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02 July 2026

HaRav Moshe Sternbuch shlit"a - Parashas Pinchas

 


LEGISLATION OF IMMORALITY

“Harass the Midianites, and smite them” (25:17)

The Gemara (Shabbos 64a) says that the nation needed atonement for the war with Midian, because even though they did not sin, they did not avoid sinful thoughts, and those are even more severe than the physical sin.

In recent times, dramatic changes have been taking place in the United States and elsewhere with regard to the registration of immoral marriages.  This could chas v’shalom have a severe negative impact on all Jews wherever they are, because whenever the spirit of tumah increases, that has an impact on the entire world.  For example, in the days of the mabul, due to the tumah that was prevalent in the world at the time, even animals changed their nature.  Therefore, when tumah becomes more intense amongst the non-Jewish public, our own nisyonos become greater.

On the other hand, these developments are also a source of hope for us, since the Midas HaDin seeks to act as prosecutor by pointing to the tumah in our midst stemming from things such as the Internet, but now that the tumah of the non-Jewish world has stooped to new levels of depravity, even to the point of enshrining it in legislation, our own sins have been attenuated to an extent by way of comparison, and with this limud zechus Hashem can state, “Who can be compared to My Nation”?

Similarly, Rabbi Meir of Premishlan would say that he is happy when non-Jewish holidays come around, because then the difference between us and them becomes clear.  They get drunk and dissolute on their holidays, removing all yokes, whereas we, on our holidays, conduct ourselves with kedushah and taharah, spending the day praying and cleaving to Hashem.

Anyone who takes the opportunity now to fight the yetzer horo will enjoy special Divine assistance to overcome it, because when tumah is on the increase, kedushah acquires a corresponding potential to increase too, as it says “G-d has made one corresponding to the other” (Koheles 7:14) 

Hence, our obligation at this time is to increase the side of kedushah and to encourage our children to do the same.  If we overcome this last nisoyon before Moshiach, we will witness wonders speedily in our time. 

Rabbi Winston - Parashas Pinchas

 PINCHAS WAS A hero. Who knows how many souls he saved the day he “saw, arose, and took his spear in his hand” and avenged G–D.

It is interesting how we didn’t hear much about him before that time. His name is mentioned several times in the Torah, but we don’t hear about anything he did. He didn’t even get to be a kohen at first because he was born before the giving of Torah.

But then he literally exploded onto the scene and never looked back. It just got better and better for him, going from obscurity to becoming one of the most important prophets in history to one of the most important angels ever. He will be the one after three millennia to announce the final redemption.

The question is, was Pinchas a hero in waiting, or did he become one in the moment? Had he not risen to spiritual fame through the incident with Zimri, would he have anyhow through some other crisis? In other words, is there something we can learn from Pinchas about being a hero, or do we just sit back and admire from a distance what he did?

Clearly, the level of soul makes a difference. Usually, the bigger the hero, the “bigger” the soul. The soul of Pinchas had great yichus, coming from both Yosef HaTzaddik and Yisro, giving him the wherewithal to accomplish great things, things that the average person perhaps cannot.

Yes, greatness of soul does make a difference. No one is expected to accomplish more than their soul will allow. But that doesn’t mean that they can’t get outside help to make up the difference when a person’s willingness to sacrifice for G–D is greater than their spiritual capacity to do so. As Chazal said, “Someone who comes to purify themself Heaven helps them,” a metaphorical way of saying, “make the effort you can and Heaven will make the effort you can’t.”

But a step is still missing. There were many people standing around watching Zimri profane the name of G–D with a Midianite princess, and they did nothing. What was unique about Pinchas that allowed him to respond to the call while others barely heard it? Why was Pinchas inspired to act and others were not?

His pilot light. It’s not a physical flame per se, but it is a flame nonetheless. It’s a continuous sense of spiritual sensitivity that stays on even during the uninspiring times for those rare moments in life when we need to be inspired to respond correctly to a situation. If a person doesn’t have it at such times, they will freeze and do nothing even though they know they’re supposed to do something.

What is it, and how do you get one? When the Torah introduces Pinchas as the son of Elazar HaKohen and grandson of Aharon Kohen Gadol, it isn’t just to give shadchanim a report about his yichus. It is to let us know what Pinchas knew, how he thought, and where he got it from. He had not been a kohen until that time, but he certainly lived like one anyhow. 

So while others in the Jewish camp lived their own personal lives and served G–D as part of them, Pinchas lived to serve G–D. That was his mentality. That was his life. That was the way he approached every moment, holy or mundane. That was the pilot light that quietly burned in the heart of Pinchas from moment-to-moment, from year-to-year.

Pinchas was internally pushed to do whatever was necessary at whatever cost to step up and avenge G–D. Looking the other way wasn’t even an option for him like it had been for others. It made him a conduit for the light of G–D and resulted in all the necessary miracles to complete the job. And not just once, but several times in the future as well, sometimes as Pinchas and later on as Eliyahu HaNavi, like at Har Carmel, for instance.

*   *   *

Series Two of the “Sha’ar HaGilgulim Course” continues this week, b”H. For more information or to register, go to: https://www.shaarnunproductions.org/Sha-ar-HaGilgulim-Course.html.

Have a great Shabbos,
Pinchas Winston

Reb Neuberger: A New King Arose in Egypt

 

 


A NEW KING AROSE IN EGYPT

Imagine the shock our ancestors felt when “a new king arose in Egypt who did not know Yosef.” (Shemos 1:8) Bnai Yisroel had been protected in Mitzraim ever since Yosef ha Tzaddik had saved the country from starvation and disaster. Now, suddenly, their protector and patron had become their enemy!

 

My friends, we don’t have to imagine, because we have just witnessed the same phenomenon in Washington, DC. The man who was our patron, friend and strong protector overnight seems to have become the friend of our enemies!

 

Granted, the meforshim debate whether it was a new Paro or whether the old Paro had suddenly “forgotten” us, but in the end the result is the same: the entire world suddenly turned upside down. An environment in which Bnai Yisroel had felt safe suddenly became a dark swamp where their very lives were in constant danger.

 

And so for us.

 

Here is our avoda: we have to remember that, in Mitzraim, the dark saga of Paro’s attempt to destroy us became the vehicle for earth-shaking miracles: the Ten Makkos, the “impossible” escape from slavery and the physical/spiritual journey to Har Sinai, where the King of the Universe bestowed His eternal Torah upon His Chosen Nation. We must understand that the same process is unfolding here! If we could but see this, then apparent darkness will turn to light and hope!

 

In this week’s Parsha, Pinchas ben Elazar ben Aharon ha Kohain suddenly turns an apparently hopeless situation into a yeshua! “Yeshuas Hashem k’heref ayin … Hashem’s salvation comes in the blink of an eye!”

 

The Chofetz Chaim wrote that Yetzias Mitzraim is the prototype for the Geulah Shele-mah. We can understand current events from what happened in Mitzraim. As we say in the Kedusha of Shabbos Mussaf, “He will let us hear, in His compassion, for a second time in the presence of all the living … ‘I am Hashem, your G-d.’”

 

There was a reason a “melech Chadash” had to arise in Mitzraim. We had to be weaned from the belief that our existence depended on his benevolence. Other nations may depend on their king or president or prime minister, but the entire existence of Am Yisroel, lehavdil, is based on our complete reliance on the King of the Universe. Our direct relationship with Hashem could never have occurred if we had believed Paro had power over us. Our spiritual and physical subservience to Paro had to be destroyed.

 

As benevolent as the United States has been to us, it was an error to view the President as essential to our existence. His new attitude demonstrates many things we have to understand. Granted that the President also may be using a subterfuge here; his true attitude may not be apparent from his actions. Regardless, we have to know the following:

  1. We have to know that it is America’s honor and bracha to help Am Yisroel. Every friend to Am Yisroel is blessed by Hashem. Those who saw the United States as our “savior” need to be weaned from this incorrect point of view.
  1. We have to know that the entire world is against us. “Esav sone es Yaakov… it is halacha that Esav hates Yaakov.” (Rashi on Beraishis 33:4) As the entire world surrounds us with hostility and our “great friend” seems to have become our enemy, it is clear that there is nowhere else to turn but to Avinu Malkainu, our Father and King. Removing from us the “stick” that propped us up forces us to rely on our True and Only Source of Strength.
  1. We have to remember that the United States, however friendly it has been, is still the main inheritor of the culture of Edom, our primordial enemy whose entire lifework has been to try to exterminate us, G-d forbid. We are now in the culminating phase of this ancient clash, upon which rests the fate of the entire universe. We now have the opportunity to bring the long-awaited Geulah Shelemah into reality. 

What are we waiting for? The message is written across the skies!

 

“If only My People would heed Me, if Israel would walk in My ways, I would subdue their foes in an instant and turn My Hand against their tormentors.” (Tehillim 81)

 

How appropriate this message is as we enter the Three Weeks and we see with total clarity that there is only one place to look for salvation. It is time to turn our gaze to the Great House in which the Shechina will reside in Yerushalayim Ir ha Kodesh.

 

The Torah calls the Bais Hamikdosh “Lebanon,” which means “white,” the Place where our sins are whitened and our souls cleansed. “Our Sages … interpret that the whiteness of snow, to which the name ‘Lebanon’ alludes, symbolizes the moral meaning of white as the color of purity and refinement. They say … ‘Lebanon is the Bais Hamikdosh….’ (Sifre). In this conception, the entire Lebanon range is named after the ‘place of purification’ (the Bais Hamikdosh) that was founded on its southern extension.” (Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch on Dvarim 3:25)

 

The Temple Mount is at the southern end of the mountain range which is called “Lebanon.” The House that will be built there is the real and eternal White House, may we see it soon in our days!

 

 

Mount Hermon, part of the Lebanon Range

 

 

GLOSSARY

Bais Hamikdosh: the Holy Temple

Bnai Yisroel: the Children of Israel

Edom: descendants of Esau, our primordial enemy

Geulah Shelemah: the Final Redemption

Har Sinai: Mount Sinai

Makkos: the (Ten) Plagues

Meforshim: classic Torah commentators

Melech Chadash: a new king

Mitzraim: Ancient Egypt

Paro: Pharaoh

Yetzias Mitzraim: the Exodus from Egypt

Yosef ha Tzaddik: Joseph, the righteous son of Jacob

Prophecy of Bilam - Summer of Moshiach, American Empire Conquers the Whole World

The Prophecy of Bilam in Parsha Balak teaches us about the amazing potential the year 2026 has to be the Summer of Moshiach. The prophecy also shows the rise of the American Empire conquering every nation in the World.


Although were into Parshas Pinchas now, hope this is going to make a difference

What's Happening in Europe? Thousands and Thousands are Dying!

The INSANE Reason Europe is BANNING Air Conditioning

💥"למה המשיח עוד לא כאן? האמת המטלטלת שחשף מרן הרב זילברשטיין בשיעורו"

 




למה המשיח לא הגיע? מרן פוסק הדור הגר"י זילברשטיין אמר בשיעורו: עם ישראל נבוך מפחדים מי יודע מה ילד יום, רוצים לקרב את הגאולה, איך מקרבים את הגאולה, כתב רבי שלמה קלוגר בהדפסת הספרים תלויה הגאולה. לשיעור הצטרפו תלמידי המתמידים באופקים ע"ש מרן רבי חיים קמיל זצ"ל שהגיעו מרחוק לזכות לקבל ממרן שליט"א צפו בדברים המלאים. קרדיט תיעוד בקודש פנימה 🔔 אל תשכחו להירשם לערוץ בקודש פנימה ולהפעיל את הפעמון כדי לקבל תיעודים מגדולי ישראל שתפו את הסרטון כדי לזכות את הרבים במסר החשוב הזה.

Shiva Asar B'Tamuz & the Breaking of the Luchos - "Nothing Is Ever Lost!"

 

Parshas Pinchas and Shiva Asar B'Tamuz: "Batla HaTamid" - When All Joy Ceased

 

Journey to Har Menuchos - The Kever of Rav Shlomo Dovid Kahane, Avi Ha'Igunos

 

The Seventeenth of Tammuz in History - repost

 1  Tammuz

  • Yaakov and family went down to Mitzrayim (according to one source. This would be the establishment of the first voluntary Jewish settlement outside of Eretz Yisrael).

3 Tammuz

  • Yehoshua “commanded” the Sun and the Moon to stand still.

5 Tammuz

  • Yechezkeil’s first prophecy, 502b.c.e.

9 Tammuz

  • Nevuchadnezer’s army breached the walls of Jerusalem, 586bce.
  • Pompey captured Jerusalem and killed 12,000 Jews, 63bce.

10 Tammuz

  • Tzidkiyahu HaMelech was captured by the Babylonians, 586bce.

15 Tammuz

  • Chur, son of Miriam was killed attempting to dissuade the people from demanding the golden calf. As such he is the first Jew to die “Al Kiddush HaShem”, in defense of his faith.

16 Tammuz]

  • The golden calf emerged from the fire into which gold of Bnei Yisrael was thrown.

17 Tammuz - 

Shiva Asar B'Tammuz: Fast Day and beginning of "The Three Weeks"

The fast of Shiva Asar B'Tammuz: Declared by the Neviim / Prophets, that marks the beginning of "The Three Weeks," a period of mourning for the destruction of Yerushalayim / Jerusalem and the Beit HaMikdash / Holy Temple, culminating in the fast of Tisha b'Av.

17 Tammuz 1656 - 2105 B.C.E.:

On this day, Noach sent out the dove the first time to see if the waters of the Mabul / Great Flood have receded; (according to Rab' Eliezer) "But the dove found no rest for the sole of her foot and she returned to the ark..." (Bereishit / Genesis 8:9). Some say that was a sign that Bnei Yisrael (who are compared to the dove - Shir HaShirim, 2:14) won’t find rest on this day when the walls of Yerushalayim were breached….. See Da’at Zekeinim (Bereishit, 8:3)  

The Talmud (Taanit 28b) lists five tragic events in Jewish history that occurred on the 17th of Tammuz, on account of which a fast was instituted on this day:

1) Moshe came down from Har / Mt. Sinai with the first stone Luchot / Tablets, inscribed with the Aseret Hadibrot / Ten Commandments. Moshe broke the Luchotwhen he saw the Bnei Yisroel / people of Israel worshipping the Egel HaZahav / Golden Calf (2448/1313 B.C.E. or 2449/1312 B.C.E.) 

2) The walls of Yerushalayim were breached in 3339/422 B.C.E. before the destruction of the  Beit HaMikdash / First Temple and in 3829/69 C.E. before the destruction of the Second Beit HaMikdash, according to the Talmud YerushalmiTaanit 4:5 The city of Yerushalayim / Jerusalem is conquered. 
According to the literal meaning of the verse in Melachim / Kings, during the first churban (destruction) this actually took place on 9 Tammuz. [The Yerushalmi states that the wrong date was recorded due to the enormity of the tzarot (troubles).]

3) The korban tamid (the daily sacrificial offering) in the  Beit HaMikdash was discontinued, three weeks before the Babylonians' destruction of the First  Beit HaMikdash in 423 BCE.

4) King Menashe placed an idol in the heichal of the (first) Beit HaMikdash. 

5) Apostomus, a Greek officer who ruled Eretz Yisrael before the destruction of the Second  Beit HaMikdash, burned a sefer Torah in public (3823/63 B. C.E.), setting a precedent for the horrific burning of Jewish books throughout the centuries. According to some, it was he who placed the idol in the Beit HaMikdash at the same time he burned the sefer Torah.

The fighting in Yerushalayim / Jerusalem continued for three weeks until the 9th of Av, when the Beit HaMikdash was set aflame.

17 Tammuz - 1099:

Crusaders captured Yerushalayim

17 Tammuz - 1148:

Anti-Jewish riots in Cordova, Spain. 

17 Tammuz - 1388:

The Jews of Lithuania received a Charter of Privilege.

17 Tammuz 5151 - June 20, 1391:
:
While the Jews of Toledo, Spain were commemorating the fall of the Beit HaMikdash, their Christian neighbors, incited by the archdeacon of Ejica, Ferrand Martinez, attacked. 4,000 Jews were massacred in Toledo, Spain, sparking pogroms in other Spanish Jewish communities, leading to widespread poverty and deaths. Rabbeinu Yehudah of Toledo, the son of the Rosh, (Rabbeinu Asher), his wife (the daughter of the Baal Haturim), and his mother-in-law were killed al kiddush Hashem. Hy"d.
This followed massacres in Seville, where 4000 Jews were murdered. Hy"d, and many others were forced to convert, as well as in Cordova. 
On Tisha B'Av 5252/1492, 101 years later, the extinction of Spanish Jewry was completed with the mass expulsion.

Our sages found a hint to the tragedies of the seventeenth of Tammuz in the
story of Noach and the dove which took place on this day, as mentioned
above. The dove's not finding a "resting place" alludes to the trials
which the Bnei Yisroel / people of Israel, which are likened to a dove, experienced on
this day many generations later.

17 Tammuz 5536 - July 4, 1776:

The Declaration of Independence was announced in the "new" country of America promising religious freedom for all. The Declaration of Independence eventually provided the basis for religious tolerance in most other countries. While there were less than 2,500 Jews within the colonies, approximately 600 Jews participated in the revolution including 24 officers (and the great-grandfather of Supreme Court Justice Cardozo). Isaac Franks, David Salisbury Franks and Solomon Bush all attained the rank of lieutenant colonel. One company in South Carolina had so many Jews that it was called the “Jews Company”. 

17 Tammuz 5558 - July 1, 1798:

· Special taxes on Jews were finally abolished in Switzerland.

17 Tammuz 5701 - July 12, 1941:

4000 Jews of the Bialystoker ghetto were shot al kiddush Hashem. Hy"d..

17 Tammuz 5701 - July 12, 1941:

Several hundred Jewish women and girls were abducted from their houses, raped and shot by the S.S. during the night in Khotin, Ukraine. Hy"d.

17 Tammuz 5730 - July 21, 1970:

All Jewish property was confiscated in Libya.

17 Tammuz 5762 - June 27, 2002:

In a landmark church-state decision, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that tuition vouchers were constitutional.

17 Tammuz Yahrtzeits

Rabbeinu Yehudah of Toledo, the son of the Rosh, (Rabbeinu Asher), his wife (the daughter of the Baal Haturim), and his mother-in-law were killed al kiddush Hashem. Hy"d. (1391). See above.

HaRav Yitzchak Hakohen Rappaport, zt”l, (1680 - 5515 / 1755), author of Batei Kehunah
He learned in Yerushalayim in Yeshivat Beit Yaakov, but due to the difficult situation in Eretz Yisrael was sent as an emissary to Turkey and the Balkans to raise money.  In 1714 he was invited to be the Rav in Izmir, where he served for 36 years. He returned to Yerushalayim in his old age in 1749 and became the Chief Rabbi. 

HaRav Chaim Tzvi Mannheimer, zt”l, (5574 / 1814 - 5646 / 1886), Rav of Ungvar and author of Ein Habdolach.
Harav Chaim Tzvi was born in 5574/1814 to Harav Dovid Leib Mannheimer and Rebbetzin Sheindel.
In his youth, Reb Chaim Tzvi learned under Harav Yaakov Koppel Altenkonstanst, also known as Reb Koppel Charif, mechaber of Chiddushei Yaavetz. From this yeshivah, Reb Chaim Tzvi went on to Toplatchon, to the yeshivah of Harav Binyamin Zev Lev, the author of Shaarei Torah. After that, Reb Chaim Tzvi moved on to the yeshivah of the  Chatam Sofer — all before he became bar mitzvah!
The Chatam Sofer arranged a shidduch for him with the daughter of a naggid from Grupe who was willing to support a chattan dedicated to learning. Following his wedding to Gittel in 5592/1832, Rav Chaim Tzvi settled near his father-in-law.
A few years later, the Chatam Sofer told him that the time had come to not rely fully on his father-in-law and advised him to take up a Rabbinic position. Reb Chaim Tzvi said he did not feel worthy. The Chatam Sofer told Reb Chaim Tzvi that if he wouldn’t take the Rabbanut by choice, it would fall on him anyway.
Reb Chaim Tzvi went to work for his father-in-law by day and dedicated the nights to Torah learning. Once, on a business trip, he was robbed and badly hurt. When he returned home, he saw a letter from the Chatam Sofer. “I told you to take up a Rabbinic post by choice…” It was then that Reb Chaim Tzvi finally agreed to become a Rav. He accepted an offer from Shutelsdorf, the first kehillah that offered him a position.
Since the city was relatively small, Reb Chaim Tzvi found time for learning and opened a small yeshivah in the city as well. Later, he became Rav in Verboi, after their Rav, Harav Shmuel Zomer, moved to Pupa. In Verboi, Reb Chaim Tzvi also opened a yeshivah.
After the petirah of Harav Meir Asch, the city of Ungvar was without a Rav, and the Haskalah movement was making inroads there. The leaders of the Torah community of the city all agreed that the best person to fill the post was Reb Chaim Tzvi. Thus he became Rav in Ungvar in 5621/1861. Reb Chaim Tzvi also had an impressive yeshivah in Ungvar.
Rav Chaim Tzvi was niftar on 17 Tammuz 5646/1886 and was buried in Ungvar.
A few years before the outbreak of World War II, his talmidim published some of his responsa in Shu”t Ein Habdolach.

HaRav Avraham Tzvi ben Harav Chaim Ungar, zt”l, Hy”d, (5658 / 1898 - 5704/1944), Rav of Kapawar, Hy”d. Born in Tzehelem, (now Deutschkreutz), in Burgenland, Austria, he was a sixth generation descendant of the Panim Me’irot and a descendant of the Arizal
As a young child he spent many hours of the day learning. Before his bar mitzvah, he was accepted to the yeshiva of his uncle, Harav Eliezer Dovid Greenwald, the Keren L’Dovid, in Tzehelem. 
When the Keren L’Dovid left Tzehelem, Reb Avraham Tzvi moved to the yeshiva of Harav Shmuel Rosenberg, the Be’er Shmuel, in Unsdorf. After several years in Unsdorf, Reb Avraham Tzvi returned to Tzehelem. He was given semichah by the Keren L’Dovid in 5674/1914. 
During World War I, Reb Avraham Tzvi fled to Vienna, where he became close with Harav Moshe of Shinev, who was also in Vienna. 
After his marriage, Reb Avraham Tzvi settled in Beled, where he plumbed the depths of Torah together with his close friend, Harav Yoel Pelner. 
Later, he moved to Kapawar, (Kapuvar, a suburb of Shofron, Hungary), where he served as Rav. He opened and developed mosdot of chinuch — a Talmud Torah and a yeshiva — realizing this was the future of Klal Yisrael. He was met with fierce opposition, but Reb Avraham Tzvi did not waver.
Reb Avraham Tzvi was close with many Rebbes, notably the Minchat Elazar of Munkacz.
He was noted for his avodah in tefillah.
When the Nazis reached Hungary in the summer of 5704 / 1944, Reb Avraham Tzvi was not spared. The Nazis deported the Ungar family to the Shopron ghetto near the Hungarian border. From there they were taken to Auschwitz, where the father, mother and five younger children were murdered. Hashem yinkom damam. All five elder brothers survived. Reb Avraham Tzvi was killed on Shabbat, at the age of 46. His five elder sons survived. 
His son, Rav Yitzchak Shlomo, related that his father was a mohel, and he took his knife with him even to Auschwitz. On the last day of his life, as he was being transported to his death, he met a lady from his kehillah who had an eight-day-old infant with her. On the train, Reb Avraham Tzvi performed the emotional brit, adding that the baby will now be a Yiddishe boy being mekadesh Shem Shamayim
After the war, Reb Avraham Tzvi’s son Harav Yitzchak Shlomo moved to Eretz Yisrael and became a Rav in Bnei Brak. He established Yeshivat Machaneh Avraham Chug Chatam Sofer, named in his father’s memory, in 5722 / 1962. He also published his father’s works, Machaneh Avraham on masechtot Mikvaot and Beitzah. 

HaRav Yaakov Yosef Herman, zt”l, (1880 - 5727 / 1967). A native of Slutsk, Russia, he immigrated with his parents and younger sister to New York City at the age of 8 and was left on his own five years later after his family returned to Russia. Following his marriage, Herman's home became known for hachnosat orchim - feeding and lodging dozens of people in his home, including visiting European rabbonim seeking kosher meals. He displayed a staunch commitment to mitzvah observance at a time that many abandoned their faith, and urged promising young Jewish men to pursue advanced Torah study in the great yeshivot of Europe, including his own son-in-law, HaRav Chaim Pinchas Scheinberg, (1910–2012). For his promulgation of Torah values to his co-religionists, Herman was called the "Chofetz Chaim of America" by Rab' Boruch Ber Leibowitz, the Kaminetz rosh yeshiva, who lived with the Hermans for two years while he was fundraising in the United States. Herman's youngest daughter, Ruchoma Shain (died March 2013), immortalized his exploits in "All For The Boss: The life and impact of R' Yaakov Yosef Herman, a Torah pioneer in America" - An affectionate family chronicle, first published by Feldheim in 1984.

HaRav Salman Mutzafi, zt”l, (1900-1975). Born in Baghdad to Rav Tzion Meir, descendant of an illustrious family of Torah scholars who first arrived in  Baghdad during the Spanish expulsion. The person who had the greatest influence on Rav Salman during his childhood was the Ben Ish Chai. Every Shabbat, the young Salman accompanied his father to Baghdad’s main shul to hear the Ben Ish Chai’s drasha, which lasted for two hours and was attended by over 2,000 people. In 1934, he moved to Eretz Yisrael. For two full years, he studied the nine volumes of Siddur Harashash, with all of its kabbalistic kavanot. It is said that his prayers have successfully saved the Jewish people on many occasions.

HaRav Shimon Biton, zt”l, (5742 / 1982), Rav and head of the Beit Din of Marseilles and author of Shalmei Shimon.

HaRav Shmuel Yaakov Weinberg, zt”l, (1923 - 5759 / 1999), Rosh Yeshivat Ner Yisrael of Baltimore, the only son-in-law of Harav Ruderman, the founding Rosh Yeshiva.
The Weinberg family is from the Slonimer chasidic dynasty, a Lithuanian chassidut. The approach and relationship of the Slonim chasidim to Torah has been similar to the classical Litvishe approach. The founder of the dynasty was Rav Avrohom ben Yitzchok Mattisyohu Weinberg, the author of Chessed L’Avraham. As a youth, Rav Weinberg studied in the Rabbenu Chaim Berlin yeshiva in New York City under Rav Yitzchok Hutner, a talmid of the Alter of Slobodke. Rav Weinberg married the only daughter of Rav Yaakov Yitzchok Ruderman, the rosh yeshiva of Ner Yisroel of Baltimore and another talmid of the Alter. In 1964, Rav Ruderman sent him to Toronto, to preside as the rosh yeshiva of a branch that Ner Yisroel had established there several years earlier. Eight years later, when the yeshiva in Toronto decided to become independent, he returned to Baltimore. Shortly before the petirah of his father-in-law in 1987, Rav Weinberg was asked to preside as the rosh yeshiva of Ner Yisroel in Baltimore. He was a member of the Moetzet Roshei Hayeshivot of Torah Umesorah for many years, and was very active in expanding the projects of this important organization.

HaRav Yaakov Yitzchak Spiegel, zt’l, (1937-2001), Rav of the Romanian shul Khal Shaarei Shomayim, son of Rav Moshe Menachem Spiegel, the Admor of Ostrov-Kalushin (formerly of Brownsville, later of the Lower East Side), and the grandson of Rav Naftali Aryeh Spiegel, the former Rav of Ostrov-Kalushin in Poland; a talmid muvhak of Rav Aharon Kotler.

HaRav Benyamin Mekeketz Didi, zt"l, author of Yad Benyamin on Pirkei Avot. (year??)

HaRav Shlomo Shemamso, zt"l, author of Shoresh Yishai. (year??)



Also Note:  17 Tammuz:

  • Fast day and beginning of the Three Weeks.
  • The first Luchot were broken.
  • King Menashe placed an idol in the Beit HaMikdash.
  • The Korban Tamid was discontinued in the second Beit HaMikdash.
  • 4000 Jews were killed in Toledo, Spain, 1391. The riots spread to many other Spanish Jewish communities bringing death and poverty in its wake.
  • The destruction of Spanish Jewry began on the 17th of Tammuzand was completed (so to speak) 101 years later on Tish’a b’Av.
  • The American colonies declared their independence, 1776.
  • 4000 Jews of the ghetto in Bialystok were shot, 1941.

The Ironic Outcome of Shevet Dan Vs. Shevet Binyomin - The Chofetz Chaim's Staggering Lesson

 

3 Sharp Divrei Torah on Parshas Pinchas {Pninei Kedem}

 

Parshas Pinchas and Shiva Asar B'Tamuz: "Batla HaTamid" - When All Joy Ceased

 

Parsha Pinchas - 250th of July 4, 1776, 17th of Tammuz, Summer of Moshiach, Eliyahu HaNavi

 



The Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776 was on the 17th of Tammuz during the week of Parsha Pinchas. What is the Holiday of the 17th of Tammuz? How does Pinchas help us overcome the final obstacle that can make this the Summer of Moshiach?

HaRav Moshe Sternbuch shlit"a - Parashas Pinchas

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