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10 March 2026
ESSER AGAROTH: The King Granted the Jews.....
...That The King Had Granted To The Jews... (Esther 8:10-11)
אשר נתן המלך ליהודים... (אסתר ח,י-יא)
ESSER AGAROTH
Haredi10: Zichron Moshe and Mea Shearim also entitled to bear arms: 300,000 enter the circle of eligibility (translated) Chaim Twill, March 9, 2026
Significant news for Jerusalem residents: Minister of National Security Itamar Ben-Gvir has approved 41 more neighborhoods in the city as areas eligible for a personal firearms license, as part of the continued expansion of the firearms reform led by the minister.
Esser Agaroth (2¢):
This report reminds me of something from Megilath Esther (Scroll of Esther) we just read last week on Purim.
And they wrote in the name of King Ahasuerus, and sealed it with the king’s ring, and sent letters by posts on horseback, riding on swift steeds that were used in the king’s service, bred of the stud; that the king had granted the Jews that were in every city to gather themselves together, and to stand for their life, to destroy, and to slay, and to cause to perish, all the forces of the people and province that would assault them, their little ones and women, and to take the spoil of them for a prey, (Esther 8:10-11)
More here Esser Agaroth’s (2¢) Substack!
New "Alert" Recording of Incoming Musical Missiles
ריקוד הבקבוקים במירון | The Bottle Dance in Meron
ומהלך ההילולה, ההמון רקד בשירה אדירה, הלבבות התלכדו יחד ברגעים עוצמתיים של קדושה ושמחה טהורה. האירוע התקיים לצד ניגונים חסידיים, כשאווירת ההתעלות ניכרת על פני המשתתפים. הילולת משה רבנו, המתקיימת בכל שנה בז' באדר, היא מועד מיוחד בעם ישראל, ובפרט במירון – מקום המסמל חיבור עמוק לרוחניות, לתורה ולצדיקים. הריקודים בציון הרשב"י הם מסורת רבת שנים, המהווה חלק בלתי נפרד מההילולה, ומביאה לידי ביטוי את שמחת האמונה והתשוקה לגאולה שלמה. 📌 צפו ברגעים הבלתי נשכחים של ריקוד תחיית המתים, שתפו עם חברים, וכתבו לנו בתגובות על החוויה שלכם במירון! The Bottle Dance in Meron – Moments of Joy and Elevation at the Hilula of Moshe Rabbeinu at the Tomb of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai On the Hilula of Moshe Rabbeinu, on the 7th of Adar, thousands gathered in the courtyard of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai’s tomb in Meron for a night of prayer, singing, and heartfelt dancing. A particularly uplifting moment was when Rabbi Shraga Schnitzer and Meir Frank led the mesmerizing Bottle Dance, a symbolic and spirited dance expressing the longing for redemption and the resurrection of the dead. Throughout the Hilula, the crowd danced and sang passionately, hearts united in powerful moments of holiness and pure joy. The event was accompanied by Chassidic melodies, with a palpable atmosphere of spiritual elevation. The Hilula of Moshe Rabbeinu, marked annually on the 7th of Adar, is a significant day in Jewish tradition, especially in Meron—a place deeply connected to spirituality, Torah, and the righteous. The dances at Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai’s tomb are a long-standing tradition, an inseparable part of the Hilula, expressing the joy of faith and the yearning for ultimate redemption. 📌 Watch these unforgettable moments of the Bottle Dance, share with friends, and let us know in the comments about your experience in Meron!
ריקוד תחיית המתים בהילולת משה רבנו במירון - Resurrection Dance in Meron | Hilula of Moshe Rabbeinu
יבמהלך ההילולה, ההמון רקד בשירה אדירה, הלבבות התלכדו יחד ברגעים עוצמתיים של קדושה ושמחה טהורה. האירוע התקיים לצד ניגונים חסידיים, כשאווירת ההתעלות ניכרת על פני המשתתפים. הילולת משה רבנו, המתקיימת בכל שנה בז' באדר, היא מועד מיוחד בעם ישראל, ובפרט במירון – מקום המסמל חיבור עמוק לרוחניות, לתורה ולצדיקים. הריקודים בציון הרשב"י הם מסורת רבת שנים, המהווה חלק בלתי נפרד מההילולה, ומביאה לידי ביטוי את שמחת האמונה והתשוקה לגאולה שלמה. 📌 צפו ברגעים הבלתי נשכחים של ריקוד תחיית המתים, שתפו עם חברים, וכתבו לנו בתגובות על החוויה שלכם במירון! The Resurrection Dance in Meron – Moments of Joy and Elevation at Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai’s Tomb 🎶🔥 On the yahrzeit of Moshe Rabbeinu, the 7th of Adar, crowds gathered in the courtyard of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai’s tomb in Meron for a night filled with prayer, singing, and heartfelt dancing. A particularly uplifting moment took place when Rabbi Shraga Schnitzer and Meir Frank led the Resurrection Dance—a powerful and inspiring dance symbolizing the longing and anticipation for redemption and the resurrection of the dead. Throughout the event, participants danced with fervent joy, their voices uniting in song, creating an atmosphere of holiness and spiritual elevation. The celebration was accompanied by uplifting Chassidic melodies, enhancing the deep sense of devotion among those present. The yahrzeit of Moshe Rabbeinu, marked every year on the 7th of Adar, is a significant day for the Jewish people, especially in Meron—a place deeply connected to spirituality, Torah, and the righteous. The traditional dances at Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai’s tomb are an integral part of this sacred gathering, expressing the joy of faith and the yearning for complete redemption. 📌 Watch these unforgettable moments of the Resurrection Dance, share with friends, and tell us about your experience in Meron in the comments! צילום: דוד כהן הצילום כפוף לחוק זכויות יוצרים, לכן חל איסור להעתיק או להוריד אותו, וכן להשתמש בו ללא קבלת רשות במפורש ובכתב Clip by: David Cohen This video clip and/or photograph is legally protected by law. All and any use of this clip and/or photo, including downloading or electronically copying, is prohibited unless granted written permission by the owner
Vayakhel Pekudei….and the Chofetz Chaim
09 March 2026
Yahrzeit of the Noam Elimelech כ"א אדר התשפ"ו
Rebbe Reb Elimelech Weissblum of Lizhensk zt"l
Noam Elimelech

Adar 21, 5547 / 1787
I once visited a Rabbi Weissblum in Willie, back when.......
DO NOT BE AFRAID…………Fall of Iran, 9 Months to Moshiach, Yalkut Shimoni on Moshiach ben Yosef
08 March 2026
😭A victim must be innocent: Trembling, Rabbi Shaul Alter explains to the bereaved father why the body of the person killed by the missile remained intact
ראש הישיבה הגאון רבי שאול אלתר, עלה אמש לנחם את הרב יצחק ביטון שיושב שבעה על שלושה מילדיו שנהרגו בפגיעת הטיל האיראני בבית שמש, חיזקו ועודדו בדברי אמונה וביטחון. הגר"ש אלתר אמר לאב השכול הרב יצחק ביטון, שכביכול הקב"ה התגלה אליו וביקש את הקרבנות האלה: "אם הקב"ה היה נגלה אליך בעצמו והיה אומר לך: 'אני רוצה שלושה ילדים', אני בטוח שהיית נותן, זה כל נפש יהודית, אם הוא היה נגלה בעצמו. אז הוא לקח, הוא רוצה שיקבלו את זה באהבה, זה מה שהוא רוצה. זה אותו דבר, זה אותו ניסיון, זה אותו קושי. וזה הכל מהכח של אברהם אבינו". האב השכול ר' יצחק הגיב ואמר: "זה מה שאמרתי, כששאלו אותי. אתה אמרת שאברהם אבינו עקד אחד ואתה עקדת שלושה ילדים, אבל זה לא מה שאני אמרתי. אמרתי, שלולא אברהם אבינו שעמד בעשרה ניסיונות, ובניסיון העקידה, לא היה לי כח לעמוד בניסיון הזה. ורק בזכות זה היה לי כח לעמוד בניסיון. זה כמו מסילת רכבת ורכבת, רכבת לא תיסע בלי מסילה, אברהם אבינו זה המסילה של הרכבת". הגר"ש אלתר הוסיף וחיזק את דברי האב השכול: "אומרים היום שבודקים ב- DNA. בנו יש בדם את ה-DNA אברהם אבינו, למסור את הנפש או לקבל את הרצון שלו באהבה, זה אותו דבר. הגדלות של אברהם אבינו זה לא שהוא נתן, אלא זה שהוא הסכים לקבל את רצון ה'. זה רצון השם, אז ככה יהיה". בשלב זה פנה ראש הישיבה לאב השכול ואמר: "אנחנו יכולים לדבר, אתכם השם מנסה בדבר הזה. זה ניסיון עצום". האב השכול פנה לראש הישיבה וסיפר לו בדמעות איך מצאו את בנו כשהוא שלם: "בית הכנסת נחרב לחלוטין. אמרו לי שמצאו אותו כשהוא היה שלם. לא הייתה עליו שום פגיעה, שום חבלה, כנראה הוא נהרג מההדף. הוא היה שלם בלי שום מום ובלי שום פגיעה".
מאיראן ועד ישראל: רבבות פתקי תפילה פונו מאבני הכותל לקראת פסח
The Apocalypse Ends It For Everyone Which Might Not Be Everyone's Choice. Is It Your Choice?
Very interesting about the volcanos! And the Magma under the Ocean
Reb Ginsbourg: Ki Sisa – Hashem gave Moses the Two Tablets of Testimony
How did Moses learn the entire Torah in forty days?
The Torah relates that: (31:18)’When’ Hashem ‘finished speaking to him on Mount Sinai, He gave Moses the two Tablets of Testimony, stone tablets inscribed by the finger of G-d’.
Rashi brings the Midrash Tanchuma::’When He had finished: בכלתו: here spelled defectively (without the first vav), as if to be read ככלתו: like his bride, the Torah was delivered to him’ to Moses, ‘as a gift, as a bride is given to a bridegroom, because otherwise he could not have learnt it all in such a short time.’
The Siftei Chachamin expounds, on this Rashi:’Hashem therefore delivered it to him, as a bride, meaning: that it should be bought by him.’
The *Be’er baSadeh elucidates: It is not the habit of Rashi to comment on defective spelling - however, here, he did so because of the use of the comparative כ: like - when it should have said בכלתו : ‘when He finished speaking to him - led Rashi to expound that the Torah was delivered to Moses ln the manner of the bride who is ‘acquired’ by the groom, without payment and without a price.’
Our Sages (Nedarim 38.) comment:’’And He gave to Moses’: Rabbi Yochanan said:’Initially Moses learnt the Torah, but forgot it, until it was given to him by way of a present, as it says:’And He gave to Moses..’.
Rav Baruch Halevi Epstein comments on this gemara:’There is no doubt that it was not due to natural forgetfulness, that Moses forgot the Torah that he had learnt, as he is known for his exceptional talents; it therefore appears to me that the forgetfulness was intentionally from Hashem, that he forget what he had learnt - however, the intention of this is not clear, and the Maharsha had difficulty in explaining it.
‘However, I did find an explanation for this in the Yerushalmi (Horayot 3:8) , where this very saying is also brought in the name of Rabbi Yochanan: all the forty days that Moses was on the mountain he learnt Torah and forgot it, until it was given to him as a present - why all this ? To put the fools on the right track, that one who learns and then forgets because of his defective memory, should not say to himself: ’Why should I toil for nought, since I forget what I learn.
‘The answer to him is that even Moses forgot what he learnt, yet nevertheless, learnt until it was given to him as a present, and was not forgotten.
‘So too, every person should learn, until he, too, receives it as a gift, and no longer forgets.
‘Further, we are taught in **Mas’ Avoda Zara (19.): One should always learn, even though he forgets what he has learnt - clearly based on our Yerushalmi.’
Abarbanel notes: ‘There are commentators who thought that this parsha should have been written after Parashat :’And these are the ordinances’, as, in their view, it was said there:(24:12-18)’And Hashem said to Moses: ascend to Me on the mountain, and be there, and I will give to you the Tablets of stone.. and Moses came into the cloud..’and Moses was there on the mountain, for forty days..’ - and this is followed closely by our passuk:’And He gave..’, and then the event of the golden calf, after which Hashem commanded Moses to carve Tablets like the first ones, and Moses ascended the mountain, and his face shone, and he then received the command to build the Sanctuary.
‘This is not my view - which is that the parshiot are written in their chronological order.
‘After the parsha of ‘And these are the ordinances’, Hashem commanded Moses to ascend the mountain to receive the Torah , the Mitzvot and the Tablets, and - in the same meeting - commanded him to make the Sanctuary, the priestly garments and the animal offerings.
‘After this was completed - as is written in the parshiot - then ‘And He gave Moses, after He finished to talk to him’, meaning: once He had finished talking with him as to the making of the Sanctuary and matters incidental to it, He then gave him the two Tablets of stone - and, as Moses was then prepared to descend, Bnei Israel made the calf, and Moses descended and shattered the Tablets, and judged the transgressors.
‘Moses then ascended, to pray for the people, and Hashem commanded him to prepare two stone Tablets, like the first ones, and he ascended and Hashem was appeased by him, and showed him His glory and the rays that shone on his face; when he descended, he gathered the people and commanded them to make the Sanctuary - so all the parshiot come in their chronological order, as the events occurred, without there being any difficulty.
‘The words:’And He gave to Moses..’, refers to Hashem who is mentioned above, and called them ‘Tablets of testimony’, as they were testimony to the Torah which was given at Sinai, to Israel, who heard the ten commandments as they were inscribed on the tablets - and as they were stone in the form of of thin tablets, they were therefore called ‘tablets’, as they were in the nature of tablets on which people inscribe writing.
‘As I have previously said, Hashem wanted to write the main principles of the Torah, on these stones, so that they should always remain whole, testifying to the eternal nature of the Torah - the tablets were thin so that they were not too heavy to be carried.’
Malbim expounds :’The gift of the Torah occurred at the end of forty days, at the beginning of which period Moses learnt and forgot what he had learnt, until - at the end of the forty days - the Torah was given to him, as a gift.
‘Our Sages add - from the Torah using the word ככלתו - that at the beginning, Hashem spoke to Moses, but at the end, Hashem said to him: ’Come, and we will say, I and you’. This, because his forty days stay on the mountain, cast from him his physical side, until he was - like the angels - a spiritual being, separated from the physical - for which, forty days were required, being the same period for the creation of a baby.
‘Until this period had elapsed, Moses had not yet cast off his physical side, and his comprehension was limited - like an intellect connected to physical matter, which meant that it was not free of forgetfulness - like writing on a piece of paper, which was erased several times, in the course of time.
‘This was the situation, until the forty days period was completed, when the physical cloud was lifted from him, and he attained comprehension like the angels, who have instant understanding - and, from that time, he learnt and did not forget.
‘This is what Hashem said to Moses: ‘Come, snd let us say, Me and you’, as the intellect stripped of the physical side, does not require to hear or to learn, as it, from itself, understands, as we saw at Matan Torah, when it said - of the angels - ‘Doing His bidding’, and then:’Hearing His voice’, as they understood everything from themselves.
‘This is why Hashem said to Moses :’Come, and let us say, Me and you’ - as you will understand everything before I say it to you ‘ - as if the two of them were saying it at the same time.’
The Alshich Hakadosh opens his commentary, by exclaiming :’Every heart will shudder, at the thought that Hashem permitted that calamity to befall His people - the golden calf - as, but for Hashem’s mercy, His people would have been destroyed, and the world returned to nothingness..
‘As to why Hashem did not ensure that Moses returned, and thereby spared the people from their transgression, the Torah preceded, by giving us a goodly reason, saying:’And He gave Moses ככלתו, to speak with him’, as to which several queries arise: Could it be that until the expiry of forty days, Hashem did not cease to speak with Moses; saying.
‘To answer all this, our Sages in Midrash Tanchuma, relate that Hashem spoke to Moses, and taught him Torah, and further - that at the end of this forty days, He gave it to him, as a gift - why didn’t Hashem do so during the forty days, and, if it was because Moses could not acquire it before then, why did Hashem teach him in these days, when He knew that he would forget what he had learnt - more so, when, in the natural order, the forgetfulness would gradually decrease, till it was overcome - and, this being so, why is it called ‘a gift’?
‘Hashem wanted all to know that any difficulty in learning, was not due to Him, but rather because our physicality is what causes this.
‘He wanted to give Bnei Israel merit, by the hands of the choicest of Mankind - Moses Rabbeinu - in two matters, as one: to teach him the whole of the oral Torah, in all of its details - present and future; second, to give him hand-to-hand the Tablets, they being the whole of the written Torah, as through them man cleaves to his Creator, so that his physicality would not prevent him receiving them from ‘the hand of Hashem’.
‘This raises a great query, as, we don’t find that even the angels are able to receive hand-to-hand, from Hashem.
‘For this, it was necessary that Moses dwelled for forty days on the mountain - like the period for the birth of a child - for his physicality to be transformed, to spirituality.
‘When this period elapsed, and the spirituality was attained, only then was it possible for Moses to learn and to receive the oral Torah - and not forget, AND also, to receive the Tablets hand-to-hand - the transformation by hearing the voice of Hashem.
‘At the end of the necessary speaking by Hashem - which was the expiration of the forty days - only then, was the preparation complete, and all that Moses had learnt in the forty days, he then forgot - which should have meant that more time was required, but, as this would likely lead to the people justifying their transgression - as being due to the delay - Hashem, at the end of the forty days, gave the Torah to Moses ‘as a gift’, and also gave him the two Tablets hand-to-hand.
‘This is why Hashem did not do so before the expiration of the forty days, when He gave it to him by His speech, as hand-to-hand, being by way of Moses cleaving to his Creator.’
Rav Moses Sternbuch adds, on ‘the Luchot being given as a gift, like a bride to a groom, that ‘it alludes to those who learn Torah, that they need to seek to acquire Torah, like a groom who ‘acquires’ his bride - not by casual learning, as in other areas - and, as with husband and wife, to cleave until they are ‘as one flesh’, his wife being as his own body.
‘So too, should he cleave to the Torah, in his love of it, it always being foremost on his mind, and all his thoughts in the engagement in Torah, and his yearning for it, just as for his bride.
A parting gem, from Rav Avigdor Nebenzahl:’Hashem knew - as all is revealed to Him, that Moses would - despite his daily toil - forget the Torah that he learnt each of the forty days, before it was given to him by Hashem, as a gift.
‘Why, then, did Hashem let His most faithful servant toil for nought, for forty days and nights?
‘The answer:true that by human toil alone it is not possible to acquire the Torah, as to do so, requires a gift from Above.
However, without the preceding toil, the gift from Above will not be given.
‘This applied to everyone of us - from time to time, there arises the thought in the heart of man: If, in any event, we are going to fo forget what we learnt, why bother toiling and learning? - the answer: do so, because if you toil and strive - you WILL receive it in the end, as a gift.
‘The mussar we learn from this episode, is that the toil and striving are the sole means of receiving the gift from Above.’
לרפואת נועם עליזה בת זהבה רבקה ונחום אלימלך רפאל בן זהבה רבקה, בתוך שאר חולי עמנ
* The work (Be'er BaSadeh) was authored by Rabbi David Pardo (1718–1790), a prominent Sephardic scholar who was born in Venice, served as a rabbi in Sarajevo, and later moved to Jerusalem
** Mesechtah
JERUSALEM? WHEN?
Just checked with the comments section and see that this was several days ago. Probably the one that hit near the area by the Temple Area Muslim Mosque. But look how it catapaulted all of a sudden over and down. Nothing intercepted it!
Is this real? Need Confirmation?
I don't hear any sirens or emerg vehicles here in Yerushalayim?
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YAHRZEIT STORY: The Parents of R' Elimelech of Lizhensk zt"l
10 Fact About Reb Elimelech of Lizhensk in honor of the yahrtzeit
- As his birthdate is uncertain, Reb Elimelech was either 69 or 70 years old when he passed away.
- He was born in Tykocin (Tiktin) Poland, a small town which today still has only 2,000 inhabitants. Sadly, the Nazis murdered all of the Jews of Tiktin during WWII.
- He had many talmidim including the Chozeh of Lublin, Rebbe Menachem Mendel of Rimanov, the Kozhnitzer Maggid, the Apter Rov and Rabbi Kalonymus Kalman Halevi Epstein, author of Maor Vashemesh.
- His last name was Weissblum.
- Many people consider the Noam Elimelech a "segulah sefer" and keep it in their home (and travel with it) for protection (among other uses).
- The Piaseczna Rebbe, Rav Kalonymus Kalman Shapira hy”d was Reb Elimelech’s great-grandson.
- Upon Reb Elimelech’s matzeiva (gravestone) there is no year of death. Instead, the Hebrew acronym for “rest in peace” (תנצב”ה) is written, which has the same gematria, or numerical value, as the Hebrew year of his passing, 5,447 (תקמ”ז).
- Thousands of people travel to Lizhensk every year; and you can submit your names to Reb Elimelech's kever.
- Reb Elimelech was one year older than his brother Reb Zusha of Hanapol zt”l. The brothers were extremely close and famously traveled in exile together for eight years.
- Besides for the Noam Elimelech and the Tzetil Katan, Reb Elimelech wrote Hanhagos Ha’Adam, a small kuntres (booklet) with good customs that one should conduct themselves. You can read it HERE.
- You can submit names in the form below (for free) through Yad L’Achim and a kvittel will be placed on the kever and davened for on the yahrtzeit. Tefillah can be for SHIDDUCHIM & All Yeshuos (Parnassah, Health, Children Shalom Bayis & All Personal Requests)



