AbsoluteTruth: Nibiru’s closest approach being simultaneously with the introduction of Moshiach (Numbers 24:17), meaning that the star IS Moshiach, and will make it's closest approach when Moshiach is here and we meet him, not three days before when Eliyahu tells us of the coming of Moshiach.
Nibiru is a dwarf star but it gives of very little light. Just as the stars disappear when the sun comes out due to the atmosphere reflecting the sun (our blue sky), Nibiru also is covered by the blue sky. That is why it becomes visible [?] at sunrise and sunset in many places in the world – when the sun is not as bright. When it gets much bigger, it will be seen very clearly, probably at night.
Nibiru is a sign, all the effects that are happening on Earth (great increase in earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, crazy weather, pole shift, magnetic effects, radiation increase, meteors, asteroids, sinkholes, gravitational effects, Nibiru size, this is too long a list for here), I doubt that Nibiru is further away than 5776.
The view that he comes after Moshiach, is the Rambam's view in (Mishneh Torah Hilchos Melachim 12:2). The fact that the Rambam, seems to contradict the Posuk in Malachi: "Behold I will send you Eliyah the prophet, before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the lord," the Chasam Sofer explains this day refers not Moshiach's arrival, but to Gog's assult on the Land of Israel.
The Tosfos Yomtov and Maharal Chaviv maintain, that Moshiach and Eliyahu will come together. (see Tosfos Yomtov on Sanhedrin Chapter 1: Mishnah 3.)
Following are some interesting photos:
This is a map of the Nibiru System, that one researcher, Samuel Hoffman, has created after his many years of following and researching [with Nibiru very large and behind Sarru, and the “Star” being our Sun to give an approximation of sizes of the system orbs]:
In 1980, Samuel Hofman wrote a scientific paper that showed how the sun in our solar system could not possibly support 9 planets, with gas giants. He showed through this paper that we had to have a binary twin solar system to balance the chemical electromagnetic equation. Samuel Hoffman...if you have been around for awhile in this community, you should know this name. Dr. Harrington used Samuel's calculations […] Samuel shares the basic knowledge he gained from being a government insider turned renegade. Samuel will change the way you think about our universe. [I could not find any other credible information about Samuel Hofman. We are relying on Steve Olson for this info.]
These are three screen shots of what he refers to as the Empire Orb (not Nibiru):
This one shows our Moon and the Green orb:
And lastly a “no lens flare” comparison via saturation:
And these are just very very interesting captures, supposedly the same object but from different views:
If you use your zoom on this one, texture can be detected:
PLEASE USE A NAME WHEN COMMENTING
17 August 2016
Fascinating Photos and Depictions Under the Temple Mount
ShiratDevorah: Subterranean Beis HaMikdash has peaked my curiosity and so I did some searching about Under the Temple Mount. This is a exhaustive subject and I’m sure much more can be found, but . . . here we are:
AbsoluteTruth: I believe we have known for years where the Ark is. There was a famous Archaeologist (Vendyl Jones) who figured it out from scriptures and wanted permission to drill a hole and send a camera down to see it (actually the entire portable Tabernacle that is all set up under ground). He was denied permission since he was probably correct, and they were Erev Rav. He talked about a tunnel that goes from the Temple Mount to Jericho, 18 miles long. He said it is in that tunnel, and even knew the exact spot. One of my readers knew him and, I believe also knows the spot. I think that this is another "when Hashem wants" situation.
YERICHO
Miraculous phenomena occurred in Yericho, which was located some 23 miles from Yerushalayim. Eight different sounds (some say nine) connected to the Beis Hamikdash were heard here. Quoting his rebbi, the Raavad stresses that this incredible occurrence was unique only to Yericho. Some say the sounds travelled through an escape tunnel that King Chizkiyahu had dug from Yerushalayim to Yericho, and others maintain that there are no mountains to obstruct the sound on the way from Yerushalayim to Yericho. Tunnel to Jericho
THE COPPER SCROLL
(Part of the Copper Scroll)
[I]n the Jewish Herald Voice Houston newspaper in 2000, the Scroll is said to contain the following text:
Temple Mount Excavations
"At the "double gateway," a portion only (5 feet 8 inches) of which is seen, further progress is stopped by a wall running southwards; but, entering the city, part of the ornamental arch over the western door is found in a vault of the Khatuniyeh, and thence the southern boundary of the Haram may be traced to the south-west angle. The construction of the "double gateway" will be better examined from the interior; but here it may be noticed that adjoining the relieving arch over the lintel of the eastern door is the Antonine inscription built into the wall upside down, most of the letters still retain their sharpness, and with the aid of a magnifying glass may be read from the photograph; they are shown in Sketch 5, Plate XI. From Temple Mount Excavations
Jewish Mikveh Under Al Aqsa Mosque
Recently photographs from 1927 have been released that show a Jewish mikveh (bath) under the Al Aqsa Mosque.
Mikveh Under Al Aqsa Mosque
It is located somewhere beneath the double passage halls below the Al Aqsa Mosque. Notice the measuring rod and ladder on the floor of this Mikveh, which shows its immense size. In my theory this could possibly be the Mikveh that would have been located under the Chamber of the Hearth.
Notice the comment on the photo says Cistern A. Which may indicate that there is at least a Cistern B.
Cistern A is UNDER the Double Passages, so it is at a very low rock level. It is suspected that there is a cistern at a higher rock level, between the eastern gate of the mosque and the Well of the Leaf, that may also be a Jewish mikveh.
UNDER THE DOME OF THE ROCK
Descent under the "great rock" on Mt. Moriah (under the Dome of the Rock).
Woodcut in explorer Col Charles Wilson's book, Picturesque Palestine, Sinai
and Egypt. (1881, New York Public Library)
[…] discovered additional photos in the American Colony and Felix Bonfils collections showing the entrance to a cave beneath the "foundation stone" (even hashtiya in Jewish tradition) on which the Jewish Temples and the Mosque of Omar* were built.
The Temple Institute in Jerusalem provided details on the cave:
Beneath the rock is a hewn cave [some claim the cave is natural] seven-by-seven meters wide. In the cave's ceiling is a hole approximately half-a-meter in diameter, a sort of chimney going up. A feature in National Geographic suggested that the beneath the cave may be another chamber hiding the Ark of the Covenant: "Knocking on the floor of the cave under the Muslim Dome of the Rock shrine elicits a resounding hollow echo, [but] no one has ever seen this alleged chamber....Famed 19th-century British explorers Charles Wilson and Sir Charles Warren could neither prove nor disprove the existence of a hollow chamber below the cave. They believed the sound reportedly heard by visitors was simply an echo in a small fissure beneath the floor.”
Entrance to the staircase to the cave beneath the Foundation
Stone (Bonfils, circa 1870).
FIRST TEMPLE DEPICTION
The stones for Solomon’s temple may have been hewn and taken from this quarry around 970 BC (1 Kings 6:1):
SOLOMON’s PRAYER PLACE
under rock of Mosque of Omar [i.e., Dome of the Rock]. This can be seen in the Woodcut (above) to the left, under the staircase. (Chandelier in photo)
SOLOMON’s WALL
A 3,000-year-old defensive wall possibly built by King Solomon has been unearthed in Jerusalem, according to the Israeli archaeologist who led the excavation. The discovery appears to validate a Bible passage, she says.
The tenth-century B.C. wall is 230 feet (70 meters) long and about 6 meters (20 feet) tall. It stands along what was then the edge of Jerusalem—between the Temple Mount, still Jerusalem's paramount landmark, and the ancient City of David, today a modern-day Arab neighborhood called Silwan. Excavation of King Solomon’s Wall
Chuldah Tunnels Photograph.
This was the first photo ever take in the Chuldah tunnels. [It] was taken during the Wilson expedition of 1864. Actually here are two, but you can see more of Chulda Tunnels photos. Chuldah Tunnels Drawing[s]. The Double and Triple Gates led into 300 foot long tunnels that surfaced on the Temple Mount. (See Rooms 32 & 33.) These accurate drawings were made in the late 19th century. This particular illustration shows the steps that lead from the end of the tunnel onto Har HaBayis. Go to above link to see this.
Have Skeletons of the Temple Mount Massacre been found?
[A] journalist, Benny Liss, has released a video he took of a cavern under the temple mount that contains a mass grave of skeletons. Liss is suggesting that these are the bones of Jews killed by the Romans when they took the temple mount in 70 CE. According to Josephus, the Romans first entered Jerusalem through the temple complex and then eventually attacked the upper city. Liss suggests that the mass grave is evidence of a Roman massacre of Jews on the site. Archaeologists, however, are not so sure.
Liss does not believe that the remains are Christian since on the lower levels of the mount he has documented systematic Christian burials where crosses, sandals and buckles clearly attest to the religion of the dead. The same cannot be said about the burial site closer to the Mercy Gate.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
http://www.israeldailypicture.com/2012_10_01_archive.html
http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/archaeology/well-of-souls/
http://www.generationword.com/jerusalem101/23-solomon-quarries.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendyl_Jones
http://www.mywesternwall.net/2014/03/16/room-45-the-chuldah-tunnels-tunnels-hidden-under-temple-mount-mentioned-in-the-mishna.html
http://templemountlocation.com/underAlAksa.html
AbsoluteTruth: I believe we have known for years where the Ark is. There was a famous Archaeologist (Vendyl Jones) who figured it out from scriptures and wanted permission to drill a hole and send a camera down to see it (actually the entire portable Tabernacle that is all set up under ground). He was denied permission since he was probably correct, and they were Erev Rav. He talked about a tunnel that goes from the Temple Mount to Jericho, 18 miles long. He said it is in that tunnel, and even knew the exact spot. One of my readers knew him and, I believe also knows the spot. I think that this is another "when Hashem wants" situation.
YERICHO
Miraculous phenomena occurred in Yericho, which was located some 23 miles from Yerushalayim. Eight different sounds (some say nine) connected to the Beis Hamikdash were heard here. Quoting his rebbi, the Raavad stresses that this incredible occurrence was unique only to Yericho. Some say the sounds travelled through an escape tunnel that King Chizkiyahu had dug from Yerushalayim to Yericho, and others maintain that there are no mountains to obstruct the sound on the way from Yerushalayim to Yericho. Tunnel to Jericho
THE COPPER SCROLL
(Part of the Copper Scroll)
[I]n the Jewish Herald Voice Houston newspaper in 2000, the Scroll is said to contain the following text:
In the desolations of the Valley of Achor, under the hill that must be climbed; hidden under the east side, forty stones deep, is a silver chest, and with it, the vestments of the High Priest, all the gold and silver with the Great Tabernacle (the Mishkan) and all its Treasures.In the desolations of the Valley of Achor, under the hill that must be climbed; hidden under the east side, forty stones deep, is a silver chest, and with it, the vestments of the High Priest, all the gold and silver with the Great Tabernacle (the Mishkan) and all its Treasures.What is important here is reference to the Great Tabernacle (the Mishkan) and all its Treasures. This reference is not repeated in other translations of this document at other Internet sites. What is listed on multiple Internet sites is only the following translation:
Column I – In the ruin of Horebbah which is in the valley of Achor, under the steps heading eastward about forty feet: lies a chest of silver that weighs seventeen talents (yard stick).KEN (Note: KEN are mysterious Greek letters in the original text).More on Vendyl Jones here.
Temple Mount Excavations
"At the "double gateway," a portion only (5 feet 8 inches) of which is seen, further progress is stopped by a wall running southwards; but, entering the city, part of the ornamental arch over the western door is found in a vault of the Khatuniyeh, and thence the southern boundary of the Haram may be traced to the south-west angle. The construction of the "double gateway" will be better examined from the interior; but here it may be noticed that adjoining the relieving arch over the lintel of the eastern door is the Antonine inscription built into the wall upside down, most of the letters still retain their sharpness, and with the aid of a magnifying glass may be read from the photograph; they are shown in Sketch 5, Plate XI. From Temple Mount Excavations
Jewish Mikveh Under Al Aqsa Mosque
Recently photographs from 1927 have been released that show a Jewish mikveh (bath) under the Al Aqsa Mosque.
Mikveh Under Al Aqsa Mosque
It is located somewhere beneath the double passage halls below the Al Aqsa Mosque. Notice the measuring rod and ladder on the floor of this Mikveh, which shows its immense size. In my theory this could possibly be the Mikveh that would have been located under the Chamber of the Hearth.
Notice the comment on the photo says Cistern A. Which may indicate that there is at least a Cistern B.
Cistern A is UNDER the Double Passages, so it is at a very low rock level. It is suspected that there is a cistern at a higher rock level, between the eastern gate of the mosque and the Well of the Leaf, that may also be a Jewish mikveh.
"We theorized in October that the American Colony photographer gained access to the area under the al Aqsa Mosque, partially destroyed in the 1927 earthquake. Nadav Shragai, a scholar on Jerusalem sites, reported in a Yisrael HaYom article last year, that Robert Hamilton, director of the British Mandate Antiquities Authority, had explored under the mosque at the time. He "photographed, sketched, excavated and analyzed" what he saw. But he promised the Islamic Authorities, the Waqf, that he would make "no mention of any findings that the Muslims would have found inconvenient" such as findings from the time of the Jewish Temples.” israeldailypicture.comFrom King Solomon’s Quarries
UNDER THE DOME OF THE ROCK
Descent under the "great rock" on Mt. Moriah (under the Dome of the Rock).
Woodcut in explorer Col Charles Wilson's book, Picturesque Palestine, Sinai
and Egypt. (1881, New York Public Library)
[…] discovered additional photos in the American Colony and Felix Bonfils collections showing the entrance to a cave beneath the "foundation stone" (even hashtiya in Jewish tradition) on which the Jewish Temples and the Mosque of Omar* were built.
The Temple Institute in Jerusalem provided details on the cave:
Beneath the rock is a hewn cave [some claim the cave is natural] seven-by-seven meters wide. In the cave's ceiling is a hole approximately half-a-meter in diameter, a sort of chimney going up. A feature in National Geographic suggested that the beneath the cave may be another chamber hiding the Ark of the Covenant: "Knocking on the floor of the cave under the Muslim Dome of the Rock shrine elicits a resounding hollow echo, [but] no one has ever seen this alleged chamber....Famed 19th-century British explorers Charles Wilson and Sir Charles Warren could neither prove nor disprove the existence of a hollow chamber below the cave. They believed the sound reportedly heard by visitors was simply an echo in a small fissure beneath the floor.”
Entrance to the staircase to the cave beneath the Foundation
Stone (Bonfils, circa 1870).
FIRST TEMPLE DEPICTION
The stones for Solomon’s temple may have been hewn and taken from this quarry around 970 BC (1 Kings 6:1):
Solomon had seventy thousand carriers and eighty thousand stonecutters in the hills, as well as thirtythree hundred foremen who supervised the project and directed the workmen. At the king’s command they removed from the quarry large blocks of quality stone to provide a foundation of dressed stone for the temple. The craftsmen of Solomon and Hiram and the men of Gebal (Byblos) cut and prepared the timber and stone for the building of the temple. -1 Kings 5:15-18It seems certain that King Herod returned here in 19 BC for some of the stone used to build his temple. Some of the stones in the Western Wall, for example, could easily have originated in this quarry.
SOLOMON’s PRAYER PLACE
under rock of Mosque of Omar [i.e., Dome of the Rock]. This can be seen in the Woodcut (above) to the left, under the staircase. (Chandelier in photo)
SOLOMON’s WALL
A 3,000-year-old defensive wall possibly built by King Solomon has been unearthed in Jerusalem, according to the Israeli archaeologist who led the excavation. The discovery appears to validate a Bible passage, she says.
The tenth-century B.C. wall is 230 feet (70 meters) long and about 6 meters (20 feet) tall. It stands along what was then the edge of Jerusalem—between the Temple Mount, still Jerusalem's paramount landmark, and the ancient City of David, today a modern-day Arab neighborhood called Silwan. Excavation of King Solomon’s Wall
Chuldah Tunnels Photograph.
This was the first photo ever take in the Chuldah tunnels. [It] was taken during the Wilson expedition of 1864. Actually here are two, but you can see more of Chulda Tunnels photos. Chuldah Tunnels Drawing[s]. The Double and Triple Gates led into 300 foot long tunnels that surfaced on the Temple Mount. (See Rooms 32 & 33.) These accurate drawings were made in the late 19th century. This particular illustration shows the steps that lead from the end of the tunnel onto Har HaBayis. Go to above link to see this.
Have Skeletons of the Temple Mount Massacre been found?
[A] journalist, Benny Liss, has released a video he took of a cavern under the temple mount that contains a mass grave of skeletons. Liss is suggesting that these are the bones of Jews killed by the Romans when they took the temple mount in 70 CE. According to Josephus, the Romans first entered Jerusalem through the temple complex and then eventually attacked the upper city. Liss suggests that the mass grave is evidence of a Roman massacre of Jews on the site. Archaeologists, however, are not so sure.
"The Romans stayed on the Temple Mount for a month after the destruction of the temple until going on to conquer the upper city [today's Jewish Quarter],” […]“They had to get rid of the thousands of decomposing bodies and the most obvious place to do this would have been the natural caves on the upper slope of the mount, around Mercy Gate."The veteran journalist emphasized that this was just a theory. "Now, after publishing this information, the experts should go into the field and examine what we found back then, evaluate it and publish their own findings," he says.
Liss does not believe that the remains are Christian since on the lower levels of the mount he has documented systematic Christian burials where crosses, sandals and buckles clearly attest to the religion of the dead. The same cannot be said about the burial site closer to the Mercy Gate.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
http://www.israeldailypicture.com/2012_10_01_archive.html
http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/archaeology/well-of-souls/
http://www.generationword.com/jerusalem101/23-solomon-quarries.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendyl_Jones
http://www.mywesternwall.net/2014/03/16/room-45-the-chuldah-tunnels-tunnels-hidden-under-temple-mount-mentioned-in-the-mishna.html
http://templemountlocation.com/underAlAksa.html
16 August 2016
UPDATE. . . . . .URGENT: SAVE SUSIYA – An Ancient Jewish Settlement
UPDATE FROM ISRAEL RISING, by Micha Gefen
Khirbet Susiya, also known as Horvat Susiya is an ancient Jewish landmark is the Southern Hebron Hills uncovered by archeologists in 1969 after the area was liberated by Israel. In the years that followed, Khirbet Susiya has become a national landmark and proof that a solid Jewish existed throughout the Har Hebron Hills up until the Islamic invasion in the 8th Century. The Jews of the area either converted to Islam or fled.
Now, this ancient landmark known for its oldest freestanding synagogue is under threat by Arab squatters from Yatta backed up by the EU and the United States State Department. These squatters have amassed a following through the international community and have set up tents on the archeological site. The group from Yatta number around 350 people and claim Khirbet Susiya as their own. They claim the site of Khirbet Susiya is really theirs despite the overwhelming evidence for it being an ancient Jewish village.
“Surveys of villages and populations conducted by the British Mandatory powers in 1945, which mention all of the villages in the area and even some of the inhabitants, prove there is no hint of the existence of an Arab village named Susiya,” says Josh Hasten, spokesman for Regavim an NGO that fights illegal land use. “More recently aerial photos obtained by Regavim from 1999 show nothing resembling a village in that area. An identical photo from 2013 shows how squatters have infiltrated the locale.”With the Supreme Court’s ultimatim to the goverment of Israel to destroy the encampment, the government has very little flexibility. In the coming days and the weeks the left is expected to harm the reputation of the region by continuing to build a false narritive with one goal in mind and that is to appropriate more land from Israel and erase established Jewish history.
FOR ANYONE TRYING TO EMAIL THE DEFENSE MINISTER, try aliberman@knesset.gov.il
it seems the Minister does NOT want criticism via email
On one of my touring adventures, I visited Sussiya and was inside the artifact remains of a Temple with its beautiful frescos in the floor depicting Jewish themes.
Khirbat Susya [סוּסְיָא] Ancient Village
The EU, the same foreign interloper that set up ILLEGAL temporary housing for Arabs in Area C which is under Israeli dominion, now has the gall to threaten Israel about removing squatters on our ancient settlement of Susiya. These squatters/invaders are deliberately making an international issue out of their ILLEGAL settling on our Historic site.
Please view the video and write to the Prime Minister and Defense Minister to give them chizuk in standing up to the EU antisemites that only want to cause havoc among Jews in our Land of Israel:
Aug 16, 2016
The Israeli Supreme Court had ruled that action needed to be taken on Sussiya by August 15th 2016. However, following immense international pressure, the Israeli government requested a two day extension to find a solution.
Josh Hasten, Regavim's International Director calls on our supporters in Israel and abroad to strengthen the hand of The Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu - בנימין נתניהו and Defense Minister Avigdor Lieberman, as they are faced with tremendous pressure from the international community to permit the illegal squatters' in Sussiya to remain on stolen Israeli State Land.
Spend a moment to write to the Prime Minister and Defence Minister's of Israel to let them know you support Israel's right to act as a sovereign power in her land and implement the rule of law.
Here are their e-mail addresses:
Prime Minister Netanyahu: bnetanyahu@knesset.gov.il
Defense Minister Lieberman: alieberman@knesset.gov.il
על המדינה אין צריך שכל Meir Ettinger’s Thoughts for August 15, 2016 – b'Ivrit
על המדינה אין צריך שכל
מעשה בחכם ותם מתגלה בשיר אותו כתב מאיר אטינגר בזמן מעצרו
מעשה – בסיפורי מעשיות של ר' נחמן מברסלב, הוא המעשה מחכם ותם. מעשה מפורסם המספר על שני חברים החכם והתם, המראה כיצד נסללה דרכו של התם לגדולה עד שנעשה מושל, ולהפך חכמתו המיותרת של החכם הובילה אותו לחוסר הצלחה בחיים.
באמצע הסיפור מסופר כיצד החליט המלך למנות את התם למושל, ר' נחמן שם דברים בפי המלך שנראים קצת מפתיעים "ועל הנהגת המדינה – אין צריך שכל גדול וחכמות".
הרבה פעמים אנחנו שואלים את עצמנו (וגם אחרים שואלים) מאיפה התעוזה לרצות לחולל מהפכה, וכי אתם יודעים בכלל מה תעשו כשאתם תהיו בשלטון. יש עוד הרבה תשובות לשאלה הזו, אבל נראה לי שהבסיס הוא התשובה הזאת של ר' נחמן, התשובה של התם.
ענווה אמיתית (שפלות) מתבטאת לפעמים דווקא בהתמסרות לביצוע משימה גדולה, פשוט בלי להתחיל חשבונות של 'מי אני ומה אני', את האני אפשר להשאיר בצד ולצאת לעבודה...
כי אם אנחנו באמת מאמינים שה' ברא את העולם והוא קובע את הכללים, אז גם פשוט שהיהודי הכי פשוט שהוא קצת ירא שמים ידע לעשות את זה יותר טוב מנתניהו וכל החברים.
במעצר יצא לי לכתוב את הרעיון הזה בצורת שיר והנה הוא:
אי שם היו שני חברים אחד חכם השני תם
השוני כלל לא הפריע לקשרי ידידותם
עד שהחכם נסע למרחק והפך למדען
והתם נשאר בכפר והתפרנס כרצען
שם במרחק רכש החכם ידע רב והשכלה
את כל השפות וחכמות רבות למד בנקלה
והתם שנשאר בכפר העלוב והקטן
מה כבר יוכל לצאת מאיש כה טיפש ותם?
כך היה עד שיום אחד המלך רצה לראותם
ולמושל העיר מינה דווקא את מיודענו התם
התם כהרגלו כלל לא חוקר ושואל שאלות
ולא התפלא כיצד לפתע עלה לגדולות
המלך מניסיונו הרב בשלטון כבר ידע
שכלל אין צורך בחכמה והשכלה להנהגה
זה לא קשור כלל לפלפול, שנינות וערמה
אין צריך שכל גדול להנהגת המדינה!
כל הזמן מחכים למנהיג שמשהו חדש יתחיל
שיעשה מהפך עם קמפיין שנון ותרגיל
אך רבנו גילה דבר חדש ומפתיע
איך התם, קראו לו ופשוט הוא הגיע
כי העיקר במנהיג זה היושרה וההגינות
והכי הכי חשוב שלא תהיה טיפת ליצנות
זה נשמע לנו קצת רעיון בלתי הגיוני
כאילו זה נלקח מעולם אחר ושני
אך זה בדיוק מה ששם קרה
התם הוא שהגיע למדרגת החכם מהרה
והחכם רק נפל ועוד נפל ונפל
עד שהגענו לחושך כפול ומכופל
הנה, ראה תמימותי לאן הביאה אותי
והלוואי שיום אחד תגיע גם למדרגתי
כי אצל ה' כמו שתמיד אמר - הכל אפשר
גם למשול באופן תמים וישר...
ומנהיג טוב דווקא יוכל להיות
זה שנשלף מהמרעה ומהשדות
רועה צאן פשוט לא מלומד ומשכיל
כפי שגם דוד מלך ישראל התחיל
כי כשדוד הצעיר נשלח לשדה הקרב
להביא צידה וקצת פינוקים לאחיו
מיד כשהגיע הבין שהמצב מעוות
איך זה שמרוב פחד כל הצבא מושבת
דוד אמנם חסר ניסיון וצעיר
אך הוא לא מפחד למבוגרים להעיר
ואת אחיו זה נורא עיצבן וקצת הכעיס
שאת ראשו ב'עניינים של הגדולים' הכניס
אתה עוד לא למדת מספיק כדי שתבין,
עד כמה העניין רגיש מסובך ועדין...
רק מי שלמד הרבה מאד שנים
יבין מדוע המנהיגים כאן לא מבינים
כולנו מכירים את אלו הטוענים
נניח שעכשיו עבורכם את השלטון מפנים
את מי תציבו במקום כראש ממשלה
אין לכם מושג במדינאות, במחילה...
כדי לדעת כיצד 'לנהל' את הטרור
צריך הרבה הכשרה וניסיון לעבור
דברים שרואים מכאן לא רואים משם,
כדי להסתבך צריך להיות מאד חכם
אז דוד ענה על כך כל כך בפשיטות
אני בשדה המרעה למדתי על כוח התמימות
כשת הארי והדוב בידי אלו היכיתי
את כוחי הפנימי והטבעי גיליתי
כי ה' הוא בעל המלחמות
אז לא צריך כאן שום חכמות
אין צורך בתואר שני במדעי המדינה
רק לב שלם ולשמור על טוהר הכוונה
וכשעם ישראל מלך כמו כולם דרש
שמואל הנביא הקפיד ונורא כעס
על מינוי מלך בתורה הצטווינו
אבל את מטרת המלך הם לא הבינו
לכן זה היה כל כך רע בעיני שמואל
הוא הבין שהעם לא כראוי שואל
הם חיפשו מלך כמו כל האומות
שידע להנהיג בשיטות מאד מתוחכמות
אבל זו ממש לא המטרה
של מינוי המלך על פי התורה
כי ה' מלכנו - הוא יושעינו
והמלך נועד כדי שנגשים את ייעודנו
וזה מה שרבנו בסיפורו גילה
שמנהיג ראוי לא צריך השכלה
אפשר כמובן חכמה ללמוד ולהוסיף
אך העיקר שנדע את מה להעדיף
כי אפילו הסנדלר הכי הכי פשוט
מתאים הרבה יותר להנהגה ולמלכות
מאשר מנהיג רחוק מתורה ואמונה
ס'תכלו איך נראית המדינה...
ואין צורך בשפלות החכם המדומה
הרי בתורתנו יש את כל החוכמה
כדי להנהיג בתוקף ותמימות,
שיבוא כבר מנהיג צדיק בלי עודף עקמימות!!!
Source: HaKolYehudi
11 August 2016
A Time to Build
[Sorry, but the previous video was withdrawn, don’t know why]
Love, commitment and a shared vision for the future… these are the qualities that a Jewish couple bring to the marriage canopy. These very same qualities will enable the people of Israel to go from merely breaking the glass of remembrance of the destruction, to the rebuilding of the Holy Temple in our lifetime.
On Tisha B'Av, the Jewish people mourn the destruction of the Holy Temple. Seated on the floor as mourners, the adults in the synagogue recite the traditional kinnot dirges. But is the goal simply the continuation of the mourning, for the sake of mourning? The children have a different idea of what needs to be done...
Tisha b'Av: The Third Holy Temple Plans Have Begun
This is a walk-through the main sanctuary of the Holy Temple, showcasing decades of research and tens of innovative Halachic solutions to various perplexing issues that were resolved to create fully functional, ready-to-use plans. As the visual tour sweeps through the sanctuary, one can see the menorah, incense altar and showbread table, all of which have already been prepared by the Institute, among 70 other sacred vessels. The presentation was specially released to coincide with the Ninth of Av, the Jewish national day of mourning which commemorates the destruction of the First and Second Temples.
This is not a ‘virtual’ representation, but a portion of a complete and highly detailed architectural plan which has been prepared for the immediate construction of the Holy Temple. The plan includes all of components that will be used in building: marble, stone, concrete, wood, flooring materials, overlay of gold, etc.
The external view presents the openings, windows, chambers, the outer hall, the Sanctuary and the Holy of Holies.
In the first stage we are moving through the hall’s entrance. As we continue we arrive at the golden chains described in Tractate Middot, which the young priests-in-training would climb in order to view the decorative crowns that were placed in unique windows above the entrance to the Sanctuary. The visit continues on to the 38 chambers that surrounded the Sanctuary. The door opens and we find ourselves within the first chamber. We turn left and enter into the Sanctuary. From the right we see the three major vessels of the Sanctuary: The golden altar, the table of the showbread, and the menorah. We also see the curtain with its depiction of the two cherubim.
This curtain is actually a double curtain, that separates between the Holy area (the Sanctuary), and the Holy of Holies. We look up to the ceiling of the Sanctuary, which reaches a height of 40 amot. Near the ceiling are the ‘narrowing windows’ (Kings I 6:4) which direct from the Temple outwards.
Turning behind us, we see the doors of the Sanctuary towards the east, as they are opened each morning by the priests, revealing the blue skies of Jerusalem at sunrise.
From the Sanctuary, we turn back to the chambers and go out to the long passageway known as the ‘mesiba.’ We ascend stairs that lead to the roof of the chambers. We continue moving, encircling the Temple from the north and west, afterwards turning east.
At the end of the passageway stands a special ladder that is used to ascend to the upper level. This level has a very high level of sanctity. One opinion maintains that it is only entered once in seventy years (for maintenance purposes).
In summary, this is a highly-detailed building plan which includes room for further innovation by professionals and craftsmen, including decoration, heating and electric etc. According to the decisions of the steering committee that will be established to oversee the construction of the Third Holy Temple, which can be begun immediately.
The video comes one year after the Temple Institute appealed to its supporters to take part in an Indiegogo crowd funding campaign that raised over $100,000 for the architectural plans. The video was first released to supporters of a current campaign to raise the first kosher Red Heifer in Israel in over 2,000 years. Over the past five years, the organization has released its most ambitious campaigns and poignant videos to reframe the mourning period into one of active preparation for the Third Holy Temple.
Support the Temple Institute's new Nezer HaKodesh Institute for training Levitical Priests for the Holy Temple: indiegogo Nezer HaKodesh
Rabbi Chaim Richman, International Director of The Temple Institute noted: “One third of all Torah commandments pertain to the building of and service in the Holy Temple. Today, we not only mourn the destruction of the two Holy Temples, but also our inability to fulfill one third of the Torah. Over the last three decades, the Temple Institute has done everything in our power to research and prepare for the Third Temple. As world Jewry sits on the ground mourning the first two Temples, we have taken a huge leap towards the rebuilding, by releasing a 3D architectural rendition of the Third Temple”
Rabbi Mizrachi – Sefer Devarim and Moshe’s Legacy
Devarim/Deuteronomy - Wealth, 9th Of Av, A Letter From Tel Aviv City Hall, Fake Babas
ALSO: What to do to Improve the Memory (this shiur or the next)
ALSO: What to do to Improve the Memory (this shiur or the next)
10 August 2016
Nibiru is a Sun with Seven Planets/ Moons in its (Separate) Solar System
Nibiru is not a planet, it is a star, a sun accompanied by 7 planets/moons (a separate solar system). AbsoluteTruth613.
Zohar Shemos 6b or 7b 'רבי שמעון זקף’).
"Thus will I magnify Myself and sanctify Myself; and I will make Myself known in the eyes of many nations, and they shall know that I am G-d." (Ezek. 38:23). There in Egypt [when G-d manifested His glory] there was one king [Pharaoh]. In the future [redemption His glory will be manifested] to all the rulers of the world.
Rebbe Shimon said: Woe to he who is present at that time [of the coming of the Mashiach] and happy is the portion of one who is present and found at that time.
Woe to he who is present at that time because at the time when the Holy One Blessed be He comes to redeem the deer [the Shechina from exile] He will look at all those who stand with her and at all those who are found with her. He will look at the actions of each and every one of them, and He will not find one who is worthy and righteous, as is written: "And I looked, and there was none to help" (Isaiah 63:5). Then how many troubles will come upon troubles for Israel. Happy is he who is ready at that time, because he who lives in faith at that time will be worthy to receive the light of the joy of the King [because then G-d will rejoice in His works]. It is of that time that the verse refers to; "I will refine them as silver is refined, and will test them as gold is tested". (Zechariah 13:9)
The troubles will be like fire to purify the rebellious and the wicked. The remainder will be tested as to their faith as gold is tested in the goldsmith's forge to test if it is free of impurities. Happy are they who will have the faith enabling them to endure these times because they will see the direction of the seemingly chaotic events. Those who have no faith will be subject to terror and fear which will give them the chance to rise to the challenge - or fail the test.
Zohar, Shemos 6b
What is decreed for man in the heavenly worlds is revealed through dreams. As Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai explains: "Thirty days before a nation rises to power, or before a nation is to endure a disaster, the coming event is announced throughout the world. It is sometimes communicated through the mouths of children, or that of the simple-minded, or at times through birds who proclaim it to the world, but no one is aware of this because no one understands. When the nation is worthy, the impending misfortune is announces to the righteous leaders of the generation so that these may issue a warning; thus, when the people hear about the decree they may return to their Maker. Yet, if the people are not deserving, it is as we said." (Zohar, Shemot 6b)
Below we have the sun passing a Planet (one in the Nibiru System) in several stills from a video. The bottom two photos (same day) are taken from Alaska – showing the same object. It is very big and near the size of our Sun. Nibiru is also a sun, so in other photos where there are TWO shining suns, one of them is Nibiru. Depending when you go to the AllSkyCam, you can see two bodies LIGHTING up the sky, one our Sun and the other Nibiru. Careful to check time of day in upper left corner, then check the East and West on the horizon view (below the Cam). At the right time of its orbit, you can see both the East and West LIT UP.
08 August 2016
This Tisha B’Av – "Time to Rethink How We Express Our Judaism in the World we Are in"
So begins Rabbi Moshe Grylak Shlit”a in his
POINT OF VIEW (Mishpacha, August 3, pg 18)
“The descendants of Reuven and Gad had an abundance of livestock very numerous, and they saw the land… and behold, the place was a place for livestock… and they spoke to Moshe and to Elazar the Kohein and to the princes of the community, saying, ‘… the land that Hashem struck down before the congregation of Israel is a land for livestock, and your servants have livestock.’ ” (Bamidbar 32:1-4)
"The pesukim clearly convey that the subject of livestock was foremost in their minds, and it was their chief motivator. They go on to make an explicit request of Moshe to have their portions of the Land on the east side of the Jordan.
“Do not bring us across the Jordan.”
"If we read the rest of the passage attentively, we find that Moshe immediately perceived just how tragic this was, that money could sway the human mind to this extent (the chassidic masters offer other mystical approaches to their surprising request, but a straightforward reading of the text is clearly negative). They were on the very threshold of realizing their vision of entering the Promised Land, with all of its special physical and spiritual attributes. And now two tribes come before Moshe Rabbeinu and say they’re ready to give up that vision for the sake of wealth. They made business their chief goal. They would follow after their flocks, the main source of wealth in those days. Moshe is upset and gives them mussar, attempting to make them see how they are distancing themselves from Hashem. Again and again, he uses the expression “lifnei Hashem,” until they get the point and see that their wealth has caused them to forget their Creator and put business first in their lives, not just business before pleasure, but business before ideals.
"[S]omething more shocking comes next, and it teaches us the destructive power of greed for money:
“They approached him and said, ‘We will build sheepfolds for our livestock here and cities for our children’ ”(ibid. 16).
Moshe answers them: “Build for yourselves cities for your children and sheepfolds for your flocks.”
Rashi explains:
“They were more concerned about their wealth than about their sons and daughters, for they mentioned their livestock before their children. But Moshe said to them, ‘Not so. Put first things first and secondary things afterward. First build yourselves cities, and after that build sheepfolds for your flocks.’ ”
In Parshas Maasei:
In Maasei we have the fulfillment of the original COMMAND to enter the Land and Settle there. The two words in Hebrew denote “you shall possess” and “you shall settle”. According to the Ramban, the world “you shall settle” is a positive commandment to inhabit the Land. The great importance the Sages attached to living in the Land and the prohibition against leaving it are derived from this verse. Kesubos 110b.
Further it says, “Accordimg to the tribes of your Fathers…” is that the Land was divided into 12 provinces, one for each tribe (despite Gad and Reuven – Manassah and Ephraim inherited).
In the same issue in another article,
A feature article on Rabbi Chaim Boruch Gluck and his son Zvi. It begins with “Seventy-five deaths in our community since Rosh Hashanah,” Zvi says [. . .] “We keep count — some suicides, some of them overdosed… Each one had a death sentence that might have been avoided had someone intervened.”
“Hi, this is Zvi Gluck, Rabbi Gluck’s son . . . My father is unreachable . . . there is a body that needs to be released. I don’t know what I’m supposed to do, but I do know that you’re the one I’m supposed to call. I need you to do what you do, so I can do what we do.”
“In those years [. . .] you could keep a secret. It was still possible to work things out quietly. […] Now, it’s on the Internet within 20 seconds.”
What they are discussing in this article is the scourge afflicting the Charedi communities in the New York Metropolitan Area.
Zvi goes on to say,
“I struggled so much, but at least now I know what to tell kinds in that situation – and I tell parents to do what my parents did. I struggled and slipped, but home was always home. My parents always made me feel comfortable and loved.” […] “But as I went from spending time on the streets to helping kids on the streets, I came head to head with a new plague . . . It was like the 11th makkah.” “It was a shock even for me […] I started to understand the horrible correlation what molestation and abuse does to a person an dhow it creates the gaping hole that will later create addiction.”
“There is an underlying connection between so many different problems that plague us – low self-esteem and bad shalom basis and drop and alcohol abuse. All of these things drive people to bad places, so its hard to see people as evil. Mostly, they’re just sick. Really sick.”
“Two, we need to teach people how to get divorced properly. They need to learn that even if the marriage can’t be saved, the parents need to put their children first and do everything they can to minimize the collateral damage.”
Let’s go back to that Rashi:
“They were more concerned about their wealth than about their sons and daughters, for they mentioned their livestock before their children.”
And also to Rabbi Moshe Grylak:
“Are we blinded by the glitter of wealth?” The tribes of Reuven and Gad were blessed with abundant livestock, but did that cause them to misplace priorities? And don’t we all occasionally get blinded by the glitter of wealth and success, hoping the really important things in life will somehow coast along on their own? Our current Parshah suggests that we have a talk about money. About careers, and distorted priorities, and the dangers inherent in both.” In Parshas Mattos (read this week outside Eretz Yisrael) we encounter — at least on the pshat level of understanding — the craving for wealth that came over a part of Bnei Yisrael, just as they were about to enter the Promised Land. If we’re honest with ourselves, the words of Bnei Gad and Bnei Reuven sound comfortably familiar. They’re speaking our language — the language of money."
And now to Why Jews Must Leave the Golus,
leave the other side of the Divide (Jordan):
In an excellent article written just about one year ago (before Tisha B’Av), Are we entering a new Golus Mode in America, questioning the events occurring in America at that time:
"A Golus in a class of its own: Never in the history of our 2000 year golus have we had it so good. Never in any other golus were Jews so affluent and so included and integrated as in American society and its political and social fabric. (remember also early 20th C. Germany)
"A full-barreled assault on religious liberties and an attempt to destroy the old order of wholesome family values that made America so Great.
"The imperative to keep a low profile. (Kli Dakar in Parshas Devorim on Tzafonah, it also means hidden (not to flaunt gashmius). As when Yaakov tells his sons, 'Lamah tisrau? Why do you make yourselves conspicuous?'"
One person’s comment to this penetrating article that brings together Rashi, the Kli Yakar, Moshe Rabbeinu, Rabbi Grylak and the Matzav in America:
"Perhaps this is a wake up call in that many Jews, even those who learn Torah, have been blinded by the material wealth that America offers. It's time to open up the books. It's time to examine the Torah, Prophets, and Writings, the words of Chazal and the great rabbis of old, and ask the question,
"Does God want us to live in the land of Obama, or in the land of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob?”
07 August 2016
Children of Baalei Teshuva / Converts / Something to Think About During These 9 Days
Something to think about in these 9 days leading up to Tisha B'Av
from an article by Rabbi Berl Wein Shlit”a
In the time of the Mishna (250 BCE to 200 CE) there were many Greek and Roman converts to Judaism. Shmaya and Avtalyon, the teachers of Hillel, were converts. Rabi Akiva was descended from a father who was a convert. In fact his "pedigree" in the Talmud traces itself back to Sisera, the Canaanite general slain by Yael in Devorah the prophetess' war against Yavin, the Canaanite king of Chatzor. Rabi Meir was descended from the Roman emperor Nero and Onkelos, the great translator of the Bible from Hebrew into Aramaic was also descended from the Roman royal family.
- […] The Torah bids the Jew to be kind and welcoming to converts - in fact, it does so thirty-six times, more than any other commandment in the Torah. Thus, the Torah places a great burden on the Jew as well as on the non-Jew when it comes to conversion issues. Hence the traditional circumspection in the matter.
- […]becoming Jewish places greater obligations on the person than before conversion. Jews are held liable for the non-observance of Shabbat, kashrut and other matters of ritual Jewish life. But non-Jews are not. A convert who becomes Jewish but is not observant of Jewish law and ritual, is in far worse spiritual condition. It is because of the incidence of insincere and/or improper conversions over Jewish history that the rabbis have been consistent in their scrupulous examination of prospective converts.
- […] In the Middle Ages, some of the renowned scholars of the Tosafists (twelfth to fourteenth century German, French and English Torah scholars) were converts or descended from converts.
- […]In eighteenth century Vilna, a famous Count Potowcki, converted to Judaism and was executed by the Church for so doing. His grave was in the famous old Jewish cemetery, later destroyed by the progressive, tolerant Soviet Union. In the old cemetery, a great oak tree grew from his grave and it was in fact the landmark of that burial ground. He was buried adjacent to the grave of the Vilna Gaon, Rabbi Eliyahu. A number of decades ago, Rabbi Pinchas Teitz of Elizabeth, New Jersey was successful in reburying the remains of the Gaon and of the "righteous convert," Count Potowcki, in a new cemetery in Vilna, as well as the remains of a number of other famous personages.
The Yeshiva World and the Children of Baalei Yeshiva
by Catriel Sugarman
The following article contains some strong opinions, some which our readers may disagree with and/or find objectionable. Nevertheless, I have posted it here, because there are points made by the author that deserve our consideration. Yakov Horowitz
Ba’alei Teshuva—sometimes translated to mean “penitents,” but, more commonly used to refer to Jews from secular backgrounds who have become religiously observant, often hareidi, or ultra-Orthodox—have been held in high regard by Jewish tradition. In the Talmud (Berachot 34b), Rabbi Abbahu says: The [elevated] position that ba’alei teshuva attain, tzadikim gemurim [those who were always righteous] are unable to reach.”
Try telling that to AM, who recently wrote a controversial article in Mishpacha, a highly regarded English hareidi magazine, about “issues” ba’alei teshuva (BTs) face when they try to affiliate with various hareidi communities in Israel.
According to Ms. M, when it comes time to register their children in mainstream hareidi schools, the BTs are rejected, finding, to their dismay, that they were never really part of their chosen community after all.
This is true not only in Israel. In the United States, too, the children of BTs—along with the offspring of Jews of Sephardic background—are increasingly denied entry into mainstream hareidi schools.
Personal Experience
A resident of Ramat Beit Shemesh and a BT herself, Ms. M related her personal experience with the Israeli hareidi educational system. Her daughter’s class, composed almost entirely of children whose parents were BTs, was suddenly closed. Worse, no other hareidi school was willing to accept them.
This was true, she said, even of Beit Shemesh BT families that had been religious for more than a decade.
“The husband wears a long black coat and a streimel; the children are sweet and have long side curls, are raised to be modest and G-d-fearing, in homes without newspapers or a computer; good pure hareidi children—until they reach school age,” she wrote.
Ms. M’s angry conclusion was that the hareidim, the FFBs (frum—or observant—from birth) who engage in kiruv, or outreach, should curtail their efforts to bring non-observant Jews into the fold, “since they do not make any serious efforts to integrate them into their community anyway.”
“Why bother? Why convince [the BTs] to make such a difficult, painful change? Why call upon them to come and live a Torah lifestyle if no one has any intention of giving them the opportunity to live such a lifestyle? Perhaps the time has come to stop investing in outreach,” she wrote.
Harsh Reactions
Responses to her article came fast and furious, and some were surprisingly brutal. Advocates of the schools’ strict exclusionary policy cited the BTs’ secular relatives, expressing the fear that even second-hand encounters with non-religious people could do irremediable damage to the spiritual health of tender impressionable hareidi children.
In a letter to the editor, YB bluntly explained that BT children had to be kept out of mainstream hareidi schools because “the newly observant tend to meet with their non-religious relatives and the children are exposed to their relatives’ culture, their speech patterns, music, body language, and concepts.”
“I feel that the pain of the girl who has not been accepted is preferable to the anguish of families whose daughters are affected by a girl who was erroneously accepted,” wrote Ms. B.
ZBL a teacher in the hareidi community’s Beit Ya’akov girls school system, agreed. The hareidi community has “enough troubles with its own young people without importing ‘trouble’ from outside,” she wrote.
Not all responders agreed. Someone who identified on the Mishpacha website only as “Krum as a bagel” wondered what exactly was so offensive about “BT speech patterns.” “Is their language linguistically coded with kefirah?” Krum asked, using the Hebrew word for “heresy.” “Do they belly-dance when they talk?”
60,000 Strong
According to Rabbi Yitzhak Greenman, executive director of the New York branch of Aish Hatorah, there are roughly 60,000 BTs in the US, a number which may be a bit high.
While some insular hareidi communities in the US have virtually no BTs, others, such as the thriving Orthodox community of Passaic, NJ, are comprised overwhelmingly of the newly observant.
For BTs, problems arise when they try to assimilate into established hareidi communities in Brooklyn, such as Borough Park, Williamsburg, Crown Heights, and Flatbush, as well as Lakewood, NJ, and Monsey, NY.
“Dhimmis”
While the BTs’ problems with the hareidi community are not widely discussed, they have been recognized. Rabbi Chananya Weissman, whose organization, “End the Madness,” is dedicated to combating the “angst and hardships associated with dating in the religious Jewish community,” noted that while BTs are lauded and even admired for overcoming the challenges to achieve an observant lifestyle, they “never manage to shake the stigma of not being FFB.”
In a satirical piece entitled “The ‘Dhimmis’ among Us: Judaism’s Lower Class,” he compared BTs to the second-class status of Jews and Christians in Muslim communities. The BTs’ stigma, he wrote, is “even transferred to children and the extended family, as if it is a genetic defect of spiritual proportions.”
He pointed out that not only are the BTs’ children rejected by many hareidi institutions and denied positions of leadership in the yeshiva world, they also have “a significantly lower value on the shidduch market.”
“Nowadays, it has become completely mainstream for contestants to be made to divulge whether they are ba’alei teshuva, and, if so, for how long. Those who mush check this unfortunate box on the questionnaire are essentially branded as undesirables,” he said.
Prejudice
This unlovely and almost universal prejudice against BTs in certain Orthodox communities is seldom discussed, except on the blogosphere, where anonymity promotes abandoning all inhibitions, including halachic prohibitions.
Those who protest this growing phenomenon rarely reveal their names or offer any identifying information. The fear of being exposed and blackballed is pervasive and palpable.
It is not hard to find blatant anti-BT sentiments on the web. An example is “Avakesh,” overseen by a blogger who claims “he is a part of this world and actively teaches ba’alei teshuva.” Although “Avakesh” praises the kiruv movement as “an unquestioned blessing,” he nevertheless insists that “frumkeit is and always remains for a BT a coat.”
“No matter how well fitting and comfortable a favorite coat can be, it always remains a coat. In theory, at least, it can always be taken off. For a person born and bred in Torah, Judaism is and always will be his skin. He can no more take it off than a man can shed his skin,” he wrote.
Avakesh enumerated the “host of problems” that he said “fester beneath the surface of the BT community.” For Avakesh, these include “underground survival of secular attitudes,” “serious psychological imperfections,” “shallow understanding of the Torah,” and “rampant deficiency of Torah knowledge.”
Like Spanish Anusim
He compared today’s BTs to the Spanish anusim and their descendants, Jews who were forced by the Spanish Inquisition, beginning in 1492, to abandon their faith and adopt Christianity, but who, years later, returned to Judaism.
Avakesh maintained that from the ranks of the “thousands of wonderful, self-sacrificing Jews [who] streamed to Amsterdam and Turkey, seeking authentic Judaism and spiritual renewal,” came the “most devoted followers” of Shabbatai Tzvi, the notorious 17th century false messiah.
Avakesh also insisted that “the descendants of these same families gave rise to the Reform movement some time later.”
Little “Chani” and “Moshe”
The extremely questionable historical accuracy of Avakesh’s observations is emblematic of the entire problem. A responder who took umbrage at Avakesh’s diatribe, pointed to the harm of such malevolent generalizations.
“Somewhere in Brooklyn, little Chani’s friends won’t come over because her parents are BT—despite the fact that they spent five years learning in kollel and actually know the halacha and ask halachic questions—since all BTs are only ‘wearing a coat’ and ‘can’t be trusted on halacha,’” the responder wrote.
A shadchanit (matrimonial matchmaker) in Borough Park who has been active in her field for over 30 years, confirmed the observations of Rabbi Weissman and Avakesh’s responder. “Though no one will admit it openly, there’s a caste system at work here, just like in India. Except here, in certain communities, the BTs and their children are at the bottom of the heap. There are thousands of ‘little Chani’s’ (and ‘Moshe’s’) in all the frum neighborhoods where ba’alei teshuva live.”
Shunned Children
According to the shadchanit, FFB parents on “both sides of the Atlantic” can be “zealous” in barring the offspring of BTs from their own children’s circle of friends.
“They’ll have birthday parties and Shabbos programs for all the little girls in the neighborhood, but ‘somehow,’ Chani, the daughter of BTs, will never be invited,” she said. “It’s insidious, it’s heartbreaking, and the worse thing is that neither poor Chani nor her naïve BT parents will have the slightest idea why.”
According to the shadchanit, this happens despite common agreement that the affected children are “eidel” (delicate, sweet, and refined) and their parents frum and learned. When the children are rejected by a school, “the administrators make up every excuse in the world to justify not taking anyone with a different background,” she said.
All Over
She maintained that this happens even in the comparably open world of Lubavitch chasidim, known for establishing schools throughout the world for BT children as well as those from completely non-observant homes.
“The ‘real’ true-blue Chabadniks send their boys to Ohalei Torah in Crown Heights. You won’t find too many children of ba’alei teshuva there. There’s a word for that: segregation,” she said.
However, she admitted that the “Litvish yeshivish,” the term for hareidim who maintain the ultra-Orthodox tradition of the Lithuanian-Jewish communities (present-day Belarus, Lithuania, Latvia and the northeastern Suwałki region of Poland) “are the worst offenders.”
Sinas Chinom
She insisted that “sinas chinom” (causeless hatred), which, according to tradition, was the cause of the destruction of the Second Temple in Jerusalem, “would not be too strong a term to use for some of these people.”
“Their insistence on yichus [lineage, pedigree, distinguished birth] is nothing but an ego booster. Everybody knows—though no one will admit it—that plenty of children from yichusdik families, great rabbanim, and roshei yeshiva, go off the rails,” she said.
Even “if by a miracle,” the BT child, does get into a “good” school, her life will not be improved, said the shadchanit.
“They’ll make her miserable. She’ll be snubbed constantly by her classmates and even by her teachers who should—and do—know better,” she said. “She will be permanently tagged as the daughter of a BT—just like a leper—and even while her teachers prattle on about the importance of observing the mitzvos bein adam le’chaveiro [ethical commandments between human beings] and ‘kol Yisrael areivim zeh la’zeh’ [‘all Jews are responsible for each other’], she’ll be treated like dirt.”
“Harry”
In a letter published recently in Yated Ne’eman, a weekly English-language hareidi newspaper published in Monsey, a bewildered father expressed concern that his son had been labeled “a Harry” in school. It took the father some time to understand that, in “yeshivish,” “Harry” is an insulting term used by some FFBs to refer to a BT or his children.
The father came to learn that a “Harry” is someone who demonstrates some lack of familiarity with the subtleties—some of them truly infinitesimal—of yeshivish living. For example, although this “Harry” was an excellent student, he made the mistake of wearing white socks instead of black. Another “Harry” might wear his talit in an unusual way or tip his black fedora at an angle slightly different from what is accepted in his yeshiva.
“In general, if you consider yourself a member of the yeshiva world and do not know what a ‘Harry’ is, you probably are one,” the father wrote.
Principals and Parents
According to the shadchanit, responsibility for this “moral flaw in the system” lies with school principles and parents. For the schools, she said, “chinuch [education] has nothing to do with it.”
“The real reason for this unfortunate exclusionary policy is to ‘prove’ that they are better than the competition because their students come from ‘purer’ homes,” she said.
However, she added, she knew of at least three schools in Brooklyn and one in Lakewood in which the administrations were bullied by organized groups of parents who threatened to withdraw their children if the offspring of BTs were admitted.
Some of the “more prestigious seminaries,” she said, have parents’ committees whose “sole purpose” is to “winnow out” any “undesirables.”
“I actually heard people say that,” she said, explaining that the committees’ function is to make sure “no unworthy pretenders share the same classroom with their precious daughters.”
Thrown Out
She recalled an incident which involved her own neighbors, whom she described as “erliche yidden” [righteous Jews]. After graduating from college, the husband, a successful businessman, and his wife, an accountant, had adopted an observant lifestyle. After their marriage, he learned for four years in a well-renowned BT yeshiva in Israel while she attended a prestigious seminary for women.
When they completed their studies, they returned to Brooklyn where, a few years later, they attempted to register their son in a well-known yeshiva ketana [elementary school]. The principal met them at the door with a radiant smile and a twinkle in his eye, both of which grew broader when he realized they were not only BTs, but well versed as well.
But the smile vanished when he learned the purpose of their visit. “Since you are ba’alei teshuva, you, of course, realize that your son will never be able to internalize our derech [way of life] and hashkafa [outlook and philosophy]. He’d never fit in, and it would be a waste of our time and your money for us to take him,” he informed them.
According to the shadchanit, without another word, he literally threw her neighbors out of his office.
“The poor woman cried all the way home,” the shadchanit recalled, adding that, over the years, hundreds of BTs have confided to her, “some with tears in their eyes,” that they had no idea that after the sacrifices they had made for Yiddishkeit, it would still be almost impossible to integrate into the frum community.
Exceptions
There are exceptions. According to the shadchanit, BTs who have acquired great wealth, or who are fortunate enough to have parents who acquired it, or who have managed to acquire a sponsor “too prominent to be ignored,” can see their children accepted to schools.
“It can happen, but it’s rare,” she said.
One young couple learned this the hard way. The husband had become observant while still in his 20s and had studied for a number of years at a well-known yeshiva for BTs in New York and then, for two more years, in Israel. While in Israel, he met and married an accomplished young woman who had spent three years in well-known Jerusalem yeshiva for BT women.
Upon returning to the US, the young idealistic couple affiliated with a hareidi community, actively involving themselves in community programs and shiurim. They also contributed as superb volunteer fundraisers for the local yeshiva.
When the young couple’s son was ready for school, the yeshiva’s administration accepted him. The parents now say they did not realize the school officials were merely “biding their time.”
Merciless Bullying
Although, from the beginning, their child encountered some minor problems in school, when he entered the fourth grade, “the roof fell in.” According to the parents, he was taunted mercilessly and ostracized by his classmates, who often called him horrible names.
“Ben Nida was a favorite,” the father said, referring to the fact that, because the parents were BTs, the child was accused of being conceived without regard to the laws of family purity, a mortal insult in the hareidi world. “That name they could only have heard from their parents at home.”
The child came home from school every day in tears. “They spread malicious rumors about him and us. I can’t even imagine how many halachot bein adam le’chaveiro [ethical commandments between human beings] they violated And his classmates are children who come from supposedly good frum homes and learn Pirkei Avos—the Ethics of the Fathers—every week,” the mother said.
No Help from School
It was not long before the child developed severe stomach cramps and began having nightmares.
The distraught parents went repeatedly to the school, asking the principal and his teachers to intervene. “They would smile, make promises, and do nothing,” the father said.
After awhile, the parents said, they understood what was happening. “The principal and the teachers—men whom we had known for years—actually wanted our boy—and us—out. We were good enough to raise money for them and run their errands, but we were not good enough to have a son in their yeshiva. It hurt,” said the father. “In numerous places, the Torah commands us to treat proselytes with equity and sensitivity. Shouldn’t born Jews receive at least the same treatment as converts?”
Escape to Modern Orthodox
Although there were hashkafa issues, the couple managed to relocate to a Modern Orthodox community where their son was enrolled in one of the local schools and “blossomed.”
There, they met another family of “refugees” from the hareidi world. The second family had sought to enroll their child in a famous yeshiva ketana which was willing to enter into a “compromise” with BTs: Before the child was accepted, the parents had to agree to break off all relations with any family and friends who were not strictly observant.
“In addition, we had to commit ourselves to throw out any ‘goyishe’ [non-Jewish] books and pictures that we might still have—as if we had pornography hanging on our walls. Would you believe, the principal wanted us to sign a contract to that effect,” the mother said.
The family turned the school down and “moved out of the area as soon as we could sell the house.”
Five Torah Personalities
That this brutal treatment of non-Orthodox Jews by hareidim is a relatively new phenomenon was noted by Prof Yitzchak Levine, of the Department of Mathematical Sciences at Stevens Institute of Technology in Hoboken, NJ, and a frequent social commentator, who attended … [the] 2008 convention of the National Society for Hebrew Day Schools, Torah Umesorah.
At the convention’s Shabbos seuda shlishit, Rav Avraham Chaim Levin, rosh yeshiva of the Telshe Yeshiva in Chicago, recalled that, 40 years ago, there were eight boys in the eighth grade of Yeshiva Beth Yehuda in Detroit. Of those eight, he noted, five were not from shomer Shabbos homes, but all five went on to become “outstanding Torah personalities.”
Dr. Levine interpreted Rav Levin’s anecdote as praise for Torah Umesorah, which obviously had played a key role in the development of Orthodox Judaism in Detroit and in those five boys—who did not come from BT homes, but, rather, completely non-observant backgrounds.
What Example?
Dr. Levine turned to the gentleman sitting next to him at the convention and said, “You realize, I’m sure, that today those five boys could not get into most of the yeshivas in Brooklyn.”
The gentleman replied, “It was a different tekufa [era] then. We are no longer concerned with parents who send their kids to public schools. If someone wants to start a yeshiva for public school kids, then let him.”
Stunned at this flippant response, Dr. Levine ended the conversation, but, he said, he could not stop thinking about those five boys in Detroit. “Forty years from now, what will a rosh yeshiva have to point to that occurred in places like Brooklyn that will serve as an example of the exceptional accomplishments of Torah Umesorah?” he said.
Some names were reduced to initials for privacy. It is truly an upside/down world we live in. B”H after 120 there will be surprises and “justice” for all. But until then we hope and pray for Moshiach to correct all the injustices and evil that exists in this world . . . that should not be.
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