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01 May 2026

AISH: The Jews Who Rode With Daggers


From the hills of Jerusalem to the rivers of Babylon, finding their way to the highest peaks of the Caucasus — a story of a Jewish community that didn't just preserve their faith, but weaponized it for survival.

In the mid-19th century, a group of European Jewish travelers stumbled upon a sight they couldn't explain. Deep in the rugged Caucasus Mountains, they encountered men with sun-bronzed skin, thick beards, and the sharp eyes of eagles speaking a mysterious Persian dialect peppered with ancient Hebrew.

These men weren't hunched over books in a dimly lit study hall. They were on horseback, draped in wool chokhas (long cloaks) with cartridge pockets across their chests and silver-handled kindjal daggers at their waists. They looked like the fierce highland tribes of the region — Circassians and Dagestanis, but were they Jews?

These people had never heard of the Crusades, the Inquisition, or the Enlightenment. And when the sun began to set, they turned toward Jerusalem and prayed. This was the European "discovery" of the Juhuro (Mountain Jews). But the Juhuro had never been lost. They had been standing guard for 1,500 years.
The Great Transformation: From Judeans to Juhuro

How did a Jewish community end up in the mountain fortress of the Caucasus? The journey begins at the rubble of the First Temple.

Some oral traditions claim they descend from the Ten Lost Tribes exiled by the Assyrians, but historical and linguistic evidence points to a more specific path. Their language, Juhuri (Judeo-Tat), is a southwestern Iranian tongue rooted in the communities of ancient Persia and southern Iraq — regions that held the world's largest Jewish population for centuries after the Babylonian exile. That exile began in 586 BCE, when Nebuchadnezzar destroyed Jerusalem and deported the Jews of Judah to Babylon. The Persian Empire soon replaced Babylon, and while a small number of Jews returned to rebuild Jerusalem and usher in the Second Temple period, the vast majority stayed and lived under Persian rule for centuries.


Mountain Jewish woman from Dagestan. 1870–1880.

Approximately one thousand years later in the 5th century CE, the Sassanid Persian Empire expanded its northern frontier into the Caucasus. To hold those mountain passes against raiders and invaders from the north, they needed loyal frontier populations. Their solution: move entire Jewish military colonies into the mountains. These weren't refugees stumbling through history. They were Jewish soldiers of the Persian Empire.

Modern DNA studies confirm that Mountain Jews share their closest genetic profile with Persian and Iraqi Jews, with the majority of their ancestry rooted in the Levant (the Land of Israel). Ancient gravestones in the Caucasus — some over a thousand years old — bear Hebrew inscriptions matching the script used by Persian Jewish communities.

The "Native Americans" of the Caucasus

In many ways, the Mountain Jews were the Native Americans of the Jewish world. Like the Apache or the Comanche, they developed a culture forged by isolation and high-altitude survival. Life in the mountains was tribal. You didn't just identify as a "Jew" — you identified with your teip (clan). Each clan had its own territory, its own elders, and its own blood-feud customs. If a member of another tribe harmed a Juhuro, the clan was expected to exact justice. This was a stark contrast to the retreat strategy most European Jews had no choice but to adopt.

Like indigenous peoples of North America, they mastered a frontier where survival meant strength, mobility, and readiness for conflict. European Jews were often legally barred from bearing arms, which left them vulnerable to mob violence and pogroms. In most Islamic states, non-Muslims faced similar restrictions, though tribal frontier zones were frequent exceptions. Mountain Jews had no such limitations. They lived among powerful, battle-tested neighbors — and proved themselves just as formidable.

They were renowned for winemaking, carpet weaving, and leatherworking. But above all, they were master horsemen and capable fighters. They endured not by hiding, but by belonging to the world they lived in.


Mountain Jews in a Jewish Kingdom?

Between the 7th and 10th centuries, most Jews in the world lived under Christian or Muslim rule. The Caucasus, sitting at the crossroads of Eastern Europe and West Asia, became a buffer zone between those two rising religious empires. In that space, a multi-ethnic state emerged: the Khazar Khaganate.

Mountain Jewish delegates with Theodor Herzl at the First Zionist Congress, held in Basel, Switzerland (1897)

The so-called Khazar theory — popular on antisemitic websites — claims that most Ashkenazi Jews descend primarily from the Turkic Khazar population rather than from ancient Israelites. Historians, linguists, and geneticists have widely discredited this claim. Modern genetic studies consistently show that Ashkenazi Jews share substantial Levantine (Middle Eastern) ancestry with other Jewish groups. Historical sources do support the view that the Khazar royal family and portions of the aristocracy may have embraced Judaism, likely for political reasons, to maintain balance between the Christian Byzantine Empire to the west and the Muslim caliphates to the south. But the broader population remained ethnically and religiously diverse — Turkic pagans, Christians, Muslims, and Jews. The Khazar realm was a pluralistic steppe empire, not a Jewish kingdom.

Still, for Mountain Jews, the arrangement offered real benefits. None of the discriminatory laws found in Christian and Muslim empires applied here. Jews could practice openly, maintain synagogues, run their own courts, and trade freely along the Silk Road — all while enjoying state protection from violence and persecution. Jewish, Muslim, and Christian writers describe Khazar rulers using Hebrew in official documents, maintaining Jewish courts, and minting coins with Hebrew inscriptions. One striking example: a 9th-century coin that imitates an Islamic dirham but bears the Arabic inscription "Musa rasul Allah" — "Moses is the messenger of God" — an echo of the Islamic Shahada ("Muhammad is the messenger of God"), with Moses in Muhammad's place. It's a small coin that tells a large story. For Mountain Jews, it was a golden age.


The Last Shtetl

As the Russian, Persian, and Ottoman empires collided in the Caucasus, the Mountain Jews found themselves caught in the middle. While they often lived peacefully under Muslim Khans, they were frequently targeted during ghazavats (holy wars). In the late 18th century, the Persian conqueror Nader Shah brought them to the brink of annihilation.

It was then that Huseynali Khan, ruler of the Quba Khanate — a semi-independent state in what is today Azerbaijan — established a protected settlement for the Mountain Jews on the northern bank of the Gudyalchay River. He granted them land, protection, and a measure of autonomy. That settlement became Krasnaya Sloboda, known today as the last all-Jewish town outside of Israel.

Life there revolved around synagogues, Torah study, family networks, and trades: commerce, craftsmanship, winemaking, leatherworking. The community observed Jewish law, celebrated festivals together, and maintained a culture of self-defense and solidarity. During World War II, the Nazis advanced into the Caucasus but never reached the main Mountain Jewish strongholds, which sat some 300 to 400 kilometers from the front lines. At its peak in the 1980s, Krasnaya Sloboda was home to about 18,000 residents — roughly a third of all Mountain Jews in the Caucasus. Today, only 3,000 to 4,000 remain.

Resilience Under Communism and the Great Exodus

During the Soviet period, authorities attempted to dissolve Mountain Jewish identity by classifying them officially as "Tats," a Persian-speaking ethnic group. The goal was to deny their existence as a distinct Jewish group, but the community adapted. Many accepted the administrative label outwardly while quietly preserving Jewish life inside their homes, using the designation as a kind of legal camouflage that sometimes kept synagogues open longer than elsewhere in the Soviet Union.

Families maintained traditions through storytelling and ritual, found creative workarounds for religious observance, and passed down faith through tight family networks. Stories from the era describe miniature tefillin, small enough to hide so that prayer could continue under Soviet surveillance.


Hilaki Synagogue, Krasnaya Sloboda

After the USSR collapsed in the early 1990s, the floodgates opened. Large numbers of Mountain Jews made aliyah to Israel, settling in cities like Or Akiva and Hadera, while others built new communities in Moscow and Brooklyn. Yet Krasnaya Sloboda didn't disappear. Every summer, former residents return from abroad for family reunions, restoring synagogues, building new homes, and keeping this "Caucasian Jerusalem" alive as a living link to their past.


Unique Traditions of the Mountain Jews

Centuries of isolation in the Caucasus gave Mountain Jewish culture a character shaped by both Jewish law and the surrounding tribal world. Many families carried surnames tied to their original village or clan, reflecting the kinship networks central to mountain life. At weddings, communities sing the Benigoru, an emotional song reciting the names of departed relatives, as if inviting them to share in the celebration. Before a bride enters her new home, she smears honey on the doorway, a custom symbolizing sweetness and blessing in married life. During Passover, Mountain Jews follow Sephardi and Mizrahi practice by eating rice, though they traditionally refrain from it on the first two nights, a local custom they preserved within their own community.


Class held at a primary Mountain Jewish school in Quba. Early 1920s. (Wikipedia)

In prayer, they follow Nusach Kavkazi, a rite closely related to Sephardi-Mizrahi liturgy but enriched with local melodies, distinct pronunciation, and piyyutim (liturgical poems) passed down orally for generations. Polygamy existed among some families historically — more as a regional custom than a religious norm — but it largely disappeared in the 20th century and is not practiced today.

What remains most distinctive is a tight combination of traditional Jewish observance with tribal-style communal identity: extended families living close to one another, deep respect for elders and ancestors, and a culture of collective celebration and mutual responsibility that runs strong even among younger generations.

In Israel, Mountain Jews are commonly called Kavkazim and fall administratively within the broader category of Mizrahi (Middle Eastern) Jews. Among the most prominent Israeli cultural figures of Kavkazi origin is Sarit Hadad, one of Israel's most successful Mizrahi pop singers, whose family roots trace to the Mountain Jewish community. Avraham Tal is another well-known performer, recognized for blending spiritual themes with contemporary Israeli music.

In sports, Olympic medalist Yarden Gerbi, who won bronze at the 2016 Games, has partial Caucasian Jewish heritage. In philanthropy and community leadership, figures like Yevda Abramov and German Zakharyayev have played major roles in strengthening Mountain Jewish institutions in Israel and the Diaspora. Small in number but outsized in influence, the Kavkazi community has left a distinct mark on Israeli music, business, and communal life.


Guardians of the Mountains, Carriers of the Flame

For 1,500 years, the Mountain Jews have proved that Jewish survival takes many forms, not only through scholarship or assimilation, but through strength, adaptation, and fierce communal loyalty. From ancient Judean exiles to frontier horsemen of the Caucasus, from hidden prayer under Soviet rule to thriving communities in Israel and the Diaspora, their story is one of continuity against all odds. Their mountain villages may be quieter than they once were, but the spirit of the Juhuro endures, rooted in faith, family, and an unbroken chain of generations.


 

Rabbi Wein: Parshas Emor

 WEEKLY PARSHA FROM THE DESTINY ARCHIVES
Emor 5773-2013


The review of the yearly holidays of Israel appears in this week’s parsha. This type of review also appears in a number of different places in the holy Torah. The reasons advanced by the commentators for this seemingly unnecessary repetition are many, varied and insightful.  


But there is one that truly resonates with me and I think it has great relevance to our times and circumstances. And the gist of this explanation, of the necessity for repeating the holiday cycle a number of times, is as follows: The original mention of the holiday cycle is directed to a generation that seemingly needed no such reminders or instructions.

 

The holiday of Pesach and the commemoration of the exodus from Egyptian bondage were fresh in the minds and memories of the generation of the desert.


And the holiday of Succot was a daily event in their lives, living as they did in their tents and underneath the heavenly clouds in the desert of Sinai. The agricultural nature of Succot - the ingathering of the summer produce of the land – and of Shavuot – the harvest of the spring and winter grain crop and the offering of the first fruits of the land in the Temple – were not yet relevant to that generation, a generation that would not live to see the Land of Israel inhabited by the people of Israel. 


That description of the holiday cycle came to teach Israel that this cycle was eternal, independent of geographic reality, and not subject to the actual circumstances of life and locality then present in the Jewish world.  

 

The further repetitions of the holiday cycle dealt with the service of the sacrifices to be offered in the Temple. This repetition is Temple service oriented. In the absence of the Temple and its sacrificial service and of the loss of the Jewish homeland and its agricultural produce, one would have possibly thought that the holidays no longer had true meaning, and in effect could stop to exist. 


This is what happened to other faiths, cultures and even mighty empires. The loss of power, homeland and sovereignty also made their holidays and days of historical and national commemoration extinct. The Jewish people, faith and its Torah have survived for millennia without nationhood, homeland and with the absence of any vestige of temporal power.  One of the main reasons for this near miraculous ability to survive and even thrive has been the proper halachic observances of the holidays of the Jewish calendar year.

 

There is almost an unconditional and unconnected review of the holidays again in the book of Dvarim, for the observance and importance of the holidays is never relegated to particular generations or geographic locations. 


The holidays denote the passage of time on the Jewish calendar but they themselves are timeless and, in a certain sense, they are above purely historical time. The very repetitions of the holidays that appear in the Torah serve to remind us of this fact, of our spiritual existence. 


As a consequence of our return to our ancient homeland, the agricultural nature of the holidays now exists once more. It confirms the timeless quality that the holidays of the Jewish year represent.

 

Shabat shalom

Rabbi Berel Wein


What’s Really HIDDEN in the Tomb of the Prophets…

 

Rebbetzen Tziporah

 Dear friends,

My mother’s yahrtzeit, the 9th of Iyar, (never mind that we in the family thought it was on the 10th. The correction came when I saw that the date on the tombstone was different from the one on the computer. She would have understood this – she never trusted computers). It falls on the day of Rav Chalkowski’s shloshim. The two never met, yet the kind of life each of them lived – steady, principled, and unembellished – feels in some ways parallel. My mother, like Rav Chalkowski’s mother, saw Eretz Yisrael as the natural place for a Jew. Although I was an only child, she never tried to dissuade me from living in Israel; on the contrary, in her later years she made aliyah herself. For her, aliyah was never a change of address or citizenship, but something literal – an upward movement in how one lives: in dress, in observance, and in a quiet pride in what we are. Rav Chalkowski would often speak of his own mother in a similar register. After the sudden death of her husband, Rav Chalkowski’s mother recalled being told that Israel is the place for our people, and she took her young family into the unknown, settling in Kibbutz Lavi – a distance from England as real and as total as Maalot Dafna is from Brooklyn.

Against that backdrop, I want to share this about Rav Moshe Chalkowski, whose life, in a different setting and language, reflected a similar seriousness about how a Jew stands in the world.

Some of you know who Rav Moshe Chalkowski was. You may know him as one of the early pioneers in what Neve eventually became – the largest and most successful of the many open doors to women who were seeking to rediscover or discover who they are as Jews. He was with Neve since the 70s, even before me (and yes, most people had abandoned the caves, since the majority of dinosaurs were gone). Rabbi Refson, the one who began the entire process, was looking for someone to be part of his emergent vision and had asked Rabbi Chalkowski to come aboard. It seemed like an unlikely headhunt – why would a man successfully learning drop everything and do the equivalent of making Aliyah to another planet? When he consulted with his Rebbe, Rav Shlomo Wolbe zatzal, he was told that this is the next step in his journey, and as was very characteristic, he committed himself heart and soul to building.

In order for you to better understand the man whose idealism was never far from his humility, his vast storage of common sense, and ability to do things uncompromisingly without tossing humor out the window, I am giving you a bit of a peek into his Rebbe’s approach. Rav Chalkowski taught and lived Alei Shor. Here is a snack – to have the meal, you have to do the work. There were a few non-negotiable principles:

EVERY PERSON IS UNIQUE

He often emphasized that a person is an entire world unto himself. Growth begins not with imitation, but with discovering one’s own inner structure. Rabbi Chalkowski never saw “another girl” – he saw another world with a past, present, and aspiration for a future.

MUSSAR IS ABOUT BUILDING, NOT BREAKING

His principles avoided the (easy-to-use) tactics of guilt. He would strengthen what is healthy, develop awareness, and aim to cultivate middos gradually.

AVOID EXTREMISM

He loved to talk about being a BTN – a Baalas Teshuvah who is normal.

INNER SELF-AWARENESS (HAKARAT HANEFESH)

His vaadim helped the participants learn to ask real questions. What motivates me? What patterns define my life?

ORDER AND STRUCTURE (SEDER)

Rav Wolbe believed spiritual growth requires rhythm and order. He famously wrote that the greater a person becomes, the more ordered his life tends to be. Structure creates freedom from impulsiveness.

SMALL, PRACTICAL CHANGE

He distrusted dramatic spiritual resolutions. Instead:  Small practices, repeatable habits, and slow internalization are what lead to real change. He suggested using concrete exercises and mini-steps to choreograph the “dance” (a phrase he would never use) towards integrating emotion and developing sensitivity, relationships, and letting the person you are and want to be touch your daily conduct.

He avoided idealized spirituality detached from ordinary life.

EDUCATION MEANS SEEING THE INDIVIDUAL

When this became who he genuinely was, nothing could be further from him than forcing all students into identical molds. Rav Wolbe would maintain: A mechanech must ask:  Who is this? What is his natural path? What blocks his growth?

Rabbi Chalkowski took all of this to the real world. He loved demoting any bit of pompous “chashivus”—he had the joy of a child sticking a pin into a balloon.

I knew the Chalkowskis before I knew Neve. In one of the first years of my marriage, my husband had to be abroad for Rosh Hashanah. I don’t remember anymore how we even knew of each other’s existence, let alone that I could use an invitation for a Yom Tov meal, but at the time it felt natural. I came the second night of Rosh Hashanah. The usual (or more correctly unusual) fruits were on the table so that the brachah Shehecheyanu (thanking Hashem for giving us life and reaching this point) is said, celebrating the new year… and the new fruit. There is a lot of potential solemnity and, as the Rav picked up the fruit (I think it was a guava), he said exactly what I was thinking but would never say: “Nobody would eat this if it wasn’t Rosh Hashanah,” which, given its taste and texture, is… true. The invisible ice was broken, and the warmth touched everyone in the room, including me.

Seeing everyone meant recognizing what needed to be done and how. He slept in his office during the Gulf War to see that the girls didn’t feel isolated from anyone who could be there for them if an emergency arose.

What stays with people is less a formal legacy and more the experience of being around him. He had a way of making big ideas feel human and serious moments feel just a little lighter without losing their depth. Those who knew him—as family, students, or in passing—tend to remember not only what he said, but the rare feeling of being properly seen, often with a touch of humor at just the right moment. In the end, his influence lives less in slogans and more in the quieter, more grounded way,

Love 

Tziporah

 

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Today is Pesach Sheini….

 Guest article from myrtlerising:


Herre's an excerpt from Bilvavi's post on the deeper meaning of Pesach Sheini (boldface my own addition):
The very long and distant path that we have taken for these last 6,000 years can entirely be “bypassed” in one moment – if we reveal mesirus nefesh [self-sacrifice].

This was the revelation of Pesach Sheini:

What seems like a “distant road” – a hint to this 6,000 year period we are in – in one moment, it can all become a path that is very close [to Hashem].

visit here for more insightful thoughts: https://myrtlerising.weebly.com/blog/pesach-sheini-the-essential-revelation-there-is-no-such-thing-as-being-distant-from-hashem

Know your rights - R' Chaim Bleier

 

30 April 2026

🫵פאה או מטפחת? שמירת העיניים על חשבון הלימוד? אתרי טבע הפתוחים בשבת? שו"ת מרתק עם מרן הרב זילברשטיין

 



במהלך 'יום שכולו תורה' בעיר חולון השיב מרן פוסק הדור הגר"י זילברשטיין שליט"א במשך שעה ארוכה על שלל שאלות אקטואליות ומרתקות שהגיעו מהקהל הרחב | ביניהם: להסיע את אביו או את רבו? האש כבתה בשבת, האם מותר להעביר את החמין? עקב קוצר המקום, נביא כאן תמליל של רק חלק מהשו"ת ניתן לראות את השו"ת המלא בגליון אוצר הפרשה, גליון שואלין ודורשין שנערך במהלך בי רב.

לעבור ממטפחת לפאה? – הכרעתו הדרמטית של רבינו
השואל: "שלום הרב, בחור רווק בגיל מבוגר, שדעת רבותיו ומנהג אמותיו שאשה צריכה לילך עם מטפחת, האם צריך לוותר על הדבר הזה בגלל הגיל, למרות שדעת רבותיו להיפך, כי עד היום הוא עמד על זה?".
מרן שליט"א: "תראה יקירי, יש אשה שלא לובשת מטפחת אלא פאה, אבל היא פאה כשרה, ומאידך יש מטפחת שלמרות שהיא מטפחת היא טמאה! דהיינו, יש אשה שהולכת עם מטפחת, אבל המטפחת היא לא טובה על פי הלכה, וכגון שהיא מקושטת באלף קישוטים, או שאינה מכסה את כל השיער וכדומה, וזה לא מביא יראת שמים, אלא להיפך. ומצד שני, יש אחרת שהולכת עם פאה, אבל הפאה היא כשרה וצנועה. כך שצריך לדעת שיש מטפחת לא טובה, ויש פאה כן טובה!
"יש נשים צדקניות שאיני רוצה לנקוב בשמותיהן ולא שמות אבותיהן, שהלכו עם פאות כל כך כשרות וצנועות, ויש כאלה שהולכים עם מטפחת אך היא טריפה! ממילא אין כלל כזה, צריכים כל שאלה לשאול את הרב ולהחליט על פיו, וכמובן להראות לרב בדיוק על איזה פאה מדובר ועל איזה מטפחת מדובר!".
*
גילה בשבת בבוקר כי האש כבתה תחת הצ'ולנט, מה יעשה?
מנחה המעמד הזמין את החברותא של רשכבה"ג מרנא בעל 'אילת השחר' זיע"א לעלות ולשאול שאלה. הגרמ"י התנצל בפני רבינו: "אינני רוצה להטריח ולהפריע"..., אולם רבינו הגיב בחיוך: "אני עושה מחאה, אתה יודע להפריע? מי אמר לך שאתה יודע להפריע? זה צדיק, מהתלמידי חכמים של העיר בני ברק. תלמיד מובהק של הרב שטינמן. במקום שאין מכירין אותו, הייתי צריך להגיד...".
הגרמ"י שניידר שליט"א: "אני רוצה להקדים, שמאז שמחת תורה לפני שנתיים וחצי, הדבר הראשון ששמענו ממרן הרב שליט"א היה ללמוד הלכות שבת, כמו שהרב שר כי אשמרה וכו' כל הזמן. אז עשינו בבית הנהגה בעז"ה ובלי נדר, שכל סעודה אומרים שאלה חדשה שהתעוררה בשבת הזו, וחוץ מזה משתדלים כל יום ללמוד הלכה בהלכות שבת, כמו שהרב אמר".
"אציג בפני התלמידי חכמים החשובים והגדולים פה שזוכים לבוא ולשמוע מרבינו הגדול שליט"א שאלה שהיתה בשבת בבוקר, בערך ב 9:30 בבוקר, משמים הקב"ה שם לי בראש להסתכל עם הלהבה דולקת מתחת הצ'ולנט, זה לא מצוי בכלל שכבה לי הגז, וראיתי שיש 2 להבות, אחת כבויה, והשניה גם. הסיר היה רותח עדיין, היתה שאלה אם אפשר להעביר אותו לשכן, שיש לו גם אש עם פלטה, בלע'ך על האש, אם מותר ובאיזה מצב?"

מרן רבינו שליט"א: "זה התעורר כדי שכולנו נזכה לשמוע את השאלה הזו. אני חושב שאם זה מבושל כל צרכו ואין חשש של בישול, אז אין בעיה להעביר לאש אחרת". [לאחר מכן הוסיף רבינו: "במקרה שיש רוטב בתבשיל, אז דווקא כשעדיין לא הצטנן הרוטב לגמרי. וסברת ההיתר היא, דבמצב כזה שהקדירה על הכירה, ומקומה מראה שדעת הבעלים ורצונם הכללי על המשך השהייה, ומיד כשיוודע להם יחזירו לכירה אחרת, לכן אע"פ שהאש כבתה, לא מיקרי ביטול השהייה הקודמת (וכ"כ באג"מ או"ח ח"ד סימן עד, דיני בישול אות לח). אמנם בארחות שבת (ח"א עמ' פח) הביא ממו"ח מרן הגרי"ש אלישיב זצ"ל שרק אם הפח או הפלטה עדיין לא נצטננו, באופן כזה שאפשר עדיין לחמם עליהם איזה מאכל, אז מותר להעביר את הקדירה לאש אחרת, דבאופן זה שהפח עדיין חם, לא אמרינן דנתבטלה לגמרי שהייתו הראשונה, יעו"ש]. וכאן הוסיף רבינו לספר: "חוץ ממקרה אחד שהיה בליקווד, היתה שם אשה אלמנה שהיתה מבשלת נפלאה, חוץ מדבר אחד שלא בישלה טוב, צ'ולנט, לא יודע למה, כך רצה בורא עולם. הלכו הבחורים והורידו את הצ'ולנט מהאש עד לרצפה, היא שמעה את זה ובכתה והורידה דמעה. נודע הדבר למרן הגאון רבי אהרן קוטלר זצוק"ל, ושאל מי הוריד את הצ'ולנט ואמרו לו, ניגש אליו ואמר לו, תסלח לי, תקח את זה ותחזיר בחזרה למקום. אז הוא אמר, שזה איסור חזרה. ואמר לו רבי אהרן, מחזרה לא מתים, אבל מלהלבין אלמנה עלולים למות! מי יותר חמור איסור חזרה או לצער אלמנה, שעליה נאמר, כל אלמנה ויתום לא תענון, כי אם ענה תענה אותו, וחרה אפי והרגתי אתכם! שמעתם פעם פסק כזה?". הגרמ"י שניידר: "זה חיזוק עצום לדעת איך להיזהר באלמנה. מרן הרב שטינמן זצ"ל, היה רועד מלצער אלמנה. היתה אלמנה שהיתה באה אליו קבוע כל חודש, ובתחילה לא הבנתי מי זה, ואמרה תגיד לרב שזה הגברת פלונית, והיה מוציא מאה שקל ונותן לה. במשך שנים היא הגיעה". * אתם שומרים על העיר – מפגינים ברבים שה' הוא האלוקים! לסיום המעמד, פנה המנחה לרבינו: "כעת שאלה אחרונה, אנחנו לא יודעים מה יהיה, נשיא ארה"ב כל יום אומר משהו אחר, ויש אנשים שמפחדים שהולך לחזור מלחמה, כן אזעקה, לא אזעקה, אנחנו רוצים לשמוע מהרב, מה יהודים יכולים להתחזק, כדי להינצל מהמלחמה, ושיעברו את הכל בשלום, ללא פחדים, ויוכלו ללמוד תורה בנחת?". מרן רבינו שליט"א: "לסיום זו שאלה הכי יפה, הולכים כעת הביתה, כל אשה תשאל את בעלה מה שמעת, וזו השאלה הכי טובה, מה ששאלתם. תראו, אלה שנמצאים פה, קוראים להם 'נטורי קרתא', אתם יודעים מה זה? – שומרי העיר... "את הסעודה גמרו לאכול, את כל השיעורים הנפלאים שהיה – שמענו, כעת נשארים עוד קצת כדי לשמוע שאלות, לכם קוראים נטורי קרתא, אתם שומרים על העיר. אתם לא מחזיקים רובה ביד, מי שצריך אז כן, אבל אנחנו? אם אדם נשאר כאן, אע"פ שקצת עייף, מהבוקר, יש כאן עשרות איש, אתם נטורי קרתא אתם! כעת כבר אין גלידות, וסוכריות, וגם יין אין, רק תורה בלבד! מי שכעת נשאר קוראים לו נטורי קרתא!". המנחה: "שואלים איזה דבר טוב יעשו כדי שכולם ינצלו, מה יקבלו חיזוק על עצמם?"
רבינו: "הדבר הכי גדול זה שבת, כי אשמרה שבת קל ישמרני! האבן עזרא חיבר, ואמר עליו הרמב"ם שהוא ניצוץ מנשמת אברהם אבינו ע"ה".

💰אני אתן בלי נדר סך 300 שקל: המנהיג מרן ראש הישיבה הרב לנדו חושף מול המצלמה על התרומה לקרן המיוחדת

 



מכתב נדיר ויוצא דופן שמתפרסם חושף דרמה של ממש שהתחוללה הרחק מעין הציבור. מרן רבן של ישראל רבינו הגר"ד לנדו פונה בקריאה אישית וחסרת תקדים, חושף את מצוקתו של איש ציבור שפועל בסתר, מצהיר על סכום מדויק שהוא עצמו תורם מכיסו ומבקש מכל יהודי להצטרף אליו מאחורי הקלעים של עולם החסד פועלים לעיתים אנשים שזהותם נותרת חסויה, אך פועלם מציל משפחות שלמות מקריסה. כעת מתברר כי אחד מאותם עמודי תווך נקלע בעצמו למצוקה נוראה. מרן רבן של ישראל שליט"א מתאר במכתבו את גודל פעליו של האיש. "התוודעתי לאחרונה למקרה מיוחד, של תלמיד חכם מורם מעם, אשר במסירות לב ובהתמסרות עצומה מסייע לכלל ולפרט בעצה ובתושיה, ואף בדברים רבים הנוגעים לפיקוח נפש ממש, ומאות ואלפים נעזרים על ידו תמידין כסדרן" חושף מרן בפני הציבור. אותו תלמיד חכם עצום אשר נושא על כתפיו משאות של אחרים, קרס לאחרונה תחת משא כבד של חובות שהצטברו וסוגרים עליו. קריסה זו מאיימת לשתק את פעילותו הענפה ולפגוע באופן ישיר באותם מאות ואלפים שנעזרים בו. מנהיג הדור קובע באופן נחרץ כי מדובר בחובה ציבורית של כולנו להכיר לו טובה. "ויהודי נכבד זה, אדם ביקר מאד נעלה, נשתרגו עליו חובות רבים והדבר מעיק עליו מאד, והציבור כולו, ואני בכללם, מחוייבים להתאמץ בהכרת הטוב במקרה זה, ואף גם זאת, מוטל עלינו להסיר מעליו את קשייו אלו, בכדי שיהא פנוי ליבו למען הכלל והפרט". כדי להוציא את מהלך ההצלה אל הפועל, ביקש מרן מראשי קופת העיר להקים קרן חירום מיוחדת. על כך מעיד מרן במכתבו. "והרבנים הגאונים גבאי קופת העיר שליט"א, יחד עם עוד עסקנים נאמנים שליט"א התוו הסדר מיוחד עם בני משפחתו ונדיבי עם, להסיר עול חובותיו מעליו". השלב הבא במכתב מעורר השתאות רבה בקרב הקוראים. מרן שליט"א מבקש מהציבור להצטרף אליו למאמץ ונוקב בסכום המדויק שהוא מפריש לטובת העניין. "אני אתן בלי נדר סך 300 שקל בעבור דבר זה, והנני פונה לכל אחד ואחד שירים את תרומתו בעד צדקה נעלה זו, ובכך יזכה לשייכות בגודל צדקותיו הנעלות עם הכלל והפרט של תלמיד חכם מך זה". לקראת סיום קריאתו מעניק מרן ברכה נדירה ועצומה שנוגעת בלב כל אחד מאיתנו. הבטחה מפורשת שמי שיתרום ויעזור לאותו יהודי יזכה בעצמו לשפע מיוחד ולא יזדקק לעולם למתנת בשר ודם. "ויהי רצון שיזכו כל התורמים לשפע רב בכל מילי דמיטב, ולא יזדקקו להסתייע מאחרים, אך טוב וחסד באהלם כל הימים לאורך ימים טובים". הציבור הרחב נקרא בימים אלו להיענות לבקשתו האישית של רשכבה"ג ולהיכנס לשותפות בסך 300 שקלים כהנהגתו המפורשת, כדי להציל את התלמיד חכם מקריסה ולזכות בברכה ההיסטורית.

Divine Encounter Weaves Israeli Soldier’s Legacy into Two Families Rabbi Yoel Gold Israel Hamas War

 


Embark on a poignant journey as we unravel the extraordinary tale of two families, bound by the name "Dvir" and an unforeseen connection that transcends tragedy. Join us in exploring the heartwarming story of an Israeli soldier, St.-Sgt. Dvir Emanuelof, whose legacy takes an unexpected turn, bringing solace and unity to the lives of two mothers. Witness the emotional twists of fate, from loss to resilience, as we delve into the profound impact of a newborn named Dvir, and the miraculous threads of destiny that intertwine these families' lives. This is a story of shared destinies, unspoken bonds, and the powerful embrace of hope from heaven above. #DvirLegacy #IsraeliSoldierStory #MiracleConnection

EXCELLENT Oven Baked 1 Hour Shabbat Menu


 

 Oven Baked 1 Hour Shabbat Menu

This sunset in Jerusalem feels surreal! Stroll through the Old City.

 

One In Ten Million

 

Another Jamie Geller Cooks Shabbat Dinner In 1 Hour

Reb Neuberger: Emor - Against All Logic

  


AGAINST ALL LOGIC 

There is a major principle which is so basic that the entire world is aware of it. It goes by various descriptions, for example, “the darkest part of the night comes just before the dawn.”

 

Perhaps the best example is our redemption from Mitzraim, which took place at the moment when we were at rock bottom, mem-tes sha’arai tumah, the forty-ninth level of impurity, a hairsbreadth away from the moment we would have ceased to exist – G-d forbid – as Hashem’s People. Can you imagine! Another second and all would have been lost! If one contemplates this, it is terribly frightening.

 

As you may know, I had this experience in my own life. On January 10, 1966, in the middle of the night, I awoke in a panic. Our marriage – two and half years old – seemed about to disintegrate and my entire life seemed about to explode. I felt helpless, totally distraught. I had tried “everything.” There was no way out. And then I got this “crazy” thought! Maybe there is a G-d! Crazy, but that one thought saved my life. That was the moment our existence changed forever. We turned 180 degrees and began anew. That was the bottom and we started to climb upwards toward Har Sinai.

 

Each year, we count the Omer, starting from the moment the Kohanim wave the barley offering in the Bais Hamikdosh on the second day of Pesach. This korban, made from grain commonly eaten by animals, is the beginning of our ascent from the dark world of Mitzraim to the ethereal light of Har Sinai. And Har Sinai itself is only a beginning, because the Torah Road leads ever upwards.

 

This phenomenon extends into all areas of life. For example, the advent of Moshiach is also predicted to come at a moment of tremendous chaos and challenge for the world. As Chazal tell us, “the Son of David (Moshiach) will not come until the entire world turns to heresy.” (Sanhedrin 97a)

 

In my book, Worldstorm, I suggest that Moshiach will not come until mankind has rebelled against Hashem to the extent that they turn the process of creation backwards to the point of “tohu vavohu … utter chaos,” the condition which existed at the beginning of the Days of Beraishis, the Creation of the world. Look around and you will see that this is happening right now before our eyes!

 

Why does life have to descend into utter darkness before every redemption? What is behind this principle? Why must it be like this?

 

Amazingly, a possuk we read recently gives us a clue for this phenomenon. This possuk, in Parshas Tazria, discusses “tzara’as,” the physical sickness which is caused by spiritual factors and can be diagnosed not by a physician but only by a Kohain. The Torah spends two entire parshios on this inyan and says the most remarkable thing: when the sickness spreads to the entire body – the moment one would expect the condition to be hopeless and sufferer doomed – that very moment, instead of being a death verdict, is the moment of redemption; the patient is “tahor … clean!”

 

“If the tzara’as will … cover the entire skin … from his head to his feet … the Kohain shall look, and behold … he shall declare the affliction to be completely cured!” (Vayikra 13:12-13) This is against all expectation, but that is what the Torah says and it is Hashem’s will!

 

My friends, this is actually logical.

 

We are a stubborn nation, who are called by Hashem, “am k’shai oref … a stiff-necked people!” (Shemos 32:9) We hold opinions to the point of mule-like stubbornness. Look at the trouble our ancestors gave Moshe Rabbeinu in the Midbar! Does it make sense? It is so crazy that we cannot believe it when we read about it. But are we any better in this generation? When I think about some of the crazy things I have done in my life I wonder what got into me! As the Torah says, one sins only when a “ruach shtuss” enters one’s head, a spirit of craziness! (Sotah 3a)

 

My friends, that is exactly the point. We are so strong in our self-willed stubbornness that it goes to the point of total extremity. Only when we are faced with the consequences, only when the edge of the cliff looms in front of us, when the sword is at our neck – G-d forbid – when the enemy is about to destroy us – G-d forbid – only then do we wake up and cry out to Hashem, “Help me! I was wrong! It is all my fault! Please Hashem, save me! I will do teshuva! I will come back to You!”

 

The most dangerous national park in the United States is the Grand Canyon. There are hundreds of miles of cliffs whose sheer walls extend thousands of feet downwards! Foolish visitors stand on the edge and make faces for the cameras. And then, a little slip, a rock is dislodged; one loses his footing; he trips on a root; he loses his balance and then … his body is found by park rangers two thousand feet below. All it takes is a bit of “ruach shtuss,” a foolish moment and it is all over.

 

Sometimes, with Hashem’s help, we realize our foolishness before it is too late. Sometimes the overwhelming darkness encompasses us and we scream out “ana Hashem hoshia na … please Hashem help me” just in time to save ourselves.

 

May we all wake up now, my friends! “Ele v’rechev … Some trust in chariots and some in horses, but we call out in the Name of Hashem our G-d!” (Tehillim 20)

 

May the Dawn of Hashem Redemption come suddenly upon us, soon in our days!

 

 

Barley Field


GLOSSARY

Bais Hamikdosh: Holy Temple

Chazal: Rabbis of the Mishna and Gemara

Kohanim: Priests of Israel, descendants of Aaron, Moses’ brother

Korban: Offering the Holy Temple

Har Sinai: Mount Sinai

Midbar: Desert

Mitzraim: Ancient Egypt

Moshe Rabbeinu: Moses

Parsha: Section of the Written Torah

Pesach: Passover

Possuk: sentence in the Torah

AISH: The Jews Who Rode With Daggers

From the hills of Jerusalem to the rivers of Babylon, finding their way to the highest peaks of the Caucasus — a story of a Jewish community...