center. I'lam claims its mission is "to empower the Palestinian media landscape and society by promoting equal access to the Israeli media, encouraging a fair information-flow, and fostering professional standards."  Not stated in their mission but reported by NGO Monitor is the fact that I'lam creates and promotes allegations of media bias in the Israeli media as part of its political agenda. I'lam received about $1.1 million from the Soros organization.

The New Israel Fund (NIF) is also listed as a recipient of Soros' love, at least  $837,500 since 2009. The NIF donates money to anti-Israel groups dedicated to making false charges and/or promote the anti-Semitic BDS movement against the Jewish State, including Adalah, B'Tselem, Breaking the Silence, and Physicians for Human Rights, Social TV, and 972 Magazine, just to name a few.

Women Against Violence (WAV): received $1,430,000 of Soros. They are another group supporting the anti-Semitic BDS movement.

Along with advocating for the anti-Semitic Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS) movement, Mada al-Carmel – Arab Center for Applied Social Research, which received $707K from Soros was one of the creators of the Haifa Document in 2007. The Haifa Document calls for a "change in the definition of the State of Israel from a Jewish state" and accuses Israel of "exploiting" the Holocaust "at the expense of the Palestinian people."

Soros helped to fund The Woman's March group, an organization is run by anti-Semites.

And let's not forget that Soros helped to fund the creation of J-Street, the faux pro-Israel organization that is actually anti-Israel and supports the BDS movement. If you don't want to believe me about J-Street, believe Democrat Alan Dershowitz

Why would Soros, a Hungarian Jew who lived through the Holocaust, spend so much money on the anti-Semitic BDS effort to de-legitimize the Jewish State?  The best explanation comes from my late friend and teacher Barry Rubin:

On November 7, 2003, almost five years after the television interview, Soros made a rare appearance at a pro-Jewish Jewish event, a conference of the Jewish Funders Network. Asked about antisemitism in Europe, Soros responded that it was the result of the policies of Israel and the United States, and particularly of President George W. Bush and Prime Minister Ariel Sharon. "If we change that direction, then antisemitism also will diminish," he said.

Once again, his words led somewhat in the wrong direction as some of the attendees were outraged. After all, blaming Jews for antisemitism is an old argument of antisemites

A 2016 document leak by DCLEAKS also revealed Soros' association with anti-Israel and pro-BDS organizations.

Rudy Giuliani has always been a supporter of Israel and a fighter against anti-Semitism.  Hence, in that perspective, even though he is a practicing Catholic, Giuliani is more of a Jew than George Soros.

And for those liberals who are tossing their non-kosher cookies, remember that you didn't complain when Jeffrey Goldberg of The Atlantic called the anti-Semitic Barack Obama, the first Jewish President.

The Claim That Jesus Was A Palestinian Is Simply An Anti-Semitic Attempt To Delegitimize Israel The Lid with Jeff Dunetz

They bring it up every Christmas and sometimes in-between.

Initially presented by Yasser Arafat's PR woman Hannan Ashrawi in 2001 is the claim that Jesus Christ was a Palestinian. But it is a claim that is historically impossible and designed to erase the historical connections between the Jewish people and the holy land.  That attempt to disconnect the Jewish people from the holy land is anti-Semitic according to Pope Francis, President Trump's new executive order about Antisemitism, and this writer.

Expect it to come in the next few days around Christmas. The most recent example, however, was in April when the anti-Semitic, anti-American Rep Ilhan Omar, retweeted a tweet from Omar Suleiman, an adjunct professor of Islamic Studies at Southern Methodist University,

 

Omar Suleiman✔@omarsuleiman504

I was once asked by a relative who is a Palestinian Christian why the Christian right in America largely supports their oppression.

"Don't they know we're Christian too? Do they even consider us human? Don't they know Jesus was a Palestinian?" https://972mag.com/easter-gaza-permits-blockade/141104/ …

 

Just 24 hours before that the NY Times published an op-ed by Eric Copage, which said in part:

"As I grew older, I learned that the fair-skinned, blue-eyed depiction of Jesus has for centuries adorned stained glass windows and altars in churches throughout the United States and Europe. But Jesus, born in Bethlehem, was most likely a Palestinian man with dark skin."

It's a claim that's popular among liberals, during the 2016 Democratic convention Rev. William Barber II received cheers during his speech when he said:

Jesus, a brown-skinned Palestinian Jew called us to preach good news to the poor, the broken, and the bruised, and all those who are made to feel unexpected.

Wrong! 

Being Jewish and living over 2,000 years after Jesus' death, I can't speak to what Jesus taught or the color of his skin. But considering when and where he lived, Copage's description of Jesus' physical appearance is probably correct. In fact, scientists who have looked into it believe that Jesus looked like a typical Middle Eastern Judean, as opposed to the way he is usually portrayed as a European. (Yes, Judean. The country was called Judea, that's where the term "Jews" comes from). The land wasn't called Syria Palestina till 135 years later.

 

After the Bar Kochba revolt in 135 CE, the Romans punished the Judeans (Jews) for revolting for the second time in sixty years. To poke those rebellious Judeans in the eye, the Romans changed the name of their country from Judea to Syria Palaestina. The Romans used Palaestina after the ancient enemy of the Jews, the Philistines. Not that there were Philistines around anymore (they had disappeared from existence around eight hundred years earlier).

The Romans also threw out many of the Judeans, creating the Jewish exile that lasted till 1948. The Byzantine Empire took control of the holy land around the year 330 C.E., and in the year 638, it was conquered by Muslim Arab forces.

Putting the timeline together, it is clear to anyone with basic math skills that Jesus can't have been a Palestinian. There was no piece of land called Palestine until a century after Jesus died, and the area wasn't controlled by Muslims until 600 years after his death.

If Jesus was a Palestinian, Christians couldn't claim that he was from the line of King David, one of the Jewish Messiah requirements.

The people claiming that Jesus was a Palestinian are trying to create a new history for the Palestinians. If they can convince people of the falsehood that Palestinians were around for two millennia, then the lie that Jews are occupying Palestinian land becomes almost logical.

Anyone who says that Jesus was a Palestinian hasn't the slightest idea of history and/or is trying to delegitimize the 3.500+ year Jewish heritage in the holy land. Both Jews and Christians believe that Jesus was a nice Judean (Jewish) boy who went into his father's business. The real disagreement between the two faiths is his father's occupation.

74% of Israelis light Chanakah Candles-Why

There is an ancient Mishnaic scroll, Megillas Ta'anis, which enumerates some 35 minor festivals that were observed during the period of the Second Temple. The Talmud (Rosh Hashanah 18b), after some debate, concludes that with the destruction of the Bayis Sheini, all of these holidays were annulled save two: Purim and Chanukah.

Clearly, with the tragic loss of our sovereignty, it made little sense to celebrate the many occasions when, during this era, Gd saved us from our oppressors. The question, of course, is why our Sages made an exception for Purim and Chanukah? We can leave the question of Purim for later. Let us now, however, try to understand what perennial message Chazal found in the Chanukah story which convinced them to extend its commemoration long after the victories of the Chashmonaim and their descendants were quashed and eclipsed by Roman domination.

 

Rav Soloveitchik, among other rabbinic luminaries, was of the view that the custom of lighting the Chanukah menorah in the Jewish home was enacted only after the destruction of the Second Temple, some 250 years after the Chashmonaim victory. For this reason, in the two historical accounts of the festival – the Book of Maccabees I & II and Josephus' Antiquities – while narrating the many military battles against Antiochus, there is no mention of the candle-lighting practice at all. The 8-day holiday was either to make up for the 8-day Succos festival which could not be observed because of the Greek persecution, or to memorialize the rededication of the Temple Altar which had been contaminated by the Syrian Greeks, a sanctification that would last for 8 days. Nothing, however, to commemorate the miracle of the small cruse of oil.

 

If Rav Soloveitchik's interpretation is correct, we must answer two questions: one, why was the miracle not remembered in some fashion during the Second Temple era; and two, what was it about this miracle that, subsequent to the churban, its observance became the central feature of Chanukah?

 

The Talmud tells us (Yuma 39b) that while miracles ceased after the destruction of the First Temple, they did not suddenly stop; they flickered on and off for many years. In particular, the miracle of the Menorah was extant and, hence, when the Chashmonaim kindled the Menorah, it did not prove to be such an unusual occurrence when the little oil lasted for 8 days. The more obvious and compelling event was the astonishing and unbelievable military victories of the "many into the hands of the few" (Al Hanissim Prayer). During the Second Temple period, then, Chanukah was certainly celebrated, as the Talmud states (Shabbos 21b), but with only the recitation of Hallel and Al Hanissim.

 

As to the second question, we must try to fathom and appreciate the sheer enormity of this catastrophic second churban. The Beis HaMikdash - destroyed and razed, the millions – killed and exiled, were both calamitous enough. But, unlike the churban of First Temple, which in its aftermath, there was at least the prophetic promise that in 70 years the Temple would be rebuilt, with the churban of the Second Temple, there was no such prophetic "silver lining." There were no prophets, no sacred text to uplift the mood of utter gloom, the black pessimism, that gripped the surviving Jewish community in the wake of the devastation of Churban Bayis Sheini. The once-proud Jew became the wandering Jew, diminished in number and damned by other faiths. How could he survive the indignities and hatred of the many?

 

Chazal then remembered something unique and astounding about the Temple Menorah. The Talmud asks (Shabbos 22b), for what purpose was the Menorah lit in the Tabernacle during the wanderings of the Jewish people in the desert? For illumination? Clearly not, as the Almighty provided all the night light they needed with the wondrous pillars of fire. If so then, why the Menorah lights? Answers the Talmud: "It is a testimony for all of mankind that the Divine Presence dwells with Israel."

As our ancestors entered into a dark, foreboding exile, there would be one holiday that would remind them and the world – and by extension, us as well – that no matter the persecutions and afflictions, no matter the toxic reality of anti-Semitism, Gd had not and would never abandon the Jewish People.

"עדות היא לבאי עולם שהשכינה שורה בישראל" . And with that unwavering faith, when the Jew, burdened by worry and frightened by threatening events, lights the Chanukah lamps, hope and optimism are rekindled and restored.

 

How does a candle generate this incredible hopefulness? King Solomon equated a candle with a mitzvah, כי נר מצוה ותורה אור"" (Mishlei 6:23). The word, מצוה, denotatively means to connect with, to join together. And it is a mitzvah to light the Menorah! And so, when the Jew hears the commanding call of a mitzvah, he can experience the very presence of his Maker – "שהשכינה שורה בישראל" - and in that acute awareness, he feels safe, confident and secure.

 

Yosef Mendelevich lit a makeshift Menorah in the infamous Siberian Vladimir Prison and knew he would survive the notorious depravations of that terrible incarceration. Yuli Edelstein, present speaker of the Israeli Knesset, on the night he was sent to a forced labor camp in southern Siberia, recounted how, knowing it was the second night of Chanukah, somehow found two matches and lit them. "I stood there in front of the window for a few seconds until the matches scorched my fingers. It was perhaps the shortest candles lit in history…, but that night, a little bit of light pushed away a lot of darkness."

 

In Israel, 74% of all Israelis light candles every night of Chanukah – an amazing statistic given the religious diversity of the Israeli politic. Apparently, the Jew knows - as he always knew - intuitively or consciously, that when thickening darkness threatens to overwhelm him, the glow of the Chanukah Menorah reminds him of his great and sacred destiny. These small lights give him the courage and resilience to endure, advance and ascend, with the absolute faith that he is not alone, that "שהשכינה שורה בישראל."

See you tomorrow bli neder

Love Yehuda Lave

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

PO Box 7335, Rehavia Jerusalem 9107202

LIKE TWEET FORWARD

You received this email because you signed up on our website or made purchase from us.

Unsubscribe