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07 July 2026
Bombshell in Israel: The Judges Tell Prosecutors They Have a Problem with the Netanyahu Case
馃毃The GOYIM'S Guide to Antisemitism | Dr Gil White
Does the ceasefire with Iran mark the end of the conflict... or the beginning of a much bigger problem? As global events accelerate, more people are searching the Bible for answers about Israel, redemption, and the future.
Subscribe for more content: @RabbiAronSokol Why are more non-Jews turning to the God of Israel? Is antisemitism simply prejudice, or does it reveal something much deeper about history, civilization, and the future of humanity? The answers may surprise you. Dr. Gil White joins Aron Sokol for a thought-provoking conversation exploring the biblical roots of antisemitism, the rise of the Noahide movement, the collapse of Western civilization, and why he left Mexico to build a new life in Israel. Drawing on decades of research in anthropology, psychology, history, and the Hebrew Bible (Tanach), Dr. White argues that the nations have a unique role to play in the unfolding story of redemption. In this interview you'll discover: • The surprising biblical origins of antisemitism • Why the Noahide movement is growing around the world • What the Bible says about the nations and redemption • Why more non-Jews are embracing the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob • Israel's role in the future of civilization • What these global trends may reveal about the days ahead Whether you're Jewish, a Noahide, or simply interested in the Bible, Israel, prophecy, and current events, this conversation offers a perspective rarely heard in today's world. Dr. Gil White's channel: @ManagementofReality-English http://franciscogilwhite.com/Reb Sones: "Rabbinic Judaism"
There Is No Judaism Besides ‘Rabbinic Judaism’
From Sinai’s eternal chain to the modern pretenders: Discerning true authority in an age of divided loyalties
From the eternal chain at Sinai to the modern dilution of the title — it is time to return to the sources. The Living Mesorah is not a later addition. It is the very mechanism by which the Jewish people have remained partners with the Creator since Sinai. The claim that there exists a Judaism independent of rabbinic tradition is not merely historically inaccurate; it severs Judaism from its most profound message:
that the Creator intended human beings to be active partners in the ongoing work of Creation. This partnership is realized precisely through the chain of transmission and participation that begins with Moshe Rabbenu and continues through the sages of every generation.
Rav Moshe Cordovero zt"l
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Ohr HaChaim HaKadosh zt"l
Rav Chaim Ibn Attar zt"l
Ohr HaChaim HaKadosh

Tammuz 15, 5503 / 1743
Born in 1696 in Sal茅, Morocco. His father Rav Moshe ben Attar named him after his grandfather, from whom he first learned Torah. In 1705, the family fled Sal茅 for Mekn猫s, where they lived in Chacham Moshe De Avila’s home.
At age 11 he married Patsonia, his first wife, who was such a tzadekes she even wore a Tallis & Tefillin. He travelled across Morocco and upon reaching Fez, he was appointed as Rosh Yeshiva by Rav Shmuel Elbaz. Since he had had no children, he married Esther, the daughter of Rabbi Meir of Fez, according to some accounts the couple had several daughters, other traditions say he never had any children from either of his wives.
After the Moroccon famine in 1738 he left for Algiers and then Livorno - Leghron, Italy. In Livorno he began preparing to move to Eretz Yisrael. In 1741 along with 30 of his talmidim he embarked for the Holy Land, arriving at the port of Acco, where they settled. He visited Kivrei Tzadikim and Rashbi in the Galilee and in 1742, they arrived in Yerusalayim, where he founded two yeshivot, one for niglah the “revealed” Torah and one for nistar the secrets and mysteries of Kabbalah.
His seforim include Chafetz Hashem, commentaries on Gemara, Pri Toar - on the Shulchan Aruch Yore Deah and his famed magnum opus Ohr HaHaim – his commentary on the Chumash. He also authored Rishon LeZion, a commentary on the Tanach.
Rabbeinu Chaim Ben Attar passed away at the age of 47, on 15 Tammuz, 5503 (1743) and was laid to rest on Har HaZeisim.Your Greatest Tool - The Chofetz Chaim on the Power of Your Mouth.....Plus
Israel's Two Tiered Justice System EXPOSED
Everything Is READY To Build the THIRD TEMPLE
Summer of Moshiach, Moshiach ben Yosef's Army is Learning Torah in Yeshivah Today!
The 3 Weeks: Adam HaRishon and the Churban - "Hands" Off the Beis Hamikdash
The Intifada Came to NYC… And Nobody is Prepared …….IS THAT SO?
06 July 2026
馃毃 "讗谞讬 讗讚讘专 讞讝拽!": 诇诪讛 诪谞讛讬讙 讛讚讜专 讛讙专诪"讛 讛讬专砖 讛转注拽砖 诇讚讘专 讘诪拽讜诐 讝拽谉 讛讚讜专? 馃馃挃
Who Really Runs The World ……
From: 4 Jun 2026 Mashiach
Hashem runs the World, He directs all World Events to Redeem the Jewish people from their Exile. 5786, 2026 is a Special Year, A Year of Purim, A Year of Moshiach.
讛讗诐 讛讬诇讚讬诐 注诪讚讜 讘讻讜专 讛诪讘讞谉? ◄ 诪谞讛讬讙 讛讚讜专 讛专讘 诇谞讚讜 讘诪讘讞谉 诪拽讬祝 诇讬诇讚讬 讞讬讬讚专 谞讜讚注 砖注专讬诐 讘讘讬转 砖诪砖
Matos: The Deal With Gad & Reuvain AND Why Rebbi Akiva Cried!
What Happened To Half of Menashe?
[That was such a terrible mistake they made, because it was doomed to war by their neighbors.]
馃挜"驻专讗讬 讗讚诐 专讜爪讬诐 诇讛砖诪讬讚 讗转 讛讬讬砖讜讘 讛讬讛讜讚讬!" – 砖讜"转 讛讬住讟讜专讬 注诐 诪谞讛讬讙 讛讚讜专 讛讙专"讚 诇谞讚讜 注诇 注爪专转 讛诪讬诇讬讜谉⚡️
From October 2025 before the Million Man Protest

Rebbetzen Tziporah
Dear friends,
The first time I dreamed of Eretz Yisrael was when one of my friends in Camp Emunah mentioned casually that a relative was going to visit the Land. I was fully aware of Israel’s existence, (both I and Israel were 16) but it still felt almost legendary. No one I knew had been there. I had learned about both its otherworldly sanctity and its very this-worldly difficulty. In the mid-60s, poverty and war were part of the backdrop when you thought about Israel, but so too was Eretz Yisrael, the land where Hashem’s focus is revealed from the beginning of time to the end of time. The day-to-day reality had features that you never consider to be mitzvot, observed by the only people obligated to perform them, in a place where heaven and earth were meant to meet.
Conceptually, at that time, Israel and Eretz Yisrael lived in close, but separate compartments. In Camp Emunah (Chabad) and earlier when I summered in Camp Bnos (Agudas Yisrael), any treats sold in the canteen that originated in Israel were understood to be unquestionably kosher. It was almost inconceivable that it could be otherwise. Many serious rabbis marched in Israel parades. Only as time went on did the gap between “Israel” and “Eretz Yisrael” become more and more painfully real, and did that assumption begin to shift.
I began to think.
I started with the Torah itself. The Land is mentioned again, and again, and again – promised to each of the Avot. It was a promise given even before Avraham had children: that his descendants would inherit the land. It is repeated to Moshe, and throughout the Torah. But the promise is never unconditional. It depends not only on the Giver, but on the receiver. In the Shema we say every day that the threat of expulsion is explicit and direct.
It is difficult to grasp why a land is so central to a way of life in which there are so many other mitzvot – tefillah, Torah study, chessed – all of which can be done anywhere.
It was deeply important to Rav Yehuda HaLevi. His poems are still read today, expressing longing for a land he only lived in briefly. He was killed on his way toward Eretz Yisrael – toward the Kotel. In the Kuzari, he explains that just as a plant requires sun, water, and soil to grow, so too the Jewish people exist within a spiritual ecology that includes Torah and mitzvot – but also includes soil, earth, and place: Eretz Yisrael itself.
The Maharal takes this idea further, explaining that it is built into the very structure of reality. The “order” that underlies reality includes the alignment of holiness with the physical world, and without connection to Eretz Yisrael something essential is missing. Exile, he suggests, is not a natural state, even though nothing may feel more natural to us.
Rav Samson Raphael Hirsch gives this vision a concrete expression. Judaism, he writes, is not confined to private belief or ritual life, but is meant to shape an entire civilization –its agriculture, its justice system, its social ethics, and its national rhythm. Such a vision requires a land in which a people can live as a collective, building a society infused with moral and spiritual purpose. The Land is therefore not a reward appended to the Torah, but the setting in which the Torah’s ideals unfold fully within the fabric of history.
Some taught that every nation has its proper place in the world, and that exile is not merely geographical displacement but a kind of incompleteness, like a tree uprooted from its soil. Others taught that there is something unique about this Land itself, that the relationship between Hashem and His people finds its fullest expression here. Whatever language they used, they all shared the same intuition: there is a connection between the Jewish people and this Land that is deeper than politics, economics, security, or even history.
Perhaps that is why the Torah uses the word “inheritance” so often. An inheritance is different from ownership. Ownership can be bought and sold.
This idea may help us understand the daughters of Tzelafchad. On the surface, they could have just found husbands from their own tribe and settled down to what they could have mistakenly called Real Life.
After all, their father died in the wilderness and left no sons. As the Jewish people prepared to enter the Land, these five women came to Moshe with a question: “Why should our father’s name disappear because he had no son?”
On the surface, they were asking about inheritance law. But our Sages understood that they were asking something much deeper. They loved the Land. They did not want their family’s place in the story of the Jewish people to disappear.
The generation of the spies asked, “Why should we enter the Land?”
The daughters of Tzelafchad asked, “How could we possibly be left out of it?”
Hashem’s response was extraordinary:
“The daughters of Tzelafchad speak correctly.”
Perhaps they understood something that Jews have understood in one form or another ever since.
Our connection to this Land is not simply about where we live. It is about who we are.
Neither the Maharal nor Rav Hirsch were able to live in the Land, and Rav Yehuda HaLevi’s arrival remained an unfulfilled dream. For many of us, living here is still an unattainable vision. It is a mitzvah, but according to many poskim, not an obligation. What Bnos Tzelafchad understood was that it is something one can want.
Sometimes, wanting is all you can do – and all Hashem asks of you.
May we all be worthy of touching the place inside ourselves where wanting is alive and real, wherever we are. And may the fasts we are about to begin become like shovels –tools that clear away what blocks what is already beneath the surface.
If you want to dig a well, you need a shovel to remove the dirt that hides the water.
May all of us – those here and those still far away – come to feel more deeply that Hashem’s eyes are upon this Land from the beginning of time until its end, and may we find our way home.
Love,
Tziporah
PS: Moshe moments are ones in which you see the bigger picture, Hashem’s will and presence, by making yourself small enough to do so. Here is this week’s version.
Hi, I have some moments something is happening and it causes me to think back to my period of Conversion and I am telling myself something e.g. 'I chose this! or I want this!'
A short story, one Pesach after Conversion I was living in London and decided to take myself for a Pesach break to the Normandie Hotel in Bournemouth. At the time my parents were living in Dorset in a village called Sturminster Marshall about 20 miles from Bournemouth. I let my parents know that I was staying in Bournemouth and my mother who adored visiting gardens wanted to take me to the Rothschild gardens at their house Exbury near Southampton slightly further away. I ate a good breakfast in the hotel and took a full bottle of Pesach water for the day. As we were admiring the Rhododendrons in the garden my mother said 'Your father would like you to come and visit him' so I agreed and we drove to Sturminster Marshall.
As we drove down the gravel drive we could see that the lawns had been given a meticulous mowing by my father and the Atco mower. We parked by the front door, I got out of the car, and walked inside the house and into the kitchen. My father who had worked very hard mowing and thinking was leaning over the Aga range, he had made himself a large sandwich with thick slices of bread toasted on the range. He put the sandwich on a plate and put the plate on the kitchen table alongside a hot mug of tea. He sat down on a stool by the table and took a huge bite into the sandwich. I sat down on the opposite side of the table in the place where I had sat from age eight. We hardly said Hello before he said, 'What's all this then about not eating yeast??!!!' I nodded and listened while he continued 'Do you know! - it would be as hard to stop/hold back the spores of yeast in the air as it would be to hold back the sea!!'
I had a Moshe Moment. I could not believe it, here was my father connecting two things connected to Pesach in one sentence! I said something like 'Well that's amazing you got the two things in one sentence - we don't eat yeast on Pesach and Hashem holds back the sea water.'
With love,
Shulamit
05 July 2026
TAX AUTHORITY Threatens.......
Israel Tax Authority Demands That Yeshivos Submit Student Lists & ID Numbers.....
and what happens when they don't comply?
Or it takes so many months to gather all such info?
What about University students "studying" also?
Let's find out how many non-religious secular students are eligible for the IDF?
What about those "exempt lists"?
What about all the eligibles living overseas?
Is there such a "conscientious objector" in Israeli files?
IDF Commander in Exchange with Rav Dov Landau
NEW YORK LIFE: This is NOT the FIRST over 100 degree Sweltering Summer Day in NY!!
This situation seems contrived and created for a "socialist agenda"!
Inside Israel's Most Controversial Communities
Bombshell in Israel: The Judges Tell Prosecutors They Have a Problem with the Netanyahu Case
PRESENTING FOR INFO PURPOSES......NOT A DEFENSE OF BIBI For years, Israel's mainstream media declared Benjamin Netanyahu corrupt as an ...


