Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Results of the Long-COVID Survey Among Children in Israel

 https://www.gov.il/en/departments/news/13092021-01

In conclusion, in accordance with the data collected from around the world, it is evident that coronavirus has long term effects not only on the adult population but among children as well. The rate of reported long-term infection means that there are thousands of children in Israel who experience long term symptoms.

New Omicron variant fills up children's hospitals

 https://edition.cnn.com/2021/12/27/health/covid-kids-hospitals/index.html

A five-fold increase in pediatric admissions in New York City this month. Close to double the numbers admitted in Washington, DC. And nationwide, on average, pediatric hospitalizations are up 48% in just the past week.
The highly transmissible Omicron variant is teaming up with the busy holiday season to infect more children across the United States than ever before, and children's hospitals are bracing for it to get even worse.

Rand Paul's ridiculous answer on whether the election was 'stolen'

 https://edition.cnn.com/2021/01/25/politics/rand-paul-stolen-election-2020-abc/index.html

Even now -- after the inauguration of Joe Biden as the 46th president, after the January 6 riot at the US Capitol, after the myriad lawsuit dismissals -- Rand Paul can't bring himself to say that the 2020 election was not, in fact, stolen.
In an appearance on ABC's "This Week" Sunday, the Kentucky Republican was asked just that question by George Stephanopoulos. And here's what he said:
"Well, what I would suggest is -- what I would suggest is that if we want greater confidence in our elections, and 75% of Republicans agree with me, is that we do need to look at election integrity and we need to see if we can restore confidence in the elections."
Well, senator, no.
Here's why: It is a FACT -- based on a total lack of objective evidence and the rejection of lawsuit after lawsuit filed by former President Donald Trump and his legal team -- that there was no widespread election fraud in the 2020 race. (Which, by the way, makes it a lot like all the other presidential elections that experts have studied in search of fraud.)
That FACT is not overridden by the opinion of Republican voters who say they don't have faith in the process. The reason they don't have faith in the process is that Trump -- as well as his enablers like Paul -- spent the last three months (and, really, the last four years) telling their supporters that the whole election system was rigged against them. So is it any wonder that so many Republicans -- contra objective evidence -- believe that the election wasn't entirely above board? Of course not!

Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Resurrection of the Dead- Rav Moshe Shapiro

 Rav Moshe Shapiro - Exile and Exodus

Rashi explains that the refutation of Geviha ben Pesisa demonstrates how the guidance of the world is the greatest revelation of the ultimate Resurrection, for we see how those who never existed before are born and live, certainly those who once existed will return and live-if life develops from nothing, surely life should develop from the fullness of life.

Clearly, the debate was not whether the dead will come back to life. The debate was how to read the constant guidance of the world. The apostate claimed that the Creator reveals in His guidance one direction, and Geviha ben Pesisa tells him to contemplate and reflect, and he will see how the Creator pointedly reveals the fact of the ultimate Resurrection.

Further in the same section, the Talmud states (Sanhedrin 92a): "Rabbi Tevi said in the name of Rabbi Yoshiyah, "What is the meaning of that which is written (Mishlei 30:16), "Sheol and the womb ... ?"'' Sheol is the place to which man proceeds, as the Mishnah states (Avos ,1:22), "Let not your inclination promise you that sheol is your escape." To sheol, man is brought in fulfillment of the decree, "For you are dust, and to dust you shall return (Bereshis 3:19)." Yet the verse juxtaposes this with the womb from which man emerges, implying a shared quality to both.
Of this, the Talmud asks, "What connection is there between sheol and the womb? Rather, to tell you, just as the in, womb takes in and brings out, so too sheol takes in and brings out." In other words, the commonality of sheol and the womb is that both take in something and bring out life- what the womb takes in is a seed that forms life, and what sheol takes in is a seed that forms life. In the words of Rashi, "The womb takes in the seed and brings out the newborn; also sheol takes in and brings out for the Resurrection of the Dead." The Talmud continues: "Surely, the matter is a fortiori, the womb, which takes in silently, brings forth amidst great noise, certainly sheol, which takes in amidst great noise brings forth amidst great noise." The underlying implication of this inference is that the womb takes in something utterly meaningless, yet brings forth something most meaningful. Indeed, the Hebrew word for "meaning" is mashma'us, the root of which is shemiah, indicating audibility; in contrast, the Talmud refers to that which the womb takes in as a thing of silence-it does not have substance and it does not speak anything, undeserving of the designation davar, a thing that speaks (cf. Shabbos 58b). Yet what this nothingness brings forth is a complete human being who declares his existence with a greal voice, as is well known: when a newborn emerges into the world, it does so amidst a great cry, announcing, "Here I am."

Conversely, sheol takes in what it takes in amidst great noise. It takes in something respectable and significant, an entity of mashma'us, of meaning, truly deserving of the designation davar, a thing that speaks. Indeed, there is no greater davar than man (cf. Bereshis 2:7 and Targum), especially a great man, such as Rabbi Akiva, the foundation of the Oral Torah (cf. Menachos 29b), who was also brought to burial. Yet, in relation lo the ultimate human being that will eventually arise at the Resurrection of the Dead, this great noise this entire man brought to burial is like the seed in relation to the complete human being that emerges from the womb.

In conclusion, the Talmud states, "From here is a refutation to those who say that the Resurrection of the Dead does not derive from the Torah." When the Torah writes sheol and the womb in juxtaposition, it writes the Resurrection; their shared attribute teaches that sheol is also a womb, just as in Talmudic terms the womb bears the designation kever, grave (Oholos 7:4). 

 Course of the World 

The verse that juxtaposes sheol and the womb is from the wisdom of King Solomon, and Geviha hen Pesisa expresses the same concept when he says, "The nonexistent come to life, even more so those who once lived." If we observe in the world the materialization of' a complete creation from a drop of nothing, how could we not perceive the eventual emergence of a much greater creation from this complete creation? Moreover, the contrast between what is placed in the womb and the human being that emerges is the contrast between what is placed in the ground and the ultimate human being that will eventually arise by the Resurrection of the Dead. And as mentioned earlier, the discussion is not only of ordinary people. The greatest people were brought to burial-the Fathers, the Mothers, and all the great ones. All of them will arise when the dead come to life, and everything that had been brought to burial will be revealed as merely the seminal drop from which their ultimate form emerged.

From this, we learn that the Resurrection of the Dead needs to be evident from within the natural course of the world. Anyone who believes the Resurrection to be a new existence in the opposite direction of the world's guidance, some type of phenomenon that falls out of the sky and not an event from within the order of creation, is a complete denier, as Rashi states. Surely, the Creator is omnipotent-He can create something from nothing and He can revert all that exists into nothing. But anyone who believes this to be the only foundation of the Resurrection-it exists in creation only be cause of the Creator's ability to do anything and not because· the course of the world compels it, of such a believer Rashi states, "What do we have to do with his belief?" 1n other words, he believes, but his belief does not relate to us because we cannot see it in the world we both live in. As for his tradition, we did not receive it, and we do not know of it. Faith in the Resurrection requires us to see it as emanating from within our world.

This explains why the Mishnah, according to Rashi and others who read this in the Mishnah, ascribes apostasy to one who says that the Resurrection of the Dead does not derive from the Torah. As we have seen, to have faith in the Resurrection is to have faith in a world order that declares the Resurrection; the very structure of our lives needs to point to it and show that the direction of the world is from death to life. This is having faith that the Resurrection derives from the Torah, for the 'Torah is the architecture of creation (Zohar 2:16la), and all that is explicit in the Torah is explicit in creation; anyone who contemplates sees it.
Succinctly, faith is not in something that will be, but in something that is. The fundamental faith of the Resurection is not whether an event will transpire; this was never a question nor was this the subject of the debate. Certainly, whatever the Creator wants will occur. "Everything that God desires, He makes in the heavens and upon the earth, in the seas and in all the depths (Tehillim 135:6)." This is how it is in the depths of sheol and this is how it is on the face of the earth. But this is the general principle of faith. Faith in the Resurrection is the perception that the existing course of the world compels it. This faith demands that we live now within an existence that declares, "Woe to you wicked ones, for you say that the dead will not live-if the nonexistent come to life, even more so those who once lived."

Rabbi Gershon Edelstein: ‘No Leniency In Lashon Hara Permits People To Spill Blood And Murder A Jew’

 https://vinnews.com/2021/12/28/rabbi-gershon-edelstein-no-leniency-in-lashon-hara-permits-people-to-spill-blood-and-murder-a-jew/

In a discussion with Chareidi educators including Yad Aharon Rosh Yeshiva Rabbi Yehoshua Eichenstein published by the Kan and Mako news outlets, Rabbi Edelstein quoted the gemara in Sanhedrin which says that “one who has relations with a married woman has a portion in the World to Come but one who publicly shames his friend has no portion in the World to Come.” He added that “even if according to halacha we need to beware of someone, there is no leniency or even hint of leniency allowing people to spill blood and murder a Jew. It is obvious that this is deemed murdering him and it is obvious that the murderer has no portion in the World to Come. It is clear that the great pressure he was under led him to lose his sanity and kill himself. This is called murder.”

 

Rabbi Shlomo Aviner: At Present, Walder’s Books Are Permitted To Be Read

 https://vinnews.com/2021/12/28/rabbi-shlomo-aviner-at-present-walders-books-are-permitted-to-be-read/

Whatever is written further about Chaim Walder is based on the current level of knowledge we have. If there will be new revelations, we will have to reopen the issue.
Every person is presumed innocent until otherwise proven. This is known in secular law as the presumption of innocence. He is not a rasha who needs to prove that he has not sinned. Nothing is yet proven.
Proof must take place not in the media or social media but in Beis Din which investigates and probes, meaning that the investigation is adversarial and takes place in the presence of both sides as the Torah says “Hear disputes between your brothers” (Devarim 1:16)
Up to this point the complaints from women were not investigated in this adversarial manner.

In Suicide Note, Chaim Walder Insists He Is Innocent, Summons Rabbis To ‘A Din Torah In Heaven’

 https://thejewishvoice.com/2021/12/in-suicide-note-chaim-walder-insists-he-is-innocent-summons-rabbis-to-a-din-torah-in-heaven/

Walder wrote that “I have gone to summon Yehuda Silman and Shmuel Eliyahu to a Din Torah in heaven. I have come to the conclusion that in the world of lies I have no chance of proving my innocence. I am dealing with horrific lies covered in anonymity, without any possibility of proving that they have no factual basis.

“I have reached the extreme limit of human suffering which is possible. They insulted me about the things which I was best at and which I dedicated my life to- supporting and protecting children.

Ben and Jerry’s VP wins antisemite of the year

 https://www.jpost.com/diaspora/article-689934

Antisemitism watchdog StopAntisemitism.org has announced the winner of their 2021 “Antisemite of the year” award – granting the (dis)honor to Anuradha Mittal, the head of Ben & Jerry’s Board of Directors and Vice President of Ben & Jerry’s Foundation Inc.

Mittal spearheaded Ben & Jerry’s BDS efforts to stop the sale and distribution of its ice cream to those living in the West Bank. In response, multiple US states, such as Florida and Illinois, divested their pension fund holdings from parent company Unilever.

Mittal bested singer Dua Lipa, who criticized Israel during last May’s clashes with Hamas, and US Representative Marjorie Taylor-Greene, who – among many controversial statements – claimed that California wildfires are the result of “Jewish space lasers” targeting the Earth.

Vaccination Requirement: Workplaces

 https://www1.nyc.gov/site/doh/covid/covid-19-vaccine-workplace-requirement.page

As of December 27, workers in New York City who perform in-person work or interact with the public in the course of business must show proof they have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Workers will then have 45 days to show proof of their second dose (for Pfizer or Moderna vaccines).

Hard-hit By Covid, Israel's Ultra-Orthodox Slow to Get Shots

 https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-12-28/hard-hit-by-covid-israel-s-ultra-orthodox-slow-to-get-shots

Levy is among the hundreds of thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jews who have yet to receive their COVID-19 shots. The group has some of the lowest vaccination rates in the country despite being hit hard by the pandemic.

Facing the new coronavirus variant omicron, officials are now scrambling to ramp up vaccination rates in a population that has so far been slow to roll up their sleeves.

Florida COVID Cases Continue to Rocket, Hit 39,000 During Christmas Weekend Surge

 https://www.newsweek.com/florida-covid-cases-continue-rocket-upward-hit-39000-during-christmas-weekend-boom-1663534

Florida reported a total of 39,000 COVID cases Monday representing the Christmas weekend, continuing the spike in cases over the past week as the Omicron variant spreads across the country.

21,040 cases were reported in Florida on Saturday in addition to 17,955 reported Sunday, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Over the past week that ended Sunday, Florida reported over 124,000 cases of COVID, a 332 percent increase from the 28,841 reported the week prior, according to Florida Today as part of a USA Today network analysis of Johns Hopkins University COVID data from across the country.

Hospitalizations are increasing as well, but at a much slower rate, with just under 5,000 likely COVID patients admitted to hospitals last week, compared to just over 3,000 the week before, Florida Today reported.

Biden Signs $768B Defense Bill That Keeps Women From Draft, Alters Military Justice System

 https://www.newsweek.com/biden-signs-768b-defense-bill-that-keeps-women-draft-alters-military-justice-system-1663508

Republicans were able to prevent attempts to include women in the draft and added a measure that prohibits dishonorable discharge for service members who refuse to take the COVID vaccine.

Rabbi Gordimer: Rabbi Riskin is not a Chareidim vs Modern Orthodox issue

Times of Israel by Rabbi A Gordimer

Rabbi Gordimer is a kashruth professional, a member of the Executive Committee of the Rabbinical Council of America, and a member of the New York Bar. The opinions expressed in this article are solely those of the author

Since my recent essay on the issue was attacked in The Jerusalem Post by Isi Leibler, who cast the discussion in terms of Charedi versus Modern Orthodox, corruption versus integrity, and fairness versus prejudice, in an op-ed loaded with negative and charged hyperbole, I would like to respond with some more objective facts, rather than the innuendo and disparagement that has come from those who evade the issues and instead sling mud when they do not like the data that is presented. As will be seen, Mr. Leibler’s assertions and insights here are quite off-target, and the Israeli Chief Rabbinate is conducting itself understandably and reasonably given the circumstances.

Mr. Leibler mounts his journalistic assault on the Chief Rabbinate and those who respect the Chief Rabbinate’s right to deliberate about whether or not to extend Rabbi Riskin’s tenure as Chief Rabbi of Efrat by alleging comprehensive corruption of the Chief Rabbinate and painting it as the embodiment of ultra-Orthodoxy, while depicting Rabbi Riskin as representative of the Modern Orthodox, moderate and sensible position. Aside from the fact that Mr. Leibler fails to demonstrate his allegations of corruption of the Chief Rabbinate as an institution (he notes one previous Chief Rabbi who was dismissed and convicted, and nothing further of substance), the truth is that the discomfort which the Chief Rabbinate likely harbors regarding Rabbi Riskin’s extended tenure is shared by the mainstream Modern Orthodox rabbinate as well. Let’s look at a few examples, in addition to those already presented in my previous essay. (The examples there, such as the rabbinic ordination of women, praising Jesus as “a great Orthodox rabbi”, extolling Christian teachings about salvation, and women leading public prayer for men, are frowned upon by most Orthodox rabbis and laypeople across the spectrum, be they “ultra-Orthodox” or Modern Orthodox).

Rabbi Riskin has sought to apply a more lenient set of conversion standards – standards that do not require a prospective convert to fully accept to observe all of the Commandments. This approach is not consistent with halachic consensus. Mainstream conversion standards, as required by preeminent sages such as Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik, and the vast majority of contemporary halachic authorities across the spectrum (including Modern Orthodox and Religious Zionist rabbinic scholars), indeed require a prospective convert to fully accept to observe all of the Commandments. This is the standard of the Chief Rabbinate, of the Rabbinical Council of America, of virtually all rabbinic courts in the world, and it is the standard that I was taught at Yeshiva University by Rabbi Soloveitchik’s closest disciples and in his name.

Rabbi Riskin has established a broad Jewish-Christian interfaith program, the Center for Jewish-Christian Understanding and Cooperation (CJCUC), at his Ohr Torah Stone institution, engaging in the type of interfaith religious study and discourse that rabbinic sages from across the spectrum have censured. (Please see here for halachic rulings on such interfaith activity.) On the CJCUC home page, Rabbi Riskin writes:

But sometime in the second century CE – perhaps because in our pride we forgot that it was the Torah’s superiority, and not our own, which had brought us such success – we became unable, or unworthy, of sustaining the momentum.

We stopped “hearing” God’s voice, were forced to leave history, and virtually forgot the mission of the third covenant.

Remarkably, the Christians in many ways continued where we left off. Maimonides, in the unexpurgated versions of the Mishneh Torah, records: “God’s ways are too wondrous to comprehend. All those matters relating to Jesus of Nazareth and the Ishmaelite who came after him are only serving to clear the way for King Messiah, to prepare the whole world ‘…to worship God with one accord’ (Zephaniah 3:9). Thus the messianic hope, the Torah and the commandments have become familiar topics… among the inhabitants of the far-flung islands at the ends of the globe…”

…Now that we as a people and a nation have returned to history, and the Christian world is beginning to recognize the continuing legitimacy of its elder brother’s covenant, grafting itself onto us as a branch is grafted to the roots, we must each complete our return to God, join hands and bring a religion of love, morality, pluralism and peace to a desperate, thirsting world.

Aside from taking the words of Maimonides totally out of context so as to change their intent (readers are advised to see the original and judge for themselves), Rabbi Riskin shockingly affirms a form of Replacement Theology, and he further maintains that Christianity has grafted itself onto Judaism to form a new universal joint religion. This notion has been rejected by Orthodox (and non-Orthodox) rabbis across the spectrum and has nothing to do with Charedi versus Modern Orthodox views, or with an allegedly corrupt Chief Rabbinate. (CJCUC has received funding in part by two Christian ministries, Zion’s Gate International and John Hagee Ministries. This is a very important point.)

The issue of the Chief Rabbinate and Rabbi Riskin has nothing to do with Charedi versus Modern Orthodox approaches. It has to do with the propriety of a rabbi’s maverick positions, while the rabbi is a paid representative of a rabbinate whose positions he does not represent in numerous ways. Orthodox rabbis across the spectrum are quite uncomfortable with many of Rabbi Riskin’s approaches, and in fact, his own rabbinic colleagues from Yeshiva University and Religious Zionist circles are among his most outspoken critics.

Let’s please stick with the facts and discuss this issue on its merits.

Bambi: cute, lovable, vulnerable ... or a dark parable of antisemitic terror?

 https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/dec/25/bambi-cute-lovable-vulnerable-or-a-dark-parable-of-antisemitic-terror?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

It’s a saccharine sweet story about a young deer who finds love and friendship in a forest. But the original tale of Bambi, adapted by Disney in 1942, has much darker beginnings as an existential novel about persecution and antisemitism in 1920s Austria.

Now, a new translation seeks to reassert the rightful place of Felix Salten’s 1923 masterpiece in adult literature and shine a light on how Salten was trying to warn the world that Jews would be terrorised, dehumanised and murdered in the years to come. Far from being a children’s story, Bambi was actually a parable about the inhumane treatment and dangerous precariousness of Jews and other minorities in what was then an increasingly fascist world, the new translation will show.

In 1935, the book was banned by the Nazis, who saw it as a political allegory on the treatment of Jews in Europe and burned it as Jewish propaganda. “The darker side of Bambi has always been there,” said Jack Zipes, professor emeritus of German and comparative literature at the University of Minnesota and translator of the forthcoming book.

“But what happens to Bambi at the end of the novel has been concealed, to a certain extent, by the Disney corporation taking over the book and making it into a pathetic, almost stupid film about a prince and a bourgeois family.”