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150 people treated by Hatzalah clinics in Meron

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150 people treated by Hatzalah clinics in Meron

Over 150 people were treated at the four United Hatzalah emergency medical clinics in Meron on Lag B’omer.  Most patients were treated for falls, burns, lacerations, fainting and shortness of breath and not more serious conditions like in previous years. The number of injuries is dramatically less than from previous years, according to United Hatzalah medics. United Hatzalah will maintain coverage in the area until Shabbat. Leon and Simi Melohn of Manhattan sponsored the four pop-up Lag B’omer clinics in Meron.

Using inter-agency cooperation from the police, fire rescue and ambulance command centers, United Hatzalah volunteers were able to ensure that all who traveled to Meron were safe. All command centers also had United Hatzalah communication gear, including the LifeCompass GPS smartphone system, to ensure immediate response to any incident. Given the years of experience leading medical security at Kever Rashbi and in light of the recent tragic incidents at the funeral of Rav Wosner ZT”l in Bnei Brak, United Hatzalah planned a thorough strategy for prevention and response during this busy holiday.

Eli Beer, founder of United Hatzalah commented that “This year United Hatzalah activities saw unprecedented cooperation and collaboration with the police and government authorities. The support by Leon and Mimi Melohn provided United Hatzalah with the dedicated resources needed to provide maximum preparation and operational response.”

outside the Hatzalah clinic, Meron

National UH command center on lag b'omer

JUST RELEASED: 8th Day – Celebrate

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8th Day – Celebrate

Its here!! “Celebrate”! The first single/video from the -soon to be released- new 8th Day album “Inner Flame”. For more info go to: www.my8thday.com
facebook.com/8thDayMusic

Credits for “Celebrate”:
Produced and directed by Bentzi Marcus
Cinematography: Yoni Oscherowitz
Gaffer: Daniel Williams
2nd Camera Operator: Tomi Rosenthal
Edited and special effects by Moshe Bree
Dance Choreography: Cheryl Baxter
PA: Sean Miller
Graphic Design: Menachem Krinsky
Backline: Samson Sound Productions

Filmed at Green Screen Downtown

Special thanks to; Shmuli Rosenberg, Sholom Lieberman, Matt Thorne, Lieder’s Catering, Spaun Drums, Drew Shankweiler, Georgiana and everyone at Green Screen Downtown, Rashi Marcus, Bluma Marcus, Chaim Marcus, Eiri Sharvit, Nechama Marcus, Shlomo Dahan, Zalman Simons, Dave Donnelly, Zalman Marcus, Avi Feder, Avremi G, Mendy Werdyger.

Lag B’Omer News: Your Tefillah In Meron

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HURRY, IT’S NOT TOO LATE TO JOIN THE TEFILLAH IN MERON! DEADLINE ISTONIGHT AT 11:57PM!!

NOTE: There is no cost to join the tefillah – details on our website

Join the Special Tefillah in Meron on Lag B’Omer for SHIDDUCHIM AND ALL YESHUOS

 through Talmidei Chachamim messengers of Yad L’Achim who will daven for your personal requests.

LAG B’OMER IN MERON IS AN AUSPICIOUS TIME & PLACE OF SEGULAH,  TEFILLAH & YESHUAH! Join now!

Tefillos can be for All Yeshuos; Shidduchim, Parnassah, Shalom Bayis, Health, Nachas, and all personal requests

Click Here Or On The Ad Below To Submit Your Names OR CALL 1-866-923-5224 OR VISIT WWW.YADLACHIM.ORG
Lag Bomer Meron
Click Here Or On The Ad Above To Submit Your Names OR CALL 1-866-923-5224 OR VISIT WWW.YADLACHIM.ORG

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The Jewish Link #261 – May Edition

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The Jewish Link 261
The Jewish Link 261 – May Edition

Twisting Laws of Armed Conflict on Israel

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Former UK Cmdr.: UN, Foreign Governments ‘Deliberately’ Twisting Laws of Armed Conflict on Israel
Shurat HaDin, an Israeli NGO specializing in International Law, opened a two-day conference in Jerusalem, Monday“Towards a New Law of War,” which dealt with the rules of armed conflict, their interpretation and application.

Col. (ret.) Richard Kemp, former commander of the UK’s forces in Afghanistan, was one of the prominent participants at the conference.

Other international contributors included former IDF Chief of Staff Lt.-Gen. (ret.) Benny Gantz and former Deputy Chief of US Special Operations Command, Lt.-Gen. (ret.) David Fridovich, among other legal, military and counter-terrorism experts.

Kemp told the Tazpit News Agency that the United Nations, foreign governments and human rights organizations were “deliberately misunderstanding, and misrepresenting, international laws of armed conflict,” specifically referring to the law of proportionality.

“These organizations and governments are portraying Israel as breaking the laws of armed conflict, which according to my knowledge, they’re not,” Kemp contended.

Meanwhile, he continued, those very same bodies were not adequately holding Hamas responsible for their own clear violations, particularly regarding “human shields.”

Gantz, in his address on Monday, also touched upon this theme, claiming that “Both in Gaza and in Lebanon, the enemy operates from within civilian populations.

“Don’t tell me it’s a kindergarten when I know it’s a rocket warehouse. Don’t tell me it’s a mosque when I know it’s a rocket warehouse,” The former Chief of Staff argued.

Gantz also called for revisions to the laws which govern armed conflict, insisting the “bad guys” no longer cared about breaking the rules.

Kemp, taking a different tack, told Tazpit that he didn’t see a need, or possibility, for changes to the laws themselves. Rather, he contended, there needed to be a reexamination of conventional interpretations to suit the realities of 21st Century conflict.

Panels on the conference’s second day discussed targeted killings, and the International Criminal Court (ICC) at The Hague.

On the subject of the ICC, Kemp maintained that Israel should not have to face the court, and not only because he sees the IDF as having acted in accordance with the law. “The ICC is set up for specific circumstances, and has jurisdiction where there is no legal system, or internal will to examine previous conduct,” he explained.

Kemp, who also led a joint UK-US counterterrorism force in Afghanistan, added “Israel has a proven and respected legal process, which stands up to international standards.”

By Zack Pyzer
Tazpit News Agency

Greatest Cause of Jewish Emigration

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Anti-Semitism ‘Indisputably the Dominant Factor’ for Jewish Emigration from Western Europe

The Jewish Agency for Israel said in a new report that immigration to Israel (Aliyah) from Western Europe in the first quarter of 2015 was unchanged from the same period last year.

However, the statistics revealed that a large increase in the number of immigrants (olim) arriving from Eastern Europe, where an unstable economic and security situation prompted more emigration. Ukrainian Aliyah alone rose by a whopping 215 percent compared to the same period last year.

Prof. Robert Wistrich, head of the Vidal Sassoon International Center for the Study of Antisemitism at Jerusalem’s Hebrew University, has sought to refute claims which seek to downplay the link between increasing anti-Semitism in Europe and emigration to Israel.

“It is indisputable that the dominant factor behind Aliyah to Israel from Western Europe is anti-Semitism,” Wistrich told the Tazpit News Agency Monday.

“Any comparisons to the situation in Ukraine, where Aliyah is also caused by anti-Semitism, although to a smaller extent, is a false comparison,” he added.

One reaction to the Jewish Agency’s report, in some Israeli and international newspapers, declared that anti-Semitism is simply one of many factors behind Aliyah from Western Europe. Economic considerations were touted as a more influential factor.

Wistrich, however, thoroughly disagreed with that analysis. He claimed that such statements were “jumping to conclusions,” and ignored longstanding work.

TONIGHT! Ohr Somayach’s 4th Annual Yom Iyun: Surviving An Insane World

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TONIGHT! Ohr Somayach’s 4th Annual Yom Iyun: Surviving An Insane World

Turn An Evening Of Learning Into A Lifetime Of Inspiration!

For Men and Women

Online booking is now closed

Tickets will be available at the door

 6:30pm Doors open
 6:50pm Mincha
 7:00pm Welcome & Introduction
 Main Program
 Maariv

Nessah Educational and Cultural Center

142 South Rexford Drive, Beverly Hills CA

Ohr-Sameach

Musings in Mourning

I just returned from the funeral of my 11 year old cousin, Chaya Spalter, and my mind is a whirl. I have never been to the funeral of a child, and as anyone especially a parent can imagine, the grief is overwhelming. It is one of the most abnormal and cruel twists of fate that can ever occur. The notion of a parent burying a child, C”V, turns the natural ways of the world on its head.

My Uncle spoke very powerfully about the concept of faith, G-dly actions we cannot understand and how to move on. But as I drove home, I could not help but ponder, how do we apply this to our daily lives? What lesson do we take away from this? How is it that so many chapters of tehillim were said, so many tears were shed, yet two parents and a bunch of siblings are sitting shiva this week?

As Jews, when faced with question like this, we turn to the Torah for guidance and inspiration. To make some sense of the fog. As divine providence would have it, the way Pessach fell out this year caused that we should learn the portion of Shemini three consecutive weeks in a row. This portion of the Torah relates the story of how Aaron’s two sons, Nadav and Avihu, were suddenly ripped from this world in one fell swoop. When Moshe comforts Aaron, he tells him: Now I know that they were greater than me and you. Hashem told me that Bekrovai E’Kadesh- through those that I am close to, I will become sanctified. ‘I thought’, said Moshe, ‘that it would be me and you. Now I see that they are greater than both of us!’

First of all, who said they died because they were great? The commentaries give us a whole laundry lists of misdeeds they did that brought about their death. Second of all, even if they were great, who says they were greater than Moshe and Aaron? G-d can have many people He considers close to him at varying levels. Perhaps they were a level below Moshe and Aaron?

The Kli Yakor explains that when G-d wants to send a message to the world, he doesn’t kill evil or even mediocre people. He specifically targets the best of the best. Only through the passing of the righteous can the communication properly be transmitted to the rest of us. If a regular person dies, it does not tend to impact us too much. But when a righteous person dies, especially for the diminutive, minute misdeeds that are attributed to Nadav and Avihu, that makes everyone sit up and take notice. If these righteous people can have that happen to them, even though they are on this high spiritual level, how much more so can such a thing happen to me! I had better correct my ways. This is why G-d says that ‘through those that are close to me, I become sanctified’. Everyone who sees this, will hopefully take it to heart and bring themselves closer to G-d, thereby sanctifying Him. That is how Moshe knew that they must have been the greatest. Only through the very public and very tragic passing of the spiritual elite, can the message really come across.

The same concept applies to our praying. If you really think about it, why do we pray that someone who is sick should get better? Are we questioning G-d’s ways? Are we hoping to change His mind? Assuming He does change His mind, does that mean He was mistaken in his earlier decision to make the person sick in the first place? G-d, to whom the past present and future is completely laid out before Him, changing His mind would mean that His earlier determination was possibly incorrect. Do you really want a G-d whose mind is changeable? Then to add insult to injury, before and after praying we give charity, as if we are bribing G-d with our good deeds. Do we really want a G-d that is so fickle and bribable?

The reality is, we daven not to change G-d’s mind, but to change ourselves. We give charity not to show G-d what good boys and girls we are, but to improve our sensitivity towards our fellow man, improving our human interaction. That is how we can override decrees. It’s not that, heaven forbid, G-d changed his mind. That is a logical absurdity! Rather, the decree was made on so-and-so the son of so-and-so, as they are in their current spiritual state, that such-and-such should happen. However, by davening and improving oneself, you are no longer the same so-and-so you were before. You are now on a different spiritual plane. You changed your status, G-d didn’t change His mind. Likewise, by a community bettering itself, it can change the spiritual playing field so that it impacts the individuals in the community that require a different outcome then what they are currently facing. That is what we need to strive for. If the end result seemingly didn’t change, that does not necessarily mean we failed. We don’t understand G-d’s ways and infinite wisdom. But we can understand what He wants from us: constant refinement on both the spiritual level and in our human interactions.

No one can ever say why Hashem chose to take a young girl in the prime of her life. But the take away message is clear: if G-d can take back the soul of a young girl, still in its pristine and pure form- actually I would argue that after suffering for almost a third of her life, her soul was on a loftier level then when it first came down here – how much more so do the rest of us need to take notice and find ways to improve ourselves quickly. If her parents, faced with the most difficult of challenges, were able to be stoic and have faith in the most trying of times, how much more so do we need to have faith with the little challenges life throws our way, that pale in comparison. We may not know the ‘why’, but we can certainly know the ‘what’ we need to walk away with.

May it be Hashem’s will, that ‘death be eternally swallowed up’ and all pain and suffering be removed from this world so that we can rejoice, together with Chaya, with the coming of Moshiach tzidkeinu, speedily, Amen!

By Sruli Schochet

Shmuz On The Parsha: Emor

Shmuz On The Parsha: Emor

“Sefiras Ha’Omer – Why We Count, What We Count”

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Mazal Tov!! 
A hearty Mazal Tov to
Mendel & Esther Scwartz
on the birth of a baby boy!

 May he grow to Torah, chupah and maasim tovim!

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