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Fox News gives Orthodox Jews the voice that The New York Times denies them

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“Get to really know us,” said Rabbi Chaim Dovid Zwiebel, executive vice president of Agudath Israel of America, in the new Fox News mini-documentary.

 

 One interpretation of a mishnah in Chapters of the Fathers is that Jews must prepare answers, with which to respond to those who hate Torah scholars. Hating those who cherish the Torah is one sense many readers may get from recent reporting in The New York Times on Orthodox schools.

A new, 6-and-a-half-minute Fox News documentary—which Kassy Dillon, a former JNS news editor, reported—turns the camera on Orthodox leaders and scholars.

Zwiebel added that the Gray Lady’s reporting on Orthodox Jews is “not only troubling, but even dangerous to a certain extent.”

He has not seen any change in Times coverage after meeting with the newspaper, and he hopes those stuck in traffic near the Lincoln Tunnel, adjacent to the Times building, in Times Square or in other Manhattan locations see Agudah’s billboards, which state, “Dear New York Times, words do break bones. Please stop attacking our community.”

Moshe Krakowski, a Yeshiva University professor who is an expert on Chassidic education, told Dillon that Orthodox Jews “feel demonized, justifiably, and would like people to get another side of the story since nobody else is actually articulating the other side of the story.”

For those who want to know that story, Zwiebel has some advice, and it isn’t to just read about Orthodoxy in the paper of record. “Get to really know us,” he said.

University in Oregon Reaches $1 Million Settlement with Professor Wrongfully Terminated After Reporting Antisemitic Incidents

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Linfield University in McMinnville, Oregon has reached a settlement with former English professor Daniel Pollack-Pelzner for his wrongful termination. The private university will pay $1 million to Pollack-Pelzner, who was fired in 2021 after reporting several incidents, including antisemitic remarks made by the university’s president, Miles K. Davis.

Pollack-Pelzner had accused Davis of making antisemitic jokes and comments, leading to his termination. He then sued the university for $4 million. A report by the American Association of University Professors concluded that Linfield had violated Pollack-Pelzner’s academic freedom and right to due process.

The settlement will prevent any further legal action by Pollack-Pelzner against the university, however, it does not prevent him from speaking about the case. It also does not include details about his claims or require the university to apologize.

Following Pollack-Pelzner’s firing, several people affiliated with Linfield, including the director of the university’s wine studies program, left in solidarity with him. Despite calls for Davis’ resignation from groups such as the Anti-Defamation League and the Oregon Board of Rabbis, he remains as president of the university nearly three years later.

Pollack-Pelzner is now a visiting professor at Portland State University and a scholar-in-residence at the Portland Shakespeare Project. Linfield University is affiliated with American Baptist Churches.

Source: (YWN World Headquarters – NYC)

Terror In Jerusalem – Two Killed, Four Wounded in Car-Ramming Attack

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Jerusalem, 10 February, 2023 (TPS) — A six-year-old boy and a 20-year-old man were killed in a car-ramming attack in northern Jerusalem on Friday afternoon.

Five other people were injured and evacuated to area hospitals, including a child in critical condition.

The terrorist was identified as Hossein Karake, a 31-year-old Israeli citizen and resident of the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of Issawiya. Karake was shot and killed by an off duty police officer at the scene and by responding officers after plowing his car into a crowd of people at a bus stop.

A spokesperson for the Hadassah Medical Organization said that a 42-year-old man was in moderate condition with a “significant” leg injury at the Hadassah-Mt. Scopus Medical Center while a 10-year-old boy was being treated for minor bruises at the Hadassah-Ein Kerem Medical Center. Both are fully conscious.

Four other victims were being treated at the Shaarei Zedek Medical Center. A hospital spokesman said an eight-year-old boy and a 20-year-old man were in critical condition. The other two victims were being treated for less serious injuries.

Following the attack, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered that Karake’s home be sealed off for demolition.

“I conducted a security situation assessment and ordered security forces reinforced, arrests made and to act immediately to seal the terrorist’s house and demolish it. Our answer to terrorism is to strike it with all our might and deepen our grip on our country even more,” Netanyahu said.

Fatah and Hamas both praised Karake’s attack as “heroic.”

Rescues Provide Glimmer of Hope Among Quake Ruins as Toll Passes 21,000

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ANTAKYA, Turkey/ JANDARIS, Syria (Reuters) – The rescue of several survivors from the rubble in Turkey lifted the spirits of weary search crews on Friday, four days after a major earthquake struck the country and neighboring Syria, killing more than 21,000 people.

Cold, hunger and despair gripped hundreds of thousands of people left homeless in the middle of winter by the region’s deadliest earthquake in decades.

Several people were pulled from the rubble of buildings during the night, including a 10-year-old boy saved with his mother after 90 hours in the Samandag district of Hatay province in Turkey’s south.

Also in Hatay, a seven-year-old girl was rescued after 95 hours and taken to hospital, the state-owned Anadolu news agency reported. In Diyarbakir to the east, Sebahat Varli, 32, and her son Serhat were rescued and taken to hospital on Friday morning, 100 hours after the first quake.

But hopes were fading that many more would be found alive in the ruins of thousands of collapsed buildings in towns and cities across the region.

The death toll from the 7.8 magnitude earthquake and several powerful aftershocks across both countries has surpassed the more than 17,000 killed in 1999 when a similarly powerful earthquake hit northwest Turkey.

The earthquake now ranks as seventh most deadly natural disaster this century, ahead of Japan’s 2011 tremor and tsunami and approaching the 31,000 killed by a quake in neighbouring Iran in 2003.

The disaster has cast doubt on whether a May 14 Turkish election will go ahead on time. A Turkish official said on Thursday it posed “very serious difficulties” for the vote, in which President Tayyip Erdogan has been expected to face his toughest challenge in two decades in power.

With anger simmering over delays in the delivery of aid and getting the rescue effort underway, the disaster is likely to play into the vote if it goes ahead.

U.N. assistance began flowing into the rebel-held northwestern Syria from Turkey on Thursday, after an aid lifeline critical to some 4 million people was severed by the quake.

But relief efforts in Syria have been complicated by the 11-year-long civil war that has partitioned the country. The United States urged President Bashar al-Assad’s government to immediately allow aid through all border crossings.

In Syria’s rebel-held Idlib Province, Munira Mohammad, a mother of four who fled Aleppo after the quake, said: “It is all children here, and we need heating and supplies. Last night we couldn’t sleep because it was so cold. It is very bad.”

Many people have set up shelters in supermarket car parks, religious centers, roadsides or amid the ruins.

Survivors are often desperate for food, water and heat, and working restrooms are sparse in hard-hit areas.

Some 40% of buildings in the Turkish city of Kahramanmaras, the epicenter of Monday’s main quake, were damaged, according to a report by Turkey’s Bogazici University.

The death toll in Turkey rose to 18,342 by Friday morning and the number injured rose to 74,242, the disaster management authority said.

In Syria, more than 3,300 have been killed, though rescuers have said many more people remain under rubble.

Some 24.4 million people in Syria and Turkey have been affected, according to Turkish officials and the United Nations, in an area spanning roughly 450 km (280 miles) from Adana in the west to Diyarbakir in the east. In Syria, people were killed as far south as Hama, 250 km from the epicenter.

In the Turkish port city of Iskenderun, people huddled ’round fires on roadsides and in wrecked garages and warehouses. Authorities say some 6,500 buildings in Turkey collapsed and countless more were damaged.

In freezing temperatures across the region, rescue teams regularly called for silence, asking all vehicles and generators to stop as they listened for any sound of life from mangled concrete mounds.

Many in Turkey have complained of a lack of equipment, expertise and support to rescue those trapped – sometimes even as they could hear cries for help.

Greece sent thousands of tents, beds and blankets and Israeli satellite intelligence was helping map the disaster zones in Turkey with technology predominantly used for special operations, the IDF said.

The World Bank is providing Turkey with $1.78 billion in relief and recovery financing, $780 million of which will become available immediately. The U.S. Agency for International Development will provide $85 million in urgent humanitarian assistance to Turkey and Syria.

The Syrian government, which is under Western sanctions, has appealed for U.N. aid while saying all assistance must be done in coordination with Damascus and delivered from within Syria, not across the Turkish border.

U.S. State Department spokesperson Ned Price said the United States will continue to demand unhindered humanitarian access to Syria and urged Assad’s government to immediately allow aid through all border crossings.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Thursday called for more humanitarian access to Syria, saying he would be “very happy” if the United Nations could use more than one border crossing to deliver help.

Damascus views the delivery of aid to rebel-held areas from Turkey as a violation of its sovereignty.

Assad, shunned by Western governments which cite his government’s brutality during the war, has chaired emergency meetings on the earthquake but has not addressed the country in a speech or news conference.

Source: Hamodia

Israeli Medical Clowns Prove Laughter is the Best Medicine

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By Darice Bailer • 9 February, 2023

Jerusalem, 9 February, 2023 (TPS) — Dr. Amir Mendelson was speaking to a medical clown in the emergency room at Israel’s Meir Medical Center when the hospital clown with the big red foam nose suddenly said, “Stop!” The clown heard the sound of crying and headed off to help.

Medical clowns have what Mendelson called “elephant ears.”

“They have those senses to go where they’re needed,” the pediatric physician explained.

Even to places around the world where disaster strikes.

That’s why two medical clowns from Israel’s Dream Doctors Project packed their bright-colored socks and clown shoes to join an Israeli humanitarian aid team to treat Turks injured in Monday’s earthquake. At the last-minute, the clowns were held back because the delegation had already reached the maximum number of people who could be taken.

Dream Doctors is a non-profit organization based in Tel Aviv with 105 medical clowns working in 34 Israeli hospitals to improve patient care and well-being. It has dispatched clowns to numerous disaster areas, including Nepal, Haiti, Uganda, Ethiopia, Chad, and even the city of Houston following Hurricane Irma in 2017.

The clowns still plan to head to Turkey as soon as they can.

Two other clowns are due to leave for Moldova on Feb. 19 to cheer up Ukrainian refugee children. The pair will also train teachers and aid workers there in the finer points of medical clowning. Last year, a Tel Aviv University-led study identified 40 different skills used by medical clowns which have therapeutic benefits beyond entertaining patients and making them laugh. The study, which was partially funded by Dream Doctors, was published in the peer-reviewed Qualitative Health Research in November.

Bonding With Patients

The clowns work hard to connect with patients, a skill called anchoring, or bonding. With their red noses, warm smiles and caring eyes, clowns listen and show that they see patients’ physical or emotional pain and want to relieve it. They’re a patient’s ally. Advocate. Friend.

Clowns may do silly, crazy things like blow up long hotdog-shaped balloon for sword fights with a child. They also help patients’ feelings and voices be heard. Medical clowns might repeat a patient’s words – that a physical therapy exercise is torture. “Absolute torture!” They’ll vent a patient’s frustrations and humorously protest on their behalf.

But, a few seconds later, they will wittily help motivate the patient to finish the exercise quickly or make it part of a fun game.

Medical clowns blow bubbles, strum a guitar, sing or play a harmonica to calm patients down, distracting them from pain or fear. A doctor or nurse will stand on one side of a child and the clown on the other as cuts are sutured or blood is drawn. Everyone smiles. No one cries. They are beside the children as they’re wheeled into surgery too.

Nimrod Eisenberg is an actor, a juggler, and a long-time professional clown at Dream Doctors. He’s also head of professional development at the organization.

Medical clowns are not there to be interesting, but to be interested, Eisenberg said. “That’s the art of clowning.” The clowns come to watch the audience and listen. “We try different things, throwing things in the air, and seeing what catches on in this moment, with this particular set of people. We play and we see what works.”

Clowns, or Angels?

Doctors and nurses know how to heal the body, but clowns are the artists who reduce anxiety and distress among children, adolescents and their parents. As one mother said, “They give me some degree of peace so I can relax for five minutes without being tense all the time knowing my daughter is okay and calm.”

Dr. Mendelson calls the medical clowns angels. He first understood how a smile can change a traumatic situation when he worked in ambulance care at the scene of a terrible bus accident. The bus rolled over, 17 people were killed, many were badly wounded, and he accompanied a girl who was conscious but in “a horrible medical situation” in the ambulance to the hospital.

“During that time, I don’t remember the words I said, but I made her laugh,” Dr. Mendelson recalled. “She was lying on the bed and I was sitting next to her and she held my hand and she told me, `Listen. It’s painful when I’m laughing but it’s good, so continue.’”

“And I think that was the point that I realized the importance of seeing the bigger picture, realizing that what we’re doing is not only finding the right medication or the right dosage for each and every patient, but seeing the bigger picture,” Mendelson said. “That’s what medical clowns are doing on a daily basis. They find a way to make a patient smile.”

Missionary alert: Notorious family posing as haredi Jews arrives in Jerusalem

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Dawson family now calling themselves “Isaacson” reportedly living in Nachlaot, trying to gain citizenship.

The Beyneynu anti-missionary organization has sent an urgent appeal to the Israeli Interior Ministry regarding a family of Christian missionaries attempting to infiltrate the haredi community in Jerusalem.

The Dawson family, now styling themselves as the Isaacsons and dressing in traditional haredi garb, were outed 16 months ago in Phoenix, Arizona. Before then, they attempted to infiltrate Jewish communities in Texas, Oregon, and Wisconsin, moving on each time their true identity was exposed.

According to the haredi news site Behadrey Haredim, the family is now in Jerusalem after obtaining three-month tourist visas, and has settled in the neighborhood of Nachlaot, near the Mahane Yehuda open-air market. Nachlaot is an eclectic neighborhood where haredi Jews live alongside religious “hippies,” traditional Jews, and secular Jews, and has in the past been thrown into turmoil after several immigrants from the United States were accused of settling there and conducting missionary activity.

Apparently, the “Isaacson” family are now trying to obtain Israeli citizenship in order to ease their acceptance into haredi society and marry their children into regular haredi families.

In her letter to the Interior Ministry, Shannon Nuszen, founder and director of Beyneynu, wrote: “We believe that they will ask to immigrate to Israel immediately or at the very least obtain student visas for their children through the Ministry of the Interior.

“It’s urgent that the Ministry of the Interior act immediately to block these people from receiving any visa that would allow them to continue the damage they are causing to Jewish communities with their insidious agenda … We know from first-hand reports from Jewish communities and rabbis in the U.S. that the Dawson/Isaacson family is deceptive, dangerous and very determined to establish themselves in Israel.”

Source: Arutz 7

Under the radar: Biden gives Iran, Russia green light to continue nuclear work

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“The move went unnoticed at first by major media, which was clearly the intent of the administration,” the Zionist Organization of America stated.

By Atara Beck, World Israel News

Last Friday, “moments before the end of the workday, the Biden administration notified Congress that nonproliferation sanctions on the terrorist regime of Iran were being waived to allow Rosatom, Russia’s state-owned energy company, to profit without sanctions,” the Zionist Organization of America (ZOA) noted in a press release this week.

Washington Free Beacon was the only news site to report the event, apparently based on the deliberate timing of the notification.

“The Biden administration renewed a series of sanctions waivers that permit Iran and Russia to cooperate on nuclear work at Iranian enrichment sites, according to a non-public notification sent to Congress and obtained by the Washington Free Beacon, the report said.

Furthermore, “Secretary of State Antony Blinken authorized the waivers on Jan. 31, but Congress was not notified of the decision until late on Feb. 3, after the Free Beacon began making inquiries about the exemptions. Senior congressional sources said the Biden administration is trying to sweep the sanctions waivers under the rug amid renewed concerns about Iran and Russia’s military alliance.”

ZOA concurred, stating that “on Friday evening, moments before the end of the workday, the Biden administration notified Congress that nonproliferation sanctions on the terrorist regime of Iran were being waived to allow Rosatom, Russia’s state-owned energy company, to profit without sanctions.”

“The move went unnoticed at first by major media, which was clearly the intent of the administration.”

 “The waivers—a vestige of the 2015 nuclear deal that the Biden administration is trying to salvage—provide billions in profit for Russian-state controlled firms, such as the Rosatom nuclear company, for work at Iran’s Fordow nuclear plant, a contested military site suspected of housing Tehran’s nuclear weapons program.

“By permitting cooperation, critics charge that the Biden administration is allowing Tehran to develop its nuclear program while enriching Russia through business with state-controlled organizations, the Beacon explains.

“These waivers send a message to both Tehran and Moscow that Washington still wants to move forward with a Russia-enabled Iran nuclear deal where [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and the mullahs both make billions,” said Richard Goldberg, a senior adviser to the Foundation for Defense of Democracies think tank and former White House National Security Council director for countering Iranian weapons of mass destruction,” according to the Beacon. “It’s a real stab in the back to Ukraine and a win for Rosatom.”

House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul issued a statement Saturday morning regarding the decision to waive sanctions.

“I am deeply troubled by the administration’s decision to waive sanctions on nonproliferation activities involving Iran, despite Iran’s continued noncompliance with its Comprehensive Safeguards Agreement and the potential benefit to Russia’s state-owned energy giant, Rosatom.

“This decision further undermines international nonproliferation norms and is inconsistent with the administration’s stated policy to support Ukraine. Rosatom cannot be allowed to profit from work in Iran while it actively fuels the Kremlin’s unprovoked war of aggression against Ukraine,” McCaul said.

A spokesman for Sen. Ted Cruz told the Beacon that “these waivers highlight what everybody already knows, though the State Department publicly denies it when they speak to the American public.

“The Biden administration is pathologically obsessed with reentering a nuclear deal with Iran,” he said. “They’re so obsessed they’re implementing parts of the last catastrophic deal, even without a new agreement. They’re so obsessed that they’re willing to boost Russia and the Russian-Iranian alliance that is attacking the Ukrainian military and civilians.”

“President Biden continues to reward the terrorist enemy of America, Iran, for monstrous behavior and irrationally undo the sanctions regime that was only inconveniencing Iran in any case. Their enrichment activities toward nukes have been moving forward throughout the tenure of President Biden, and Russian assistance will only shorten the critical timeline,” ZOA President Mort Klein said in a statement.

“In light of the aggressive sanctions against Russia following the invasion of Ukraine, this step makes no sense at all,” he added.

“Russian state-owned companies will make billions and the United States and Israel will be far less safe. Israel may be forced to take military action to stop Iran’s program, and the Biden administration is literally doing nothing to deter these maniacal terrorists running Iran.

“The idea that this waiver will convince the Iranians to make a new deal with the United States is delusional on its face, but even in that scenario it would only compound the foreign policy malpractice of this administration. The JCPOA has sunset clauses which make it completely useless in the near term and for the life of the agreement, so that Iran would have no constraints on it at all by the end of this decade.”

 “We thank Senator Cruz and House Foreign Affairs Committee Chairman Michael McCaul (R-TX) for their leadership on this issue. When the administration is so determined to be pathetically weak in the face of threats to American National Security, it is imperative that Congress takes the lead and acts in a bipartisan way to limit the damage from Iran and Russia working together,” said ZOA Director of Government Relations Dan Pollak.

In conversation with World Israel News, Pollak referred to McCaul’s confirmation that this move by the Biden administration ” was done at 6 p.m. on Friday, just before Shabbat and when everything was closing down in Washington. They did it quite intentionally at the end of the day. It worked…the mainstream media has still not reported on this.”

Indeed, to date – six days later – only the Beacon has reported on it.

It was done under the radar in order “to hide the policy that they’re not proud of,” Pollak said. “They’re not proud of this because the entire city of Washington, all parties, are looking to punish Russia, and this policy rewards Russia.”

Source: World Israel News

Tragedy: Wife of Chabad emissary in Virgin Islands dies at 40

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NEW YORk (VINnews) — Rebbetzin Henya Federman, who nearly drowned while trying to save her baby daughter Shterna Sarah who fell in the marina at St. Thomas Island two months ago, has passed away at the age of 40. The baby did not survive and Rebbetzin Henya has been in critical condition since the incident.

Pulled out of the water and resuscitated after attempting to save her baby, Federman was flown to the mainland of the United States for emergency care. During the time that she lay hovering between life and death, countless people around the world increased in prayers, good deeds, and Torah study in her merit but unfortunately she passed away on Wednesday at Lakewood hospital in New Jersey.

Rebbetzin Henya served as a Chabad Shliach (emissary) together with her husband Rabbi Asher Federman in the Virgin Islands. The two ran a successful Chabad house for local residents and for the thousands of Jewish tourists who visit the islands annually. The couple served as emissaries for 18 years on the islands, providing all of the religious services for Jews in the region and working as a team to create a Jewish lighthouse on the islands while raising a growing family.

Rabbi Asher and Henya Federman surrounded by some of their children.

Rebbetzin Henya with husband Rav Asher and children

Rebbetzin Henya is survived by her husband and 12 other children whose ages range from 1 to 17, as well as her parents, Rabbi Yisrael and Bracha Shmotkin, who are shluchim in Wisconsin, and their extended family.

May her memory be blessed.

Source: VosIzNeias

Israel Police rabbi calls for citizens to arm themselves in synagogues on Shabbat

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Rabbi Rami Brachyahu said the measure was necessary following the Jan. 27 Palestinian terrorist attack that killed seven people at a synagogue in Jerusalem.

 The chief rabbi of the Israel Police penned an open letter on Tuesday to rabbis throughout Israel urging them to advise congregants to carry firearms on Shabbat, Arutz 7 reported.

In his letter, Rabbi Rami Brachyahu said the measure was necessary following the Jan. 27 Palestinian terrorist attack that killed seven people at a synagogue in Jerusalem’s Neve Yaakov neighborhood.

“In deliberation with prominent rabbis and on the recommendation of relevant police authorities, I appeal to the rabbis of Israel to instruct their communities that everyone who has a license to carry a firearm should carry that firearm with them on Shabbat, especially during prayer times in the synagogues,” he said.

He also said that synagogues should maintain the ability to call authorities at any time in the event of an emergency.

Jewish law, or halacha, generally prohibits the use of electronic devices on the Jewish day of rest, which occurs weekly from sundown on Friday to sundown of Saturday.

Israeli National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir vowed on Tuesday to push through a fivefold increase in weapon permits in the wake of last month’s deadly attack.

Ben-Gvir has directed the Firearms Licensing Department to increase the number of new permits issued from roughly 2,000 to 10,000 per month, according to a statement from his Otzma Yehudit Party.

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