When the Holy Temple was destroyed, there was a wailing voice heard
throughout the whole world. The Ministering Angels said to G-d, "Master
of the Universe, do You have such emotions of sadness? Isn't it written
'Splendor and glory are before You?' "
G-d answered: "My House is destroyed, and My children are manacled in
chains. Shouldn't I be suffering?"
- Midrash, Yalkut Shimoni, Tehillim 679
From the day that Jerusalem and the Holy Temple were destroyed, there
is no joy before G-d... until Jerusalem will be rebuilt and the Jewish
People will return to it.
- Midrash, Yalkut Shimoni, Eychah 7009
(It is precisely at times of closeness - i.e. prayer - that G-d feels
the most suffering over the destruction of the Holy Temple.)
Rebbe Yosie said, "I was once traveling on the road, and I entered into
one of the ruins of Jerusalem in order to pray. Elijah the Prophet
appeared and waited for me at the door until I finished my prayer.
"My son, what sound did you hear in this ruin?" he asked.
I replied, "I heard a divine voice, cooing like a dove and saying: 'Woe
to the children, on account of whose sins ... more »
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Sunday, July 22
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 04:58 PM CDT
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 01:57 PM AKDT
(IsraelNN.com) A report Saturday night quoted several important
Kabbalists, as well as senior Ashkenazi Haredi Rabbis, as saying that a
major war would take place in Israel “very soon.” The reports quoted a
senior Haredi Rabbi, Baruch Avraham Rakovsky, who said that during a
recent gathering where senior Kabbalists discussed important issues of
the day, it was revealed through a variety of means – including
communication with autistic children - that a major war was in the
offing. However, great “open miracles, such as those that occurred when
the Jews left Egypt,” would take place. The events they were referring
to, they said, would clearly be understood as miracles, even to those
who were not expert in Kabbalistic studies.
The Kabbalists did not reveal the specific details on the war, but said that Iran would be involved. Already, they said, Hashem was performing miracles: During the past five times that Iranian President Ahmadinejad threatened Israel, they said, major natural catastrophes, such as earthquakes, occured a short time afterwards. Other Haredi leaders last week told their students similar messages, including Harav Chaim Cohen (“Hachalvan”), who said that Israel was in a position to quickly destroy its enemies, and Harav Chaim Kamienvsky, ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 04:45 PM CDT
Hundreds of settlers gather on hill near former settlement of Homesh in
defiance of army orders
Efrat Weiss Hundreds of settlers and their supporters gathered Sunday on a hill facing the former West Bank settlement of Homesh where they set up a number of tents. IDF forces are preparing for a forceful evacuation of the right-wing activists if they disobey orders to leave the area which was declared an off-limit military zone since the 2005 pullout from Gaza and parts of the West Bank. Dozens of supporters were on their way to Homesh, which had witnessed confrontations between security forces and angry settlers bent on rebuilding the evacuated settlement. Earlier Sunday, the army blocked two groups of settlers from entering Homesh. Settler leaders instructed activists not to exhibit violence against IDF soldiers, and there were no reports of clashes between the two sides. The IDF said the settlers' march to Homesh was a burden on the army as hundreds of soldiers had to interrupt crucial training exercises for policing missions in the West Bank. The army blocked major roads leading to Homesh to prevent settlers from shuttling hundreds of activists to the former settlement. The army ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 02:39 PM CDT
The Bible forbids Jews to participate in the uprooting of Jewish
communities in the Land of Israel, ruled a council of chief rabbis from
Judea and Samaria (the West Bank) on Thursday.
Israel National News reported that the rabbis had been asked by many Israeli soldiers whether or not it was lawful from a biblical standpoint to forcibly remove fellow Jews from portions of their God-given inheritance. The response of the council was unequivocal: “It is forbidden to lend a hand to this task in any way.” Fearing a national backlash, many rabbis declined to issue such rulings or interpretations of scripture prior to the 2005 evacuation of all Jews from the Gaza Strip. But with polls showing that a majority of Israelis now believe the Gaza “disengagement” was a mistake, religious leaders are becoming more bold in their application of biblical precepts to modern political moves. Prime Minister Ehud Olmert last week said it was an unrealistic “dream” for Israel to retain control of all Judea and Samaria, and that he intends to uproot additional settlements despite the public's views on further land withdrawals. Original Source more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 02:38 PM CDT
Knesset members censure military deal between Iran and Syria, with
some, including Lieberman, calling for emergency national government
Amnon MerandaThe strengthening ties between Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and Syrian President Bashar Assad "require Israel to prepare itself anew from a governmental, military and political perspective," said Strategic Affair Minister Avigdor Lieberman, in response to reports of a military deal between Iran and Syria "The Iranian threat lies outside the realm of political argument. As such, I call on the government and the head of the opposition (MK Benjamin Netanyahu) to reconsider the possibility of an national emergency government," the Yisrael Beiteinu chairman, added. According to a Saturday report in the London-based al-Sharq al-Awsat newspaper, Tehran will help Syria fund future arms deals with North Korea and Russia, set up military plants in there and back Syria on the Lebanon issue. In return, Assad promised Ahmadinejad to refrain from entering peace talks with Israel. The deal had a number of Knesset up in arms. In light of the situation, Kadima member Isaac Ben-Israel also called for the establishment of a national emergency emergency government. “Iran openly supported Hizbullah during the war against Israel last summer and came out unscathed. Now ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 02:34 PM CDT
by Alex Traiman
(IsraelNN.com) Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert reiterated his belief that Israel "needs to withdraw" from the biblical Jewish provinces of Judea and Samaria. Speaking at a gathering of farmers in the Jezreel Valley, Olmert maintained that Israel would have to make "tough decisions" with regard to territorial compromise. According to the Prime Minister, anyone who thinks Israel can continue to hold onto the provinces captured in the defensive Six Day War of 1967 is "living in a dream." "Everyone understands that the State of Israel can't exist without a guarantee of a Jewish majority," Olmert added. Although many in Israel believe the question of Jewish majority to be a fundamental problem, recent research suggests otherwise. A major demographic study published in 2005 by Bennett Zimmerman, Roberta Seid and Michael L. Wise revealed that the status of a Jewish majority between the Jordan River and Mediterranean Sea is much more stable than previously reported, with Jews representing at least 60 percent of the total population. The data further suggests that the numbers of Arabs living in Judea and Samaria (commonly referred to as the West Bank) in particular have been grossly overstated. Original Source Olmert added in his ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 11:29 AM AKDT
Written by Moshe Kempinski
It is not surprising that in these redemptive times, good and evil become confused. It should not be shocking therefore that Israel's present self-serving administration would lose the ability to discern between people imprisoned by hate and people imprisoned in the name of a vision. A perfect example of this is the Olmert government's decision to release 256 convicted terrorist prisoners from Israeli jails and granting amnesty to 178 others as a gesture to the so called Moderate terrorist Abu Mazen (a.k.a. Mahmoud Abbas. ). This has been a release that has been couched in all forms of dangerous political doublespeak. The terrorists that are being offered for release, we are told, have "no blood on their hands". This simply means that they either tried to kill Jews and were not successful, or were simply only successful at maiming and crippling Jews or were "simply" involved with the planning an aiding of these acts of terrorism. We also are told that the terrorists that were chosen for this gesture have all promised to desist from being involved in terrorist activities. In fact they do not have to be rejoin their old terror affiliations but have ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 11:26 AM AKDT
By Adam Entous
JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Tony Blair begins his first visit to the region as Middle East envoy on Monday, hoping he can help turn around 60 years of peacemaking failures since Britain ended its mandate over Palestine. "Mission Impossible" is what the sceptics have, inevitably, already called the newly retired prime minister's mandate. He has been asked by the Quartet powers -- the United States, European Union, United Nations and Russia -- to present by September an initial plan for building ruling institutions needed to establish a viable Palestinian state alongside Israel. That more limited mandate, which he will discuss with Israeli and Palestinian leaders on a visit of barely 48 hours, may be expanded later into a more direct peacemaking role between the parties, a senior Western diplomat said on Sunday. This week, however, Blair "is coming very much in listening mode", a spokesman for the former British leader said. Blair faces serious obstacles to success in a role that has doomed all his predecessors. The goal of a state appears more remote than ever, with the Palestinian territories divided between Hamas Islamists in the Gaza Strip and President Mahmoud Abbas's secular Fatah faction in the occupied ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 11:24 AM AKDT
MEXICO CITY — Mexican cantaloupe irrigated with water from
sewage-tainted rivers. Candy laced with lead. Chinese toothpaste is not
the only concern for U.S. consumers wary of the health risks posed by
imported goods.
Producers in other developing nations are notorious violators of basic food-safety standards, even as they woo consumers with a growing appetite for foods such as pickled mangoes from India and fruits and vegetables during winter from Mexico. On Wednesday, President Bush established a high-level government panel to recommend steps to guarantee the safety of food shipped into the U.S. and to improve policing of those imports. "The administration is concerned about the safety of imported products that Americans eat and use," White House spokesman Tony Snow said. China, already under suspicion as the source of tainted toothpaste, contaminated fish and toxic medicine, logged the largest number of violations in the past 12 months, with the U.S. Food and Drug Adminstration rejecting 1,901 shipments of food and cosmetics. But India and Mexico weren't far behind, with inspectors rejecting 1,787 and 1,560 shipments, respectively. The biggest reasons? Foods that are unapproved or contain poisons and pesticides. Some are simply dirty, with inspectors finding that the shipment "appears to ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 11:19 AM AKDT
USA Alan Caruba
In a month, August 20 and 21, the leaders of the United States, Canada, and Mexico will sit down together in Montebello, Quebec to discuss making the borders between these three nations disappear. They will discuss progress on a vast highway project passing through America to link Mexico with Canada. So far, no one has asked the citizens of these three nations whether they want to do this. It is not up for a vote in Congress and, indeed, Congress has no supervision over the gnomes in the U.S. Department of Commerce who are busily “harmonizing” the laws under the auspices of the Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America (SPP). This, we’re told, is not a treaty so Congress has no constitutional oversight obligation. I guess it’s more like a nice big handshake between the presidents and prime minister of these three nations who, let’s face it, just know better than the rest of us. I mean, do Canadians really think they’re in charge of Canada? Americans should have a say about programs affecting America? Or has anyone asked Mexicans if they want to be part of some “harmonized” configuration not unlike the European Union? Last ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 09:05 AM AKDT
By TODD LEWAN
Demonstrators prepare to march against microchip implants planned for Alzheimer's patients, in front of the Alzheimer's Community Care Headquarters in West Palm Beach, Fla., May 12, 2007. March organizer Katherine Albrecht, left, said a payer before starting the march. (AP Photo/Gary I. Rothstein) CityWatcher.com, a provider of surveillance equipment, attracted little notice itself - until a year ago, when two of its employees had glass-encapsulated microchips with miniature antennas embedded in their forearms. The "chipping" of two workers with RFIDs - radio frequency identification tags as long as two grains of rice, as thick as a toothpick - was merely a way of restricting access to vaults that held sensitive data and images for police departments, a layer of security beyond key cards and clearance codes, the company said. "To protect high-end secure data, you use more sophisticated techniques," Sean Darks, chief executive of the Cincinnati-based company, said. He compared chip implants to retina scans or fingerprinting. "There's a reader outside the door; you walk up to the reader, put your arm under it, and it opens the door."Innocuous? Maybe. But the news that Americans had, for the first time, been injected with electronic ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sun 22 Jul 2007 08:16 AM AKDT
Officials in Fort Worth, Texas, want to know who set an Israeli flag on
fire outside of a Baptist church, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.
Thursday, 19 Jule 2007 00:03 Officials in Fort Worth, Texas, want to know who set an Israeli flag on fire outside of a Baptist church, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported Wednesday. The three flags in front of Cornerstone Baptist Church had been lowered to half-staff in memory of the late Lady Bird Johnson. On Tuesday morning, however, the Texas and U.S. flags were still flapping while the Israeli banner hung charred and tattered, its Star of David burned out of the fabric. Beneath its flagpole was an overturned trash can that had been taken from a nearby playground. The Rev. Bobby Herrel, the church's pastor, said Cornerstone Baptist began flying the Israeli flag last July "to support the Israeli people during its conflict with Lebanon". "Apparently there are some very anti-Semitic attitudes here in Fort Worth," he said. The incident will be investigated as criminal mischief, not a hate crime, because the Israeli flag is not a religious symbol, said Lt. Dean Sullivan, a police spokesman, adding they have no suspects. In March, the tires ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 11:49 PM CDT
by Larry Domnitch
After Tisha B'Av, the burning of the Temple continued for another day. Its affects continue to be felt throughout Jewish history. The fires that consumed the first Jerusalem Temple began on the ninth of Av, and continued to burn until middle of the following day. The Talmudic sage Rabbi Yochanan stated, "Had I been alive in that generation, I would have fixed [the day of mourning] for the tenth [of Av], because the greater part of the Temple was burnt on that day." As Tisha B'Av has been a day of misfortune throughout Jewish history, so too has been the Tenth of Av: Expulsion from France On July 22, 1306, the tenth of Av, the Jews of France were arrested and ordered to leave the country. Approximately 100,000 were forced to wander in search of new homes, and many perished along the way. The Jewish community was not aware of the planned expulsion, as France's king, Phillip the 'Fair', did not want them to flee in advance with their assets. One of the monarch's motives for expelling the Jews was financial. Phillip saw plundering Jewish wealth as a way to shore up France's economic woes. No doubt, ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 11:44 PM CDT
By Benjamin Lau
This Sabbath we will be reading Parashat Devarim, the Torah portion that is always followed by a haftarah from Isaiah and which is read before the week when the fast of Tisha B'Av falls. The Torah portion, haftarah and the Book of Lamentations, read on Tisha B'Av, share a common feature: They all contain the word "eikha" (how): "How can I myself alone bear your cumbrance, and your burden, and your strife?" (Deuteronomy 1:12); "How is the faithful city become a harlot!" (Isaiah 1:21); and "How doth the city sit solitary ..." ; "How hath the Lord covered the daughter of Zion with a cloud in his anger ..." ; How is the gold become dim!" (Lamentations 1:1, 2:1, 4:1). The midrashic commentary accompanying Lamentations refers to this linking word: "Three individuals prophesied using the word eikah: Moses, Isaiah and Jeremiah. Rabbi Levy stated: 'This is like the story of a matron who had three escorts. One of them saw her in her period of serenity; the second in her period of rash behavior; and the third in her period of degradation. Similarly, Moses, seeing Israel in its glory and in its period of serenity, asked ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 11:41 PM CDT
by Hillel Fendel
(IsraelNN.com) Once again, Gush Katif expellee families find themselves shifted about in power struggles between the powers-that-be. Some 50 families thrown out of northern Gush Katif two years ago still have no permanent solution on the horizon - and now they are being told they must leave their temporary homes as well. Nearly 30 families from Elei Sinai, another 20 from Nisanit, and one from Netzer Hazani - former communities of northern Gush Katif that were evacuated and razed in the Disengagement/expulsion plan of 2005 - are living in Kibbutz Carmiya, just north of Gaza and west of Yad Mordechai. They arrived there over a year and a half ago, after several months of living in even more temporary locations. Many of them lived in a tent city for over two months. The State signed a contract with Kibbutz Carmiya according to which the State pays $450 each month per family, and the kibbutz provides land for upgraded temporary pre-fab homes, dubbed caravillas. The kibbutz now says that the residents must leave within a month if the State does not agree to renew the contract - at $600 per month/family. One resident told Arutz-7 that she is ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 11:39 PM CDT
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert called over the weekend for direct peace
talks between Israel and Syria, without any mediation.
His proposal came in response to comments from Syrian President Bashar Assad last week that Damascus would resume peace talks in the presence of an honest broker if Israel first provided a guarantee that it would return the entire Golan Heights. Addressing veteran kibbutz members on Friday at Kibbutz Yifat in the Jezreel Valley, Olmert responded to Assad. "I want to make peace with any Arab country, and I want to do it through direct negotiations. That's how it was with Egypt and with Jordan," he said. The prime minister rejected the Syrian demand that before negotiations resume, Israel agree to withdraw from the Golan Heights. "When he [Assad] says Israel needs to withdraw to the June 4, 1967, lines, that is setting a precondition. I can't make any commitments before negotiating," Olmert said. Regarding the Gaza Strip, the prime minister said he could not promise that the situation there would not develop into one similar to that on the northern border before last year's Second Lebanon War, but he cautioned against a large-scale military incursion or reoccupying the Strip. On ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 11:35 PM CDT
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's visit to Damascus proves that
Israel must not open negotiations with Syria, GIL Chairman Rafi Eitan
said Friday.
"[Syrian President Bashar] Assad is not showing any indication that he will cut his strong ties with Iran, Hamas and Hizbullah even after he starts peace talks with Israel," Eitan told Israel Radio. Ahmadinejad's visit Thursday posed a snub to Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, who has called on Syria to cut its relations with Iran as a precondition to restart peace talks, deadlocked since 2000. On the road with Netanyahu in the US; on the agenda: Iran divestment The Iranian president's talks with Assad focused on the Iraq situation, Palestinian territories and Lebanon, where both Teheran and Damascus wield influence. "The enemies of the region should abandon plans to attack the interests of this region, or they would be burned by the wrath of the region's peoples," the hardline Iranian leader said at a joint press conference with Assad. Ahmadinejad, accompanied by a high-level delegation, was greeted at Damascus airport by Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem ahead of the official reception by Assad at the People's Palace. Assad was sworn in Tuesday for a second seven-year term. He ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 11:31 PM CDT
By Yoav Stern, Haaretz Correspondent
Minister of Strategic Threats Avigdor Lieberman on Saturday called for the establishment of an emergency national unity government in light of the strategic threat posed by the tightening ties between Syria and Iran. The right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu patry head urged Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and the chairman of the opposition Benjamin Netanyahu to form an alliance after the London-based Arabic-language newspaper Ashraq Al-Awsat reported Saturday that Iran's President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had pledged to help Syria conduct nuclear research during a visit to Damascus earlier this week. In exchange, Syria agreed not to engage in peace talks with Israel, the newspaper reported. According to the report, Iran also pledged to provide Syria with $1 billion in military aid to purchase arms from Russia and North Korea. In response to this report, Lieberman said that the relations between Syrian President Bashar Assad and Ahmadinejad "require Israel to reevaluate the political and military preparation" and added that "the Iranian threat is situated outside any political discussion, and therefore I urge Prime Minister Olmert and opposition chair Netanyahu to consider forming an emergency national unity government." The Likud party, Netanyahu, did not embrace Lieberman's call for an emergency ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 11:26 PM CDT
World Likud chairman Danny Danon widened the field of candidates in the
August 14 Likud leadership race to three on Tuesday when he threw his
hat into the ring, challenging incumbent Binyamin Netanyahu and Likud
activist Moshe Feiglin.
A former chairman of World Betar and aide to former MK Uzi Landau, Danon was 25th on the Likud's list for the Knesset in the last election. Danon's views are just as hawkish as Feiglin's but he opposes the religious elements of Feiglin's views. After MK Silvan Shalom quit the race last week, MKs who support Netanyahu told The Jerusalem Post they hoped "a straw candidate" would enter the race, so he would not have to face Feiglin one-on-one. But instead of getting a "straw candidate," Netanyahu received a challenge from one of his most bitter critics in the party. Danon intends to use the race to force Netanyahu to answer questions about why he supported the disengagement from the Gaza Strip and what his emissaries offered former Syrian president Hafez Assad. Danon said he intended to challenge Netanyahu and Feiglin to an "ideological debate," but he acknowledged that it was unlikely Netanyahu would agree. When Danon won an election for World ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 08:20 PM AKDT
Terry Friedlander - Ketchum, Idaho
Al Neuharth's column "What '08 race needs is a McGovern type" is timely and appropriate because the war in Iraq is the contemporary version of the Vietnam War (Plain talk, July 13). I have yet to hear any of the Democratic or Republican candidates for the presidency say anything close to what McGovern said back in the 1960s. Recently, McGovern has said that neither Iraq nor Vietnam was a threat to the United States. Neither war could be won militarily unless the U.S. government leveled the entire country. The similarities outweigh the differences dramatically. As someone who evaded the draft in the '60s, I was aware of the corruption in South Vietnam and that Ho Chi Minh was way more influential, charismatic and worldly than the leaders in the U.S.-backed South. Under Ho's leadership, the Vietnamese had just defeated the French. What communism was back then is equivalent to today's terrorism. Iraq, like the entire Middle East, is best left in totalitarian hands, which has been the norm for hundreds of years. Vietnam survived and prospered after our withdrawal, and so will Iraq whether we are forced to leave or we voluntarily withdraw. The real ... more »
by
Publisher
on Sat 21 Jul 2007 08:18 PM AKDT
Norwegian jet fighters were three times this week scrambled to meet
Russian bombers which flew close to the Norwegian coast. The flights
are seen as part of a Russian military exercise.
On Tuesday the Russian Tupolev (Bear) bombers flew down to Troendelag before turning back north. In the early hours of Friday morning they were escorted by Norwegian jet fighters as far down as the waters between Stavanger and Aberdeen, before returning to Russia. On Friday morning another two bombers approached the coast of Finnmark, when they were met by Norwegian jet fighters, and turned back out to sea. The Norwegian Defence has seen an increased activity by Russian military aircraft along the Norwegian coast over the last couple of years. - There has been a gradual increase in the activity since the down-period of the Russian Defence in the middle of the 1990's, says Defence spokesman John Inge Oeglaend. - We must go back to the Soviet era to find such high (military) activity on land, sea and in the air, says Deputy leader of the Barents Secretariat, Thomas Nilsen. Defence experts see this as a sign that the Russian military forces now have more money to spend on ... more » |
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