PLEASE USE A NAME WHEN COMMENTING

17 November 2025

The Battle Ground Before the End of Days {Torah Academy of Boca Raton} ……Plus

 

 

 Delivering the Knock Out Punch to Eisav 

 

 comment to this: "WOW THAT WAS INSANE! Must be played in all girls schools and yeshivos, and be given over on Shabbos in every Shule, etc............ TY for helping/saving us, by sharing your holy Torah. We all want to give HaShem nachas, so it's critical we know the truth about everything!"

Who is He Kidding?

 

Netanyahu Rejects Palestinian State, Warns Gaza Will Be Demilitarized “Either the Easy Way or the Hard Way” as U.S. Plan Faces Deadlock


*demilitarized:  
  1. (of an area) having had all military forces removed.
    "a demilitarized zone"

    Note:  that leaves the residents to fight for their own lives ….but they need amunition and supplies.
    HKB”H please watch over the citizens of Judea and Samaria and foil the plans of their enemies who come to attack them, even from a foreign friendly nation!

    Dov bar Leib:  “ Look for HaShem to stir up the חוויסטים (Chavavistim)(hill top farmers) and the גבעוניסטים (hilltop shepherds and other trades) for battle against whatever the world throws at them.

Rabbi Weissman: …………Part Three

 

The Erev Rav Control the Shidduch World — Part Three

Plus Rav Wasserman on discerning truth, the idolatry of political parties, and Zionist protests

In part 24 of The Prophetic Teachings of Rav Elchonon Wasserman we discussed the following:

  • How to discern the truth in a world full of falsehood
  • The need for God-fearing people to organize and work together
  • Why the very existence of political parties is bad for the people and against the Torah
  • The futility and counter-productivity of Zionist protests against Arab pogroms and the ruling government

The class is embedded above and on Rumble here.

Speaking of discerning truth in a world full of falsehood, the very notion of decreeing that young women who wish to get married, have children, and build Jewish homes must wait even one day — effectively becoming agunos— to rectify a presumed demographic imbalance is horrific and completely against the Torah. 

The entire discussion around the age gap theory is predicated on a mistaken presumption. Even if the theoretical island with 100 single women and only 80 single men, as they like to depict the shidduch world, actually existed, there would be no justification to exclude the 20 youngest women from dating until more men are shipped in. There is no right for anyone to impede them from moving forward with their lives, even if their existence on the island makes it more difficult for older women to receive attention.

Instead of getting sucked into an argument about numbers, statistics, and theoretical islands, this is the point that needs to be hammered home.  It makes no difference even if there is a demographic imbalance. It is entirely against the Torah to forbid people who wish to get married from doing so for the presumed sake of helping others get married first.

Page 4 of the Erev Rav supplement lists several common explanations for “why so many girls are not married”:

  • There are more good girls than boys.
  • Girls are too picky.
  • There aren’t enough shadchanim.
  • Boys only want money and yichus.
  • The girls are so quick to say no.
  • Mothers of boys have such high expectations.

This is followed by an Orwellian conclusion: 

While it is true that these factors may make it more difficult for a girl to get married, they are just symptoms of an underlying cause. The issue isn’t pickiness or money; it’s an imbalance we can no longer ignore. It’s time to look beyond what just feels true and face the actual cause of the problem…In a market where the girls severely outnumber the boys, the one who is less picky takes any “chair”, and the one who is picky is inevitably left standing. Treating these symptoms will not create enough chairs — someone will be left standing, and those most vulnerable are the hardest hit.

If you are struggling to make sense of that, rest assured that the problem is not with you.

First of all, how is it that women being overly picky is a symptom of there not being enough men? This is indeed a phenomenon that is widely corroborated — yet just the opposite should be true.

Indeed, they want us to believe all of the following:

  • The supply of single men is not nearly enough to meet the demand.
  • Single women are therefore desperate for opportunities to date.
  • Single women are also extremely picky and quick to say no.

Clearly, 2 and 3 are a contradiction.

If many yeshiva men are too immature and unsophisticated for the single women, it would seem that making mensches out of them would improve the situation — but that is not suggested.

If single women are unreasonably picky, and thereby sabotaging themselves, it would seem that straightening out their values and priorities would improve the situation — but that is not suggested.

They also want us to believe the following:

  • Single women who are not extremely picky take what they can get.
  • The more picky women remain single.
  • There is no reason to encourage women to not be overly picky, because there aren’t enough men, anyway.
  • The only solution is to exclude some women from dating to even the numbers.

But if “the one who is picky is inevitably left standing”, and she continues to reject eligible men, what difference will that make? All this does is delay marriage for women who aren’t unreasonable.

In fact, the only guaranteed result of temporarily barring young women from dating is that many of them will get married later than they otherwise would, while having needless angst imposed upon them, and losing a year of prime fertility for good measure.

Page 5 features a silly comic illustrating a room with not enough chairs for all the women, follow by this conclusion:

A mathematical problem requires a mathematical solution. There are more girls than boys in the shidduchim market; there just aren’t enough chairs. We have to either add chairs, (bring boys home early,) or ask some girls to wait outside. That’s the only way to ensure that everyone in the room gets a seat.

They have hereby reduced the many layers of problems in the shidduch world, including the corruption of values, the improper priorities and expectations, the bad behavior, the colossal failure of matchmakers, the extreme shortage of meeting opportunities, the inability of people to date properly and develop healthy relationships, and an overall departure from Torah principles — they have reduced all of that to a simple numbers game.

A mathematical problem requires a mathematical solution! We just need to bring more chairs into the room and ask some girls to wait outside! Then all those other problems will just go away, if they even exist at all.

What’s most remarkable is that The Gedolim™ would frame a serious crisis facing the Jewish people as a mere mathematical problem. 

If there is not enough rainfall, and not enough water to meet demand, is this a mathematical problem? Would the response of real Gedolim be that we need to create more water, and force some people to drink less?

If locusts eat the crops, would the response of real Gedolim be that we need to drive away locusts and control the food supply?

If, God forbid, we lose wars against inferior enemies, would the response of real Gedolim be to obtain better weapons and send yeshiva students to the army to replace the soldiers who were killed? 

Real Gedolim would urge us to examine how we have veered from the Torah and to address potential spiritual causes of the crisis. While they would certainly encourage sensible behavior, in accordance with the nature of the world, they would never reduce a widespread calamity to a simple numbers game. That is the definition of going with Hashem b’keri, with happenstance, and the very essence of kefira.

Lehavdil, if large numbers of yeshiva students have no money to make ends meet, would the same rabbis pushing the age gap nonsense frame it as a mathematical problem requiring the creation of more money by working for a living, instead of becoming schnorrers and perpetually dependent on others as a first resort?

So why is the shidduch world suddenly just a secular problem, requiring a most secular solution?

No matter how they wrap it in melodramatic statements about following The Gedolim™, doing our hishtadlus, and doing the retzon Hashem, their overall approach is as secular as can be. It is also senseless, cruel, and entirely against the Torah. It is guaranteed to bring nothing but harm upon the Jewish people. 

Therefore, it is our obligation to firmly reject it and all those who are attempting to foist it upon us.

But we are far from finished addressing this Erev Rav garbage. To be continued.


For your reading displeasure, and to preserve the evidence so we can better hold these Erev Rav creeps accountable, below are the first five pages of the supplement. I will share more as we continue with this series.






Visit chananyaweissman.com for the mother lode of articles and books.

Visit rumble.com/c/c-782463 for my Torah classes, Amalek and Erev Rav programs, and much more.

Buy my books on Amazon here or contact me directly to purchase in Israel.

Download Sefer Kibbutz Galuyos pdf here or ePUB here, or buy on Amazon here.

Download Tovim Ha-Shenayim as a PDF for free!

weissmans@protonmail.com












16 November 2025

Rabbi Wein zt"l – Toldot

Toldot

The frightening thing about the struggle between Eisav and Yaakov is its apparently doomed inevitability. While yet in the womb of their mother Rivkah, they already find themselves opposed to one another. They are not only two different personalities, physically, emotionally and intellectually, but they represent two diametrically opposed worldviews. The only question that remains is one of accommodating one another. If the Lord created them so differently, their freedom of choice in life is centered on how they will deal with one another. And in that respect, the question of accommodation – of the relationship between the Jewish people and the broader, more numerous and powerful non-Jewish world - remains alive and relevant until our very day.


Eisav varies and wavers in his attitude towards Yaakov. Hatred, jealousy, scapegoating frustration are all present in certain aspects of his behavior patterns towards Yaakov. And yet there is also a grudging admiration and attempts at reconciliation on the part of Eisav. Yaakov is portrayed as reactive towards Eisav with a more passive nature, patiently attempting to wait out the situation and hope that Eisav will calm down and reconcile himself to Yaakov’s right of existence - in what Eisav considers to be his exclusive world.

 

And, the question arises – in reality, the question for all ages – is there room in the world, especially our rapidly shrinking world, for Yaakov and Eisav to coexist peacefully. One would hope so, though history belies this optimistic view of the rivalry between the brothers.

 

The Torah itself is pretty much noncommittal about the causes for the true source of Eisav’s hatred of Yaakov. Even though Yaakov’s purchase of the birthright and his subsequent preempting of his father’s blessings are ostensibly the cause of Eisav’s displeasure with Yaakov, these are only superficialities. The hatred was there from the beginning, from the moment of their conception, even though no incidents between them had occurred.


The Torah just seems to take for granted that this is the way it is going to be. And this accounts to a great degree for the almost traditional Jewish attitude of fatalism regarding the behavior of the non-Jewish world towards the Jews. Rabi Shimon ben Yochai stated in the Talmud that it is a given rule that Eisav hates Yaakov. However, there are other opinions in the Talmud that take a different tack and belie this inevitability of hatred and violence.

 

After the horrors of the Holocaust were revealed, Jews felt that perhaps Eisav had finally reformed and had seen the evil of the ways of hatred and bigotry. Almost seventy years later we are not so certain about this hopefully sanguine view of Eisav’s reconciliation with Yaakov. Though we are certainly less accepting and passive about the situation now than we were a century ago, there are relatively few options left to us as how to deal with the matter.

We should minimize whatever frictions possible but realize that we are dealing with a millennia-old problem that cannot be just wished away or papered over. Faith and fortitude in our own self-worth are the strongest weapons in our arsenal to bring Eisav to reconciliation and harmony.


Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Berel  zt"l



Yehudis Litvak: A Surge of Converts to Judaism After October 7th


After witnessing the horrific massacre of October 7th and the onslaught of antisemitism, why are many non-Jews responding by joining the ranks of the Jewish People?


When Andres Mustafa, a practicing Muslim, watched the news on October 7th, 2023, and saw the footage of the Hamas invasion of Israel, he says, “My heart was breaking. I actually started crying.” He ended up watching every single video of Hamas atrocities that was available. “I had never been more angry,” he says. “I said, what are we living in? Holocaust 2.0?”

Trying to process his own emotions, Mustafa, who now goes by Ariel, reached out to a Jewish friend who recommended that he speak to a rabbi. Thus began Ariel’s journey to Judaism. Currently, Ariel is studying for his Orthodox conversion and planning to move within walking distance of a synagogue.

He explains, “I did a lot of research because I couldn't understand why I wanted to convert, why I felt connected to the Jewish people, why I felt connected to God through the Jewish people. Now, I would say that I had a Jewish soul all along, and that’s what really pushed me.”


Ariel Mustafa

Ariel is one of a growing number of non-Jews who were drawn to Judaism in the aftermath of the October 7th Hamas massacre and the rise in antisemitism around the world. Ariel says, “I'm not the only one, because when I speak to other people, instead of scaring us, October 7th really only just hardened our resolve.”

The evil they witnessed on October 7th propelled these converts to bring more good into the world and to seek out God. Ariel continues, “We just had to move forward, knowing that God is behind us, and if He's with us, then who could be against us? So I just went for it and it's been the best decision of my life. I have never been more satisfied and more happy.”

Though Ariel encounters plenty of antisemitic sentiments from his friends, he says, “I deal with antisemitism through education. Antisemitism is a fear, it's a phobia of what people don't understand, or what people sometimes don't want to understand.” He speaks of seemingly educated people who believe ridiculous blood libels. When confronted with facts, some of his friends recognize the truth and apologize, while others stubbornly cling to their irrational fears. “Sometimes, no matter what you say, people are still going to hate you,” he concludes.


Studying for Conversion

Rabbi Eliyahu Raskin, founder and director of Jewish Conversion Academy, the largest online learning program for potential converts to Judaism, says that he has seen a “huge uptick” in conversion to Judaism post-October 7th.

Many converts describe themselves as a Jewish soul born into a non-Jewish body. “Serious converts do not feel that they have an option not to be Jewish,” says Rabbi Raskin. “For them, it's something they have to do. And so, when they saw what happened on October 7th, they felt like their sisters and brothers were captured. And then they look at themselves like, oh, there are a lot of people who don't consider me their sister or brother. I need to change this.”

Founded almost two years ago in response to a growing need, Jewish Conversion Academy is an educational platform that caters to English speakers of various backgrounds. Candidates whom they deem ready are referred to accredited Beth Dins for actual conversion. Currently, about 100 students are enrolled in the Academy. Over 50 graduates have successfully converted to Judaism. The majority come from a Christian background, but some are from a Muslim or secular background. A significant percentage have some Jewish ancestry.

The intense schedule and challenging curriculum helps to ensure that only those who are sincere complete their conversions. A potential convert needs to practice Judaism for at least a full year before converting. The process usually takes much longer. Some people have been studying for years, or even a decade, and still do not feel ready to complete their conversion.


Commitment Post October 7th

“Most of the people that have come to us post-October 7th are people that were always interested,” says Rabbi Raskin. “They feel Jewish or want to be Jewish, and this was just kind of a wake-up call, like, you’ve got to do it now.”

For Betzalel Schraeder, a registered nurse from Kansas City, the turning point was the antisemitic murder of Sarah Milgrim and her boyfriend, Yaron Lischinsky, outside the Capital Jewish Museum in Washington, D.C. Sarah grew up in Kansas, and though Betzalel had not known her personally, they had some mutual friends. Her murder hit close to home.

“It was so senseless, so ridiculous,” says Betzalel.

Betzalel came from a Christian background. It was Bible study and a search for meaning that had originally led him to study Torah over ten years ago. Several years later, his paternal grandmother revealed to him that she was Jewish. The discovery of Jewish ancestry increased Betzalel’s interest in Judaism.

When he began studying for conversion, “I approached it very carefully and methodically,” he recalls. “I’ve taken one thing at a time and integrated it into my life.”

Sarah’s murder led Betzalel to realize that “it doesn’t matter whether I convert or not. Antisemitism is pointed at me, even though I am not part of the Jewish nation [yet]. And that was the thing – I feel deeply inside myself that I am part of the Jewish nation, and there was a sense of, I’m not fully part of the mourning because I am not technically Jewish.”

Betzalel has a date scheduled for his conversion.

Others report that their commitment to convert only strengthened in the aftermath of Oct. 7. Henrietta Weekes, born and raised nominally Christian in England, discovered Judaism in her late forties.

“It’s been three years of a process of completely changing my life,” she says. “But even though it’s counterintuitive to the way I was raised, it also feels the most natural, what I’ve wanted my whole life, which is to always live with God. Every single thing makes sense to me on the soul level, but I was never taught that by the people I was around or by the society I was in.”


Henrietta Weekes

For Henrietta, who currently lives in New York, the rise in antisemitism “has been very challenging in lots of aspects, because I’ve lost a lot of my friends.” Many of her former friends have expressed pro-Palestinian sentiments, and sometimes, plain antisemitism.

But Henrietta has no regrets. “I just joined with the Jewish people. These are my people… It’s also been very lonely and hard, and I’ve shed a lot of tears. I am not a very fearful person but I’ve felt more fear and anxiety with my shifting friendships, relationships, colleagues – either the hostility towards me and the change I’m undergoing, or just being around antisemitism and them not knowing.”

Henrietta explains that what gives her strength to “stand in front of antisemitism, with literally people shouting at me, which I’ve experienced a few times” is the understanding that evil is a lack of connection with God. “It’s all very well being full of knowledge and intellect, but it’s so dangerous without first knowing Who your Creator is,” she says. “Those kinds of challenges have actually made me more committed. I couldn’t imagine not living on this path anymore, because it would feel like a lie to myself.”


Rabbi Raskin says that he always warns potential converts about the dangers of antisemitism, but they are usually not discouraged. In fact, one student was harassed on a train for wearing a Magen David — instead of fear, he felt pride in being a target of antisemitism.

one of his students told him about being harassed on a train for wearing a Magen David and how proud he was to be a target of an antisemitic attack.

Rabbi Raskin recalls only one incident of a future convert getting scared because of the hate she received on social media when she shared that she was becoming Jewish. “We spoke through it,” says Rabbi Raskin. Overall, the experience only strengthened her resolve to convert.


Relationships Post-October 7th

The events of October 7th and their aftermath made a significant impact on intermarried couples. For some, the strong emotions experienced by the Jewish spouse and feeling misunderstood, or worse, brought much conflict and eventual separation.

For other intermarried couples, however, the events sparked an interest in Judaism in the non-Jewish spouse and led them on a path of conversion to Judaism. Rabbi Raskin says, “We saw a lot of people who were married to Jews and who could not experience the pain of their spouse. Or they were interested in converting for many years, but never had the push to do it. After October 7th, they said, ‘This is my people!’” For such couples, their relationship grew stronger as a result.

Mayim Aversa, 65, recently completed her Orthodox conversion. The process took her 25 years, with many obstacles on the way. Mayim’s husband, Adam, was born Jewish but grew up secular. She grew up in Mexico and moved to the U.S. as an adult. There, she met and married Adam, an artist and rock musician.


Mayim Aversa

As Mayim learned more about Judaism, Adam was very supportive. “He says, ‘My job is to keep you happy. What do you need? You need me to keep Shabbat? I will. You need me to keep kosher? I will. You need me to wear a kippah? I will.’ He's doing a very good job of keeping me happy,” says Mayim.

Two years ago, after another frustration on the way to conversion, Mayim met another rabbi, who recommended that she move back to Mexico. “And you know what we did?” she says. “My crazy husband and I, my uneventfully American, Jewish-born husband and I, we left everything and we moved!”

It wasn’t easy, but in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, the Aversas finally found a Jewish community where they feel at home. Today, they host large Shabbat meals. Some of their guests had never been at a Shabbat table before, and others come from various levels of observance. They are of different skin colors and speak different languages.

“It’s a lot of fun,” says Mayim. “It’s wonderful. It’s very obvious that we need one another. We're pieces of the puzzle, and the time to put the puzzle together is now.”

As for antisemitism, Mayim says that she’d experienced plenty of racism living as a Mexican in the U.S. “I’m tough,” she says. “Good luck squashing the olive, trying to destroy it. The more you squash it, the more you activate the Jewish thing – it’s dangerous. How do you make a passionate Jew? Inflict a little bit of pain. That’s how you activate the Jewish passion.”


Converting as a Family

Anelyn and Matthew Massaro and their three sons are currently studying for conversion. Anelyn was born and raised as a Christian in the Philippines. Matthew was born in El Salvador and adopted by an American couple – a Jewish mother and a Catholic father. He was raised with Reform Judaism and even had a Bar Mitzvah.

Bar Mitzvah.

Matthew and Anelyn Massaro


Neither of them had thought much about religion when they got married. It was the Covid pandemic that, Matthew says, “flipped a switch” for them.

Anelyn, afraid of the pandemic, searched for a way to connect to God and to learn what message He was sending through it. “I was looking at our bookshelves, and I found [a book called] Torah. I didn’t know what Torah was.”

The book was a gift from Matthew’s Bar Mitzvah that he had never opened as an adult. Anelyn began reading, recognizing it as the “Old Testament” she had studied as a child. But she found that the Torah was very different from what she had been taught.

Anelyn read the book from cover to cover and then went back to the beginning. She began looking for more information online and came across Jewish perspectives on the Tanach, among them Rabbi Tovia Singer’s anti-missionary lectures. Eventually, she realized that “I grew up with lies,” she says.

Thus began the family’s journey towards Judaism. As Anelyn learned about Jewish traditions, she suggested to Matthew that they incorporate them into their lives. Matthew says, “We started doing things, and we just fell in love. There is no turning back. We have to be Jews. I believe in my heart that my soul is a Jewish soul.”

With their newfound connection to God, the Massaros are no longer afraid – not of any pandemics, and not of antisemitism. Reading the Torah, says Anelyn, helped her understand that antisemitism has a spiritual purpose in reminding Jews at risk of assimilating who they truly are.

“When the spirituality of the Jews declined, God brought antisemitism. That’s why in my heart I don’t have fear. Antisemitism is God’s tool to bring us back to Him.”


Belonging to the Jewish People

Despite their experiences with antisemitism, converts and future converts find comfort in the sense of belonging to the Jewish people and being on a mission. The darkness of October 7th and its aftermath only underscored that point.

“It’s up to us to be the light,” says Matthew. “We have a responsibility, not only to the Jews, but to everyone.”

Henrietta says that being a Jew is a privilege, “and we can stick together. We are all born with a purpose, to bring light to the world. What could be more beautiful than that?”


Source:  AISH:  A Surge of Converts to Judaism After October 7th

by Yehudis Litvak

The Battle Ground Before the End of Days {Torah Academy of Boca Raton} ……Plus

     Delivering the Knock Out Punch to Eisav     comment to this: "WOW THAT WAS INSANE! Must be played in all girls schools and yeshivo...