Friday, September 30, 2022

Parshiyos Netzavim & Vayelech, two escape from Auschwitz stories, news

 

Parsha Netzavim

 

 

It appears to me that the heads of the tribes commanded everybody to be present as this speech was going to be on the last day of Moshe’s Life.

 

29:9  Ye are standing this day all of you before the LORD your God: your heads, your tribes, your elders, and your officers, even all the men of Israel, 10 your little ones, your wives, and thy stranger that is in the midst of thy camp, from the hewer of thy wood unto the drawer of thy water; 

 

Everybody even the lowest grade profession of wood choppers and those who carried water from place to place to eek out a living. The work was hard, unappreciated and repetitive.

 

11 that thou shouldest enter into the covenant of the LORD thy God--and into His oath--which the LORD thy God makes with thee this day; 12 that He may establish thee this day unto Himself for a people, and that He may be unto thee a God, as He spoke unto thee, and as He swore unto thy fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob. 

 

You are to understand that your G-D is your King and no job is too big or too little.

 

13 Neither with you only do I make this covenant and this oath; 14 but with him that stands here with us this day before the LORD our God, and also with him that is not here with us this day-- 

 

Everybody standing here today has an equal portion in following the oath of the Mitzvos.

 

15 for ye know how we dwelt in the land of Egypt; and how we came through the midst of the nations through which ye passed; 16 and ye have seen their detestable things, and their idols, wood and stone, silver and gold, which were with them-- 

 

Remember what you have seen in the past of the detestation of Egypt.

 

17 lest there should be among you man, or woman, or family, or tribe, whose heart turns away this day from the LORD our God, to go to serve the gods of those nations; lest there should be among you a root that bears gall and wormwood; 18 and it come to pass, when he heareth the words of this curse, that he bless himself in his heart, saying: 'I shall have peace, though I walk in the stubbornness of my heart--that the watered be swept away with the dry'; 

 

You have a Living G-D to worship not these fruitless idols.

 

19 the LORD will not be willing to pardon him, but then the anger of the LORD and His jealousy shall be kindled against that man, and all the curse that is written in this book shall lie upon him, and the LORD shall blot out his name from under heaven; 

 

Having seen in museums some of these Canaanite gods or various non-sensical items, I don’t understand how these people worshipped them or why a most powerful CREATOR of a Universe could be jealous. Rather I believe that since jealousy is a human quality it was used as a metaphor for the simple people in the audience.

 

20 and the LORD shall separate him unto evil out of all the tribes of Israel, according to all the curses of the covenant that is written in this book of the law. 21 And the generation to come, your children that shall rise up after you, and the foreigner that shall come from a far land, shall say, when they see the plagues of that land, and the sicknesses wherewith the LORD hath made it sick; 

 

This happened to Samuel Clemens when he visited Israel and saw the desolation that I can see in the Arab Occupied Areas vs. Jewish Settlements that are rich and fertile.

 

22 and that the whole land thereof is brimstone, and salt, and a burning, that it is not sown, nor bears, nor any grass grows therein, like the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah, Admah and Zeboiim, which the LORD overthrew in His anger, and in His wrath; 

 

The destruction of the Romans raping the land with taxes and the Arabs neglecting the land led to this from a physical standpoint but it was overthrown by the L-RD in HIS anger.

 

23 even all the nations shall say 'Wherefore hath the LORD done thus unto this land? what means the heat of this great anger?' 24 then men shall say: 'Because they forsook the covenant of the LORD, the God of their fathers, which He made with them when He brought them forth out of the land of Egypt; 

 

They forsook the covenant and the land turned into Sodom and Amorah and threw them out.

 

25 and went and served other gods, and worshipped them, gods that they knew not, and that He had not allotted unto them; 26 therefore the anger of the LORD was kindled against this land, to bring upon it all the curse that is written in this book; 27 and the LORD rooted them out of their land in anger, and in wrath, and in great indignation, and cast them into another land, as it is this day'.-- 

 

Yacov had no problem fighting a cunning Lavan but foolishness and stupidity of Bnei Yisrael worshipping gods that have legs and cannot walk, hands that cannot feel, a mouth with no breath, etc. makes G-D angry for not obeying the covenant.

 

28 The secret things belong unto the LORD our God; but the things that are revealed belong unto us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law. 

30:1 1 And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon thee, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before thee, and thou shalt bethink thyself among all the nations, whither the LORD thy God hath driven thee, 2 and shalt return unto the LORD thy God, and hearken to His voice according to all that I command thee this day, thou and thy children, with all thy heart, and with all thy soul; 

 

Do you want the blessing and life or the curse and death? I am teaching you but you have the free will to be foolish.

 

3 that then the LORD thy God will turn thy captivity, and have compassion upon thee, and will return and gather thee from all the peoples, whither the LORD thy God hath scattered thee. 4 If any of thine that are dispersed be in the uttermost parts of heaven, from thence will the LORD thy God gather thee, and from thence will He fetch thee. 

 

After a long time, even if it takes eons until you learn, the L-RD is ETERNAL Patience, has great mercies and truth until you return from diaspora.

 

5 And the LORD thy God will bring thee into the land which thy fathers possessed, and thou shalt possess it; and He will do thee good, and multiply thee above thy fathers. 6 And the LORD thy God will circumcise thy heart, and the heart of thy seed, to love the LORD thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, that thou mayest live. 7 And the LORD thy God will put all these curses upon thine enemies, and on them that hate thee, that persecuted thee. 

 

Just as a man’s circumcised organ can lead him astray so can one with a foolish heart. By circumcising one’s heart, he will come back to Torah and Mitzvos.

 

8 And thou shalt return and hearken to the voice of the LORD, and do all His commandments which I command thee this day. 9 And the LORD thy God will make thee over-abundant in all the work of thy hand, in the fruit of thy body, and in the fruit of thy cattle, and in the fruit of thy land, for good; for the LORD will again rejoice over thee for good, as He rejoiced over thy fathers; 10 if thou shalt hearken to the voice of the LORD thy God, to keep His commandments and His statutes which are written in this book of the law; if thou turn unto the LORD thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul. 

 

Then by following the Mitzvos in all their details, you will become wealthy.

 

11 For this commandment which I command thee this day, it is not too hard for thee, neither is it far off. 12 It is not in heaven, that thou shouldest say: 'Who shall go up for us to heaven, and bring it unto us, and make us to hear it, that we may do it?' 

 

I brought the Torah from Heaven on Har Sinai to you so it is here.

 

13 Neither is it beyond the sea, that thou shouldest say: 'Who shall go over the sea for us, and bring it unto us, and make us to hear it, that we may do it?' 14 But the word is very nigh unto thee, in thy mouth, and in thy heart, that thou mayest do it. 

 

If you put the Torah on your lips and observe it with positive actions it is right before you.

 

15 See, I have set before thee this day life and good, and death and evil, 

 

So now you can choose a good life instead of death and evil.

 

16 in that I command thee this day to love the LORD thy God, to walk in His ways, and to keep His commandments and His statutes and His ordinances; then thou shalt live and multiply, and the LORD thy God shall bless thee in the land whither thou go in to possess it. 

 

To love G-D and walk in his ways is not new to them, but they need to be reminded. Moshe is not the only leader to remind people of their goal. In the early 5720’s in America there was a black leader named M. L. King who told his people “I have a dream that someday we shall be free and an equal.” He did not live long enough to see a black man elected president but it eventually happened. Moshe wants the people to blessed and the land blessed so he repeats himself.

 

17 But if thy heart turn away, and thou wilt not hear, but shalt be drawn away, and worship other gods, and serve them; 18 I declare unto you this day, that ye shall surely perish; ye shall not prolong your days upon the land, whither thou pass over the Jordan to go in to possess it. 

 

Oy voy-voy if you do not listen and observe for you will perish.

 

19 I call heaven and earth to witness against you this day, that I have set before thee life and death, the blessing and the curse; therefore, choose life, that thou mayest live, thou and thy seed; 

 

A Kabbalist will tell you that heaven and earth although inanimate objects have some physical vibration or essence of G-D. The inanimate in Kabbalah can become a witness or witnesses in the heavenly court.

 

20 to love the LORD thy God, to hearken to His voice, and to cleave unto Him; for that is thy life, and the length of thy days; that thou mayest dwell in the land which the LORD swore unto thy fathers, to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, to give them. 

 

Therefore love begets love and love to do the Mitzvos and follow Torah.

 

 

Parsha Vayelech

 

 

 

31:1 And Moses went and spoke these words unto all Israel. 2 And he said unto them: 'I am a hundred and twenty years old this day; I can no more go out and come in; and the LORD hath said unto me: Thou shalt not go over this Jordan. 

 

I cannot go anymore before you, but a new generation of leadership will. The leaders will be Yehoshua and Eleazar.

 

3 The LORD thy God, He will go over before thee; He will destroy these nations from before thee, and thou shalt dispossess them; and Joshua, he shall go over before thee, as the LORD hath spoken. 

 

HASHEM will fight your battles and save you.

 

4 And the LORD will do unto them as He did to Sihon and to Og, the kings of the Amorites, and unto their land; whom He destroyed. 5 And the LORD will deliver them up before you, and ye shall do unto them according unto all the commandment which I have commanded you. 

 

In case you do not believe me, I will bring you a proof what happened very recently with Sihon and Og which you defeated soundly.

 

6 Be strong and of good courage, fear not, nor be affrighted at them; for the LORD thy God, He it is that doth go with thee; He will not fail thee, nor forsake thee.' 

 

Be strong and of good courage will be repeated and mentioned in Chapter One of Sefer Yehoshua.

 

7 And Moses called unto Joshua, and said unto him in the sight of all Israel: 'Be strong and of good courage; for thou shalt go with this people into the land which the LORD hath sworn unto their fathers to give them; and thou shalt cause them to inherit it. 

 

All these years, he was the beetle of Moshe (Shamash) now he is to be the leader instead of the assistant and follower.

 

8 And the LORD, He it is that doth go before thee; He will be with thee, He will not fail thee, neither forsake thee; fear not, neither be dismayed.' 9 And Moses wrote this law, and delivered it unto the priests the sons of Levi, that bore the ark of the covenant of the LORD, and unto all the elders of Israel. 

 

Sefer Devarim until close to the end as the last 8 Pasukim appear to be written by Yehoshua but it is also possible that Moshe wrote them and immediately forgot them by the grace of HASHEM.

 

10 And Moses commanded them, saying: 'At the end of every seven years, in the set time of the year of release, in the feast of tabernacles, 11 when all Israel is come to appear before the LORD thy God in the place which He shall choose, thou shalt read this law before all Israel in their hearing. 12 Assemble the people, the men and the women and the little ones, and thy stranger that is within thy gates, that they may hear, and that they may learn, and fear the LORD your God, and observe to do all the words of this law; 

 

This will occur this year but since all the people do not go up to Yerushalayim only some will gather and hear Devarim.

 

13 and that their children, who have not known, may hear, and learn to fear the LORD your God, as long as ye live in the land whither ye go over the Jordan to possess it.'

 

The whole purpose was to reteach the Torah to the Nation. I do not know if this Mitzvah is superius in our day as each year we read the full Torah in 54 Parshiyos.

 

14 And the LORD said unto Moses: 'Behold, thy days approach that thou must die; call Joshua, and present yourselves in the tent of meeting, that I may give him a charge.' And Moses and Joshua went, and presented themselves in the tent of meeting. 15 And the LORD appeared in the Tent in a pillar of cloud; and the pillar of cloud stood over the door of the Tent. 16 And the LORD said unto Moses: 'Behold, thou art about to sleep with thy fathers; and this people will rise up, and go astray after the foreign gods of the land, whither they go to be among them, and will forsake Me, and break My covenant which I have made with them. 

 

This is what Moshe was told and he brought this forward as a warning.

 

17 Then My anger shall be kindled against them in that day, and I will forsake them, and I will hide My face from them, and they shall be devoured, and many evils and troubles shall come upon them; so that they will say in that day: Are not these evils come upon us because our God is not among us? 

 

G-D hiding his face is a terrible punishment. I can imagine the IDF going into Schem or Jenin without help from heaven and what the results might be. (Heaven forbid.)

 

18 And I will surely hide My face in that day for all the evil which they shall have wrought, in that they are turned unto other gods. 

 

You are going to turn away so G-D will turn away and you will be in deep trouble over your heads.

 

19 Now therefore write ye this song for you, and teach thou it the children of Israel; put it in their mouths, that this song may be a witness for Me against the children of Israel. 20 For when I shall have brought them into the land which I swore unto their fathers, flowing with milk and honey; and they shall have eaten their fill, and waxen fat; and turned unto other gods, and served them, and despised Me, and broken My covenant; 

 

Therefore, learn by heart the Hazinu Song (next Parsha) by heart and sing and re-sing it until it enters your heads and heart.

 

21 then it shall come to pass, when many evils and troubles are come upon them, that this song shall testify before them as a witness; for it shall not be forgotten out of the mouths of their seed; for I know their imagination how they do even now, before I have brought them into the land which I swore.' 

 

You have been forewarned.

 

22 So Moses wrote this song the same day, and taught it the children of Israel. 23 And he gave Joshua the son of Nun a charge, and said: 'Be strong and of good courage; for thou shalt bring the children of Israel into the land which I swore unto them; and I will be with thee.' 

 

In case you have a poor memory, the song is written down. Again be strong and of good courage to Joshua who will now be the leader going into Eretz Yisrael.

 

24 And it came to pass, when Moses had made an end of writing the words of this law in a book, until they were finished, 25 that Moses commanded the Levites, that bore the ark of the covenant of the LORD, saying: 26 'Take this book of the law, and put it by the side of the ark of the covenant of the LORD your God, that it may be there for a witness against thee. 27 For I know thy rebellion, and thy stiff neck; behold, while I am yet alive with you this day, ye have been rebellious against the LORD; and how much more after my death? 

 

This book Devarim has the Mussar that the nation needs to whip them back into shape.

 

28 Assemble unto me all the elders of your tribes, and your officers, that I may speak these words in their ears, and call heaven and earth to witness against them. 29 For I know that after my death ye will in any wise deal corruptly, and turn aside from the way which I have commanded you; and evil will befall you in the end of days; because ye will do that which is evil in the sight of the LORD, to provoke Him through the work of your hands.' 

 

Now both the young and especially the elders would be taught Hazinu so that they could emphasize and comment in their own words on the meaning.

30 And Moses spoke in the ears of all the assembly of Israel the words of this song, until they were finished:

 

 

From Helene W.: Life Asteroid tracking. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=malQcSehJ0I

 

 

Tishrei Judgement and Atonement

 

When I came to Israel 52years ago I was praying Rosh Hashanah bent over humbly and beating my chest on Yom Kippur humbling. Concentrating on word by word prayers with the English Translation 45 to 50 minutes at Mussaf. This week on the first day of Rosh Hashanah I found myself crying in prayer as I skipped the first additional words in the Amidah Prayer and having to repeat myself over poor concentration. For me personally it was like Tisha B’Av Oy what we once had prayer. I was not crying for Am Yisrael but pleading with G-D that my mumbling of words in Hebrew will be as if I had all the great Kavana of the meanings of the prayers.

 

I was humble all right my hands shook from the traffic accident I once was in and with age. I could barely stand on my legs for the prays. My neighbors in the ‘fast’ Minyan Schul 3.5 or more hours of prayers vs. whole day prayers brought me a stander for placing my Machzor. All this above and beyond my grave danger from heart problems.

 

Those of you who can do better than mumbling words like the young Rachamim Pauli please do so not only for your sake but that of Am Yisrael. For according to the Rambam on Hilchas Teshuva that if the heavenly scales are 50-50 with the sins and merits of Am Yisrael and one Baal Teshuva on one Mitzvah does something it will tip the scales in the favor of the whole nation and unfortunately the reverse has been true in the past when the two Temples were destroyed.

 

Our goal now is to have a good finish of our Din Torah from G-D or Gmar Chatima Tova.

(A good stamp of approval in the Book of Life.)

 

To win our stamp of approval in the book of life, we must atone. Over the years, we have discussed adding to the Ashamnu Prayers with what is written in Sefer Chomas Adam. (We have sinned, we have been treasonous, we have stolen, and this goes across the whole Hebrew Aleph Bet) – it does not matter if you Like one ate without a blessing before and after. One ate forbidden food like a mixture of meat and milk. Going through the Hebrew Aleph-Bet, and then Al Chet to try to cover all sins. What is interesting with the Al Chet that a large number of sins come from speaking badly, gossip, cursing, etc. Sins that we would have to offer up a Korban aka accidently turning on or off a light on Shabbos or sins of anger management or embarrassing our friends.

 

Make the best of Yom Kippur try to atone and repent your sins and resolve to sin no more. Then you can truly have a Gmar Chatima Tova!

 

P.S. not brought down in Inyanay Diyoma is Yeted Neeman that headlines the need to observe Family Purity, Shmita, Learn Torah, Milestones of Roshei Yeshivas and Mussar from leading Torah Scholars. Other articles on guarding the Shabbos and sanctity of marriage vs. secular intrusions into Torah. Then you wonder why they are against secular learning!

 

 

The following two stories of escape from Auschwitz took me too much time to copy and paste and often copied the same paragraphs so as important as they are I have to think twice before copying and pasting from Times of Israel or Aish.

 

Breaking into Auschwitz by Dr. Yvette Alt Miller

https://aish.com/breaking-into-auschwitz/

 

 

For decades one of the most incredible tales from the Holocaust has been virtually unknown outside of Poland. The writings of Witold Pilecki, a Polish patriot who volunteered to be imprisoned in Auschwitz, were published in English only a few years ago. His incredible bravery and heroic actions deserve to be better known.

 

In 1939, Poland was invaded by Nazi Germany and was divided into two: the eastern half was annexed by the Soviet Union and the western half was absorbed into the Nazi Reich. In the east, the USSR managed to quash almost all attempts at Polish resistance, but in the western half a top-secret resistance dubbed the Underground State and Home Army managed to function, resisting Nazi rule. Witold Pilecki was a 38-year-old former Captain in the Polish Army who’d retired, married his wife Maria, and was working as a farmer and raising his two children, Andrzej and Zofia, in an area of Poland that is now in Belarus.

 

With his homeland in tatters, Pilecki left his family and travelled to Warsaw to help organize a resistance. Facing these Polish fighters, the Nazis decided to set up a concentration camp to house political prisoners of the new regime. They chose the Polish town of Oswiecim, or Auschwitz.

 

Two of Pilecki’s fellow resistance fighters were among the first prisoners transported from Warsaw to Auschwitz, in August 1940. Telegrams arrived for their families a few days later informing them their loved ones had been killed. The Polish underground desperately wanted to know what had befallen these men. Pilecki volunteered to go to Auschwitz and report back on conditions there. If possible, his mandate included also raising a resistance movement inside the camp and ordering a breakout.

 

On September 19, 1940, Pilecki deliberately joined a group of men being arrested by Nazis in Warsaw. He was sent to the camp with nearly 2,000 other fighters, and given the number 4859. He would remain a prisoner there for nearly three years.

 

While many prisoners in Auschwitz reported losing all hope, Pilecki never stopped thinking of himself as a man on a mission. As a political prisoner, he never endured the especially brutal and deadly conditions that were reserved for Jewish prisoners, but he did survive horrible privations too.

 

On his first day in Auschwitz, Pilecki watched as all the men on a train were shot as soon as they arrived at the camp. He saw one former judge beaten to death before his eyes. Pilecki himself was hit so hard that two of his teeth fell out. Pilecki and his fellow prisoners were shaved, given prison clothes with a red triangle (signifying political prisoners), and told that none of them would ever leave Auschwitz alive. When Pilecki told a fellow prisoner he was there to form a resistance, the prisoner told him, “You’re either the greatest hero or the biggest fool.”

 

Instead of succumbing to despair, Pilecki got to work. He told the prisoners news of the outside world and wrote a report on the conditions inside Auschwitz, which he managed to smuggle out of the camp and send to the resistance movement in Warsaw. His anguished first report was sent to Poland’s Government in Exile in London in March 1941. They passed it onto the Allies. In his report, Pilecki appealed to the Allies to bomb Auschwitz and end the “monstrous torture” that was taking place there.

 

The report was forwarded to the highest levels of the British military and might have resulted in action had not Sir Charles Portal, Chief of the British Air Staff, intervened. Sir Charles warned that any raids on Auschwitz “avowedly conducted on account of the Jews would be an asset to enemy propaganda” and declined to act. Pilecki’s torture, and that of this thousands of fellow prisoners in Auschwitz, continued.

 

Pilecki continued to work, organizing his fellow Polish political prisoners to smuggle in food, plan the occasional escape, and bribe guards to reduce punishments. He organized about 500 prisoners to be part of a top-secret resistance organization inside of Auschwitz, which Pilecki called the Union of Military Organization, known by its Polish initials ZOW.

 

For a while, ZOW members managed to construct a radio from parts that were smuggled into the camp and reported on conditions to the outside world. They abandoned this attempt when the risk of being caught grew too great. Pilecki survived bouts of typhus and pneumonia, and managed to live on starvation rations. Yet these monstrous cruelties of Auschwitz were set to increase.

 

When the Nazis broke their non-aggression pact with the Soviet Union in June of 1941, the eventual fighting exposed millions of eastern European Jews to the Nazis’ murderous killing machine. For a few months in 1941, Soviet prisoners of war were the main target of mass killings at Auschwitz; the notorious gas Zyklon B was first used on Soviet prisoners. Ever the conscientious resistance professional, Pilecki meticulously documented the carnage, writing that “The men (Soviet POWs) had been so tightly packed (in gas chambers) that even in death they could not fall over.”

 

In 1942, the main aim of Auschwitz shifted to the mass killing of Jews. Over one million Jews were systematically murdered in Auschwitz; most were gassed and then their bodies were burned in the camp’s giant crematoria. Pilecki was determined to document the death of these Jews. “Over a thousand a day from the new transports were gassed,” he wrote.

 

Pilecki also noted the callous indifference to this death and suffering on the part of Polish civilians in the town and countryside nearby. “When marching along the gray roads (on a work detail outside of the camp)...we would encounter young couples out walking, breathing in the beauty of springtime, or women peacefully pushing their children in prams - then the thought uncomfortably bouncing around one’s brain would arise...swirling around, stubbornly seeking some solution to the insoluble question: We are all...people?”

 

Pilecki managed to write and smuggle out three comprehensive reports detailing life in Auschwitz as it evolved from a camp primarily housing political prisoners into the center of the Nazis’ monstrous killing machine targeting Europe’s Jews. Each time he managed to smuggle out a report at enormous risk, Pilecki hoped that his words might galvanize the Allies to take action and bomb Auschwitz. Each time he waited in vain.

 

As the years went by, many of Pileckis’ fellow ZOW resistance members were killed. He realized that he could do much more to fight the Nazis outside of Auschwitz and began to plot an escape. His main goal was to speak with Polish resistance fighters and Allied forces in person and persuade them to launch an assault on Auschwitz and stop the killings there. On one occasion, Pilecki gave up his spot as part of an escape plan to another political prisoner who was in greater danger of being killed.

 

Eventually, in April 1943, Pilecki and two fellow ZOW members managed to escape, prying the bolts off a door and fleeing the camp. Pilecki was shot but managed to travel 100 km on foot until he could reach the home of a fellow resistance member and rest. Pilecki still hoped that the Allies would attack Auschwitz, but as the months went by nothing happened.

 

Still seeking ways to fight the Nazis, Pilecki travelled to Warsaw to fight in a major uprising against Nazi rule there. Pilecki, an older former officer who’d endured years of brutal imprisonment and torture, became known as “Daddy” among the young resistance fighters who were determined to make a last desperate stand against the Nazi murderers.

 

In August 1944, Pilecki fought to defend a key street that had been a major thoroughfare inside the now-empty Jewish Ghetto known as Jerusalem Avenue. Today, the street is the site of the Warsaw Uprising Museum. Historian Norman Davies documented Pilecki’s crucial input to the battle at this strategically crucial site: “Almost every day... he captured, lost, and recaptured (an important holdout). Repeatedly driven out, he returned and with deadly cunning repeatedly expelled the German defenders. He lived to fight elsewhere. But so long as he threatened this one vital pressure point, the German command was constantly made to feel insecure.” The spot he defended became known during the fighting as Pilecki’s Redoubt.

 

After the Warsaw Uprising was brutally put down in September 1944, Pilecki was sent to a POW camp in Germany. Liberated by American troops in April 1945, he travelled to Italy where he fought with Polish troops in the final days of the war. In Italy, he also wrote his final report on what he’d witnessed at Auschwitz. He suspected that he might not have long to live and it was crucially important to him to record all he’d seen for future generations.

 

After the war, Pilecki returned to Warsaw and continued his activities for the Polish underground, this time gathering intelligence on the new Communist government of Poland which he opposed. On May 5, 1947, he was arrested and brutally tortured by the government of Poland. He was given a show trial and condemned to death. He was executed May 25, 1948.

 

Pilecki’s son Andrzej later recalled his father’s final letters to him and his sister. “He didn’t know he was leaving us forever,” Andrzej explained. “But in letters he would write that we should live worthwhile lives, to respect others and nature. He wrote to my sister to watch out for every little ladybug, to not step on it for a reason. ‘Love nature.’ He instructed us like this in his letters.”

 

Pilecki’s final report on Auschwitz was translated into English in 2012 and released as The Auschwitz Volunteer: Beyond BraveryNow a new book The Volunteer: One Man, an Underground Army, and the Secret Mission to Destroy Auschwitz by Jack Fairweather tells Pilecki’s story for a new generation.

 

Witold Pilecki’s legacy of courage and moral strength deserves to be remembered.

 

 

Rudolf Vbra escaped Auschwitz saved 200,000 Jews. By Robert Philpot.

https://www.timesofisrael.com/the-first-jew-to-escape-auschwitz-helped-save-200000-lives-but-few-know-his-name/ author Jonathan Freedland

 

 

LONDON — They didn’t know it, but it was the eve of the Passover seder. At 2:00 p.m. on April 7, 1944, 19-year-old Rudolf Vrba and 25-year-old Fred Wetzler began their epic and daring bid to bring the news of the horrors of Auschwitz to their fellow Jews and the wider world.

 

That bid began in a dark, cramped hole under a woodpile in the death camp. It ended with a report describing the Nazi machinery of slaughter which landed on desks in Allied capitals and, through a series of diplomatic maneuvers, helped to save the lives of up to 200,000 Jews in Budapest.

 

But, for more than seven decades, the story of Vrba and Wetzler’s astonishing escape — the first successful effort by Jewish prisoners to break out of Auschwitz — and their mission to sound the alarm and strip away the layers of deception under which the Final Solution was perpetrated has itself remained somewhat hidden. The recognition they rightly deserve has consequently been denied.

 

And, says Freedland, this is not simply a story about the past. Vrba’s belief about the potential power of shining a light onto Auschwitz’s dark secrets holds salutary lessons for our “post-truth age.”

 

 

Walter Rosenberg — the name Vrba was given to him as a cover after his escape from Auschwitz — was born in western Slovakia in 1924. A precocious child with a gift for languages and mathematics, he was forced out of school at 14 when Slovakia’s puppet regime, established following Hitler’s 1939 dismemberment of Czechoslovakia, introduced a series of antisemitic regulations.

 

When, in February 1942, Vrba was ordered to report for “resettlement,” his immediate thought was to escape to England to join the Czechoslovak army in exile. While he didn’t succeed, the teenager managed to make it to Budapest where he made contact with the underground. Eventually, after being roughed up by Hungarian troops, he ended up back in the hands of the Slovaks who sent him to the Nováky detention camp.

 

Nonetheless, Vrba’s determination to escape had in no way diminished. Indeed, he managed to slip out of Nováky with Josef Knapp, a young man from his birthplace. His subsequent betrayal by Knapp, which led to Vrba being returned to the camp, taught the 17-year-old an important lesson that helped him to survive what lay ahead: trust nobody.

 

When he was transported to Auschwitz in June 1942, Vrba soon realized that thoughts of escape had to be subordinated to the demands of simply staying alive. If distrust was one factor in Vrba’s survival, luck was another. Sent to IG Farben’s brutal Buna factory, he was recruited by a French civilian to do less onerous work. He was later transferred from the notorious gravel pits to a job painting skis for troops on the Eastern Front. And, after being selected for execution during an August 1942 typhus outbreak in which 746 men were murdered, he was saved by a kapo.

 

Perhaps Vrba’s greatest stroke of luck, however, was being sent to work in “Kanada,” a unit that sorted through the belongings of new arrivals at Auschwitz. The work included ferrying bags and rummaging through valuables, including squeezing tubes of toothpaste potentially containing diamonds or cash that had been stashed away. Crucially, however, the prisoners were also able to surreptitiously steal food that newly arrived prisoners had brought with them to the camp. The newcomers were, by this point, likely already dead.

 

Vrba’s time in Kanada slowly led him to a shocking realization: that Auschwitz was, as Freedland puts it, not simply a slave labor or concentration camp, but “a factory of death.” He also came to the sickening understanding that anything of value found in Kanada was shipped on trains back to Germany: The Nazis were attempting to turn a profit on their policy of mass murder.

 

Vrba’s transfer to work on the “ramp” — where he spent 10 months helping to remove the luggage of new arrivals and clear out the cattle trucks — led him to grasp a final truth about the mechanics of this factory of death: that deception was crucial to its smooth functioning. Unaware of their fate, the deportees largely obeyed the Nazis’ instructions — inadvertently ensuring the order the SS required to commit industrial-scale murder. If the wheels of the killing machine were to be slowed, Vrba believed, this veil of secrecy had to be lifted and Jews needed to be forewarned of their imminent fate.

 

His close-up knowledge about the experience of the “family camp” — where, in another act of Nazi deceit, groups of Czech Jews were kept in relatively good conditions should the Red Cross choose to visit — led Vrba to revise his belief about the importance of information. The Czech Jews had been warned by the underground that they were to be murdered after six months. But, still, they did nothing to resist.

 

Knowledge, Vrba came to realize, had to be accompanied by the possibility of being able to escape the Nazi butchers. This may have been a near-impossibility in Auschwitz itself, but the door was still ajar for those Jews who had not yet boarded the trains. They had to be alerted.

 

For Vrba, escape thus became a mission that was about much more than his own survival. He sought nothing less than to shatter the wall of lies that the Nazis had constructed — a wall that surrounded their victims at every stage of their journey to the gas chambers.

 

Despite his youth, Vrba was well equipped to carry out this mission. Alongside his resilience, he was gifted with strong numerical and scientific abilities and an uncanny ability to retain data. He also had what Freedland terms an “almost uniquely panoramic view” of Auschwitz. Aside from the factory, gravel pits, Kanada and the ramp (where he counted and memorized details of the arrival selections), he also volunteered to work in Birkenau and, through his links to the underground resistance, became a registrar in a quarantine sub-section of the camp. As a clerk, he now had the opportunity not only to wander more freely around Auschwitz — committing to memory its layout and workings — he also had access to the chief registrar’s records which contained highly detailed information about the transports.

 

Statistically, though, Vrba’s chances of escape weren’t good. No Jew had ever achieved this perilous feat. However, he was, as Freedland notes, young and, thanks to the nature of the clerical work he had been doing, much fitter and healthier than most inmates. In Kanada, he had also found a child’s atlas and memorized the route from Auschwitz to the Slovak border. He also had invaluable mentoring from a Russian prisoner, Dmitri Volkov, who had once escaped from Sachsenhausen. Among the advice Volkov imparted was a crucial piece of intelligence: machorka, a Soviet tobacco, soaked in petrol and dried, was the only available substance that could throw the camp’s tracker dogs off of a human scent.

 

For Vrba, the clock was also ticking. In January 1944, he discovered that a new railway line, which ran straight to the camp crematoria, was being constructed in preparation for the arrival of Hungary’s roughly million-strong Jewish population. Hungarian Jews had hitherto been partially protected from the worst of the Final Solution. But that all changed when Hitler occupied the country in early 1944, snuffing out the last vestiges of Hungarian independence and forcing the country’s opportunistic leader, Admiral Miklós Horthy, to appoint a Nazi sympathizer as prime minister.

 

Less than three weeks later, Vrba launched his bid for freedom. Accompanying him was Wetzler, a young man from his hometown with whom he had become friendly in the camp. The pair were well acquainted with the drill when a prisoner was found to have escaped: For 72 hours, the camp went onto high alert and a thorough search was conducted. But, after that point, the Nazis returned the outer camp — where prisoners labored by day before being herded back into the main came overnight — to its less stringent nighttime security arrangements. The plan was thus to hide in a makeshift bunker under the woodpile in the outer camp, then slip out under cover of darkness once the search was called off.

 

For three days and three nights, Vrba and Wetzler lay side-by-side in the dugout. Luck was once again on Vrba’s side. While the machorka had stopped the search dogs from giving them away, two guards had spotted the woodpile and begun to pull away the planks. But, when Vrba and his companion were just seconds away from discovery, the SS men were distracted by a commotion elsewhere and disappeared, never to return. In a further stroke of luck, as the three days came to an end, Vrba and Wetzler realized that the wooden planks concealing them were much heavier and more difficult to move than they had anticipated. If the SS guards hadn’t removed the first few layers of planks, the two men would have been trapped in the pit.

 

Vrba’s luck continued as the men began the 50-mile (80-kilometer) trek south, following the course of the Sola river, towards Slovakia. Despite taking the precaution of walking only after dark, they had plenty of narrow escapes: they accidentally stumbled upon a Hitler Youth camp; got lost perilously close to a subcamp at Jawiszowice; and awoke to find themselves, not as they’d believed, in a secluded wooded grove but a public park where SS men and their families were enjoying the Easter holiday weekend. They were even pursued and shot at by a patrol of German soldiers.

 

The gambles they took — necessary, though reckless — also paid off. A Polish peasant woman, believing them to be escaped Russian POWs, provided them with shelter when they struggled to find somewhere to hide out one day. Luckier still, 10 days into their trek, another Polish woman allowed them to stay in her goat hut, provided them with food, and introduced them to a man who guided the pair through the mountains to the border with Slovakia.

 

But getting to the relative safety of his homeland had never been Vrba’s sole goal. As soon as they crossed the border, Wetzler made contact with Slovakia’s Jewish council, the only communal organization the regime still allowed to function. The men were then subjected to a grueling 48-hour interview and cross-examination, both to establish their credibility and to record their story.

 

From their interviews, Oskar Krasnansky, one of the council’s most senior members, compiled a 32-page, single-spaced report, complete with professional drawings based on Vrba and Wetzler’s testimonies. The document was, Freedland writes, “bald and spare, free of rhetorical fire. It gave the floor to facts rather than passion.”

 

Still, the report methodically detailed the horrors of Auschwitz and, crucially, the fictions deployed by the Nazis from the moment the cattle truck doors were slammed on departure to that at which the gas chamber doors were locked.

 

Thanks to Vrba’s extraordinary memory, the report provided details of individual transports and a country-by-country breakdown of the estimated death toll during his time in the camp.

 

But, over Vrba’s strong objections, the report contained no warning to Hungary’s Jews that the camp was being readied for their destruction. Krasnansky was insistent: the document was to record only what had happened, not provide forecasts about the future.

 

Nevertheless, when two more Jews successfully escaped seven weeks later, Krasnansky added a seven-page addendum to the report which contained their account of the murder of Hungarian Jews when transports began to arrive from the now German-occupied country in May 1944.

 

Vrba was understandably frustrated that the warning he had been so desperate to sound had clearly not reached the latest victims of the Final Solution in time. But this wasn’t the full story. Within hours of the report’s completion, Krasnansky had personally handed the document to Rezso Kasztner, the de facto leader of Hungarian Jewry.

 

Meanwhile, having got their hands on a copy of the report, the anti-Nazi resistance in the country lobbied the most senior Protestant and Catholic bishops in Budapest to intercede with the government on the Jews’ behalf; the former acted immediately, the latter stalled and said it was a matter for the Pope.

 

Thanks to the energetic efforts of a Swiss-based British journalist who turned the report’s somewhat dry language into attention-grabbing press releases, Vrba’s revelations began to filter out in the press, including the New York Times, and on the BBC’s foreign services. Vrba himself was invited to brief a papal envoy who was visiting Slovakia.

 

Horthy’s regime had a long history of antisemitism, but the Jews had a sympathizer close to the center of power: the regent’s daughter-in-law. Furnished with a copy of the report by the Hungarian opposition, Countess Ilona Edelsheim Gyulai passed it to Horthy himself. The regent declared himself appalled by what he read. He also soon came under external pressure — from the Pope, the United States and the Swedish monarch — to stop the deportations.

 

While the Vatican spoke in code and attempted to appeal to Horthy’s better angels, the Roosevelt administration bluntly warned that “all those responsible for carrying out [these] kind of injustices will be dealt with.” Painfully slowly, Horthy — who, as Freedland notes, was primarily motivated by personal self-interest — began to assert his tattered authority, ordering the deportations to stop and frustrating Adolf Eichmann’s impending plan to ship Budapest’s 200,000 Jews to Auschwitz.

 

For over 400,000 Jews who lived in rural Hungary it was, of course, too late. And, when the Nazis finally ousted Horthy in the autumn, the Arrow Cross launched a reign of terror in which thousands of the capital’s Jews were murdered. But Vrba had won enough time to ensure that, when the war ended, over 200,000 Hungarian Jews are believed to have survived.

 

But the feeling that more could — and should — have been done would haunt Vrba for the rest of his life. He would, for instance, never forgive the fact that, as part of Kasztner’s controversial deal with the Germans which secured exit permits for around 1,700 Hungarian Jews, Kasztner agreed to keep silent about what he and the small leadership group surrounding him had learned from Vrba’s report. Kasztner thus gave Eichmann and the SS, writes Freedland, “the only thing they deemed indispensable for their work… order and quiet.”

 

Then there is the question of how the Allies responded to the report. The report reached London speedily and was read by Churchill, who immediately agreed to a request, passed on by Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden, that the railway line between Budapest and Auschwitz should be bombed. But, once passed down the chain of command, military objections were raised as to the feasibility of such a raid.

 

The US, too, opted for inaction. “Bureaucratic buck-passing and paper shuffling,” as Freedland describes it, characterized the response of US diplomats in Switzerland when they received the report. Urgent appeals for bombing, passed through Jewish community contacts in the US, met a wall of resistance. Roosevelt himself decided that the US could end up “accused of participating in this horrible business” were its bombs to end up killing Jews.

 

Reactions to the report in London and Washington also revealed that, despite the horrors it contained, old prejudices remained unshaken. The US Army magazine, Yank, for instance, declined to use material from it in a feature on Nazi war crimes, requesting instead “a less Jewish account.” Meanwhile, in the UK Foreign Office, civil servants bemoaned the “usual Jewish exaggeration” and the amount of time expended on “these wailing Jews.”

 

But, alongside these responses, there was also a swirl of disbelief surrounding the report’s revelations: one which affected not only the Allies but even some Jews themselves. It was perhaps best captured by the words of the French-Jewish philosopher Raymond Aron: “I knew, but I didn’t believe it. And because I didn’t believe it, I didn’t know.”

 

“I think this goes to something very profound about human nature and our limited ability to hear terrible news,” says Freedland. “We can have the information without it ever becoming something we fully, truly believe.”

 

Facts, he says, have to be combined with belief before they become knowledge, which is itself the spur to action. For all his insights into how the Nazis were using deception to perpetrate their terrible crimes, the teenage Vrba hadn’t reckoned on such sentiments.

 

After the war, Vrba returned to his native Czechoslovakia, later living in Israel and Britain before finally settling in Canada. He married twice — the author interviewed first and second wives Gerta and Robin for this book — and had two daughters, Helena and Zuza. Vrba also had a successful academic career as a biochemist.

 

He also became what Freedland terms an “ultra-witness”: writing his own memoirs; giving expert testimony in multiple cases involving war criminals and Holocaust deniers; and sharing his perhaps unparalleled insights into the working of Auschwitz with the foremost chroniclers of the Shoah, including the historian Martin Gilbert and documentary-maker Claude Lanzmann.

 

Vrba’s story, however, never obtained the wider recognition or status afforded to other rescuers, like Oskar Schindler, or fellow survivors such as Elie Wiesel or Primo Levi.

 

“I think it’s because he was an awkward, uncomfortable witness who spoke awkward, uncomfortable truths,” says Freedland. “He pointed an accusing finger, partly at Whitehall and Washington… [but], much more sensitively, at a limited number of individuals in the Jewish leadership, specifically in Budapest. That was not a story many people wanted to hear in Rudolf Vrba’s lifetime.”

 

But, as Freedland says, reactions to Vrba’s story reflect a wider issue with how Holocaust survivors have often been treated.

 

“I think we — the media, educators, and others — have put, and continue to put, a very unfair pressure on Holocaust survivors to serve up a sort of comforting, healing wisdom and to make us feel better for having spoken to them,” he says.

 

This pressure, he continues, denies survivors the opportunity to express “a range of responses to the gravest possible trauma, including anger.” Vrba’s response, of course, was anger — an anger which few readers of the book will conclude was unjustified.

 

But, as Freedland says, reactions to Vrba’s story reflect a wider issue with how Holocaust survivors have often been treated.

 

“I think we — the media, educators, and others — have put, and continue to put, a very unfair pressure on Holocaust survivors to serve up a sort of comforting, healing wisdom and to make us feel better for having spoken to them,” he says.

 

This pressure, he continues, denies survivors the opportunity to express “a range of responses to the gravest possible trauma, including anger.” Vrba’s response, of course, was anger — an anger which few readers of the book will conclude was unjustified.

 

 

Milestone: Yehuda Samet, 84, survived Bergen Belsen, Tree of Life Attack. https://www.timesofisrael.com/holocaust-survivor-who-escaped-tree-of-life-synagogue-massacre-dies-at-84/

 

 

Inyanay Diyoma

 

 

Iceland arrests 5 terrorists. https://www.timesofisrael.com/iceland-police-arrest-four-in-first-ever-suspected-terror-plot/

 

2 die in tourist bus crash in Republic of Georgia. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360311

 

Ramming attack. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360330

 

Golani stops another drive-by attack on Har Bracha. https://www.timesofisrael.com/idf-says-troops-opened-fire-at-group-of-armed-palestinians-near-nablus-killing-one/

 

34 guns seized in smuggling attempt. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360364

 

N. Korea launches missiles. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360347

 

Pakistan has a delegation to Israel. https://www.timesofisrael.com/visiting-israel-pakistani-delegation-promotes-vision-of-peace-one-step-at-a-time/

 

Danger from stray Bedouin Bullets. https://www.timesofisrael.com/stray-bullet-fired-at-bedouin-wedding-hits-car-in-southern-kibbutz/

 

77Dead in sinking of Lebanese Migrant Boat. https://www.timesofisrael.com/at-least-77-dead-as-lebanese-migrant-boat-sinks-off-syrian-coast/

 

Moon launch postponed due to storm. https://www.timesofisrael.com/nasa-scraps-third-attempt-at-moon-launch-due-to-tropical-storm/

 

Mob hit in Acre as car explodes. https://www.timesofisrael.com/man-seriously-injured-by-acre-car-explosion-in-apparent-mob-hit/

 

Protests in Iran continue. https://www.jpost.com/middle-east/article-718064

 

Gun toting Antisemite threatens Yeshiva Boys. https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/antisemitism/article-718002

 

Underwater eruption spreads water into upper atmosphere. https://www.jpost.com/science/article-718031

 

Netanyahu meets head Litvak Rabbi. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360306

 

Antisemitic cartoon on train to Uman. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360365

 

Man asking for quiet stabbed to death by Synagogue. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360339

 

Total 4 Shachidim battled IDF. https://www.timesofisrael.com/clashes-as-israeli-troops-surround-jenin-home-of-tel-aviv-terrorists-family/

A bullet to the head stopped him. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360427

 

DeSantis deploys National Guard for Hurricane. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360417

 

Hurricane 2 mph shy of Cat. 5 https://www.foxnews.com/live-news/hurricane-ian-tracker-2022-news-path-weather-09-28-2022

 

Hurricane could effect US food supply. https://www.foxbusiness.com/economy/hurricane-ian-may-spike-food-prices

 

Remote Control Riot Control in Chevron. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360374

 

Terrorist was killed on Shabbos. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360353

 

Multi-shooting near Pittsburgh. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360366

 

Terrorist explosive device in gas station. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360367

 

Terrorist try to sabotage train. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360386

 

Sen. Manchin caves in. https://www.foxnews.com/politics/manchins-energy-permitting-proposal-stripped-funding-bill-gop-progressive-opposition

 

Fetterman tops Oz, the cardiac surgeon and celebrity doctor, 51%-44% among those likely to vote in the general election, according to a Marist College Poll in Pennsylvania. https://www.foxnews.com/politics/pennsylvania-showdowns-fetterman-topping-oz-shapiro-leading-mastriano-new-poll

 

Tens of thousands flee Putin’s Draft. https://www.foxnews.com/world/russias-neighbors-see-surge-migrants-men-flee-putins-draft

 

Fetal Heart Beat at 6weeks. https://www.foxnews.com/media/pediatrician-rips-planned-parenthood-redefining-fetal-heartbeat-back-stacey-abrams-claim

 

N. Korea 3rd ballistic missile. https://www.foxnews.com/world/north-korea-fires-third-ballistic-missile-ahead-vp-harris-arrival-seoul

 

17 Lev Tahor Members arrested in Mexico. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360385

 

Yeshiva Fellows learn with Prisoners. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360428

 

Shas looking to pick up Arab Votes. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360432

 

Lawyer named one of the top influential Jews. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360419

 

Crown Prince becomes Saudi PM. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360414

 

Autumn or not warm temperatures in Israel. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360420

 

Temple Mt. Violence. https://www.ynetnews.com/article/hkrwysgzi#autoplay

 

Jihadi Spiritual Leader dies at 96. https://www.ynetnews.com/article/ry4zvn1fi

 

Islamic Jihad claims attacks. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360403

 

Allenby Crossing to be 24/7. https://www.timesofisrael.com/liveblog-september-28-2022/

 

Woman kills male partner. https://www.timesofisrael.com/woman-arrested-after-partner-found-dead-in-netanya-apartment/

 

Underwater heat killing Coral and more. https://www.timesofisrael.com/underwater-heat-inferno-ravages-mediterranean-corals-turning-them-to-skeletons/

 

Nefertiti buried in King Tut Tomb. https://www.timesofisrael.com/tutankhamuns-tomb-may-conceal-fabled-beauty-nefertiti-says-archaeologist/

 

Road Rage suspect left in cop car in train tracks. https://www.timesofisrael.com/video-shows-train-smashing-into-colorado-cop-car-in-which-suspect-was-held/

 

Terrorists throw explosive devices. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360380

 

US will respond to Russian use of Nukes. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360383

 

20 Ukrainian Soldiers treated in Israel. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360376

 

Iran on Sunday filed indictments against 14 individuals over killing of scientist. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360382

 

Israel rejects Russian annexation. https://www.timesofisrael.com/israel-rejects-annexation-votes-in-occupied-ukraine-as-russian-proxies-claim-victory/

 

Italian Leader once lauded Hezballah and Syria. https://www.timesofisrael.com/italy-far-right-leader-once-hailed-hezbollah-iran-as-defenders-of-syrian-christians/

 

Gas Leaks a terror attack according to Russia. https://www.timesofisrael.com/kyiv-says-nord-stream-gas-leaks-are-a-terrorist-attack-by-moscow/

 

Death toll rises to 76 in Iran. https://www.timesofisrael.com/rights-group-says-at-least-76-dead-as-iran-protests-rage-despite-violent-crackdown/

 

Asteroid crash on purpose. https://www.timesofisrael.com/nasa-to-crash-craft-into-asteroid-in-first-ever-test-of-planetary-defense/

 

Man murdered his wife and then burnt the body. https://www.timesofisrael.com/man-arrested-after-wife-found-dead-in-burning-home/

 

Iran dissident growing. https://www.timesofisrael.com/in-iran-the-sparks-of-dissent-are-multiplying/

 

COS to allow some targeted terrorists. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360483

 

Hamas threatens Israel. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360488

 

Brave terrorist flee into school to avoid IDF video. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360453

 

Are the Americans meddling in Israeli elections? https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360492

 

Orthodox and Christian Groups go to SCOTUS over religious discrimination. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360490

 

Is Biden and his climate change behind the sabotage of the Russian Pipe Line? https://www.forbes.com/sites/michaelshellenberger/2022/09/27/nato-says-sabotage-behind-destruction-of-natural-gas-pipelines/

 

Fire breaks out in children’s hospital. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360487

 

Woman hit by train in locked police car on train tracks has injuries. https://www.autoblog.com/2022/09/27/woman-hit-by-train-police-car/

 

Hope for Alzheimer. https://www.aol.com/news/experimental-alzheimers-drug-slowed-cognitive-233112923.html

 

Harry and Meagan demoted behind Princess Anne and cousins. https://www.aol.com/lifestyle/prince-harry-meghan-markle-demoted-170100889.html

 

Aaron Judge ties Roger Maris record. https://www.aol.com/sports/aaron-judge-hits-61st-home-011133327.html

 

Israel must take Iran’s threat against Dimona seriously. https://www.algemeiner.com/2022/09/28/irans-threats-against-israels-nuclear-facilities-must-be-taken-seriously-israels-atomic-energy-head-warns/

 

Rutgers NJ egging of Jewish Frat. https://www.algemeiner.com/2022/09/28/egging-of-jewish-fraternity-house-on-rosh-hashanah-being-investigated-by-rutgers-university-police/

 

S. Korea first Asian trade deal with Israel. https://www.algemeiner.com/2022/09/28/south-korea-becomes-first-asian-country-to-ratify-free-trade-deal-with-israel/

 

Why don’t these congresswomen defend Iranian Hijab Protests? https://www.algemeiner.com/2022/09/28/why-havent-linda-sarsour-ilhan-omar-and-rashida-tlaib-even-mentioned-irans-hijab-protests/

 

E. Oakland CA school shooting of 6 Adults. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360481

 

Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement) falls on Oct. 5 — which is also the state’s “student count day,” the one day a year when the number of students who attend school determines how much that district will receive in state funds the following year. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360486

 

Film from drone of explosive devices in yesterday’s battle in Jenin. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360459

 

You come a pick a ripe Banana Republic: https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360492

 

Arab criminal gangs. https://www.timesofisrael.com/suspect-killed-another-seriously-hurt-in-shootout-with-police-in-nazareth/

 

Two residents of the Arab town of Maale Iron arrested on extortion. https://www.timesofisrael.com/two-men-suspected-of-extorting-and-kidnapping-man-suspending-him-from-a-tree/

 

Shooting in Chevron hills. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360472

 

Russia to annex parts of Ukraine. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360522

 

Lev Tahor Cult breaks free (probably bribed) from captivity. https://www.timesofisrael.com/lev-tahor-members-break-out-of-mexican-shelter-escape-in-waiting-vehicle/

 

Iraq vs. Iranian Drone Bombing. https://www.timesofisrael.com/iraq-summons-iranian-ambassador-following-deadly-drone-bombing-campaign/

 

Joke Marriage w/far-left Judge. https://www.timesofisrael.com/in-step-toward-civil-marriage-jerusalem-court-accepts-zoom-weddings-from-utah/

 

UTJ leader angry at Deri and Saar. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360520

 

Fungi in Tumors may help detection. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360498

 

Don’t push secular education on Charedim. https://www.ynetnews.com/article/hkcpqwkbi

 

US w/thousands killed of collateral damage in Iraq & Afghanistan suddenly worries about dead 7year old (may be a blood libel). https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360543

 

Ian death toll at least 17. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360553 SC next.

 

Iranian Revolutionary Guards and Hezbollah have decided in recent days to change the location of sensitive weapons and missiles. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360542

 

Argentina man falls on tracks before train. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360572

 

Charedi Draft Protest. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360528

 

Biden Moment where is Jackie? https://www.timesofisrael.com/wheres-jackie-biden-asks-for-recently-deceased-congresswoman-at-event/

 

Terminating Hatred Arnold delivers msg. https://www.timesofisrael.com/arnold-schwarzenegger-delivers-message-against-hatred-in-first-visit-to-auschwitz/

 

Rebel MK barred from Knesset. https://www.timesofisrael.com/rebel-ex-mk-chikli-barred-from-running-with-likud-which-vows-high-court-appeal/

 

Shaked deports family of terrorist. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360460

 

Down again to 59 seats. https://www.israelnationalnews.com/news/360467

 

Have a wonderful, healthy, peaceful Shabbos and Gmar Chatima Tova,

Rachamim Pauli