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Outrage in Chabad: Tunnel discovered under Chabad Headquarters

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Chabad discovered a tunnel under the Hasidic World Center in Crown Heights. Posing a danger to the building’s foundations, it was decided to close the women’s section above the tunnel.

A tunnel has been discovered under the Hasidic World Center 770 Eastern Parkway in Crown Heights, New York.

The tunnel had been dug for several months at least, as Chabad suspects that several men are responsible for the digging that began during the Covid-19 pandemic, in order to enter a building that was locked.

Others in Chabad claim that the tunnel was dug during the last year by a number of Mexican workers.

Due to the danger to the foundations of the building, it was decided to close the women’s section above the tunnel. The diggers hid the dirt and debris in a mikvah that had not been used for years.

 

Source: VosIzNeias

American College Students Openly Support Campaign To Kill Jews

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A mind-boggling video released Thursday by filmmaker Ami Horowitz shows students at San Francisco State University (SFSU) supporting and even offering donations help kill Jews.

In a series of interactions captured on hidden cameras, Horowitz is seen asking students if they are willing to contribute financially to “arms and weapons against the Jews” globally. He specifically mentions targeting “soft targets, schools, hospitals, Jewish cafes.” Horowitz tells one student, “All we have is rockets and suicide bombers, that kind of thing.”

Reactions from the students were varied but deeply concerning. “I would totally be down,” one student said. Another student responded, “I like what you’re saying,” while another said of Jews, “I think their behavior and the actions are evil.”

“Because they want the land. It’s a money thing,” yet another student said.

The video shows some students offering money, ranging from $5 to $30, to support Horowitz’s fictional campaign. On student, unable to donate money, “kindly” offered to instead spread the message.

In all, 28 out of 35 students asked expressed support for killing Jews and 17 out of 35 – nearly 50% – offered money to kill Jews.

Closing out the video, Horowitz highlighted his alarming findings: “The rhetoric in demonizing Jews we have seen globally has led to this. Twenty-eight out of 35 people I engaged in conversation with expressed support for what I was doing. And 17 out of 35 — nearly 50% of the people I spoke with — offered me money to kill Jews.

Source: The Yeshiva World

 

Fetterman Distances Himself from Progressive Left on Israel

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Sen. John Fetterman (D-PA) has now publicly distanced himself from the hard progressive left for their stance on Israel after weeks of outwardly expressing support for the Jewish state, Breitbart reports. Fetterman’s support for Israel has been no secret, even going back to his U.S. Senate campaign. In April 2022, for instance, he told Jewish Insider that he would always be leaning in toward Israel.

“Whenever I’m in a situation to be called on to take up the cause of strengthening and enhancing the security of Israel or deepening our relationship between the United States and Israel, I’m going to lean in,” he said. “I would also respectfully say that I’m not really a progressive in that sense.”

Interestingly enough, back in 2018, socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-VT) hailed Fetterman as an “outstanding progressive” during his campaign for Lt. Governor. Fetterman also backed the Sanders campaign during the 2016 presidential primary.

Since the horrific October 7 terrorist attack on Israel, Fetterman has been stalwart in his support, earning him the nickname #GenocideJohn from the far left. In an interview this past Wednesday, Fetterman said he will not be backing down.

“What I have found out over the last couple of years is that the right, and now the left, are hoping that I die,” Fetterman said. “There are ones that are rooting for another blood clot. They have both now been wishing that I die.”

Fetterman said he feels the progressive label has left him.

“It’s just a place where I’m not,” he said. “I don’t feel like I’ve left the label; it’s just more that it’s left me.”

“I’m not critical if someone is a progressive,” he added. “I believe different things.”

As noted by the New York Times, Fetterman has “rejected calls for a cease-fire, filled the walls of the hallway outside his Senate office with photos of the hostages taken by Hamas, draped himself in an Israeli flag and even waved one provocatively in the face of pro-Palestinian demonstrators.”

On other issues, Fetterman has stepped away from his left-leaning colleagues by asking for Democrats to engage with Republicans in a dialogue on border security.

“I don’t think it’s unreasonable to have a secured border,” he said in a recent interview. “I would never put Dreamers in harm’s way, or support any kind of cruelty or mass expulsion of hundreds of thousands of people. But it’s a reasonable conversation to talk about the border.” (Breitbart)

Source: {Matzav.com}

Congressional committee to investigate UNRWA ties to Hamas

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The Biden administration has given the aid agency over $730 million after president Trump had cut off all funding.

By Batya Jerenberg, World Israel News

A Congressional committee is going to investigate the UN agency dedicated to aiding Palestinians over its alleged ties to the Hamas terror organization, three members of the committee told the New York Post Sunday.

“There is extensive evidence of a troubling connection between UNRWA and Hamas, and it is far deeper than was known,” said Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. “Congress must now investigate and uncover the extent of what UNRWA knew, what it did, and what it may be hiding from the world.”

Jerusalem has accused the United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) for years of also aiding and abetting Palestinian terrorism by its virulently anti-Israeli textbooks, employment of terrorists among its personnel, and turning a blind eye specifically to Hamas using many of its premises, especially schools, as rocket launching sites against Israel and covers for its terror tunnels.

Several tunnels used by the Islamic extremists have been found during the current war in the Gaza Strip at UNRWA sites. Another even more direct link with the terrorists was documented after one of the Israeli hostages freed last month in a prisoner deal with Hamas, said that that they had been held prisoner in the attic of a home belonging to an UNRWA teacher.

The Foreign Affairs Committee’s oversight subcommittee would be the venue of the probe, and its chairman, Rep. Brian Mast (R-Fla.), is all for getting started, said his spokesman.

Mast would even like to call in UNRWA head Philippe Lazzarini for questioning, he added, although he cannot be forced to come as he is not an American citizen.

Lazzarini has denied any UNRWA complicity with Hamas terrorists and rejected Israeli charges that UN aid trucks have been stolen by its fighters even while video clips online support Israel’s contentions. He has accused Israel of “blatant disregard of UN premises,” and of not abiding by international humanitarian law in its war against the Islamic extremists.

While he has expressed “deep concern” for the lives of Gaza civilians he has not articulated compassion for the 1,200 Israelis whom Hamas murdered and the thousands they injured during its surprise attack on Gazan envelope communities on October 7.

The international aid group provides food and schooling for Palestinian refugees and their descendants in the Gaza Strip as well as Judea and Samaria and Arab countries such as Lebanon and Syria.

It is the only refugee agency that allows descendants of those who fled war – in this case, Israel’s 1948 War of Independence – to claim refugee status, thus blowing up the number of their dependents to over five million instead of perhaps several thousand who are still alive today from that time.

Then-president Donald Trump dried up U.S. funding to the agency in 2018, calling it an “irredeemably flawed operation.” The White House restored funding to the aid agency, to the tune of over $730 million so far during the Biden administration’s tenure.

Issa is a strong ally of the Jewish state, saying after the Hamas invasion of Israel on October 7 that “This Congress will stand with Israel to ensure that Hamas is eradicated and every hostage is released,” and that “America will stand with its friend, ally and partner in very way and see Israel through another fight for its survival. Israel – the democracy of the Middle East – must win. Hamas – a cancer of the Middle East – must lose.”

Source: World Israel News

Phyllis Shallman – Pros and Cons of Simple Interest

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Brace yourself: You’ve been brought here under false pretenses.

This post is not so much about a list of pros and cons as it is about one big pro and one big con concerning simple interest accounts. There are many fine-tooth details you could get into when looking for the best ways to use your money. But when you’re just beginning your journey to financial independence, the big YES and NO below are important to keep in mind. In a nutshell, interest will either cost you money or earn you money. Here’s how…

The Pro of Simple Interest: Paying Back Money

Credit cards, mortgages, car loans, student debt – odds are that you’re familiar with at least one of these loans at this point. When you take out a loan, look for one that lets you pay back your principal amount with simple interest. This means that the overall amount you’ll owe will be interest calculated against the principal, or initial amount, that was loaned to you. And the principle decreases as you pay back the loan. So the sooner you pay off your loan, you’re actually lowering the amount of money in interest that you’re required to pay back as part of your loan agreement.

The Con of Simple Interest: Growing Money

When you want to grow your money, an account based on simple interest is not the way to go. Setting your money aside in an account with compound interest shows infinitely better results for growing your money.

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For example, if you wanted to grow $10,000 for 10 years in an account at 3% simple interest, the first few years would look like this:

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  • Year 1: $10,000 + 300 = $10,300
  • Year 2: $10,300 + 300 = $10,600
  • Year 3: $10,600 + 300 = $10,900

In a simple interest account, the 3% interest you’ll earn is a fixed sum taken from the principal amount added to the account. And this is the amount that is added annually. After a full 10 years, the amount in the account would be $13,000. Not very impressive.

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But what if you put your money in an account that was less “simple”?

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If you take the same $10,000 and grow it in an account for 10 years at a 3% rate of interest that compounds, you can see the difference beginning to show in the first few years:

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  • Year 1: $10,000 + 300 = $10,300
  • Year 2: $10,300 + 309 = $10,609
  • Year 3: $10,609 + 318 = $10,927

At the end of 10 years, this type of account will have earned more than the simple interest account, without you having to do any extra work! And that’s not even considering adding regular contributions to the account over the years! Just imagine the possibilities if you can get a higher interest rate and combine that with a solid financial plan for your future.

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One final thought: Simple isn’t always the way to go, and that can be a good thing.

Israel Discovers Hamas Bomb Belts Adapted for Children

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By Pesach Benson • 24 December, 2023

 

Jerusalem, 24 December, 2023 (TPS) — The Israeli military struck 200 terror infrastructure targets in Gaza over the past 24 hours and seized weapons belonging to Hamas, the Israel Defense Forces said on Sunday.

Among the facilities was a building in northern Gaza where civilians were staying which contained a Hamas weapons complex. Soldiers found explosive belts adapted for children, dozens of explosives, hundreds of grenades and intelligence documents, the IDF said. The weapons complex was located in close proximity to schools, a clinic and a mosque.

Briefing reporters on Saturday night, IDF Spokesperson Rear Admiral Daniel Hagari disclosed that Israeli forces destroyed and seized approximately 30,000 explosive devices, including anti-tank missiles and rockets that were in Hamas’ possession over the course of the ground war.

“There is an immense amount of weaponry in Gaza, some as happened today, are found in schools. During our current operation in the Daraj-Tufah, we scanned schools and found weapons, including a significant amount of rockets and equipment belonging to Hamas’s naval commando unit. We seize the weapons, neutralizing Hamas’ terrorism capabilities,” Hagari said.

During a separate operation in the northern Gaza Strip, soldiers identified a number of terrorists coming out of a military structure where Hamas placed observation devices. The forces directed an air strike on the building, eliminating the terror squad.

At least 1,200 people were killed in Hamas’s attacks on Israeli communities near the Gaza border on Oct. 7. The number of men, women, children, soldiers and foreigners held captive in Gaza by Hamas is now believed to be 129. Other people remain unaccounted for as Israeli authorities continue to identify bodies and search for human remains.

Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks zt”l -The Space Between – VAYIGASH • 5771 5784

“What do porcupines do in winter?” asked Schopenhauer. “How can they stay warm?” If they come too close to one another, they will injure each other. If they stay too far apart, they will freeze. Life, for porcupines, is a delicate balance between closeness and distance. It is hard to get it right, and dangerous to get it wrong. And so it is for us.

That is the force of the word that gives our parsha its name: Vayigash. “And he came close.”

Then Judah came close to him and said: “Pardon your servant, my lord, let me speak a word to my lord. Do not be angry with your servant, though you are equal to Pharaoh himself.”

Gen. 44:18

For perhaps the first time in his life, Judah came close to his brother Joseph. The irony is, of course, that he did not know it was Joseph. But that one act of coming close melted all of Joseph’s reserve, all of his defences, and as if unable to stop himself, he finally disclosed his identity:

Then Joseph said to his brothers, “I am Joseph! Is my father still alive?”

Gen. 45:3

How can we be sure that Vayigash is the key word? Because it contrasts with another verse, many chapters, and many years, earlier.

But they saw him in the distance, and before he reached them, they plotted to kill him.

Gen. 37:18

Right at the beginning of the story, when Joseph was sent by his father to see how the brothers were doing, tending the sheep, they saw him from far away, from a distance. Imagine the scene. They cannot see his face. All they can see is the richly ornamented cloak, the “coat of many colours,” that so upsets them. This coat acts as a constant reminder that it is he, not they, whom their father loves most.

From far away, we don’t see people as human beings, and when we stop seeing people as human beings, and they become instead symbols, objects of envy or hate, people can do bad things to one another. The whole tragedy of Joseph and his brothers was distance. They were too far apart in every way.

Which is why it was only when Judah came close to Joseph – vayigash – that the coldness between them thawed, and they became brothers, not strangers to one another.

Too much distance and we freeze. But if we get too close we can injure one another. That was the story of Jacob and Esau. Think about it. Jacob bought Esau’s birthright. He stole his blessing. He wore Esau’s clothes. He borrowed his identity. Even when they were born, Jacob was clutching Esau’s heel.

It was only when there was a distance between them – the 22 years in which Jacob was away from home, with Laban – that the relationship healed, so that when they met again, despite Jacob’s fears, Esau embraced and kissed him and treated him like a brother and a friend.

Too close and we hurt one another. Too distant and we freeze.

How then do we make and sustain relationships, if the balance is so fine and it is so easy to get it wrong? The Torah’s answer – already there in the first chapter of the Torah – is: first separate, then join. The verb lehavdil, “to separate,” appears five times in the first chapter of Bereishit. God separates light from darkness, the upper and lower waters, sea and dry land. Separation is at the heart of Jewish law – between holy and profane, pure and impure, permitted and forbidden.

In Judaism kadosh, holy, means separation. To sanctify is to separate. Why? Because when we separate, we create order. We defeat chaos. We give everything and everyone their space. I am I and not you. You are you and not I. Once we respect our difference and distance, then we can join without doing damage to one another.

First separate, then connect. That seems to be the Jewish way.

Heart-wrenching separations also appear at both ends of the Abraham story. At the beginning of his mission, Abraham was told to separate himself from his father, to leave his home and journey to a new land, faraway. Towards the end he was told to separate himself, in different ways, from each of his two sons. These painful episodes represent the agonising birth-pangs of a new way of thinking about humanity. But ultimately, we see his sons standing together again, and he is reconciled with both.

That is how God created the universe, and that is how we create real personal relationships. By separating and leaving space for the other. Parents should not seek to control children. Spouses should not seek to control one another. It is the carefully calibrated distance between us in which relationship allows each party to grow into full individuals. And then to be seen, when we stand back and really look at them – but not too far back.

The most beautiful symbol of the problem and its resolution is the ceremony of havdallah at the end of Shabbat and especially the havdallah candle. The wicks are separate but the flame they make is joined. So it is between husband and wife. So it is between parent and child. And so it is, or should be, between siblings. Distance damaged the relationship between Judah and Joseph. Vayigash – Judah’s act of drawing close to his brother – restored it.

Amazon suspends employee who slipped note into package reading ‘Death to Zionists’

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I never felt threatened or in danger, just surprised, and disappointed,’ the customer said.

By Shiryn Ghermezian, The Algemeiner

Amazon has suspended an employee who put a note that read “Death to Zionists” inside a book about Israel before it was sent to a customer.

“We have taken this issue very seriously and an employee has been suspended pending the outcome of our investigation,” an Amazon spokesperson told The Jewish Chronicle. “We have apologized to the impacted customer and author.”

Michael Sharp ordered a copy of Israelophobia: The Newest Version of the Oldest Hatred & What to Do About It, by Jake Wallis Simons, editor of The Jewish Chronicle, on Dec. 15 and received the book the next day.

“I took the book out of the packaging, and I think the edge of the note might have been protruding slightly and so the book naturally fell open on that page,” he told the Chronicle, adding that the note had the word “Zionists” misspelled. “It was a tiny scrap of paper, just a few centimeters long, ripped off from a larger piece, and inserted about halfway through the book.”

“I was just shocked, really,” Sharp said. “I never felt threatened or in danger, just surprised, and disappointed. A sad reflection of the situation we find ourselves living in.”

Sharp reported the incident to Amazon and the e-commerce giant offered him a £100 gift card, in addition to apologizing for the incident, the Chronicle reported.

Simons’ book, published earlier this year, traces the history of “Israelophobia” and the difference between criticism and hatred of the Jewish state. It “reveals why the Middle East’s only democracy … attracts such disproportionate levels of slander. Rather than defending Israel against all criticism, it argues for reasonable disagreement based on reality instead of bigotry,” according to the book’s description on Amazon.

Source: World Israel News

Jared and Ivanka Visit Israel, Meet With Families of Hostages

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ISRAEL (VINnews) Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump visited Israel, toured kibbutzim that were ravaged by the Hamas terror attack, and met with relatives of hostages.

The couple traveled to Israel to express solidarity as the war against Hamas rages on. Knesset Speaker Amir Ohana accompanied the pair on the first stop of their 24-hour visit.

In Kfar Aza, Trump and Kushner heard from local residents who lived in the community up until the attack.

One of the residents who met with them, Shachar Schnorman shared that he and his wife were the only residents to return to the community thus far.

One former resident, Chen Kotler, reportedly gave Ivanka a dog tag with the inscription, “Kfar Azza is my home.”

“In this kibbutz, there were 64 people murdered, nineteen were kidnapped, numerous wounded. But the most important thing is that five are still hostages in captivity in Gaza. This says, ‘Kfar Aza is my home,’” Kotler said as she slipped the dog tag into Trump’s ballistic vest. “Hopefully, one day, I can host you in my home.”

Another former resident, Maor Morvia, said, “We must defeat Hamas so that our children can come back here to play in the fields. It must not happen again.”

The couple also heard from Border Police and IDF soldiers who were among those to help save lives and eliminate the Hamas terrorists on October 7, in addition to ZAKA volunteers.

“Thank you for sharing your stories with us. I just have to say it’s very humbling for me to be with you, with the heroic acts that you did,” Kushner said. “What you did had made a massive difference.”

Kushner tweeted about the trip: “Ivanka and I traveled to Israel to bear witness. It’s important to see with one’s own eyes the lingering effects of the barbaric and unspeakable acts of October 7.

“We met with families of those that were kidnapped, including some still in Gaza. We met with several political leaders who are committed to building lasting solutions to intractable problems. With determination, trust, pragmatism and creativity, the previously unthinkable can be accomplished.

“We will pray that the coalition for peace, prosperity, respect and understanding will prevail and create a bright and exciting future for humanity.”

 

Kushner was at the center of the Trump administration’s amazing success at brokering peace deals in the Middle East, leading the historic Abraham Accords.

Source: VosIzNeias

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