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04 May 2026

Rabbi Weissman: Zionism and Hocus Pocus Halacha

 Zionism and Hocus Pocus Halacha (link)

Ben Gvir's dubious heter, and a bizarre response to inquiry from Rabbi Lior's office

Yirmiya was extremely frustrated by the corruption all around him and the prosperity of the wicked that spanned generations. At the beginning of chapter 12 he questioned Hashem about this. There is a great deal to be learned both by the way he asked the question and the answer he received.

Last week’s Torah class, in which we studied this and the rest of the chapter, is embedded above and on Rumble here.

As has become the norm in our dumbed down, color war generation, a rabbinic “ruling” without substantiation was reported in the media without investigative journalism.

Here’s one English report from Arutz Sheva:

National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir has received a special halachic dispensation from his rabbi, Rabbi Dov Lior, to enter the entire area of the Temple Mount, including locations where entry for the general public is prohibited.

The issue arose during a visit by Ben-Gvir to the home of Rabbi Lior, who is the official spiritual leader of the Otzma Yehudit party.

During the meeting, Rabbi Lior displayed a map of the halachically permitted walking path on the Temple Mount and stressed that it was critical to walk only on that path, so that visitors do not enter areas that are forbidden due to their sanctity. As a general rule, Rabbi Lior permits visits to the holy site, but only to the permitted areas and after immersion in a ritual bath.

At the same time, the rabbi clarified to Minister Ben Gvir, as reported in the Matzav Haruach newspaper, that a different ruling applies to him than to the general public due to his role as a minister in the Israeli government. By virtue of the concept of “sovereign control” of the State of Israel and the Jewish people over the Temple Mount, he is permitted to enter all areas of the site, including those where there is a halachic prohibition for the broader public to ascend.

Rabbi Lior emphasized to the minister the rationale behind this permission: “This is done through the importance of the concept of sovereignty of the State of Israel and the Jewish people on the Temple Mount, expressed by a minister of the State of Israel ascending and demonstrating presence in these places. Of course, it is desirable to do so with as much solemnity as possible, befitting these holy sites.”

What the heck? A dispensation for kares? Just like that?

Where is there sound halachic basis from Chazal (not some contemporary Zionist clergyman fabricating an argument) that clearly permits a government official to violate an issur kares to demonstrate Jewish sovereignty over a place?

This is especially true when he represents a decidedly secular Jewish state, and any demonstration of sovereignty would be an illusion anyway, because Jews continue to be forbidden to go there both halachically and legally.

For goodness sake, we don’t have sovereignty over anything under this Erev Rav regime. Whenever they feel like it they lock down the country, close shuls and yeshivas, restrict access to holy sites, prohibit earning a living, ban travel, throw people out of their homes, bulldoze settlements, batter those who protest, force people to take toxic injection, spray the population, conduct medical experiments on the population, imprison and torture innocent people, send money and weapons to our enemies, order Jews to be maimed and killed under false pretenses for no justifiable reason, and so much more.

The State of Israel was founded by monstrous enemies of Hashem and the Torah who openly waged spiritual and physical war against the Jewish people. They collaborated with the Nazis, sold us out every way possible, and made no secret of their desire to destroy those who held fast to the Torah above all else. They assassinated many Jews who posed a threat to their agenda, even before the creation of the state.

(None of this is disputable. People simply choose to ignore it, downplay it, or dismiss it as no longer relevant, not because it is, but become confronting the truth is inconvenient.)

Their successors have not confronted this reality, let alone done teshuva and changed course. The tactics have evolved, but nothing in principle has changed. They are what they are and have always been — enemies of Hashem and the Jewish people.

But we’re supposed to believe a bad actor (tarti mashma) with a big white yarmulka prancing around on parts of Har Habayis (no doubt with bodyguards and a camera crew as well) where even the holiest Jews and greatest Torah scholars are forbidden to go is a demonstration of Jewish sovereignty, an ultra-important messianic step forward, that somehow supersedes halacha?

Is this what we waited 2000 years for? For Netanyahu to wear a tallis for photo-ops, while the government promotes the largest perversity parade ever in the Middle East, and Ben-Gvir breaks halachic barriers on Har Habayis in a provocative, triumphant dispay of might? Should we say Hallel with a bracha? Is this really what HASHEM wants?

Why have no gedolim in Israel’s history ever allowed such a thing, or even broached such a notion? Why does it fall to a handpicked Religious Zionist rabbi in frail health to (supposedly) issue a statement in a contrived meeting, which is then regurgitated without question in unprofessional media reports and celebrated as some sort of historic redemptive event?

Those who cheer this baseless “ruling” are not doing so because they have cleared their minds of preconceived notions, overcome their personal biases, considered the matter objectively, and found it to be on firm halachic ground.

They are cheering it because it is what they want to hear, because it fuels their delusions about Zionism and the State of Israel representing a messianic redemption, not the final, most dangerous stage of exile at the hands of Erev Rav and the seed of Amalek, as Chazal foretold.

These are people who make the perverse argument that the government of Israel has the halachic status of a king. One can make comparisons to Achav, who murdered and also inherited, and to Menashe, who brought idolatry into the Holy of Holies, but halachically equating the government of Israel with a Jewish king is lunacy.

Nevertheless, this does not deter people from hijacking Torah sources that do not support them and making the argument anyway, because they want to believe it. They live in an intellectual fantasy land, playing games with the Torah and halacha, with Jewish lives and Jewish souls. The Torah doesn’t guide what they believe; it bends to what they believe.

“The argument can be made…” should introduce an interesting theoretical discussion in the Beis Midrash to sharpen people’s understanding. It should not be a segue for radical conclusions, for radical departures from accepted halacha that no rabbis in our time have the authority to make.

Those who self-righteously pretend to give deference to rabbis who fabricate specious “rulings” do not really respect rabbis and how halacha works. They are using and abusing rabbis who support whatever they already decided they want to do, who cherry-pick sources and take them out of context to support whatever they decided they want the halachic outcome to be.

Religious Zionism’s relationship with Halacha at this point resembles that of Reform Judaism in earlier times, with less actual scholarship.

Meanwhile, the Arab press picked up the story, of course, with a predictable slant on things. Ben-Gvir violating an issur kares with a specious “ruling” he sought and received in a contrived meeting will not bring redemption. But it might bring a fresh round of blood being spilled, and perhaps even the next round of contrived “war”, while brainwashed fools celebrate an imaginary triumph.

Maybe that’s the real purpose.

Unlike Arutz Sheva and the rest of the garbage media, Mordechai Sones did some actual investigative journalism regarding the “ruling”, and wrote about it here:

Rabbi Lior’s Office Deflects on Ben Gvir Temple Mount Ruling

Key quote:

In an effort to understand how such a radical departure from established Halacha could be justified, Jewish Home News reached out to Rabbi Lior’s long-time assistant and secretary, Rabbi Yossi Dermer.

When pressed for a halachic source or a written teshuva (formal response) that would permit a minister to violate an issur kares to demonstrate sovereignty—particularly when representing a secular state and where entry remains legally and halachically restricted for the general public—the response was startlingly brief.

Dermer stated that Rabbi Lior “is currently not in good health and therefore cannot answer your question.” Yet, in the same breath, he confirmed to Jewish Home News that “everything written in the article is correct” and that “the Rabbi indeed said this to Ben Gvir.”

Comment: It’s very suspicious that Dermer emphasized that Rabbi Lior gave this ruling when he wasn’t even asked about that, and there was no indication that Sones doubted it. Criminal psychologists refer to this sort of thing as preemptive denial.

This creates a logical and halachic paradox. If a Torah sage is too ill to articulate the sources of a ruling, how can such an “earth-shattering” decision be issued in the first place? In the world of Halacha, the more novel a ruling and the more severe the implications, the more rigorous the requirement for detailed, public substantiation. Without such support, critics argue, a statement is merely an instruction or a political opinion, lacking any formal halachic force…

…As of press time, no written halachic document has been produced by Rabbi Lior’s office to support the claim of expanded access. For a community that prides itself on Torat Emet (the Torah of Truth), the reliance on hearsay and press releases rather than source-based scholarship remains a deeply troubling development.

Here is a weird video from Arutz Sheva with an AI voice translating a small part of the meeting, which is somehow supposed to be convincing.

הרב דוב ליאור התיר לבן גביר להיכנס למקומות האסורים לציבור בהר הבית https://youtu.be/Qie4TVGEv9E?si=puKlY3-GwssoqynC

 

This is the proof? Please show me where Rabbi Lior even gave this “heter” to Ben-Gvir that the media unquestioningly reported.

It reminds me of the doctored video of Rav Kanievsky the Ministry of Mengeles went great lengths to produce in order to push those safe and effective shots, because they desperately wanted to protect us:

https://rumble.com/v10h9v7-rav-chaim-kanievsky-elder-abuse.html



The truth 

is abundantly clear for those who don’t want to be fooled.

LISTEN Eyal: They Wouldn’t Hurt The Family……..

 JERUSALEM (VINnews) — IDF Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Eyal Zamir strongly condemned Haredi extremists who broke into the Ashkelon home of Military Police chief Brig. Gen. Yuval Yamin Tuesday evening while his family was inside, describing it as crossing a dangerous red line.

The incident took place amid anti-conscription protests across the country in response to the arrest of a Haredi draft dodger.

More: https://vinnews.com/2026/04/28/haredi-extremists-break-into-military-police-chiefs-home-in-ashkelon-idf-chief-netanyahu-condemn-attack/

Does this look like an attack? It’s your fear of the truth that causes you to think that!


The Meron revelry was canceled - but crowds continue to arrive despite the guidelines (dubbing?)

 Impossible to hear the Israeli voices and emotions. BUT THIS MAY BRING AM YISRAEL CLOSER TOGETHER. One can read the transcript.

Kan News | Despite the decision to cancel the celebration in Meron and the roadblocks in the area, thousands are already at the tomb complex and plan to remain there on Lag BaOmer. This coincides with the continuation of Hezbollah's firing on northern communities and the tightening of the Home Front Command's defensive guidelines. The article by Robbie Hamershaleg from the Kan News edition 03.05.2026 • Kan News on TikTok ◄ / kan_news

The Jews Strike Back And the Elites Are Livid

A new generation of young Jews in Israel is stepping forward, taking responsibility for the lands of Judea & Samaria, and securing strategic ground that protects Israelis across the country. As they act to defend Israel’s future, the same elites of former senior officials, who failed to do so, are outraged. Don’t miss today’s episode as we uncover the deeper story behind the so-called “settler violence” media narrative and what’s really driving it.

 

What Is The Real Reason Behind The *Closure Of Meron? And All the AG Restrictions?

 Remember in Mitzrayim on “that night” we were told to paint our doorposts with th3 blood of the lamb and to “stay inside” until …….

Can we look deeper into the “restrictions and Supreme edicts” from a dif perspective.

We are being coaxed perhaps from above to stay close to home and in our homes and batei medrash. Only to venture out for necessities.

Think about this

Even the weather, by Design, is not reflecting the season but maybe a dif message?

Yes one could say I’m reading into these events.

But we Frum Jews are required to read the week’s parsha as it contains a reflection of our ‘current’ week’s events.

Could there even be a coming event that will make all this clear?


https://www.theyeshivaworld.com/news/israel-news/2543592/what-is-the-real-reason-behind-the-closure-of-meron.html

Why Satmar STILL Rejects Israel’s Miracles

 


Something Biblical Is Happening... Rabbi Yitzchak Breitowitz is a world-renowned lecturer and rabbinic authority, who is a senior lecturer at Ohr Somayach in Jerusalem. Rabbi Breitowitz's scope of knowledge, brilliance, as well as a unique ability to grasp complicated material and communicate it clearly to others is legendary. He has lectured extensively throughout the US and Israel on medical, business, and family ethics. He has published numerous articles on bankruptcy, commercial law, medical ethics, & Jewish law. Yeshivat Ohr Somayach located in the heart of Jerusalem, is an educational institution for young Jewish English-speaking men. We have a range of classes and programs designed for the intellectually curious and academically inclined - for those with no background in Jewish learning to those who are proficient in Gemara and other original source material. To find the perfect program for you, please visit our website https://ohr.edu/study_in_israel​whatsapp us at https://bit.ly/OSREGISTER or call our placement specialist at 1-254-981-0133 today! Subscribe to the Rabbi Breitowitz Q&A Podcast at https://plnk.to/rbq&a Subscribe For More Moshiach Content @RabbiAronSokol

🔥היסטוריה בפוניבז': אלפים במעמד פתיחת הזמן ומשא החיזוק של המנהיג מרן הרב לנדו שליט"א - הנצחון הרוחני

 


03 May 2026

😭"הקול שנשנק: דברי הפרידה המרעידים של המנהיג מרן רבי דוב לנדו מידיד נפשו החברותא הרב מאירוביץ, מרטיט

 

Interesting Fight in Congress......guess who's winning

Very Amusing.....even laughable 

 Iran Shouts "WE'VE WON THE WAR"... Then Their WHOLE WORLD EXPLODES

Reb Sones: Sovereignty.......

 🔥 Sovereignty or Sacrilege? 🔥

Rabbi Dov Lior reportedly gave Itamar Ben Gvir “special permission” to enter all areas of the Temple Mount — even those forbidden under kares — to “demonstrate sovereignty.”

When asked for the halachic sources or written teshuva?

His office deflects: “The Rabbi is not in good health.”

No document. No public explanation. Just silence.

Is this rigorous Halacha… or politics dressed as psak?


Read the full investigation 👇

https://jewishhome.news/rabbi-liors-office-deflects-on-ben-gvir-temple-mount-ruling/

#TempleMount #Halacha #BenGvir #JewishSovereignty

Eliezer Meir Saidel: Achrei Mot.... and ....... Emor

 Acharei Mot-Kedoshim  -  Eradicate Hate

Our parsha instructs us (Vayikra 19:17) that if a fellow Jew has wronged you in any way, for example – insulted you, embarrassed you, betrayed you, harmed you physically, financially, emotionally or in any other way, it is forbidden to hate them.

What constitutes hate, according to the halacha? One or more of three behavioral patterns:

  1. You do not speak to the person for three days or more
  2. You seek to cause the person harm
  3. You are happy at their misfortune

A few examples for clarification are in order:

  1. This is not speaking to the person for three days or more, not because you are away on vacation and don’t happen to see them, but because when you do see them, you purposely do a U-turn or a detour to avoid having to greet or speak to them.
  2. You have slaved for the last 15 years establishing a pedicure/manicure business and last week, a new family moved into an apartment building directly opposite yours and had the “chutzpah” to open a competing pedicure/manicure parlor. It is a small neighborhood and, you think, not large enough to support two businesses of that type. The new manicurist has gone round the neighborhood posting flyers on noticeboards and lampposts. When you came home from shopping yesterday, you saw her flyer on your building’s noticeboard. After looking around to see that nobody is watching, you removed her flyer from the board.
  3. A co-worker in your law firm is always belittling you and making snide remarks to the other people in the office about you behind your back. This morning he accidentally spilt a cup of coffee over his clean suit, 10 minutes before having to appear in court. You think to yourself “Yes! That is karma baby! What goes around comes around.”

If you behave in one or more of the three ways above, you are guilty of the Torah prohibition of hate.

That person chas v’chalilah just got you fired, shamed you in public, informed on you to the IRS, swindled you out of a million dollars, poisoned your dog!!! And you are not allowed to hate them?

Judaism is not like other religions – there is no turning the other cheek. You are allowed to pursue any legitimate recourse stipulated by the Torah for protection/justice/restitution. If someone is trying to hit you, you are allowed to protect yourself. You are allowed to take them to court and seek compensation. But you are not allowed to hate.

If someone has wronged you, the Torah gives the remedy, go to the person and rebuke them “What did I ever do to you that you did this to me?” In the best-case scenario, the person will relent and repent and then you are obliged to forgive them (you may still claim restitution for damages caused to you).

There are also halachic criteria for rebuking:

  1. The person must be “rebukeable.” If they are mentally unstable or rebuking them just makes them intensify their harm to you, they are considered unrebukable.
  2. You may only rebuke them if you yourself are not guilty of the same wrongdoing they have done you.
  3. You may only rebuke if you witnessed the wrongdoing with your own eyes, not by being told about it from a third party.

If you rebuke the person (according to the above criteria) and the person is unrelenting and unrepenting, then and only then are you allowed by the Torah to “hate” them. What does that mean? You are allowed to cut yourself off from them and not speak to them for three days or more (1. above). But you are still not allowed to seek them harm or rejoice in their misfortune (2, 3 above). The Torah allows you to disassociate yourself from them, to “hate” their evil deeds, not hate them as a person, to protect you from getting swallowed up in their evil. If, however, that person ever does teshuvah, you have to forgive them and you are again forbidden to perform 1,2,3 above.

The Torah (Shemot 23:5) takes this one step further. You are walking down the street and you see your best friend walking with his donkey that is straining under the heavy load. On the opposite side of the street, you see your enemy who is loading his donkey, no strain yet on the donkey. The Torah tells us that we must first help our enemy to load his donkey before we help our best friend, even at the expense of causing pain to animals.

The bottom line from all of this is that – the Torah forbids us to hate a fellow Jew – period. In the worst-case scenario, we are allowed to hate – the evil deeds, but not the person and even then, we are commanded to give precedence to our enemy over our best friend – to totally stamp out hatred amongst Am Yisrael.

Am Yisrael is not a nation of hate. Even with our arch enemy, Amalek, the Torah commands us to wipe out their memory, but not to hate them.

What it is about hate that the Torah so despises? What is hate?

Hate is all about anger. When the yetzer hara wants to make a person sin, one of the best weapons in his arsenal is anger. Anger is manifested in two ways – rage and hate. Rage is violent and visible/audible. Hate is violent and surreptitious – it poses under the veneer of civility but is as deadly as rage.

Hate and rage are emotions, perhaps the strongest emotions of all, but they are part of our animalistic nature. We are human, we cannot escape our emotions. When somebody wrongs us, we feel hurt, anger, rage, hate. The Torah does not deny us our emotions, it allows us these emotions, but for no longer than three days. After that we are required to use the Torah to control these emotions. This is what separates Am Yisrael from the other nations – that we try to elevate ourselves above our animalistic nature and conquer our yetzer hara, using the Torah.

 

Parshat HaShavua Trivia Question: What is “Pigul?” (Vayikra 19:7)

Answer to Last Shiur’s Trivia Question: What is the shortest chapter in the Torah? Vayikra, chapter 12 – only eight verses.

Small Eyes    Parshat Emor

Parshat Emor is the second-most “mitzvah-rich” parsha in the Torah (after Ki Teitzei) with 63 mitzvot, 24 of which are positive commandments and 39 are negative commandments. One of these positive/negative mitzvot pairs is Chillul (profaning) Hashem and Kiddush (sanctifying) Hashem.

There are very few people who epitomize the mitzvah of Kiddush Hashem more than Rebi Akiva. As we all know, Rebi Akiva suffered a horrendous death at the hands of the Romans, who peeled off his skin with steel rakes. Just before his last breath, he cried out Shema Yisrael.

In light of the above, the whole story of Rebi Akiva’s students dying because they did not respect one another seems incredulous. How could students of a Gadol HaDor of that stature (Tanna’im all), contemporaries of Rebi Shimon Bar Yochai (whose yahrzeit we celebrate next week), not respect each other?

The major source of the episode in question, quoted ad nauseam, is from a Gemara (Yevamot 62b). There is, however a second source, in the Midrash (Breishit Rabba 61, 3), which describes the story a little differently. Unlike the Gemara, the Midrash does not say anything about “not respecting” one another, instead it says “Shehayta eineihem tzara eilu l’eilu,” they their “eyes were small” to one another. What does that mean? This Midrash ends with Rebi Akiva’s admonition to his five remaining students “Make sure you don’t repeat their mistake. Fill the country with Torah.”

Another Midrash (Kohelet Rabba 11, 6) states this in a slightly different way, “Shehayta eineihem tzara ba’Torah zeh lazeh,” their “eyes were small” in Torah to one another.

From above two Midrashim, it appears that the sin of Rebi Akiva’s students was Torah related. So how do we understand this?

Rebi Akiva and his students were the pinnacle of Torah study in Eretz Yisrael, the top of the top. If Rebi Akiva was learning reams of halachot from every “extrusion” on the letters in the Torah (if you examine the Torah script, you will notice some letters have extrusions above them) then the Torah of Rebi Akiva was not only the 63 Masechtot of the Mishna we have today, but probably ten times that, or more.

If someone wanted to send their son to study in yeshiva, Rebi Akiva’s yeshiva was the elite, the cream of the crop. Only the best students went there, were accepted there, were capable of understanding what they were learning there, were capable of keeping pace with the study there. To be a student of Rebi Akiva, you had to be extremely gifted and super intelligent. There were other yeshivot, other rabbanim, but none matched Rebi Akiva’s for level of study and for number of students.

Aside from yeshiva students, the majority of Am Yisrael were working folk, not yeshiva material.

What are the Midrashim above are telling us is that the talmidim of Rebi Akiva had “small eyes” when it came to their Torah study. After the tens of thousands of his students perished, Rebi Akiva’s advice to his remaining five students was “Don’t follow those that died, fill Eretz Yisrael with Torah,” meaning that the students that died did not fill all of Eretz Yisrael with Torah. They sat in their ivory towers of learning and spearheaded the forefront of Torah study, but this Torah never got to the rest of Am Yisrael – they never shared it, they kept it to themselves.

How could this possibly be? A teacher of Rebi Akiva’s stature and students, Taana’im, of that stature? How could they possibly be so selfish?

Perhaps we can understand it from another Gemara (Bava Metzia 62b). If two people are stranded in a desert and only one has a bottle of water to drink. If they both share the one bottle, they will both die of thirst. If only one of them drinks the water, he will survive and make it back to civilization. What to do? Ben Petorah says “Better that they both drink and both die rather than one seeing his friend perish.” Until Rebi Akiva came along and taught “Your life is more important than the life of your friend.” If the bottle of water belongs to you, you must drink it all and survive and your friend must die. The halacha is like Rebi Akiva.

Rebi Akiva’s students heard this ruling about the bottle of water and took it one step further. If someone owns a “bottle of water,” Torah (compared to water), he has two choices. If you are a top-of-the-top student, the pinnacle of Torah study, a student of Rebi Akiva and you have 24 hours in the day, how do you spend them? Do you spend them using your incredible talents to research and uncover more hidden secrets of the Torah, or do you split your time between research and teaching what you already know to others. If you do the former, you will exponentially expand the Shas, but only an elite few will understand it and know it. If you do the latter, more people will learn and understand these Torah secrets, but you will miss out on discovering other, new secrets.

They came to the conclusion, based on Rebi Akiva’s psak above, that it is better for the owner of the “bottle” to drink and survive – not waste his limited resources on his friend, but rather reach his maximum potential in his lifetime.

As a result, Rebi Akiva’s students, instead of going down to and mingling with the rest of Am Yisrael, on a lower level, and teaching what they had discovered, preferred to remain in their ivory towers of study and push the envelope to the next level.

Rebi Akiva’s Torah that interpreted each and every extrusion on every letter has been lost – his students never taught it to anyone else, they had “small eyes” with their Torah. But more importantly, Rebi Akiva never taught it to the final five students! Perhaps his reasoning was that this level of study was too dangerous and too destructive. The fact is, we no longer have it, it did not survive.

 

Parshat HaShavua Trivia Question: How much flour (Solet) is there in each loaf of Lechem HaPanim?

Answer to Last Shiur’s Trivia Question: What is “Pigul“? A “disqualified” Korban, one that cannot be offered or eaten, for one or more of a variety of reasons.

Smelling The Smoke Already ........

 What Will Happen At Lag b'Omer Celebrations This Year?

מה יהיה בחגיגה ל״ג בעומר השנה?


YNET: Police say main Lag B’Omer event at Meron canceled, flag incitement against cops
Authorities prepare to block unauthorized access to Mount Meron amid fighting with Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, warn of calls to use pepper spray against officers

Shilo Freid, Yair Kraus | May 3, 2026

Esser Agaroth(2¢):
On my way from Tzfat to Nahariya, we encountered a police checkpoint at the junction of Highway 89 and Road 886. After speaking with the bus driver for a couple of minutes, one police officer actually boarded the bus, and began asking passengers where they were headed, clearly focusing on those in Haredi (ultra-orthodox) garb.

suspense is growing

confrontation possibility

message is not “saving lives”

its morelikely campaign to eliminate religion

especially because

they have a grand ‘rainbow’ event scheduled for Shavuos

will we see a repeat of what happened in that area


visit ESSER at link in title





Rabbi Weissman: Zionism and Hocus Pocus Halacha

  Zionism and Hocus Pocus Halacha   (link) Ben Gvir's dubious heter, and a bizarre response to inquiry from Rabbi Lior's office Yirm...