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Monday, May 29, 2023

Hasidic pop singer Lipa Schmeltzer reveals he was sexually abused

 



(A7) Hasidic pop singer Lipa Schmeltzer, one of the prominent singers in the haredi sector, went public last week with a pair of YouTube videos revealing that he suffered sexual abuse as a child.

The videos, released in Hebrew and English, touched on Schmeltzer’s difficult childhood, and the therapy he has since undergone.

. “I have gone through many difficult things in my life,” he shared in the Hebrew video, posted on his YouTube channel just before the Shavuot holiday.

“At that time, they would take this child to live elsewhere, without going to court, without calling it rape. I don’t want to make a story out of it. I’m not looking to go back and judge people; I want to move forward.”

“I am sharing this after much thought, in order to be whole with myself, with all the families who hear my music, so that they truly know who Lipa Schmeltzer is from within.” He added that he prays his video “changes someone’s life.”

In the English video, Schmeltzer elaborated about the therapy he underwent for years, following various childhood traumas.

“I’ve been through a lot of trauma. I’ve been through every type of abuse – physically, mental, verbal, and I’m not here to point fingers.”

Regarding the handling of such abuse within the tightly-knit Skver Hasidic community he grew up in in New Square, New York, Schmeltzer linked the inability of his parents and teachers to support him as a child to the legacy of the Holocaust.”

“I will tell you not to judge. The teachers who were teaching me… were taught by Holocaust survivors.”

“The Hasidic community, the ‘black-and-white’ community, the haredi community, was founded by people who came out of the concentration camps. We carry this in our DNA, we carry the trauma, we carry the pain.”

“These people, including my father and mother, never went for therapy. My father never saw the funeral of his father, because his father is in a mass grave. And he carried that.”

“Why am I sharing all this? All my fans know me, they are connected to me. They know my music, but I get all these judgments sometimes – ‘why do you do this or that’.”

“I feel like talking about my real me will help me move forward.”

 WATCH VIDEO:

https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/372024

https://thejewishvoice.com/2023/05/hasidic-pop-singer-lipa-schmeltzer-reveals-he-was-sexually-abused/

Sunday, May 28, 2023

Sexual abuse, underage marriages and physical violence – Chasidic life in a remote corner of Israel...

 

The rabbi was universally known as Mohorosh, and witnesses in the film tell Ojalvo’s camera that “he is not dead, how could he be dead? He is a tzaddik” (righteous person). 


Last week the BBC aired a film that exposes the systematic abuse of children in the Breslov community. We spoke to its director

 

Moishi Schick with his father, Rabbi Eliezer Schick
Moishi Schick with his father, Rabbi Eliezer Schick
 

Bat-Dor Ojalvo is the director of one of the year’s most important films — In the Name of the Father — screened in the BBC’s prestigious Storyville slot last week. It is the deeply disturbing account of a Breslov Chasidic community, set up in a northern Israeli town, Yavniel. The man who encouraged people to move to Yavniel, Rabbi Eliezer Schik, died in 2015, aged 74. But as the film shows, the rabbi, working from Brooklyn, presided over a massively corrupt culture of sexual abuse of young girls and boys, of illegal under-age marriages, and of physical and emotional violence.

It took Ojalvo and her team seven years of relentless, dedicated research, to make the film. The rabbi was universally known as Mohorosh, and witnesses in the film tell Ojalvo’s camera that “he is not dead, how could he be dead? He is a tzaddik” (righteous person). 

 

Rabbi Eliezer Schik

 

But besides Mohorosh’s followers, Ojalvo has secured two key testimonies: from Moishi, the rabbi’s 44-year-old Brooklyn-based son, and from members of the Boloton family, some of whom left Yavniel and now lead secular lives.

Originally there were three films, shown on Israel’s Kan TV, but they were edited down to the Storyville 90- minute slot. And so I learn that Moishi, who is now mounting a legal action to claim a massive financial inheritance from his father, as not an only child, as the BBC programme suggests. He has in fact three sisters, whom Orthodox law does not recognise as claimants; and an older brother, who remains in Brooklyn, where he owns his parents’ building, and who has been described to Ojalvo as “not healthy, mentally” and thus not part of Moishi Schik’s legal initiative.

For Ojalvo, it was “very important to bring all sides to sit in front of the camera”, whether or not they remained devotees of Mohorosh, or were ex-members of the Yavniel community. To conduct many of the interviews, she wore modest, religious clothing, particularly because some of the conversations took part in the community’s synagogue. She slowly gained people’s trust — and because she spent so much time in Yavniel, she thinks that people became comfortable with her, asking after her children, and accepting that she herself is a secular Jew.

Some of the most remarkable footage in the film shows violent attacks against Moishi and also against members of the community perceived to have complained against the “party line” — the strict enforcement of under-age marriages and the casting out of people such as women who wanted a divorce, or a child who reported sexual abuse.

“You see interviews with about 12 people in the film, but in fact we spoke to around 50. Many said they wouldn’t appear on camera, but they gave us access to their computers, and old tapes. We took that material to a special laboratory and it was worked on to show in our film. Some of the people who said they didn’t want to appear on screen nevertheless still helped us, and are still helping. One man told me, ‘You are shouting from my throat’”.

Two central questions: was Mohorosh aware of the sustained level of abuse, and did Ojalvo believe Moishi?

To the first, she has no doubt. “He was totally aware of the sexual abuse. People would write faxes to him in New York and they would ask him anything and everything, from what did a scary dream mean, to whether it was permitted to keep cats. But many of these questions concerned sexual abuse, who was a victim, who was carrying it out, and exactly what was being done”. She is as certain as she can be that the rabbi knew what was taking place — but because of the stricture against being a “moiser” — one who informs or betrays, usually to the outside authorities — Rabbi Schik was able to clamp down on the  complainants, often by throwing them out of Yavniel.

In one shocking instance, Ojalvo says, a nine-year-old boy said he had been raped by a neighbour. Mohorosh threw this child out of the community and his mother was forbidden to make contact with him — to which she agreed. What became of the boy? “He became addicted to drugs and ended up living on charity. When it came to having his own children, he couldn’t be a father to them and ended up giving them away. So what we are seeing is generation after generation of shame and misery.”

 

Moishi Schick
 

As for Moishi, Ojalvo admits she was very sceptical at first — but then adds that so was he. Each was wary of the other, and at one point she made him sign an agreement promising not to sue people who spoke disparagingly of him on camera. “I was so scared at the beginning. I wasn’t sure what I would find. One man even said that Moishi had murdered someone; I told Moishi, it’s not your movie, it’s mine. I was very clear and open with him. Everything was on the table.”

She concludes that he was “quite brave” and said things about himself which did not show him in the best light. Moishi’s bitterness is understandable: he says on camera that he himself was sexually abused in his father’s New York yeshiva, that his father knew, and did nothing about it. (Moishi and his wife and children never lived in Yavniel, but the abuse appears to have been part of the culture of the community).

Now, since the screening of In the Name of the Father in Israel, the police, the attorney-general’s office, the Ministry of Education and the Ministry of Social Welfare have become involved in a belated but welcome inquiry into what went wrong in Yavniel. Some members of the Breslov community have told Ojalvo that they are getting involved in workshops, and learning how to create a safe space for their children. She and her film team have given hours of testimony to the police.

But the illegal, under-age marriages are still taking place, often at night where they cannot be tracked. That is an issue which Israeli authorities must deal with, urgently.

 https://www.jewishnews.co.uk/the-doc-that-shocked-israel/

In The Name of The Father is available to watch on BBC iPlayer

Thursday, May 25, 2023

He Could Have Been A Contender For The Philadelphia Rosh Yeshiva!

 



COVID Conspiracy Doc Dies

Rashid Buttar, DO, a well-documented COVID conspiracy theorist, died days after claiming he had been poisoned, according to the Daily Staropens in a new tab or window.

Buttar claimed in early May that he was given a "poison" that contained "200 times of what was in the vaccine" shortly after an interview with CNNopens in a new tab or window in late 2021, according to the report.

His official cause of death wasn't released, but he spent time in intensive care recently, the Star reported.

Conspiracy theories have cropped up in the wake of his death, according to VICE Newsopens in a new tab or window. Anti-vaxers have claimed that doctors who oppose mainstream medicine are being killed by mysterious forces, and Buttar said he had a stroke in February, which he "appeared to blame on vaccine 'shedding,'" VICE reported.

A member of the "disinformation dozen," Buttar was known for spreading disinformation about the COVID-19 pandemic. Before the pandemic, Buttar was punished by the North Carolina state medical board for his treatment of autism and cancer patients -- including injecting a cancer patient with hydrogen peroxide, according to the Star.

 

https://www.medpagetoday.com/special-reports/exclusives/104674?xid=nl_mpt_investigative2023-05-24&eun=g2011045d0r&utm_source=Sailthru&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=InvestigativeMD_052423&utm_term=NL_Gen_Int_InvestigateMD_Active

Wednesday, May 24, 2023

COVID still kills 1 person every 4 minutes despite the global emergency being officially over...20 Million Dead and Counting...

 

Covid deaths are still a reality as vaccination rates tumble.

After more than three years, the global Covid emergency is officially over. Yet it’s still killing at least one person every four minutes and questions on how to deal with the virus remain unanswered, putting vulnerable people and under-vaccinated countries at risk. 

A key question is how to handle a virus that’s become less threatening to most but remains wildly dangerous to a slice of the population. That slice is much bigger than many realize: Covid is still a leading killer, the third-biggest in the US last year behind heart disease and cancer. Unlike with other common causes of death such as smoking and traffic accidents that led to safety laws, though, politicians aren’t pushing for ways to reduce the harm, such as mandated vaccinations or masking in closed spaces.

“The general desire in the world is to move beyond the pandemic and put Covid behind us, but we can’t put our heads in the sand,” said Ziyad Al-Aly, director of the Clinical Epidemiology Center at the Veterans Affairs St. Louis Health Care System in Missouri. “Covid still infects and kills a lot of people. We have the means to reduce that burden.”

Even before the World Health Organization declared earlier this month that Covid no longer constitutes an emergency, most governments had already relaxed lockdowns and guidelines. After spending heavily in earlier phases of the pandemic, global leaders have dialed back efforts and are reluctant to pursue preventative measures for which the public no longer has much patience. 

Meanwhile, the infection that caused at least 20 million deaths worldwide continues to evolve, leaving the elderly and those with pre-existing conditions at the mercy of luck, uneven access to medicine and little protection from others without face masks or recent vaccinations. 

Why No Long-Term Plan? 

A global, long-term plan to protect the vulnerable and to keep a resurgence at bay hasn’t materialized, partly because of how difficult it is to forge any consensus around Covid. From the start, polarized political discourse overshadowed official guidelines on masking and vaccinations. 

Even in developed countries where the vaccine became available in less than a year into the pandemic, many people refused to take it. Lack of immunization led to more than 300,00 excess American deaths, or one out of every two from Covid, throughout 2021. Globally, it could have saved half a million more, studies show. 

“We know that politicizing public health is one of the tragedies of the pandemic,” Al-Aly said. “Political leaders leveraged their responses not only to advance public health but to advance their own narrative and drum up support for themselves.” 

Global coordination has also been hampered by politics. China’s refusal to allow independent experts unfettered access to a wet market thought to be a crucible for Covid or to the Wuhan Institute of Virology added to diplomatic tension and mistrust. Today, Chinese representatives aren’t participating in many global preparation efforts, said Linfa Wang, a virologist and director of the emerging infectious diseases program at Duke-NUS Medical School in Singapore.

“It’s hindering academic collaboration, and China/US collaboration is almost zero,” Wang said. “With these two superpowers, if they don’t collaborate, how can we say the world is ready for the next disease?”

A waning sense of emergency has also meant the surge of investment in Covid vaccines and therapeutics has also cooled. While companies including Moderna Inc and Pfizer Inc are still updating their shots, trying to make them easier to manufacture and store, many of the hundreds of novel approaches that were initially conceived have fallen by the wayside. 

In the US, experts are due to meet in June to advise on what strain of the virus vaccines should target for the remainder of the year. Those vaccines will only launch in the fall, with just 100 million doses expected in the US according to Moderna’s estimates, far less than in previous years. 

Why Is This a Problem? 

Long Covid, estimated to affect around 10% of infected people, is considered one of the biggest post-pandemic medical challenges. The economic costs are also significant.

In the US, long Covid was estimated to cost around $50 billion a year in lost salaries as of late 2022. In the UK, the Institute for Fiscal Studies last year estimated that about one in 10 people with long Covid have to stop working as a result. The number of people with those symptoms, including brain fog, breathing difficulties and fatigue, are rising even as infections are decreasing. 

It’s particularly scary for high-risk people, who’ve had to return to work and public spaces where masks are sparse and the dangers are invisible. A family wedding can still turn into a super-spreader event, and a flight can be catastrophic. 

Epidemiologist Steffanie Strathdee is painfully aware of this. Her husband Tom survived a drug-resistant infection with a rare superbug in 2016, but was left with scarred lungs and other medical issues. They understood the potential risk if he contracted Covid, so they were vigilant, limiting travel through the pandemic. Both were fully vaccinated and avid maskers. 

But a recent visit to their son in Canada led to an infection. In the hospital, where Tom was treated with acute respiratory distress, she was taken aback by how cavalier some younger staff were about contracting Covid as they considered themselves low-risk, even though they could transmit it to patients. 

“It’s not mild for everybody and we know repeated exposures increase your risk,” said Strathdee, also associate dean of Global Health Sciences at the University of California, San Diego. 

While people with active health issues may know to take precautions, some will learn that they’re vulnerable only after an infection lands them in the hospital. Repeated bouts can add to damage, and that applies to everyone, not just those with pre-existing conditions. 

What Should We Be Doing? 

The silver lining is that the world now has vaccines and better treatments. Tests can uncover infections in minutes, and new outbreaks can be quickly spotted. 

Health experts say immunization is the best way to protect against it. Only about 16% of Americans have gotten a bivalent booster, according to Pfizer Inc., compared with almost 70% vaccinated in the first inoculation drive. Increased out-of-pocket costs and vaccine fatigue could cause uptake rates to fall further. Longer term, the hope is that innovative new shots or nasal sprays will provide better protection. 

There are other improvements that could help, ranging from ventilation and air quality testing to better masks. There needs to be more investment in surveillance systems so threats can be caught early, experts said.

The US is also planning to spend $5 billion on a new project aimed at developing advanced vaccines and treatments for coronaviruses in concert with drugmakers. The goal is to make medicines available quickly as the virus mutates, so the targeted strain isn’t ebbing when they hit the market. 

“Even if governments are tired, we have to face the reality that the virus is still evolving,” said Duke-NUS’s Wang. 


https://fortune.com/well/2023/05/23/covid-deaths-one-person-every-four-minutes-vaccination-rates/

Tuesday, May 23, 2023

The Conversion Authority “is making the utmost effort to make sure applicants are converted with dignity, support and maximum guidance,” the spokesperson added.

A single absentee mohel is thwarting dozens of converts at very end of their journey

 

The government’s Conversion Authority has a long backlog of men waiting for months for a 10-second circumcision inspection to be considered Jewish


It takes years of studying, considerable devotion and a radical lifestyle change for someone born outside Judaism to pass a conversion test, conducted by three Orthodox rabbinical judges certified by the Chief Rabbinate to vet such processes.

So when one such young man recently passed the test, he believed that he had cleared the last hurdle on the way to realizing his dream of immigrating to Israel under its Law of Return for Jews and their relatives.

But that success proved to be only the beginning of a new and more frustrating battle for the convert, who spoke to the Times of Israel anonymously so as not to compromise his pending conversion process. His conversion and naturalization have been held up for months because of a final formality that he and others in his situation have been unable to complete since last year: a 10-second circumcision inspection by a mohel, a person whose job it is to perform this procedure.

The delay is reportedly due to the absence of a single employee of Israel’s Conversion Authority, which is allegedly preventing dozens of people from moving forward with the conversion and onward to other major life milestones, including getting married. Critics say the holdup by the Authority is part of a broader indifference and incompetence in the state’s handling of conversion to Judaism and fresh evidence of the need for an overhaul.

The Conversion Authority, which was established in 2000 to streamline and centralize state-recognized conversions, “has over and over again demonstrated  how it places unnecessary bureaucratic obstacles before people who are genuinely interested in converting, instead of welcoming them and making their process seamless,” said Seth Farber, an Orthodox rabbi who heads the nonprofit organization ITIM, which helps Jews navigate religious institutions.

According to Farber’s sources, the only mohel servicing the Conversion Authority had stopped performing his duties for unknown reasons.

Queried by The Times of Israel, a spokesperson from the Prime Minister’s Office, which is responsible for the Conversion Authority, acknowledged that brit milah services had been put on hold but insisted they will resume soon. The spokesperson declined to respond to the claim that a single employee had stopped the work, or to questions on why other mohels could not be called upon to ease the bottleneck.

The spokesperson’s statement, which follows multiple letters by ITIM urging the Conversion Authority to act, read: “Recently, for a combination of reasons that are not necessarily under the Conversion Authority’s control, it was not possible to carry out inspections and Jewish circumcisions on men undergoing conversion. We are pleased to report that an adequate solution has been found and we hope the backlog will be addressed in the coming weeks.”

The Conversion Authority “is making the utmost effort to make sure applicants are converted with dignity, support and maximum guidance,” the spokesperson added.

The convert who spoke with The Times of Israel described a different experience.

“I was never told where I stand by the Conversion Authority. It felt like I was being given the runaround without clarity,” he said.

For the convert, who is in Israel on a tourist visa that he needs to renew by leaving the country every three months, that has meant starting a life in Israel without knowing whether he would be able to stay.

Dozens of others, many of them Israeli citizens who grew up here after immigrating from the former Soviet Union, are waiting for the inspection so that they can marry their Jewish wives in a religious marriage ceremony – the only service available in Israel, which does not recognize civil marriages performed in its territory.

The convert added that months of wondering when the inspection would take place have eclipsed his initial qualms about why it was needed at all.

”On one hand, I totally understand that they need proof,” said the convert. “But on the other, reputable rabbis and a well-known mohel already oversaw my milah and attested that it’s kosher. So why do I need to be inspected? It seems disrespectful, not so much to me, but to the authority of the rabbis who vouched for it,” he said.

Farber also sees the need for an inspection, at least in some cases. “It’s a sensitive and perhaps uncomfortable situation. But I have personally been involved in cases where, two days before the wedding, it turned out the groom wasn’t circumcised at all,” he said.

“In some situations, it’s absolutely justified, necessary even. But in others, it’s not. That’s where sensitivity and individual attention to cases, missing with the Conversion Authority, need to come into the equation.”

The convert said he remains hopeful that his conversion and naturalization will be finalized this year. He sees his long-term future in Israel. He has found an Orthodox Jewish community that accepts him, where he has friends and a tight-knit social circle. He has another such circle in a sports club he’s joined.

This sense of community is precious and essential for the convert, who decided to become Jewish while living abroad in an English-speaking country after increasingly immersing himself in the spiritual lives of his Jewish friends.

But the uncertainty has taken its toll, and the convert is preparing for the possibility that his efforts and dreams could eventually be foiled by bureaucracy, which in some cases is complicated by the hardline attitudes of rabbis who seek to undermine the authority of counterparts in the Diaspora, often at the expense of earnest converts.

“I am of the mindset that this may not work out. And I might just have to spend a year living in the country as a tourist, not having healthcare, not being able to work, having to go in and out,” the convert said. “I figured I’ll give it a year and if it works, great. If not, I had an amazing experience in Jerusalem.”

Source: Haaretz


Monday, May 22, 2023

The Great Compromise.... Agudat Yisrael will receive (ONLY) NIS $250 million in additional funding for its religious academy (yeshiva) students, the Likud announced in a statement on Monday, marking the end of a dispute between the Hassidic faction, the Likud and the finance ministry that could have toppled the government.


Likud grants extra NIS 250 m. to haredi schools, ending budget battle -  It is unclear what the source of these funds are.

 

ex·tor·tion

the practice of obtaining something, especially money, through force or threats.
 
 

Marathon budget debates begin on Knesset floor; voting begins on Tuesday evening.

LIKUD LEADER BENJAMIN Netanyahu shakes hands with United Torah Judaism MK Yitzhak Goldknopf in the Knesset last week. If Netanyahu’s promise of a full budget for all haredi educational institutions is realized, the already-low incentive to provide core studies will disappear entirely. (photo credit: YONATAN SINDEL/FLASH90)
LIKUD LEADER BENJAMIN Netanyahu shakes hands with United Torah Judaism MK Yitzhak Goldknopf in the Knesset last week. If Netanyahu’s promise of a full budget for all haredi educational institutions is realized, the already-low incentive to provide core studies will disappear entirely.

Agudat Yisrael will receive NIS 250 million in additional funding for its religious academy (yeshiva) students, the Likud announced in a statement on Monday, marking the end of a dispute between the Hassidic faction, the Likud and the finance ministry that could have toppled the government.

The impasse developed last week after Agudat Yisrael, the Hassidic faction within the Ashkenazi-haredi United Torah Judaism (UTJ) party, demanded over NIS 600 million additional coalition funds in order to cover retroactively the costs of its yeshivot and education systems since the beginning of 2023. It currently is only set to receive funding for 2024, but the party claims that funding 2023 was part of the coalition agreement between it and the Likud during coalition negotiations in December.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich (Religious Zionist Party) refused to reopen the budget bills. The solution, according to the Likud's statement, provides NIS 250 million in one-time stipends to yeshiva students for January-June 2023, without needing to reopen the budget. It is unclear what the source of these funds are.

The party will receive no additional funding, and any additional budgetary demands by Agudat Yisrael must be met via UTJ's own coalition funds, according to the agreement.

The agreement effectively ended the largest threat to the budget's passage, and thus to the government's existence, as failure to pass the national budget by next Monday (May 29) would automatically dissolve the Knesset and bring on a new election.

Knesset begins discussing state budget

The debate in the Knesset plenum over the budget began on Monday at 9:00 a.m. and is scheduled to last until Tuesday evening at 8:30 p.m., a total of 35 and a half hours straight. During this time the plenum will debate the package of seven laws that make up the national budget. MKs will not remain in the plenum the entire time, but will rotate in and out in order to rest.

Beginning on Tuesday evening at approximately 9:00 p.m., the plenum will begin voting on the second reading of the bills, which will include over 800 votes, as every clause of the budget bills must be approved separately. Once this ends, the plenum will hold a third and final reading of the bills, after which the plenum will vote to approve them in their entirety. By passing this vote, the bills become law.

The coalition hopes to pass the entire package into law by the Shavuot holiday, which begins on Thursday evening. However, it scheduled another plenum session at 10:00 a.m. on Sunday morning, May 28, in case this is delayed. 

https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/politics-and-diplomacy/article-

Sunday, May 21, 2023

Israeli police are investigating Rabbi Efraim Tessler, father of Deputy Culture Minister Yaakov Tessler and former head of a Jerusalem yeshiva, on suspicion of rape and sexual offenses against students.


Father of Deputy Israeli Minister Under Investigation for Sexually Abusing Yeshiva Students

 

Knesset member Yaakov Tessler (left) with his father, Rabbi Efraim Tessler,

Following a Haaretz investigation, Israeli police have opened a case against Rabbi Efraim Tessler, the former head of the Damesek Eliezer Yeshiva in Jerusalem, on suspicion of sexually assaulting students there

Israeli police are investigating Rabbi Efraim Tessler, father of Deputy Culture Minister Yaakov Tessler and former head of a Jerusalem yeshiva, on suspicion of rape and sexual offenses against students.

The investigation follows a January Haaretz report detailing the sexual abuse suffered by high school-aged students at Damesek Eliezer Yeshiva of the Vishnitz Hasidic community.

Yaakov Tessler, the deputy minister and the rabbi's son, has not been summoned for questioning or as a witness by the police, even though he was involved in the agreement to exchange 100,000 shekels for a victim's silence.

Police are unsure of how to proceed regarding the deputy minister, and told Haaretz that the Jerusalem District of the State Prosecutor’s Office is now weighing the issue. The prosecution said it is unfamiliar with the matter.

Efraim Tessler was questioned last week on suspicion of sexual offenses against his students, including one known as Aryeh (a pseudonym), who filed a detailed criminal report with the police. Tessler denied the accusations, and was conditionally released after several hours of questioning.

The police have also not gathered testimony from other central figures in the case, including a rabbi from the south who was involved in the hush money agreement and others whom Aryeh had told about the abuse years earlier.

A police official said that the investigation is ongoing, despite a lack of cooperation from a number of figures involved in the case. This was the second time that police have questioned Efraim Tessler on the matter; he had been investigated in 2017 on suspicion of committing indecent acts against four of his students, but the case was closed due to lack of evidence.

A Cabal of Sociopaths

In February, Aryeh told police about how Tessler, the head of his yeshiva, had sexually abused him for a year and a half, from age 14 to 16. Aryeh, who is now in his late 20s, described how from 2009 through 2012, when he was a student at the yeshiva, his father paid Tessler for private lessons. These lessons quickly evolved into severe sexual assault a number of times a year during that period, most of the time in Tessler’s office.

In 2016, Aryeh told a relative about the abuse he suffered in the yeshiva for the first time. Following this, and after consulting the spiritual leader of the Vizhnitz community, Rabbi Yisroel Hager,

HAGER

  Aryeh began a process with a well-known religious court judge from Bnei Brak.

In June 2017, the sides signed an agreement according to which Aryeh would remain silent about the events in exchange for a payment of 100,000 shekels. The document they signed included a clause that both the parties will not discuss the matter at all and will inform no one of the agreement.

Yaakov Tessler, then a member of the Ashdod City Council and a member of the United Torah Judaism party, was involved in reaching this agreement, as well as in transferring the money to Aryeh via a middleman.

Also in 2016, Efraim Tessler was ousted as head of the yeshiva due to other complaints of sexual abuse by his students. The Vishnitz community was told that he left the post because of a medical issue. Yaakov Tessler was involved in his father's removal from the yeshiva as well. Police approached four young men for their cooperation in 2017 on the matter, including Aryeh, who had refused to file a criminal complaint at the time.

One Haredi source, who has been aware of these events for seven years and was involved in the previous investigation into Tessler, said that when it came to the police's conduct in the case, he had lost hope. To this day, he said, he is surprised that police had closed the previous case.

"This is someone who did something very brave, put himself at risk, experienced serious abuse and filed a complaint – but look at how the police let it fall apart and are dragging their feet," he said. "Why aren’t they crying bloody murder? What have we gained? Why should someone go to the police if they don’t take these complaints seriously?”

The Magen nonprofit organization, which aids victims of sexual abuse and is helping Aryeh, said they welcome the investigation, “but are disappointed by the fact that [Tessler] was not detained, or, alternatively, placed under restrictive conditions. The heroic complainant has proven what courage truly is, and has sat on the story for years and expects to get closure. We will continue to help him, and we are convinced that justice will be done in the end.”

Friday, May 19, 2023

The Pitiful Rabbi With No Shame --- Bowing to Notorious Jew-Haters!

 

Meeting With Chief Rabbi Following Synagogue Atrocity, Tunisian President Again Emphasizes ‘Palestinian Tragedy’


Tunisian President Kais Saied greets the country’s Chief Rabbi, Haim Bittan. The Mufti of Tunisia, Hichem ben Mahmoud, is seen in the background.


Tunisia’s president has met with key religious leaders including the North African country’s chief rabbi in the wake of the May 9 deadly attack on the historic El Ghriba Synagogue on the island of Djerba, in which two Jewish worshipers and three security guards were murdered by an as yet unnamed assailant.

President Kais Saeid had faced criticism in the wake of the attack for not immediately reaching out to the Jewish community, for angrily denying that the attack was motivated by antisemitism and for raising the issue of Israel’s policies towards the Palestinians as a response to the charge.

 The presence of Tunisian Chief Rabbi Haim Bittan at Wednesday’s parley at the presidential palace in Carthage went some way towards acknowledging the Jewish community’s concerns, but nevertheless did not prevent Saeid from voicing his opposition to the State of Israel’s existence.

Saeid told his guests — Hichem ben Mahmoud, the Mufti of Tunisia, Ilario Antoniazzi, the Archbishop of Tunis, as well as Rabbi Bittan — that it was imperative to “distinguish between Judaism and Zionism.” Calling on the international community to “put an end to the tragedy of the Palestinian people,” the Tunisian leader reiterated his rejection of “normalization” with Israel, a move that would require formal recognition of the Jewish state’s right to a sovereign existence.

After again denying that antisemitism is an issue in Tunisia, according to a report of the meeting in the French news outlet Le Figaro, Saied told Bittan that the remaining 1,500 Jews in the country “can live in peace and we will guarantee your security.”

Bittan later declared himself satisfied with the meeting. “The meeting with the president was excellent,” he commented. “He said everything he had in his heart. He gave us good explanations. I am convinced that the Jews of Tunisia live like all others Tunisians. He gave us the assurance that what happened (in Djerba) will not happen again.”

The question remains as to whether Bittan’s positive assessment will shake the conviction among Tunisian Jews that Saeid’s main aim is to rebuff the claim that the synagogue shooting was an antisemitic act, in keeping with his view that antisemitism is a problem confined to the past. Last Friday, the president mocked  those “who talk about antisemitism when we are in the 21st century” following a meeting with Prime Minister Najla Bouden and other members of his cabinet.”

The following day, Saeid unfavorably compared Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians with the response of Tunisians to the persecution of the Jewish community during the Nov. 1942-May 1943 Nazi occupation of the country. Speaking on a visit to his grandfather’s house in the Tunis suburb of Ariana where, he said, Tunisian Jews fleeing the Nazis had obtained refuge, he complained that “the locals protected them from the Nazi army. And then they say we’re antisemitic? Our Palestinian brethren are killed daily, elderly people, young people, women. Homes are demolished but no one is saying anything about that.”

Last week, a member of the Jewish community who spoke to The Algemeiner on condition of anonymity denounced Saeid as an antisemite following the president’s remarks to the National Security Council in which he failed to mention the selection of a Jewish target or offer condolences to the Jewish community specifically.

“I heard his entire speech, and I realized that it is probably very difficult for him to mention the word ‘Jews’,” the person said. “Without a doubt, [Saied] is not only a hater of Israel but also antisemitic.”

On Wednesday, Mosaique FM, a private radio station in Tunisia, reported that four alleged accomplices of the El Ghriba Synagogue gunman, a naval officer who was serving on Djerba, had been arrested by police. The station did not name the individuals or provide any further details.

https://www.algemeiner.com/2023/05/18/meeting-with-chief-rabbi-following-synagogue-atrocity-tunisian-president-again-emphasizes-palestinian-tragedy/

Thursday, May 18, 2023

Blackmail With A Shtreimel! Crucial State Budget Be Damned!

 

Haredi faction threatens to oppose state budget if NIS 600 million demand not met

 

Agudat Yisrael, part of UTJ, says it wants more funding for full-time religious scholars and their families, in line with coalition deals; coalition official: ‘There’s a limit’

 


Religious Zionism head Bezalel Smotrich (standing) with United Torah Judaism leader Yitzchak Goldknopf at the Knesset on November 21, 2022. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)
Religious Zionism head Bezalel Smotrich (standing) with United Torah Judaism leader Yitzchak Goldknopf at the Knesset
 

Part of Haredi party United Torah Judaism (UTJ) threatened Wednesday night to withhold its support for the crucial state budget, or even actively oppose it, unless the government further funds full-time religious scholars to the tune of NIS 600 million ($164 million), in addition to the billions already pledged to the ultra-Orthodox community.

Agudat Yisrael, which holds three of UTJ’s seven Knesset seats, released a statement late Wednesday night saying that it would not support the 2023-2024 state budget unless it received significant additional funding for men enrolled in full-time religious study, as well as their children.

The warning, which confirmed earlier reports, came days after the government approved NIS 13.7 billion ($3.7 billion) worth of discretionary funds to meet coalition commitments, largely to support ultra-Orthodox institutions and programs.

The Agudat Yisrael faction, which represents Hasidic ultra-Orthodox groups, held a meeting on Wednesday where it “was decided to uphold the agreement signed with the United Torah Judaism list, including the commitment to the budgets for the children of Torah scholars in the yeshivah and avrechi schools,” the statement read, in reference to full-time religious study schools.

Out of the approved NIS 13.7 billion in discretionary funds, about NIS 3.7 billion is promised to be spent on increasing the budget for stipends at Haredi yeshiva student institutions, despite criticism that the community’s schools skirt full Education Ministry oversight and fail to teach core subjects to prepare students for the workforce, including math, science and English. Another NIS 1.2 billion is budgeted for private, non-supervised educational institutions, which also do not teach core subjects such as math and English.

About NIS 1 billion is directed as an allowance for a food voucher program being pushed by Shas party leader Aryeh Deri. Additional funds will be funneled for ultra-Orthodox education, constructing religious buildings, and supporting Haredi Jewish culture and identity.

Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men study in the Lithuanian Slabodka yeshiva
 

The government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has less than two weeks to pass the proposed two-year, 2023-2024 trillion-shekel overall budget before its May 29 deadline, which if not met would trigger an automatic dissolution of parliament and snap elections.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has repeatedly said that the budget, which is expected to increase the national debt at a time when tax income is underperforming forecasts and inflation is rising, was swollen as a result of meeting political demands to keep Netanyahu’s hard-right coalition together.

UTJ is currently chaired by political newcomer and housing minister Yitzhak Goldknopf, who also controls Agudat Yisrael. The full party secured sweeping promises in their coalition deal with Netanyahu’s Likud, a non-binding agreement that often serves as a basis for future political deal-making.

“As you know, from time immemorial at the behest of the elders of Israel, this issue was the first in the coalition agreement and our only demand is the full implementation of the agreement,” Agudat Yisrael’s statement continued. “Loyalty and coalition commitment must be mutual.”

Likud party chairman Benjamin Netanyahu, right, shakes hands with United Torah Judaism party leader Yitzchak Goldknopf in the Knesset 
 

However, unnamed senior coalition officials told the Walla news site Wednesday that there was no intention of increasing the budget framework “by a single shekel,” lambasting the Haredi party for increasing its demands.

“There is a limit. It is ridiculous that they are not showing a shred of responsibility or patience,” the officials said. “The Haredi public has not seen such great achievements in the national budget since the state’s establishment, and it makes no sense that they are unable to understand that there are limits.”

Degel HaTorah, the second faction in UTJ, has yet to announce whether it is joining the protest and did not respond to a request for comment. While the 64-member coalition can still pass the budget without Agudat Yisrael’s three votes in the 120-member Knesset, this would not be the case if Degel HaTorah supports its partner and withholds its votes as well.

Goldknopf has sent a letter to Degel HaTorah leader Moshe Gafni, the Ynet news site reported Thursday, demanding that UTJ in its entirety oppose the state budget unless the additional funds are given.

According to a Tuesday report by public broadcaster Kan, lawmakers with Agudat Yisrael have also threatened to renew demands for a controversial law exempting Haredi community members from military service, which they dropped temporarily to see the budget through.

In recent weeks, Haredi Knesset members had leveraged the upcoming vote on the 2023-2024 state budget to push for progress on the military service exemption law, and criticized Netanyahu for failing to deliver.

The coalition agreement between UTJ and Likud includes an explicit pledge to approve such legislation before the budget is passed.

Agudat Yisrael’s threat puts more pressure on Netanyahu’s coalition at a sensitive time. With just 11 days left to shepherd the budget through its final two votes or risk snap elections, the government is working overtime to settle internal disputes.

The Knesset Finance Committee votes on the national budget, in the Knesset
 

On Wednesday, far-right Otzma Yehudit kicked its own budget protest into higher gear, sitting out three Knesset floor votes that let minor pieces of opposition legislation progress forward.

The party is demanding additional funds for its Negev and Galilee Ministry, demanding what a source close to its chief said was “equality” in funding Otzma Yehudit’s priorities, considering the large amount of funding devoted to ultra-Orthodox and other far-right party interests.

Also on Wednesday, protesters angry with the state budget gathered in the ultra-Orthodox enclave of Bnei Brak to rally against the generous funding of sectoral interests.

Ahead of the approval of the NIS 13.7 billion in funds on Sunday, the Finance Ministry warned that the promised money could lead to trillions of shekels in lost gross domestic product in the coming years.

The Finance Ministry’s Budgets Department head Yogev Gardos warned that the allocation of funds to ultra-Orthodox institutions and initiatives creates negative incentives for Haredi men to seek employment and will harm the country’s labor market and the economy as a whole.

Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, left, with the ministry’s Budget Department head Yogev Gardos 
 

Furthermore, Gardos cautioned that if the employment participation rate among Haredi men is not encouraged, by 2065 the government will have to increase direct taxes by 16 percent to maintain the same level of services that it provides without increasing the deficit.

Israel’s Haredi population, which makes up about 13.5% of the country’s total population, is expected to grow to 16% in 2030. The ultra-Orthodox population’s current growth rate of 4% is the fastest of any group in Israel, according to Central Bureau of Statistics data.

The Knesset is preparing to vote on the 2023-2024 overall budget, allocating NIS 484.8 billion this year and NIS 513.7 billion in 2024, up from NIS 452.5 billion in 2022.

As backdrop to it all, the coalition is also struggling with how to move forward with its controversial plan to overhaul the judiciary, which supporters call a necessary corrective but critics decry as potentially the end of Israel’s liberal democracy.

https://www.timesofisrael.com/haredi-faction-threatens-not-to-back-state-budget-if-nis-600-million-demand-not-met/?utm_source=The+Daily+Edition&utm_campaign=daily-edition-2023-05-18&utm_medium=email

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

Our Friend Rudy...

 

‘Get over Passover, it was 3,000 years ago,’ ex-NY mayor Giuliani tells Jews - report

 

Giuliani is also accused in the complaint of disparaging Jewish men’s penis sizes and commenting about the “‘freaking Arabs’ and Jews.”

Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani coughs as he speaks to media about the US evacuation of Afghanistan outside his apartment building in New York City, US, August 20, 2021. (photo credit: REUTERS/EDUARDO MUNOZ)
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani
 

Rudy Giuliani, the former New York City mayor who became an aide to former president Donald Trump, mocked Jews for observing Passover, according to a lawsuit filed Monday by a former assistant who is accusing him of sexual assault and harassment.

“Jews want to go through their freaking Passover all the time, man oh man,” Giuliani once said, according to the complaint, which was filed on Monday in New York Supreme Court and indicates that the comments were recorded. “Get over the Passover. It was like 3,000 years ago. The Red Sea parted, big deal. It’s not the first time that happened.”

 

“Get over the Passover. It was like 3,000 years ago. The Red Sea parted, big deal. It’s not the first time that happened.”

Rudy Giuliani

 

The religious significance of Passover

The statement that Jews regularly observe Passover is accurate. Retelling the story of the Israelite slaves’ exodus from Egypt each spring is one of the most widely observed Jewish practices, and is frequently cited as an inspiration by politicians (including the person who holds Giuliani’s old job, New York City Mayor Eric Adams).

Meanwhile, there is no historical record of the Red Sea ever parting. The Torah says that God was able to make the miracle happen with the help of Moses, who led the Israelites to freedom — but there is no evidence that such a phenomenon has happened before or since. Some have sought to offer scientific explanations for such an event.

The vast majority of the $10 million suit focuses on allegations by Nicole Dunphy, a former Giuliani associate, that he pressed her into sexual activity without her consent and harassed her continually almost as soon as she began working for him in January 2019.

The Jewish elements of the lawsuit were first reported by the Forward. In addition to mocking Jewish observance of Passover, Giuliani is also accused in the complaint of disparaging Jewish men’s penis sizes and commenting about the “‘freaking Arabs’ and Jews.” He also made racist comments about other groups, according to the suit.

Giuliani, who was New York City mayor from 1994 to 2001, and in 2021 was barred from practicing law in New York state due to his repeated false claims about the 2020 election. Through a spokesperson, he “vehemently” denied the allegations Monday to the Associated Press. 

 


https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/antisemitism/article-743237?_ga=2.85146905.1039877588.1683983290-103014047.1667283256&

Tuesday, May 16, 2023

Chief Goy - "And what’s primarily shocking is the fact that here we are in a week where a former president of the United States is found liable for sexual abuse and sexual assault and defamation of a woman who survived such abuse and assault. And the country just yawns for the most part".

 

Christianity Today Chief Torches Trump Over Sexual Abuse Case — Drops Jesus Quote When Chuck Todd Asks If He’ll Ever Vote Trump -  NEVER - But Not The Orthodox Jews! Trump Featured Speaker at Torah Umesorah Convention...



689 comments

Christianity Today Editor-in-Chief Russell Moore torched ex-President Donald Trump over his sexual abuse case and ripped ex-VP Mike Pence for downplaying the verdict, then gave Chuck Todd a quote from Jesus when asked if he could ever vote for Trump.

On Sunday morning’s edition of NBC’s Meet the Press, Todd asked Moore about the unanimous verdicts finding Trump liable for sexual battery and defamation of E. Jean Carroll and ordering him to pay Carroll $5 million.

Moore ripped Pence for downplaying it and Trump for defending his infamous Access Hollywood remarks, and mocking Carroll at a town hall, saying “think about the teenage girl in a church somewhere who’s being abused by her youth pastor wondering whether to come forward. And she hears not only that, but when the victim is ridiculed by a presidential candidate in front of a crowd, the response is laughter. That has devastating implications.”

And when asked if he could ever support Trump, Moore offered a scriptural response:

CHUCK TODD: You know, even former Vice President Pence was kind of dismissive of the defamation verdict with E. Jean Carroll against the former president, you know, saying, “Well, I think this is something that the media cares more about.” That was a shocking reaction for me coming from the former vice president. Was it (UNINTEL)?

RUSSELL MOORE: I’m not sure what’s going on in Vice President Pence’s mind at this point. I know it was a shocking moment for me even after everything that we’ve seen. And what’s primarily shocking is the fact that here we are in a week where a former president of the United States is found liable for sexual abuse and sexual assault and defamation of a woman who survived such abuse and assault. And the country just yawns for the most part.

That tells me that something has really, really badly gone awry in this country. And you add to it the demeanor and the content of President Trump’s deposition to simply shrug off and defend the Access Hollywood comments. In 2015, I said that President Trump, or Donald Trump at the time, had the attitude toward women of a Bronze Age war lord.

In that deposition, he said, “Yes, as a matter of fact,” predated it back to millions of years ago, and said, “Unfortunately or fortunately, that’s the way that it is.” Well, think about the teenage girl in a church somewhere who’s being abused by her youth pastor wondering whether to come forward. And she hears not only that, but when the victim is ridiculed by a presidential candidate in front of a crowd, the response is laughter. That has devastating implications.

CHUCK TODD: Eight years ago when Donald Trump first ran, there was a divide inside the evangelical community. And there was a lot of hand-wringing. And many came down on the side of, “Well, if the choice is between Donald Trump and Hilary Clinton, Donald Trump will appoint the judges that I like.” You seem to indicate after Donald Trump announced his reelection plans after the November 2022 midterms that you didn’t sense a divide anymore in the evangelical community, that politically they’re all in. Do you still sense that?

RUSSELL MOORE: Well, I think that’s probably true with the politically activated, politically energized base. I don’t think that’s true of everyone. And that’s one of the reasons why we see churches divided. We see families divided. I mean, one of the most dismaying aspects of the Trump years is the fact that Donald Trump is at the center of everything.

Almost every congregation that I know is either divided or tense about these sorts of political controversies coming out of the Trump years. Almost every family that I know has people who don’t speak to each other anymore about this personality and this figure.

And I think there are a lot of people, including conservative evangelicals like me, who are looking at this and saying, “Are we really going to do this again? Haven’t we seen this already? Do we really want to repeat it?” And I suppose that will be the question for the rest of the year.

CHUCK TODD: What would you like to see from other candidates? I mean, it seems that they very much don’t want to make a character case against the former president.

RUSSELL MOORE: Well, I think someone needs to step forward and talk about the importance of character and talk about the importance of having someone who can be trusted to have the nuclear codes. I mean, we really need someone to step forward and say, “Let’s remember what’s at stake here.”

We’re not just choosing what kind of entertainment we’re going to have for the next six years. We’re talking about the direction of the country. And we’re talking about what our children are seeing and potentially will replicate.

If you have an entire generation who only grow up seeing this, what’s going to happen? We need somebody who will make that case and say it. And right now, among candidates, among elected officials, sometimes even among church officials, there’s fear. No one wants to speak to this because they’re afraid of what will happen to them. The stakes are too high.

CHUCK TODD: Last question. Is there any circumstance you could imagine supporting Donald Trump?

RUSSELL MOORE: Well, I can’t speak for all evangelicals. I can only speak for myself. And Jesus said, “Let your yes be yes and your no be no.” I’ll let my never, never.

Watch above via NBC’s Meet the Press.

https://www.mediaite.com/news/christianity-today-chief-torches-trump-over-sexual-abuse-case-drops-jesus-quote-when-chuck-todd-asks-if-hell-ever-vote-trump/

Monday, May 15, 2023

Possible miracle at Connecticut church being investigated by the Vatican - a lay person distributing hosts had found that the wafers had multiplied in the ciborium.

 


The dicastery is composed of two sections, one for discipline, which handles cases of sexual misconduct, and one for doctrine, which oversees “safeguarding faith and morals and protecting their integrity (of number of wafers) from errors,” according to the Vatican’s website.

HARTFORD, Conn. — The results of an investigation into the reports of a possible miracle at Thomaston’s St. Thomas Church have been sent to the Vatican.

On March 5, the Rev. Joseph Crowley, pastor of St. Maximilian Kolbe Parish, which includes St. Thomas, reported that during Holy Communion a lay person distributing hosts had found that the wafers had multiplied in the ciborium.

“God duplicated himself in the ciborium,” Crowley said after Communion. “God provides and it’s strange how God does that. And that happened.”

Now, the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith has been notified and is conducting its own investigation.

David Elliott, spokesman for the archdiocese, issued a statement that “reports such as the alleged miracle in Thomaston require referral to the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith in Rome. The Archdiocese has proceeded accordingly, and will await a response in due time.”

“I’m guessing they have the testimony of numerous people who would have been able to say that they saw something or understood that this had to have been miraculous,” O’Neill said. “So I’m guessing they’re caught in the middle a little bit not having the hard evidence but having good testimony. So they’re looking for some guidance from the Vatican.”

“Roman Catholics experience a daily miracle because every time Mass is celebrated what was bread becomes the Body of Putz Yona and what was wine becomes his Blood. Through the centuries this daily miracle has sometimes been confirmed by extraordinary signs from Heaven, but the Church is always careful to investigate reports of such signs with caution, lest credence is given to something that proves to be unfounded,” he said.

 THIS IS NOT SATIRE:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/possible-miracle-at-connecticut-church-being-investigated-by-the-vatican/ar-AA1b7nXA

 

IN OTHER CATHOLIC NEWS AND MIRACLES: 

Priest convicted of sex trafficking for abusing (ONLY) 3 victims as minors, later adults

 

https://www.wane.com/top-stories/priest-convicted-of-sex-trafficking-for-abusing-3-victims-as-minors-later-adults/

Sunday, May 14, 2023

“But how come I need an orange wristband? This place is like my home. And now a police officer comes here and tells me: ‘Go here, go there?!’ It’s because we’re Haredim so the authorities feel they can walk all over us,” Kazin said.



At Meron pilgrimage, joy and grief mix as Haredi traditions and secular Israel clash

 

At renewed annual Lag B’Omer event, worshipers mourn the 45 attendees killed in deadly 2021 crush, while chafing at regulations meant to head off another disaster

Haredi Jews celebrate Lag B'Omer at Mount Meron on May 8, 2023. (David Cohen/Flash90)
Haredi Jews celebrate Lag B'Omer at Mount Meron on May 8, 2023
 

The hilltop gravesite of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai was already in sight for Yitzhak Kazin when two police officers stopped him from crossing over to the shrine through an impromptu checkpoint.

Irritated, Kazin, a 37-year-old Haredi garbage truck worker from Bnei Brak, showed them that he was wearing the orange wristband necessary for admission into the heart of the annual pilgrimage on the Jewish holiday of Lag B’Omer to the final resting place of the second-century sage, on Mount Meron.

The wristband, and the strict enforcement of the crowd control measures that it facilitates, were precautions implemented this year for the first time around the gravesite in northern Israel where 45 people died in a crush during the 2021 pilgrimage. The incident, caused by overcrowding, was the worst civil disaster in Israel’s history.

More than merely a technical crowd management issue, the security arrangements around Meron are a point of friction between strictly devout Haredi Jews, who live in insular communities led by rabbis, and the enforcement and regulation mechanisms of the more secular State of Israel. The state’s actions, policies and principles often clash with those of the ultra-Orthodox world.

“They don’t want us to come here, that’s the truth,” Kazin said after he entered the site. “So they divide us, send some of us here and some of us there. Because to them, we’re nothing but a nuisance,” he said of authorities.

“They want me to go downhill. I didn’t come from Bnei Brak to be on some hill. I came to be near Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai,” Kazin said.

 

Yitzhak Kazin wear an orange wristband that allowed him to enter the gravesite of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai on Mount Meron, Israel on Lag b’Omer eve, May 8, 2023
 
 
 
 

Following the 2021 catastrophe, several government ministries and branches overhauled how the pilgrimage is managed. Rabbis kept the 2022 event low scale amid preparations for adaptations that would allow a resumption of mass events.

Around 200,000 Haredi Jews were expected to attend this year’s pilgrimage to Meron on Monday night.

To prepare for the large numbers, authorities beefed up the deployment of police officers — there were 8,000 of them at the main Meron pilgrimage site on Monday — and rescue professionals. Thousands of stewards from the Haredi public were recruited to minimize friction and streamline interaction with the pilgrims, some of whom speak better Yiddish than Hebrew.

Another change was the introduction of stricter enforcement of safety capacities at the gravesite, which is situated atop a steep summit with a limited surface area and featuring topographic complications, and encouraging the unadmitted to celebrate instead at an open area farther downhill.

 

Lag B’Omer celebrations at Mount Meron on May 8, 2023
 

Some pilgrims, like Moshe Levy from Shiloh, near Jerusalem, accepted the new reality.

He came to the gravesite hours ahead of the main event, lighting a fire as is customary on Lag B’Omer, to avoid the evening rush and do his part in reducing the crowd numbers.

“I don’t need the shoving and pushing. The magic happens at the gravesite and that’s good enough for me,” Levy told The Times of Israel.

But others circumvented the new arrangements.

“He brought me in,” Asher Levy, who is not related to Moshe, said while pointing to the heavens when asked how he made it into the grave compound without a wristband. Pressed for more information, he said: “Oh, I just came down the mountain from a moshav.”

 


 

Others, like Kazin, complied with authorities’ requirements but did so under protest. He “pulled some strings” in Bnei Brak to get an orange wristband, Kazin said with some pride.

“But how come I need an orange wristband? This place is like my home. And now a police officer comes here and tells me: ‘Go here, go there?!’ It’s because we’re Haredim so the authorities feel they can walk all over us,” Kazin said.

 
Israeli rescue forces and police stand on the stairs where a mass of people were crushed to death and injured during the celebrations of the Lag B’Omer holiday on Mount Meron, in northern Israe

He also complained about the actions of “certain rabbis and people of influence within our circles, who help the snakes control us.” Asked whom he meant by snakes, he only said: “I don’t mean to offend. We’re all Jews.” Visibly upset, he added: “It’s all about control. Like they did when they made us wear masks.”

During COVID-19, many ultra-Orthodox ignored emergency regulations based on medical authorities’ policies that mandated wearing face masks in public, prompting outrage by many non-Haredim who accused the community of helping the pandemic spread.

Reflecting deep divisions around pragmatism and fatalism, the health and safety crises set the scene for an ideological clash over the right-wing policies of the government of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, which is dependent on the cooperation of the country’s two Haredi parties.

Other pilgrims, who did not make it into the gravesite compound, reacted violently to security arrangements, hurling objects at police, according to Haaretz. At one checkpoint, young men pushed past police, according to reports on social media.

Haredi Jews attend Lag B’Omer celebrations in Mount Meron on May 8, 2023
 

One worshiper allegedly bit Israel Diskind, whose brother, 23-year-old Simcha Bunim, died in the 2021 catastrophe. Diskind, a spokesperson for Heritage Minister Amichai Eliyahu, was reportedly suspected by some radicals of being an undercover police officer. The radicals confronted Diskind, leading to an altercation. Police detained the man who allegedly bit him but released the perpetrator to avoid further confrontations, the Kan broadcaster reported.

Some journalists were cursed at and some police cameras vandalized. Police said they believe some sites on Meron were exceeding their safety capacity.

Despite these issues, “generally it has been a peaceful event so far,” said Dov Maisel, deputy head of operations for United Hatzalah, a Haredi rescue and first response group that is accredited, along with Magen David Adom, at the event as responsible for medical issues.

United Hatzalah was working to encourage people not to stay at the gravesite and leave after half an hour to make room for others, Maisel said.

Worshipers light a bonfire a day before the Lag B’Omer celebrations, in Meron
 
 

Like the attitudes to the security arrangements around it, the holiday itself also reflects the split reality that Haredim and non-Haredim sometimes inhabit in Israel.

For many secular and national religious Israelis, Lag B’Omer is a minor holiday enjoyed mainly by children, who have bonfires on its eve, although that custom, too, is declining as authorities increasingly crack down on it due to safety and environmental concerns.

But for the Haredim, it is a major date that the Talmud ties to a plague that killed thousands of students of Rabbi Akiva, among the greatest early rabbinic figures, who legend has it was put to death by the Romans for defying their restrictions on teaching Torah. According to Jewish tradition, the plague ceased on Lag B’Omer, making that date a time of celebration.

Lag B’Omer is also believed to be the date of death of Bar Yochai, a prominent disciple of Rabbi Akiva and a major figure in Jewish mysticism, or Kabbalah, whose gravesite on Mount Meron is the locus of festivities year-round. Bar Yochai’s grave became a site for celebration because tradition has it that he asked his disciples to rejoice instead of mourn when they commemorate his death.

Celebrating Lag B’Omer is “refilling the fountains of the soul,” Moshe Levy, the pilgrim from Shiloh, said.

Haredi Jews attend Lag B’Omer celebrations, in Meron on May 8, 2023
 

At the main ceremony near the gravesite, 4,000 men gathered on Monday night around a tall metal cylinder full of wood and oil-doused textiles where the ceremonial fire was to be lit. The excitement was palpable as a cantor recited Mincha, the afternoon prayer many Jews say each day in the afternoon. The prayer was followed by a choir that sang Psalms, their strong tenors reverberating in the cool mountain air as their listeners swayed with delight.

A cantor then recited the names of the 45 victims of the 2021 crush, as the crowd listened respectfully. Nachum Dov Brayer, who heads the Boyan Hasidic dynasty, lit 45 candles in memory of the victims and the cantor then recited the Kaddish mourning prayer.

After some additional prayers, the fire was lit and the men’s section, bordering a packed women’s section, exploded into dancing to the sounds of a live band and choir, including row dancing and the signature synchronized bobbing jumps of Haredi groups.

Victims of the April 30, 2021, Mount Meron disaster: Top row (L-R): Chen Doron, Haim Rock, Ariel Tzadik, Yossi Kohn, Yisrael Anakvah, Yishai Mualem, Yosef Mastorov, Elkana Shiloh and Moshe Levy; 2nd row (L-R): Shlomo Zalman Leibowitz, Shmuel Zvi Klagsbald, Mordechai Fakata, Dubi Steinmetz, Abraham Daniel Ambon, Eliezer Gafner, Yosef Greenbaum, Yehuda Leib Rubin and Yaakov Elchanan Starkovsky; 3rd row (L-R): Haim Seler, Yehoshua Englard, Moshe Natan Neta Englard, Yedidia Hayut, Moshe Ben Shalom, David Krauss, Eliezer Tzvi Joseph, Yosef Yehuda Levy and Yosef Amram Tauber; 4th row (L-R): Menachem Knoblowitz, Elazar Yitzchok Koltai, Yosef David Elhadad, Shraga Gestetner, Yonatan Hebroni, Shimon Matalon, Elazar Mordechai Goldberg, Moshe Bergman and Daniel Morris; 5th row (L-R): Ariel Achdut, Moshe Mordechai Elhadad, Hanoch Slod, Yedidya Fogel, Menahem Zakbah, Simcha Diskind, Moshe Tzarfati, Nahman Kirshbaum and Eliyahu Cohen.
 

Kazin was deeply moved by the gesture to the victims, he said.

But he disputed that the arrangements that irked him were effective attempts to prevent a repeat.

“We want police to help us. Not oppress. It can be done,” Kazin said. “But to shepherd us you have to know us. And the police don’t know us.”

 

https://www.timesofisrael.com/at-meron-pilgrimage-joy-and-grief-mix-as-haredi-traditions-and-secular-israel-clash/?utm_source=The+Weekend+Edition&utm_campaign=weekend-edition-2023-05-14&utm_medium=email