EVERY SIGNATURE MATTERS - THIS BILL MUST PASS!

EVERY SIGNATURE MATTERS - THIS BILL MUST PASS!
CLICK - GOAL - 100,000 NEW SIGNATURES! 75,000 SIGNATURES HAVE ALREADY BEEN SUBMITTED TO GOVERNOR CUOMO!

EFF Urges Court to Block Dragnet Subpoenas Targeting Online Commenters

EFF Urges Court to Block Dragnet Subpoenas Targeting Online Commenters
CLICK! For the full motion to quash: http://www.eff.org/files/filenode/hersh_v_cohen/UOJ-motiontoquashmemo.pdf

Sunday, October 22, 2023

“People Love Dead Jews”


An illustration showing a grieving woman being comforted and a historical image of damaged scrolls.

There is a reason so many Jews cannot stop shaking right now. The concept of intergenerational trauma doesn’t begin to describe the dark place into which this month’s attack plunged Jewish communities around the world.

On Oct. 7, a Jewish holiday, Hamas terrorists went house to house in southern Israel murdering and abducting children and grandparents, pulling them from their beds, displaying victims’ dead bodies online, in a massacre of at least 1,400 people. In at least one instance, terrorists were reported to have uploaded a video of the murder of one victim to her own social media account for her family to discover.

The feeling of deep dread that these atrocities stirred in Jews was horribly familiar. This is what Jewish history has all too often looked like: not civilians tragically killed in war but civilians publicly targeted, tortured and murdered, with the crimes put on public display. Accounts of past crowd-pleasing killings are folded into Jewish tradition; every Yom Kippur, we recount the public torture and execution of rabbis by their Roman oppressors in a packed second-century stadium. Those ancient stories are consistent with the experiences of the more immediate ancestors of nearly every Jew alive today.

I’m not even talking about the Holocaust, which several of last week’s oldest escapees and victims also endured. (Far more Jews were killed on Oct. 7 than on Kristallnacht.) No, I’m thinking of the Farhud pogrom in 1941 Baghdad, a two-day rampage in which hundreds of Jews were raped, tortured and murdered. I’m thinking of the pogroms of 1918-21 in Ukraine, in which an estimated 100,000 Jews were slaughtered in organized massacres, reminiscent of this month’s attack.

I’m thinking of the lynching of Leo Frank in Georgia in 1915, after which the delighted crowd’s snapshots of Frank’s body were made into postcards mailed around the country and pieces of his clothing were sold as souvenirs. I’m thinking of how many of the earliest books off Europe’s first printing presses were about the executions of Jews accused of the blood libel and of a 10th-century massacre of thousands of Jews in the Spanish caliphate encouraged by a poem calling for Jewish blood and of the paintings and illuminated manuscripts showing Jews who were burned alive by the Spanish Inquisition and during the Black Death — all crowd-pleasing events celebrated in popular media and art.

Even ancient Romans celebrated their destruction of Judea by issuing commemorative coins featuring a bound Jewish woman and inscribed with the words “Judaea capta.” The humiliation and murder of Jews have always made a great meme.

Many American Jews, like Jews around the world, are descendants of those who survived. Our ancestors, in one way or another, were the ones who either made lucky decisions or barely made it out alive from Lodz and Kyiv and Aleppo and Tehran.

For diaspora Jews, the recent attacks were not distant overseas events. As was true in ancient times, the ties between global Jewish communities and Israel are concrete, specific, intimate and personal. My New Jersey Jewish federation has institutional ties with the southern Israeli town of Ofakim and its surrounding communities, sharing annual home stays with a place whose death toll from the attacks already exceeds that of the notorious Kishinev pogrom of 1903, in which 49 Jews were murdered. Millions of American Jews, not to mention Jews in Britain, France, Australia and elsewhere, have friends and relatives in Israel. Even if Hamas hadn’t made it clear that they see all Jews as targets, our connection is personal and all too real.

We spent days desperately scrolling to learn who among our acquaintances was dead, maimed or captive, connecting American hostages’ families with State Department contacts, attending panic-stricken online briefings and pooling resources and supplies for victims — all while fighting obtuse official statements from our own towns, schools, companies and universities that refused to mention the words “Israel” or “Jews” in referring to the largest single-day massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, lest some antisemite take offense at the existence of either.

We have tried to get our children off social media, shielding them from images of the violence. We’ve held mass fasts, recited psalms and sung ancient prayers for the rescue of captives. And as we gather by the thousands despite our many contradictory opinions and despite the extra security required for our gatherings even here, we have returned to the words of our ancestors that have carried us through thousands of years: Be strong and courageous. Choose life.

Many of us were physically carrying those words during the weekend of the attack, celebrating Simchat Torah, a joyous holiday when congregations dance with Torah scrolls, read the Torah’s final words and then scroll back to the beginning to start the book again.

As a child, I found this baffling. Why read the same story over and over, when we already know what happens? As an adult, I know that while the story doesn’t change, we do. What defines Jewish life is not history’s litany of horror but the Jewish people’s creative resilience in the face of it. In the wake of many catastrophes over millenniums, we have wrestled with God and one another, reinvented our traditions, revived our language, rebuilt our communities and found new meanings in our old stories of freedom and responsibility, each story animated by the improbable and unwavering belief that people can change.

Right now many of us feel trapped in this old, old story, doom-scrolling through images with terrible outcomes. But in our grief, I remind myself that each year as we finish the reading of the Torah, we immediately, at that very moment — and at the moment of this newest, oldest horror — scroll back to the story of creation and the invention of universal human dignity. We recall, once again, that every human is made in the divine image.

The story continues; we begin again.

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/22/opinion/hamas-israel-jews-massacre.html

Thursday, October 19, 2023

I Wondered How Long It Would Take The Moshiach Clowns To Begin Their Predictions! (Buy His Book To Get The Exact Date!!!)

 


Birthpangs of Mashiach

Where is the Redemption in all this?


Question:

Since the establishment of the State of Israel, religious Zionists like yourself have been saying that this is the promised Redemption. Now, after two decades of Intifadas and thousands of missile attacks and hundreds of terrorist killings, Israel is facing the threat, G-d forbid, of Iranian missiles armed with powerful warheads raining down on Tel Aviv. Not only that, but Israel’s economy is taking a beating from this expanding war and the country’s leaders don’t seem to have solid answers. I ask you, where is the Redemption in this?

Answer:

Your concern over the situation in Israel is understandable, but the fact that there are problems in Eretz Yisrael does not in any way negate the great Redemption which we are witnessing in our time. In fact, the opposite is true. The tribulations and wars which we are experiencing are signs that Mashiach is on the way.

The Sages of the Talmud, in tractate Sanhedrin, describe the terrible suffering which will accompany the advent of Mashiach (Sanhedrin 97A-98B).

The national anguish, economic chaos, and spiritual decline surrounding the messianic era lead the Sages to say that they would rather not be around when it comes. Foreseeing the economic hardships, Rabbi Chanina says: “The son of David (Mashiach) will not come until a sick person will ask for a fish to eat and there will be none to give him” (Ibid. 98A).

Rabbi Simlai says in the name of Rabbi Elazar, son of Rabbi Shimon, “The son of David will not come until judges and public officers are no more.” “Rabbi Yochanan says: If you witness a generation where the influence of Torah lessens and lessens, expect the Mashiach to come” (Ibid). And he adds: “If you see a generation where great tribulations sweep over it like a river, expect the Mashiach to come.”

While no one likes war, military engagement is an integral part of the process of Israel’s salvation and triumph over its enemies. The Talmud states that, “War is also the beginning of Redemption (Megilla 17B). There, the Talmud explains that Mashiach comes after a period of struggle and war.

The Midrash teaches that if you see the nations of the world waging war against each other, you can expect the “footsteps of Mashiach” (Bereshit Rabbah 42:4). In our daily prayers, G-d’s hand in the blueprint of Israel’s Redemption is clearly laid out as a gradually developing process: “The Master of Wars, the sower of righteousness, Who causes Salvation to sprout….” (Morning blessing, “Yotzer Ohr” recited before the Shema).

An interesting Midrash, fitting for our times, describes a future when all the world is at war: “Rabbi Yitzhak stated, the year in which the King Mashiach comes, all of the kingdoms of the world are at war with each other. The King of Persia attacks the King of Arabia… and all of the nations are confounded in fear… and Israel is in panic and trembling and says, ‘Where shall we flee to and where shall we go?' And Hashem says to them, ‘My children, fear not. All which I have done, I have done for your sake alone. Why are you frightened? Fear not. The time of Redemption has come'” (Yalkut Shimoni, Isaiah, Remez, 499).

Rabbi Kook, in his classic work, “Orot,” writes that “When there is a great war in the world, the power of Mashiach awakens” (Orot, 2:1). In retrospect, we can see that World War One and World War Two were the instruments G-d employed to reestablish the Jewish People in Israel. In the aftermath of WWI, the Balfour Declaration recognized the right of the Jewish People to establish a homeland in Israel. The result of WWII brought another step forward in the Redemption of Israel – the establishment of Jewish State. In the aftermath of the Six Day War, Jerusalem returned to our hands along with the heartland of Biblical Israel.

G-d directs the world in a natural, historical fashion, achieving His aims through the vehicle of nations and kings. “He dethrones kings and raises kings up” (Daniel 2:21). To return the scattered Jewish People to Israel, G-d had to rearrange the world map. Since nations are reluctant to surrender their territory, this can cause war.

Rabbi Kook refers to the uprooting of tyrants as “the time of the songbird.” In writing about this aspect of Israel’s Redemption, he uses the allegory of the songbird from Shir HaShirim where springtime and rebirth are connected to the songbird of Eretz Yisrael (Shir HaShirim 2:11-12).

“The time of the songbird has come, the weeding of tyrants. The evil ones are obliterated from the world, the world becomes perfected, and the voice of the turtledove is heard in our Land.”

The uprooting of the world’s Saddam Husseins, Arafats, Bin Ladens, and Hamas terrorists brings cleansing to the world. Little by little, like the shining of dawn (Jerusalem Talmud, Berachot 1:1) the light and righteousness of Israel shines forth from out of the darkness – precisely through the Hand of G-d which works wondrously in these very wars. Just as increasing pain and screaming are heard during labor just before birth, so too the anguish of war leads to a further stage of Redemption.

Therefore, don’t let current events overwhelm you. The Jewish People are still on course. G-d is directing the ship. If we do our share by fervently increasing our commitment to Torah, prayer, and the settlement of the Land, then G-d will do His part.

“The Master of wars, the sower of righteousness, Who causes salvation to sprout, the creator of cures, awesome in praise, Master of Wonders…cause a new light on Zion to shine, and may we all speedily be privileged to enjoy its light.”

May the missiles of our enemies all backfire and explode on their heads. Amen.

 

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/378708?utm_source=activetrail&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

Wednesday, October 18, 2023

The Immorality & Vicious Chilul Hashem Of Supporting Child Rapists In Any Way Whatsoever!

 

The 48th Street Dunce aka BOBOVER - This Supporter of the Rodef of an Innocent Child Sent His Son To Sit Through The Trial In Show Of Support!

 JACOB DASKAL KIDNAPPED & RAPED A 15 YEAR OLD GIRL TRUSTED TO HIS CARE - SENTENCED TO 17 YEARS IN PRISON AFTER PLEADING GUILTY  

 

Child Killer in Brooklyn --- Who Only Eats Glatt Kosher & Cholov Yisroel!

http://theunorthodoxjew.blogspot.com/2023/10/child-killer-in-brooklyn-who-only-eats.html

 Divrei Harambam:

Mishneh Torah, Foundations of the Torah 5

מִי שֶׁנָּתַן עֵינָיו בְּאִשָּׁה וְחָלָה וְנָטָה לָמוּת וְאָמְרוּ הָרוֹפְאִים אֵין לוֹ רְפוּאָה עַד שֶׁתִּבָּעֵל לוֹ. יָמוּת וְאַל תִּבָּעֵל לוֹ אֲפִלּוּ הָיְתָה פְּנוּיָה. וַאֲפִלּוּ לְדַבֵּר עִמָּהּ מֵאֲחוֹרֵי הַגָּדֵר אֵין מוֹרִין לוֹ בְּכָךְ וְיָמוּת וְלֹא יוֹרוּ לְדַבֵּר עִמָּהּ מֵאֲחוֹרֵי הַגָּדֵר שֶׁלֹּא יְהוּ בְּנוֹת יִשְׂרָאֵל הֶפְקֵר וְיָבוֹאוּ בִּדְבָרִים אֵלּוּ לִפְרֹץ בַּעֲרָיוֹת:
 
[When] someone becomes attracted to a woman and is [love-]sick [to the extent that] he is in danger of dying, [although] the physicians say he has no remedy except engaging in sexual relations with her, he should be allowed to die rather than engage in sexual relations with her. [This applies] even if she is unmarried.
 
אַף זוֹ מִצְוַת לֹא תַּעֲשֶׂה שֶׁלֹּא לָחוּס עַל נֶפֶשׁ הָרוֹדֵף. לְפִיכָךְ הוֹרוּ חֲכָמִים שֶׁהָעֻבָּרָה שֶׁהִיא מַקְשָׁה לֵילֵד מֻתָּר לַחְתֹּךְ הָעֵבָּר בְּמֵעֶיהָ בֵּין בְּסַם בֵּין בְּיָד מִפְּנֵי שֶׁהוּא כְּרוֹדֵף אַחֲרֶיהָ לְהָרְגָהּ. וְאִם מִשֶּׁהוֹצִיא רֹאשׁוֹ אֵין נוֹגְעִין בּוֹ שֶׁאֵין דּוֹחִין נֶפֶשׁ מִפְּנֵי נֶפֶשׁ וְזֶהוּ טִבְעוֹ שֶׁל עוֹלָם: 
 
This, indeed, is one of the negative mitzvot - not to take pity on the life of a rodef.
 
 

COPY AND PASTE COURT DOCUMENTS OF SUPPORT:

file:///C:/Users/Owner/Downloads/Daskal-sentencing-community-character-letters.pdf

President Biden Hopefully Gets This One Right! Bibi & Biden Hugfest ---- For Now!


Tuesday, October 17, 2023

GoodFellows Live: The War in Israel and the War at Home | GoodFellows

Conversation with Fareed Zakaria — The Conflict in Israel and the State ...

Hamas and Gaza | A Liberal Israeli's View - Yuval Noah Harari

The Sin of Moral Equivalence!

 


ToDo

This is a transcript of a recorded podcast

* * *

 

I want to say a few things about recent events in Israel. I’m sure I will do future podcasts about this and speak with a wide range of relevant experts. But, for the moment, I would like to say something brief that stands a chance of being useful, as we watch the initial expressions of support for Israel begin to decay, as it wages war in Gaza and perhaps beyond.

As many of you know, I spent years talking about the clash, as I see it, between Western civilization and Islam. Specifically, I’ve spoken and written about the connection between the actual doctrines of Islam and jihadist violence. Of course, this violence has fallen out of the news in recent years, especially since the collapse of the Islamic State. Even I have stopped thinking much about it, but I’ve been under no illusion that the problem has gone away. Those of you who have been following my work for 20 years know that I’ve said everything I have to say on this topic, ad nauseum. And I’m sure I’ll periodically just repeat myself for the rest of my life—because eruptions of jihadist violence, and the attendant secular moral confusion about it, will be with us for generations.

However, I don’t want to rehash any of my criticism of Islam here. I’ll just briefly remind you of what I believe, which is that there is no possibility of living in peace with jihadists. So, whether we want to admit it or not, we are perpetually at war with them. And we must win a war of ideas with everyone, both within the Muslim world and outside it, who is confused about that—and there are legions of the confused. And there is no place on Earth where the truth about jihadism is more obvious or excruciating, and moral confusion about it more reprehensible, than Israel today.

But leaving all of that to one side, for the moment I’d like to make a very simple point, that really shouldn’t be at all controversial—because it doesn’t prejudge any of the questions that people might disagree about. You don’t have to agree with me about Islam, or about the role it plays in inspiring conflict. The point I’m making now says nothing about the causes of the recent violence in Israel—and yet it cuts through all the arguments and pseudo-arguments that attempt to paint some moral equivalence between Israel and its enemies, or to justify the actions of Hamas as though they were a response to Israeli provocations—to the growth of settlements, or the daily humiliation of living under occupation. Incidentally, there has been no occupation of Gaza since 2005, when Israel withdrew from the territory unilaterally, forcibly removing 9000 of its own citizens, and literally digging up Jewish graves. The Israelis have been out of Gaza for nearly 20 years. And yet they have been attacked from Gaza ever since.

But even a statement like that wades too far in controversy. I want you step back… Whatever you think about the origins of this conflict, whatever you believe about the role that religion plays here (or doesn’t play), whatever you think about colonialism, or globalism, or any other ‘ism, whether you’re a fan of Noam Chomsky or Samuel Huntington, you should be able to acknowledge the following claims to be both descriptively true and ethically important.

At this moment in history, there are people and cultures that harbor very different attitudes about violence and value of human life. There are people and cultures that rejoice, positively rejoice—dancing in the streets rejoicing—over the massacre of innocent civilians; conversely there are people and cultures that seek to avoid killing innocent civilians, and deeply regret it when they do—and they occasionally prosecute and imprison their own soldiers when they violate this modern norm of combat.

There are people and cultures who revel in the anguish of hostages and prisoners of war—who will parade them before cheering mobs, and often allow them to be assaulted, or raped, or even murdered. They will desecrate their bodies in public, and all of this carnage is a cause for jubilation. Conversely, there are people and cultures who find such barbarism revolting—and, again, would be inclined to prosecute anyone on their own side who took part in it.

In short, there are people and cultures who revel in war crimes—and who do not hide these crimes or their celebration of them but, rather, proudly broadcast their savagery for all the world to see. Conversely, there are people and cultures who have given us the concept of a war crime as a sacred prohibition—and as a safeguard in the ongoing project of maintaining the moral progress of civilization.

One point to concede, and this will absorb all the nuance and nonsense that is now percolating in the brains of many listeners: It is, of course, true that we in the West have been on the wrong side of these dichotomies in the past. Most Western armies, including Israel’s, have at one time or another been guilty of war crimes. And if you go back far enough, all of human conflict was just a litany of war crimes. And you don’t have to go back all that far, in fact, to find large pockets of Western culture that were morally indistinguishable from what we now see in much of the Muslim world. If you have any doubt about this, study the photos of white mobs celebrating the lynchings that occurred in the American South in the first half of the 20th century: where seemingly whole towns—thousands of men, women and children—turned out as though for a carnival to watch some young man or woman be tortured to death and then strung up on a tree or lamppost for all to see.

Seeing the pictures of these people in their Sunday best, having arranged themselves for a postcard photo under a dangling, and lacerated, and often partially cremated person, is one thing, but realize that these genteel people—who considered themselves good Christians—often took souvenirs of the body home to show their friends—teeth, ears, fingers, knee caps, internal organs—and sometimes displayed them in their places of business.

So I’m not claiming that there are permanent differences between groups of people. I’m talking about the power of ideas that happen to be ascendant at any given time and place. I’m talking about beliefs and whole worldviews that come into being in one culture and have yet to come into being in others. The point, of course, is that if we recognize the monstrosities of the past, we should recognize the monstrosities of the present, and acknowledge that at this moment in human history not every group has the same ethical norms governing its use of violence. For whatever reason. Perhaps religion has nothing to do with it.

Consider just one of these norms: Whenever an armed conflict breaks out, some groups will use human shields, and others will be deterred, to one degree or another, by their use. To be clear, I’m not talking about the taking of hostages from the opposing side for the purpose of using them as human shields. That is appalling, and it is now happening in Gaza, but it is separate crime. I’m talking about something far more inscrutable—it’s astounding, really, that it happens at all—I’m talking about people who will strategically put their own noncombatants, their own women and children, into the line of fire so that they can inflict further violence upon their enemies, knowing that their enemies have a more civilized moral code that will render them reluctant to shoot back, for fear of killing or maiming innocent noncombatants. If anywhere in this universe cynicism and nihilism can be found together in their most perfect forms, it is here.

Jihadists use their own people as human shields routinely. Hamas fires rockets from hospitals and mosques and schools and other sites calculated to create carnage if the Israelis return fire. There were cases in the war in Iraq where jihadists literally rested the barrels of their guns on the shoulders of children. They blew up crowds of their own children in order to kill US soldiers who were passing out candy to them. Conversely, the Israeli army routinely warns people to evacuate buildings before it bombs them.

Of course, during times of war, it common to dehumanize one’s enemy, to describe them as barbarous and evil. And it is natural for ethical and educated people to distrust such politically-charged language. But pay attention: I’m describing concrete behaviors—behaviors that occur on only one side of this conflict.

Just consider how absurd it would be to reverse the logic of human shields in this case: Imagine the Israelis using their own women and children as human shields against Hamas. Recognize how unthinkable this would be, not just for the Israelis to treat their own civilians in this way, but for them to expect that their enemies could be deterred by such a tactic, given who their enemies actually are.

Again, it is easy to lose sight of the moral distance here—which is strange. It’s like losing sight of the Grand Canyon when you are standing right on the edge of it. Take a moment to actually do the cognitive work: Imagine the Jews of Israel using their own women and children as human shields. And then imagine how Hamas, or Hezbollah, or al-Qaeda, or ISIS, or any other jihadist group would respond. The image you should now have in your mind is a masterpiece of moral surrealism. It is preposterous. It is a Monty Python sketch where all the Jews die.

Do you see what this asymmetry means? Can you see how deep it runs? Do you see what it tells you about the ethical difference between these two cultures?

There are not many bright lines that divide good and evil in our world, but this is one of them.

Of course, there is much more talk about when considering the ethics of war and violence. And there’s much more to be confused about. For instance, as this war proceeds, many people will consider the deaths of noncombatants on the Palestinian side to be morally equivalent to the kids who were tortured and murdered at the peace concert by Hamas, or to the hostages who may yet be murdered and their murders broadcast on social media. But they’re not. There is a difference between collateral damage—which is, of course, a euphemism for innocent people killed in war—and the intentional massacre of civilians for the purpose of maximizing horror.

Simply the counting the number of dead bodies is not a way of judging the moral balance here. Intentions matter. It matters what kind of world people are attempting to build. If Israel wanted to perpetrate a genocide of the Palestinians, it could do that easily, tomorrow. But that isn’t what it wants. And the truth is the Jews of Israel would live in peace with their neighbors if their neighbors weren’t in thrall to genocidal fanatics.

In the West, we have advanced to a point where the killing of noncombatants, however unavoidable it becomes once wars start, is inadvertent and unwanted and regrettable and even scandalous. Yes, there are still war crimes. And I won’t be surprised if some Israelis commit war crimes in Gaza now. But, if they do, these will be exceptions that prove the rule—which is that Israel remains a lonely outpost of civilized ethics in the absolute moral wasteland that is the Middle East.

To deny that the government of Israel (with all of its flaws) is better than Hamas, to deny that Israeli culture (with all of its flaws) is better than Palestinian culture­ in its attitude toward violence, is to deny that moral progress itself is possible. If most Americans are better than their slaveholding ancestors, if most Germans today are better than the people who herded Jews into gas chambers, if the students protesting this war on your college campus—who are so conscientious that they lose sleep over crimes like “cultural appropriation” or using the wrong pronouns—if they are better than the racists and religious lunatics that inevitably lurk somewhere in their family trees—then we have to recognize that there is no moral equivalence now, between Israel and her enemies.

 https://twitter.com/manniefabian/status/1714377828131553446?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1714377828131553446%7Ctwgr%5E333c9b4305d4ef698fdbf0400a258a18eea0cbb0%7Ctwcon%5Es1_c10&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fvinnews.com%2F2023%2F10%2F17%2Fwatch-footage-clearly-shows-outgoing-hamas-rockets-explode-gaza-hospital%2F

Monday, October 16, 2023

After terrorists killed my cousin Daniel Pearl, my family called for peace. But after the worldwide celebration of our people’s slaughter, my hope for peace is dead

 

As an IDF soldier stationed near Gaza in 2011, Ilan Benjamin believed he could promote “goodwill with our Palestinian neighbors.” 

Once, I Was a Peace Advocate. Now, I Have No Idealism Left.


The story I’m about to tell is one that many progressive Jews can relate to. In some ways, it’s a prototypical arc of a diaspora Jew who has always advocated for nuance. This week, something broke in us. We watched history repeat itself. Not just on the global scale, with the wanton massacre of our people, the savage mass murders and dismemberments of entire families and communities. But for many, my family included, history is repeating itself on a personal level as well. 

In March 2003, I turned 13 and celebrated my bar mitzvah in Walnut Creek, California. By Jewish tradition, I became a man. But the ceremony felt redundant; I had already grown up. Only one year earlier, my older cousin, Daniel Pearl, an investigative journalist for The Wall Street Journal, was kidnapped and beheaded by Islamist jihadis while on assignment in Pakistan.

His killers, like the Hamas killers of last weekend, proudly released a video documenting Danny’s murder. Among Danny’s last words were, “My father is Jewish. My mother is Jewish. I am Jewish.” At first, I was in shock—how had my own cousin become a player in such a large international nightmare? Why did people get murdered simply for being who they are? In this case, for being Jewish?

Danny’s parents did not call for revenge. Instead they set up The Daniel Pearl Foundation that offers fellowships, sponsors cross-cultural music events (Danny was a gifted musician), and brings people together to improve the world. Even after what my family had been through, their work encouraged me to be idealistic and believe that the Jewish people could make peace with our neighbors. I became a fierce advocate for peace.

When I immigrated to Israel at the age of 18 and enlisted in the Israel Defense Forces, I was still driven by ideals. I thought I could promote more goodwill with our Palestinian neighbors. Serving in a combat unit based on the Gaza border, I witnessed the release of the kidnapped Israeli soldier Gilad Shalit, held for five years by Hamas, when his freedom was exchanged for more than 1,000 Palestinian prisoners. One for 1,000. Despite my many criticisms of the Israeli government, I recognized then how much Israel valued the life of every soldier.

The late journalist Daniel Pearl

On my rare free weekend, I spent my time at Kibbutz Be’eri. Because I was a “lone soldier”—that is, an immigrant without much close family in Israel—I was given a host family. They treated me like a son, including teasing me relentlessly for choosing to come to Israel and serve, whereas most Israelis have no choice. They were politically left, just like me. Despite rockets often raining down on them, they believed in peace, just like me. This week, when the terrorists came, ideals didn’t make a difference.

I watched the news in horror as terrorists massacred over 100 people at Kibbutz Be’eri. Women. Children. I frantically messaged my host family and heard nothing back. Like my cousin Danny years ago, my family was being held hostage. The good news: unlike Danny, my host family at Kibbutz Be’eri was saved. They are physically okay. But how can they really be okay, after watching their friends and neighbors being slaughtered? 

There was a time when these types of events couldn’t shake my ideals. I used to argue relentlessly for a two-state solution. I fought bitterly with Israeli friends about the decency of the Palestinian people. Even though radical Islamists had murdered my cousin, even though civilians had been blown up in buses daily during the Second Intifada, I refused to give in to nihilism. 

In 2012, I returned to the States to study film at University of Southern California, and published a book about my military service that criticized the Israeli government. This didn’t win me many friends, but I continued to advocate for nuance regardless. I proudly supported Black Lives Matter, LGBTQIA+, and feminist causes. I called myself a progressive Jew.

But over the years, I noticed a disturbing trend: With all the atrocities in the world, why did my social justice warrior friends hate Israel so disproportionately? Why did it feel like intersectionality excluded Jews? Why did the left—who supposedly stood up for human rights—put child-murdering Hamas terrorists on a pedestal? 

At first, I thought it must be miseducation.

“Ah, they think Palestinians are the indigenous people. I’ll show that Jewish history, and the archaeology to prove it, dates back millennia.” 

“Ah, they think we’re white colonizers. I’ll show how many Jews are people of color, including those who are Mizrahi, Sephardi, and Ethiopian.” 

“Ah, they’ll get it once I show them that there are fifty Muslim countries, and only one Jewish state.” 

But my friends weren’t interested in correcting their misunderstandings. 

Ilan Benjamin at his bar mitzvah.

I agreed that the settlements were unlawful, that Gaza was a humanitarian crisis, that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyuahu was a dictator. I assumed—if I cared enough, if I mourned for the Palestinian dead, if I put nuance above all else—our neighbors and their allies would give us the same decency.

How wrong I was. This past week, as over 1,300 Jews were slaughtered, the most murderous attack on Jews since the Holocaust, I saw the true face of Palestinians and their allies. All around the world, they celebrate. They gloat. They mock our tears. They do not protest against Hamas. They embrace pure evil. 

And so, to the terrorists I now say:

When you killed my family, I forgave you. When you killed my people, I forgave you. But when you killed my idealism, I had no forgiveness left. 

To non-Jewish friends who have reached out, thank you. It is simply the human thing to do. To friends who dare justify what has happened, you are not friends. You are nothing but Nazi supporters dressed up in leftist intellectual language. To the Palestinians: you have lost all moral authority to claim victimhood. I will never advocate for you again. To my family, friends in Israel, and Jews around the world hurting right now, I love you. Stay safe.

In Berlin, where I live today with my German-Ukrainian Jewish wife, Germans love to say “Never Again.” Right now, Never Again is happening again in real time, livestreamed for the whole world to see. I find myself looking up my military number in case the IDF reserves call for me. Unlike our enemy, I feel no joy at the prospect of going to war. But if our people’s existence is at stake, I will do what I must. I will be the world’s favorite villain: the Jew who has the audacity to defend his people.

https://www.thefp.com/p/daniel-pearl-cousin-hamas-idealism

Sunday, October 15, 2023

Child Killer in Brooklyn --- Who Only Eats Glatt Kosher & Cholov Yisroel! ---- Prosecutors wrote in a memorandum to the court that Mr. Daskal had “methodically groomed an exceedingly vulnerable 15-year-old girl in his care, sexually abused her and then threatened her to prevent her from exposing his crimes.”

Jacob Daskal, wearing a black vest, white shirt, long black coat and skullcap, exits a courthouse with several people walking beside and behind him.
Prosecutors said Jacob Daskal was acting in his capacity as a shomrim leader when he brought a teenage girl to his home, where he sexually abused her  
 
מילים ישירות מהתחת שלו

 To Paraphrase Elya Brudny Whenever Daskal attacks, and when he does the most atrocious things in the world, it is only because Hashem allowed it. Hashem, the Av Harachaman,  deems it in our best interest.  but we cannot forget that Hashem is allowing Daskal to do what he is doing...


Brooklyn Safety Patrol Leader Who Abused Girl Gets 17-Year Sentence ("So Obvious The New York Times Hates Orthodox Jews" Heard In Shul)

 

Jacob Daskal, head of a private Orthodox crime patrol, took a 15-year-old runaway to his upstate home. Her family thought he was helping.

 

After a 15-year-old girl had run away from her Brooklyn home in 2017, her relatives turned for help to a trusted figure: Jacob Daskal, the head of a private crime patrol called the Boro Park Shomrim Society.

The girl’s aunt and uncle asked Mr. Daskal to help find their niece a place to live and he offered his summer home in upstate New York. There, according to federal prosecutors, Mr. Daskal began months of sexual abuse that took place in New York State and Illinois.

On Wednesday a judge sentenced Mr. Daskal, who pleaded guilty last summer to transporting a minor with the intent to engage in criminal sexual activity, to 17 and a half years in prison, the maximum allowed under his plea agreement.

Before the sentencing, a prosecutor, Erin Reid, read a statement from Mr. Daskal’s victim, who wrote that he had subjected her to “nightly rape sessions” and emotional abuse, adding: “I will live with the pain of this trauma forever.”

Mr. Daskal also spoke, sobbing as he told the court that “words cannot capture the overwhelming shame and regret I feel.”

A defense memorandum had asked that Mr. Daskal, who had been free on bail, receive a lesser sentence, writing that he is “plagued by guilt” and will be “forever branded by the crime he committed.” In a letter to the judge, Mr. Daskal apologized, adding: “I know that I can never repair the damage I did to this girl.”

Mr. Daskal worked as a real estate property manager but was known for his role as a leader in the shomrim, the Hebrew word for “guards.” Various shomrim organizations have existed in New York City since the 1970s, serving as a sort of auxiliary police force for ultra-Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn neighborhoods like Borough Park, Crown Heights and Williamsburg.

The shomrim are valued by supporters for chasing thieves, searching for people who are missing and handling crowds at weddings and other events. But some men connected to the patrols have been accused of bullying, vigilantism and breaking the law. In 2016 a member of the Williamsburg shomrim was convicted of beating a Black student, who lost vision in one eye as a result. Later that year, Alex Lichtenstein, a member of the shomrim in Borough Park, pleaded guilty to bribing police officers for expedited handgun licenses.

The shomrim cultivate ties with police commanders, have served as liaisons with precincts and have received funding for equipment from elected officials. Members’ cars and clothing are typically emblazoned with logos that resemble that of the New York Police Department. Within Orthodox neighborhoods, the shomrim can be seen as more sympathetic or culturally attuned than the police.

Mr. Daskal was acting in his capacity as the Boro Park Shomrim Society’s founder and chief, prosecutors said, when he “coordinated efforts” with the teenage girl’s relatives who wanted to address their problems with her.

The girl moved into Mr. Daskal’s home in South Fallsburg, N.Y., in summer 2017, prosecutors said. On a Saturday in August, they said, Mr. Daskal called her into his bedroom, locked the door and sexually assaulted her.

Afterward, prosecutors said, Mr. Daskal sent text messages to her describing sexual fantasies, saying that he was “going to make her into a lady” and describing himself as a “father figure.”

The assaults continued, prosecutors said, taking place in his South Fallsburg home, about 90 miles northwest of New York City, where other members of his family were also living. They also happened in his car, when he took the girl from the home under the pretext of bringing her to see friends.

In fall 2017, prosecutors said, Mr. Daskal helped the girl’s parents enroll her in a school in Chicago. Mr. Daskal communicated with the girl by text message and video calls while she was living there, prosecutors said. Around early November, prosecutors said, Mr. Daskal flew to Chicago and picked the girl up at a driver’s education class, then sexually assaulted her in a hotel room.

In 2018, prosecutors said, as Mr. Daskal continued to try to contact the girl, she described the abuse to a mentor, who helped her go to the police. The F.B.I. searched two phones that Mr. Daskal had used and found what prosecutors said were “extensive chat communications between the defendant and the victim” including some that had been deleted but were recovered with forensic tools.

Prosecutors said that Mr. Daskal had told the girl to erase messages between them and said nobody would believe her if she described her encounters with him. At one point, prosecutors wrote, he asked her to write a letter stating that whatever sex they engaged in was “therapy” and that she loved him.

In a WhatsApp exchange cited by prosecutors, the girl asked whether a blood test could show that she had engaged in sex with him. Mr. Daskal told her not to worry.

“U know what my last name is,” he wrote. “Mr careful.”

 

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/11/nyregion/brooklyn-safety-patrol-leader-abuse-sentencing.html?unlocked_article_code=3flisyOUEJCQcwNm4E1vVyx1NHaDjDCYr9NZ4sEjCzMfHEHVy92fPHVp16zHYnyY55O1bwoZMdyLLYbNhFQk2xCTrBv_Suov5JwTaoSeWNoS3uWsS2weuV_bnlAEtCEjQlL7LUbP55tVe8t91m57SeYOpG_fuPCNoTj9sL5HIXu6HTWpHUHTODU6DGyNKBNt5tXh14KrtdHoeeQGr2Z1Q2b4TJ4MFAXJXVD5r3bin7M4IodIqZvHMBZdmA34bDhLlhCKIazqNBqoLtfljXOlbdsQRqm_lI9AlFBtQcKz5j9f5J54IaVHMu6GNKjQydKkfgBAtlZ5eXTqkIbZGHnt8JOnVDBTJADR7VqIHaYIN514Ilbmce9Kv4k&smid=fb-share

Wednesday, October 11, 2023

Divrei Outrageous Idiocy, Brazen Stupidity v'Sheker -- from Elya Brudny!

"First and foremost is the recognition and internalization that everything is ein od milvado. Everything is run by the hand of Hashem. Whenever Hamas attacks, and when they do the most atrocious things in the world, it is only because Hashem allowed it. Nobody can lay a finger on us if Hashem, the Av Harachaman, did not deem it in our best interest. That does not take away the appreciation of the cruelty, but we cannot forget that Hashem is allowing Hamas to do what they are doing. The first address of our frustration and pain must be our Father in shamayim."  Elya Brudny





מילים ישירות מהתחת שלו

 CLICK: BABIES BUTCHERED PICTURES:

KIDNAPPED & MURDERED JEWISH TODDLERS

https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&sca_esv=572890011&sxsrf=AM9HkKkfGKMFbW3lEZ5sJg2CdKHRKtaPhQ:1697123154927&q=babies+murdered+by+hamas+pictures&tbm=isch&source=lnms&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjEiqi25PCBAxWHJkQIHWezDq0Q0pQJegQIDBAB&biw=1024&bih=643&dpr=1

https://vimeo.com/873085648


Tuesday, October 10, 2023

Yaakov Meir Schechter: Do Not Leave Eretz Yisroel Now ---- Put This Idiot On The Frontlines In Gaza!


In response to the questions of many during the current eis tzarah, Rav Yaakov Meir Schechter was posed a number of shailos by his close talmid and associate, Rav Yehuda Deutsch.

Rav Yaakov Meir encouraged people not to fear and emphasized that they should “remain in Eretz Yisroel,” which is “a place of ultimate safety.”

Rav Yaakov Meir acknowledged that there are concerns from individuals living abroad who are considering returning and parents overseas whose children are studying in Eretz Yisroel. However, he unequivocally advised them to stay in the country, assuring them that there is no reason to leave.

Rav Yaakov Meir firmly believes that fleeing from the land is not the solution to the challenges at hand, and he urged Yidden to recite Tehillim to strengthen their faith and dispel fear.

Rav Yaakov Meir explained that reciting Tehillim at every available moment will not only strengthen one’s emunah, but also help eliminate fear.

“The root of fear,” he said, “lies in a confused mind and a lack of faith. Therefore, the solution is to recite Tehillim, which strengthens faith, clarifies the mind, and purifies the heart.”

Monday, October 09, 2023

I FULLY ENDORSE UNITED HATZALAH! I KNOW 100% OF YOUR DONATED DOLLAR GOES FOR EMERGENCY EQUIPMENT!


 

EMERGENCY CAMPAIGN FOR EMERGENCY EQUIPMENT

Shabbat morning at 6:20 am Israel was targeted by Hamas terrorists who crossed its border, infiltrating southern towns, resulting in many killed, people kidnapped, and hundreds injured. At the same time, thousands of rockets were launched into Israel, reaching Tel Aviv and Jerusalem. A state of war has been declared by Israel’s Defense Minister. In this state of emergency – unlike anything Israel has experienced since the Yom Kippur War – Israel needs your urgent support. We are launching an emergency appeal to raise funds for desperately needed supplies to provide our volunteers with the equipment they need to save lives and the protective equipment to keep themselves safe. The goal of the campaign is to raise $20 million to equip an additional 1,000 United Hatzalah volunteers with protective vests and helmets, oxygen tanks, defibrillators, trauma bandages, and tourniquets. These supplies can be ordered and delivered over the course of the next week to ensure that UH volunteers have everything they need to respond to the ongoing attacks. Our medics are on the front line and in need of support and reinforcements as they respond to lifesaving calls. The time is now. Your support is critical to ensure the safety of our volunteers and the people of Israel.

United Hatzalah of Israel is the largest independent, non-profit, fully volunteer Emergency Medical Service organization that provides the fastest and free emergency medical first response throughout Israel. United Hatzalah’s service is available to all people regardless of race, religon, or national origin. United Hatzalah has more than 6,500 volunteers around the country, available around the clock – 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, 365 days a year. With the help of our unique GPS technology and our iconic ambucycles, our average response time is less than 3 minutes across the country and 90 seconds in metropolitan areas. Our mission is to arrive at the scene of medical emergencies as soon as possible and provide the patient with professional and appropriate medical aid until an ambulance arrives, resulting in many more lives saved.

 PLEASE DONATE ANY AMOUNT YOU CAN:

https://israelrescue.org/campaign/israel-at-war/?utm_campaign=gaza2023&utm_medium=popup-new-2&utm_source=homepage

KEl Male Rachamim


Tuesday, October 03, 2023

An Almost Jewish Doctor & a Hungarian Meet In a Lab....

 

Drew Weissman, (Whose father was Jewish) immunologist, wins Nobel Prize for his work on COVID vaccines

(JTA) — Drew Weissman, a Jewish scientist who identified the technology that made possible the mRNA vaccines against COVID-19, has won the 2023 Nobel Prize in medicine. Weissman shared the prize with Katalin Kariko, his Hungarian-born research partner at the University of Pennsylvania.

Kariko and Weissman’s story of collaboration became famous in 2020 when the technology they had started experimenting with more than two decades earlier allowed the swift creation effective vaccines against the crippling pandemic.

The pair first encountered each other while photocopying research papers in 1998 and realized they were working on related topics. Kariko, who had been a low-level researcher for years, was trying to prove that messenger RNA, the genetic material that tells cells what to do, could be programmed. Weissman, a physician who previously worked under Dr. Anthony Fauci, later the U.S. COVID czar, at the National Institutes of Health, was working on a vaccine against HIV.

They teamed up and, in 2005, published a paper showing that mRNA could in fact be altered to instruct cells to take certain actions. But their breakthrough was widely overlooked for decades until it became clear that it could be used to take action against COVID-19, which was killing hundreds of thousands of people and crippling the global economy. Their technology fueled both the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines, which arrived with unusual speed and effectiveness in late 2020 and together have been administered millions of times.

“Through their groundbreaking findings, which have fundamentally changed our understanding of how mRNA interacts with our immune system, the laureates contributed to the unprecedented rate of vaccine development during one of the greatest threats to human health in modern times,” the Nobel Prize committee said in announcing the award.

Weissman is the son of a Jewish father and non-Jewish mother who grew up celebrating Jewish holidays at home, he told the Philadelphia Jewish Exponent in 2021. Together with his wife Mary Ellen, who grew up in a more observant Jewish home, he sent his children to Hebrew school at Temple Beth Hillel/Beth El, a Conservative synagogue in suburban Philadelphia. Mary Ellen Weissman is heavily involved in Momentum, which seeks to engage Jewish women with Israel, and together with her husband has spoken to and donated to the organization.

Drew Weissman told the Exponent that his personal religious outlook was not specifically Jewish. ““I’m more of a Daoist, in that point of view that I think that Earth, nature is the supreme — the main component of life,” he said. “And that’s what needs to be celebrated.”

About a quarter of Nobel laureates in medicine over time have had one or more Jewish parents, according to Jinfo.org, a website that meticulously documents the Jewish lineage of prize winners across all fields. The site, which was updated swiftly to include Weissman, says that nearly 40% of U.S. Nobel laureates in medicine have been Jewish.

Monday, October 02, 2023

I Miss Ringling Brothers Circus --- Where The Clowns Were Funny & had Better Costumes! OY! The Gold Ol' Days Of Chol Hamoed...

 

Israel's chief rabbi: Secular Jews have lower intelligence....

 

"They do not find satisfaction in life; everything is driven by the desires of this world," Sephardi Chief Moronic Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef said.

Israel's Sephardi Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef speaks during a ceremony of the Israeli police for the Jewish new year at the National Headquarters of the Israel Police in Jerusalem on September 22, 2022. (photo credit: OLIVIER FITOUSSI/FLASH90)
Israel's Sephardi Chief Clown Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef

 

Sephardi Chief Rabbi of Israel Yitzhak Yosef has said that the mental faculties of secular Jews who eat unkosher food are "impaired," and therefore it is "difficult for them to comprehend things."

His comments were released by Israel's Channel 13 on Sunday. 

The rabbi added that, "I observe everything happening within the secular community. They are in a state of jeopardy. They do not find satisfaction in life; everything is driven by the desires of this world."

"They are poor souls...they are jealous of us. They see the haredi sector, with its holidays and children, it is all jealousy," the rabbi continued. "And the hate is developed from jealousy." He also called on religious organizations to promote the ultra-Orthodox lifestyle to secular Israelis.

Opposition outrage by chief rabbi's comments

His statements have sparked a political uproar, with strong condemnations coming from the opposition.

The Sephardi chief rabbi is seen as the masses pray at the Western Wall during Hol Hamoed Sukkot, October 2, 2023. (credit: WESTERN WALL HERITAGE FOUNDATION)
The Sephardi chief CLOWN is seen as the masses pray at the Western Wall

 

Opposition leader MK Yair Lapid commented that Yosef has misrepresented his role, saying, "he is not the Chief Rabbi of Israel but rather the rabbi of a vocal minority that condemns millions of Jews who serve in the army, risk their lives, work, and support this nation. In one aspect, he is correct - they felt somewhat foolish tonight when they realized they are the ones funding his salary."

Yisrael Beytenu chairman MK Avigdor Liberman, also commented, "The sole foolishness with your statements is the fact that the secular public is funding and paying a salary to someone as uninformed as you." A member of his party, MK Yulia Malinovsky, added, "Based on Chief Rabbi Yosef's statements, even consuming kosher food alone doesn't ensure profound wisdom." 

 

List of 200 Jewish Nobel laureates: 1 observant Jew out of 200 laureates:

2005 Robert Aumann[231


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Jewish_Nobel_laureates


https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-761245?utm_source=ActiveCampaign&utm_medium=email&utm_content=Excerpt%3A+Trump+wanted+%245b++from+SBF+to+not+run+in+2024&utm_campaign=October+2%2C+2023&vgo_ee=U0Cnp9xWz33fm%2F9cYm1%2Fa94frB0F1cyLbrCVMkTOeY%2FGLg%3D%3D%3AK8QxLBqa%2BRUUFgVWtliqCIH5l4rydqL8

Thursday, September 28, 2023

Lest We Forget The Mass Slaughter Of Ukranian Jews By The Ukranians! On Sept. 3, 1941, the first murders took place in the gas chambers of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp. On Sept. 29, 1941, mass shootings of Jews began at Babi Yar in Kyiv, Ukraine.

 

The dark legacy of Babi Yar 

 

We must remember not only the Jews who were slaughtered but the millions of Jews who were never born. 

 

A memorial at Babi Yar in Ukraine, the site of a September 1941 massacre carried out by German forces and Ukrainian collaborators during their campaign against the Soviet Union in World War II. Credit: Meunierd/Shutterstock.
A memorial at Babi Yar in Ukraine, the site of a September 1941 massacre carried out by German forces and Ukrainian collaborators
 
 

The English word “holocaust” is borrowed from the Latin word holocaustum, used in the Latin translation of the Bible. This word is based in turn on a Greek word that means “burned whole” or “burnt offering.” In English, holocaustum was first used by an English chronicler of the second half of the 12th century—the monk Richard of Devizes—in order to describe an anti-Jewish pogrom that began in London after the coronation of Richard the Lionheart on Sept. 3, 1189. Some 750 years later, the Nazis decided to “burn” the Jews of Europe.

On the evening of July 31, 1941, in a luxurious baroque mansion in the Schorfheide Forest north of Berlin, Hermann Goering, the Nazi’s commissioner for the “Jewish question,” signed an order for the “Final Solution of the Jewish question.” It had been brought to him by Gruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich, the first deputy reichsführer of the SS. In 1961, Adolf Eichmann testified at his trial in Jerusalem that, in early August 1941, Heydrich summoned him, showed him a document signed by Goering and said: “The Führer has given orders for the physical extermination of the Jews.”

On Sept. 3, 1941, the first murders took place in the gas chambers of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp. On Sept. 29, 1941, mass shootings of Jews began at Babi Yar in Kyiv, Ukraine.

The Holocaust unites Jews because it is a tragic demonstration of their national and religious commonality. Jews speak dozens of languages, but what they have in common is the “language” of the Holocaust—a reminder of their common fate. The Holocaust continues to affect the entire Jewish people to this day. Professor Sergio Della Pergola of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem, a specialist in Jewish demography, believes that if the Holocaust had not happened, the number of Jews in the world would now be between 26 million and 32 million.

Kyiv has fertile soil. Everything grows well in it, including antisemitism. In the ravine called Babi Yar, the soil was especially fertile. Everything that nature desired grew there. The women of Kyiv from time immemorial saw their husbands off to war from the site. Tears of grief mixed with the waters of the overflowing Dnieper. There was plenty of moisture in Babi Yar.

But woe to the Jews who wanted to live. The Nazis chose the largest and saddest ravine in Kyiv as the place of execution. Fifty years after the mass shootings, my landlord in Stuttgart, where I worked at the Max Planck Institute, told me that he had heard machine-gun bursts from Babi Yar. His wife recalled how he woke up from nightmares in which he heard the sound again, as well as shouts and prayers of “Shema Yisrael!” He would wake up, but my relatives would sleep there forever.

On Sept. 28, announcements in three languages—Russian, Ukrainian and German—were posted in the streets of Kyiv: “All Jews of Kyiv and its environs should come on Monday, Sept. 29, 1941, by 8 am to the corner of Melnikovskaya and Dochterevskaya (near the cemeteries). Take with you documents, valuables, as well as warm clothes and underwear and other things. Whoever of the Jews does not fulfill this order and is found elsewhere will be shot.”

The Jews believed they were going to be resettled, as there was a railroad freight station not far from the appointed place. Dozens of members of my family read this announcement. They packed their belongings and recited the Jewish traveling prayer, which included words addressed to God: “Save us from every enemy and ambush, from robbers and wild beasts on the trip, and from all kinds of punishments that rage and come to the world.”

But no one spared them from ambush, from robbers and from wild beasts. My grandmother’s brother was shot at Babi Yar in 1941, along with dozens of our family members. Unlike his relatives, he was not wounded. He crawled out of the moat of death and escaped.

As I grew up, I heard his stories. Often, he said, “Many Jews were killed, but because of these executions, even more Jews were not born.” When one honors the memory of the Jews who died in the Holocaust, one must be aware of the many millions of Jews who never existed at all because of the slaughter.

Twelve years before my scholarly visit to Germany, I repatriated to Israel. I chose Israel, a country of limited opportunities and unlimited dangers, a country of uncertain borders and certain enemies, a country of three seas and three deserts, standing at the crossroads of three continents, a country flowing with milk, honey and blood. Before leaving for Israel, I brought my 5-year-old son to Babi Yar. We came to say goodbye to those who could not leave with us.

https://www.jns.org/the-dark-legacy-of-babi-yar/?_se=bWpwb2xvQGJib3guZnI%3D&utm_campaign=Evening+Syndicate+Wednesday+9272023&utm_medium=email&utm_source=brevo