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Iranian plot in Turkey reportedly targeted Israels ex-consul to Istanbul – The Times of Israel

Posted By on June 30, 2022

An Iranian plot to attack Israelis centered on targeting former Israels consul general to Istanbul Yossi Levi-Sfari, according to the Turkish Sabah news outlet.

According to the report, the Iranian attackers were staying in the same hotel as Levi-Sfari and his partner, Ronny Goldberg, and planned to kidnap and then execute the two men.

The Hurriyet Turkish site reported that the Mossad learned at the last minute that a handful of Iranian agents were staying in the hotel and worked together with local Turkish authorities to foil the attack and whisk Levi-Sfari and Goldberg back to Israel.

The IHA news outlet said that seven of the eight Iranian nationals arrested as part of the plot appeared in a Turkish courthouse on Thursday. The men were reportedly arrested with several pistols and silencers that were confiscated by Turkish police.

News of the foiled plot first broke in Turkish media a week ago, the same day that Foreign Minister Yair Lapid who became prime minister on Friday landed in Ankara for a diplomatic visit.

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According to senior Israeli officials, significant intelligence had indicated that Iran was seeking to carry out attacks against Israeli tourists in the country to avenge a series of killings and strikes on Iranian military and nuclear targets that have been attributed to the Jewish state.

A senior security official briefing Hebrew media earlier this month said that the Mossad and local counterparts thwarted three Iranian attacks targeting Israeli civilians in Istanbul in recent weeks.

The security official said Mossad intelligence had led Turkish authorities to 10 members of an Iranian cell who were allegedly planning to kidnap and murder a former Israeli ambassador to Turkey and his partner.

In the wake of the arrests and Lapids visit, Israel on Tuesday lowered its security warning to Turkey to level 3, or moderate, after it had been at its highest level amid weeks of threats and warnings of imminent Israeli attacks.

The National Security Council warned that Irans motivation to carry out attacks remains high, and that it assesses that there are efforts to build infrastructure on the one hand and identify potential Israeli and Jewish targets on the other hand.

Two Turkish riot police officers walk in front of the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, on June 14, 2022. (Yasin Akgul/AFP)

Israelis are being asked to avoid publicizing details of upcoming trips to Turkey and photos while they are still in the country; to avoid wearing any clothes that could indicate they are from Israel; and to refrain from giving personal details to and having unnecessary contact with strangers.

Iran and Israel have been engaged in a years-long shadow war but tensions have ratcheted up following a string of high-profile incidents Tehran has blamed on Israel.

The Islamic Republic claimed Israel was responsible for the killing of Revolutionary Guards Colonel Hassan Sayyad Khodaei in his Tehran home on May 22. Khodaeis assassination was the most high-profile killing inside Iran since the November 2020 killing of top nuclear scientist Mohsen Fakhrizadeh.

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Iranian plot in Turkey reportedly targeted Israels ex-consul to Istanbul - The Times of Israel

Bank of Israel to hike rates by 1/2 pct point to get on top of inflation – Reuters.com

Posted By on June 30, 2022

The Bank of Israel building is seen in Jerusalem June 16, 2020. REUTERS/Ronen Zvulun

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JERUSALEM, June 30 (Reuters) - The Bank of Israel is expected to raise short-term interest rates by half a percentage point next week to a nine-year high in a bid to keep inflation under control amid very low unemployment and strong economic growth.

Of 15 economists polled by Reuters, 14 forecast that the central bank's monetary policy committee (MPC) will raise the benchmark rate (ILINR=ECI) to 1.25% -- its highest level since September 2013 -- from 0.75% in what would be its third straight hike. One other anticipated a 0.25 point increase to 1.0%.

The bank will announce its decision on Monday at 4 p.m. (1300 GMT).

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A half-point increase would be the most aggressive policy move since a 3/4-point reduction in early 2009 during the global financial crisis. It would also match its strongest rate increase since late 2005 and keep up with U.S. rate increases.

The Bank of Israel "wants to make sure the market knows that they are willing to fight inflation hard -- to finish with it and take inflation expectations down," said Psagot Chief Economist Ori Greenfeld.

On the heels of global supply issues and rising wages due to a tight labour market, Israel's annual inflation reached an 11-year high of 4.1% in May, below expectations and far less than in other Western countries.

Economists believe inflation may climb near 5% -- well above the government's annual 1-3% target -- before moderating in 2023. Israel's economy grew 8.2% in 2021 and is expected to expand at least 5% in 2022 and 4% next year, while the jobless rate stands at 3.5%.

The central bank will issue updated macro estimates on Monday.

Analysts also cite recent large rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve and other central banks as pushing Israeli policymakers into a half-point move rather than a quarter-point one. They expect further rate hikes at subsequent meetings to bring the key rate to about 2.5% by the end of the year.

Citi economist Michel Nies said expectations for aggressive hikes stem from the central bank choosing "hawkish" options for the prior two decisions -- raising rates by a quarter percentage-point in April when the market expected 15 basis points and 40 basis points in May versus expectations of a quarter percentage-point.

"This suggests that the Bank of Israel sees the fact that Israel has lower inflation than other economies as an opportunity to get ahead of the curve rather than as an argument for a slower pace of tightening," he said.

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Reporting by Steven Scheer; Editing by Hugh Lawson

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Bank of Israel to hike rates by 1/2 pct point to get on top of inflation - Reuters.com

Bernie Sanders went to war with AIPAC. Now the pro-Israel lobby is pushing back. – Forward

Posted By on June 30, 2022

The AIPAC logo is displayed during the policy conference in Washington, D.C., U.S., on March 25, 2019. Photo by Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg via Getty Images

By Jacob KornbluhJune 30, 2022

The American Israeli Political Action Committee (AIPAC) pushed back Thursday against Sen. Bernie Sanders criticism of their multi-million dollar spending in the Democratic congressional primaries against progressive candidates.

Sanders, an independent senator from Vermont and a progressive firebrand, had declared war in May on the pro-Israel lobby for intervening in high stakes primaries that resulted in the defeat of candidates he had endorsed. On Wednesday he doubled down, calling it out in a statement as a right wing-funded super PAC aimed at defeating progressives and ensuring the Democratic Party advances the agenda of powerful corporations and the billionaire class.

AIPAC officials say theyre actually supporting progressives.

Bernie cant accept the fact that a majority of progressive Democrats in America are pro-Israel, said Patrick Dorton, a spokesperson for AIPACs super PAC, the United Democracy Project.

United Democracy Project raised $22 million since it was launched last December, including $2 million from Republican megadonors Bernie Marcus and Paul Singer. The group has spent over $11 million in recent months on television ads and mailers in highly competitive races and won most of those battles. AIPAC also launched a political action committee that endorsed 329 Democrats and Republicans, and its members have donated more than $11 million in individual contributions directly to the campaigns of who they identified as pro-Israel. The group asserts that 98% of their candidates have won their primary elections to date.

Sanders leveled his most recent criticism of AIPAC as he endorsed Rep. Andy Levin, a Jewish congressman competing with Rep. Haley Stevens in a rare incumbent-vs.-incumbent primary. They seek to represent Michigans redrawn 11th District, which includes most of Detroits Jewish community.

Levin, a member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, drew the ire of AIPAC and its allies for a bill he introduced last year that would advance the two-state solution and restrict Israel from using U.S. taxpayer dollars to expand or annex settlements in the occupied West Bank. Levin has also publicly defended his progressive colleagues, Reps. Rashida Tlaib from Michigan and Ilhan Omar from Minnesota, who have been accused of antisemitism and openly support the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement.

No matter how many misleading statements Bernie makes, it doesnt change the fact that Democratic primary voters are consistently preferring Democratic pro-Israel progressives, Dorton said, calling the candidates endorsed by Sanders out of step and anti-Israel.

The Super PAC recently purchased $910,000 in its first round of television ads, and AIPAC raised nearly $1 million in earmarked contributions to boost Stevens, who is not Jewish, this year.

Levin had slammed Stevens for accepting AIPACs endorsement after it announced its backing of more than 100 Republicans who refused to certify the election of President Joe Biden. In a recent interview, Levin said oft AIPAC: What I really think is happening, and wont work, is a politics of intimidation in the Jewish community to try to tear me down.

AIPAC spokesperson Marshal Wittmann noted the group is backing this election cycle scores of other progressives including over half of the Congressional Black and Hispanic Caucus and nearly half of the Progressive Caucus.

Wittman said it is very revealing that while Stevens has received the support of traditional pro-Israel groups, Levin embraces the support from some of the most hostile and persistent critics of the Jewish state.

Jacob Kornbluh is the Forwards senior political reporter. Follow him on Twitter @jacobkornbluh or email kornbluh@forward.com.

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Bernie Sanders went to war with AIPAC. Now the pro-Israel lobby is pushing back. - Forward

Israel delays travel restrictions on West Bank in apparent gesture to Joe Biden – The Guardian

Posted By on June 30, 2022

Israel has delayed the implementation of strict rules limiting the ability of foreigners to enter and stay in the occupied West Bank, in what is believed to be a gesture to Joe Biden before the US presidents visit to the Middle East next month.

A statement from the high court on Wednesday said the new rules would be shelved until early September, as a decision had not yet been made regarding objections to the proposed policy.

An injunction alleging discriminatory and restrictive criteria was filed by HaMoked, an Israeli non-profit organisation focusing on Palestinian legal rights, last week. The rules were due to come into effect on 5 July.

Palestinian academics, business leaders and rights groups expressed outrage over the policy when it was first outlined in February. Israeli media reported that the postponement follows talks between the Israeli defence minister, Benny Gantz, and US officials, who had voiced strong opposition to the new proposals.

The 97-page ordinance replacing the current four-page document is expected to stifle the Palestinian economy and academia, as well as create complications for hundreds of thousands of Palestinian families with dual nationality already struggling to navigate a convoluted permit system.

Nearly all foreigners would only be granted single entry visas, some valid for just three months, and be forced to leave between visas and wait in some cases for more than a year before reapplying for entry. Residency is limited to a total of five years, making family life and long-term employment almost impossible.

This is going to cause major issues. Some of our board members come here frequently and they need to be able to see their investments. They are destroying Palestinian businesses but also Oslo, said Bassem Khouri, the chief executive of a pharmaceutical company in the West Bank, referring to the 1990s peace process agreements.

Who can live and work here is supposed to be a Palestinian decision. This is designed to isolate us.

There are no provisions at all for some common visa categories, including teachers and journalists working for Palestinian media outlets, as well as culture and tourism, and family visits by siblings, grandparents or grandchildren.

Only 150 foreign students a year may enrol at Palestinian colleges and universities, studying pre-approved subjects, and there is a quota of 100 foreign distinguished lecturers, a designation Israeli authorities will make.

Palestinians holding dual citizenship will have to give the names and ID numbers of family and friends they will visit before they travel, as well as declare whether they own or stand to inherit property in the West Bank.

The new procedures apply only to Palestinians, and not Israeli settler communities living across the Green Line in violation of international law.

Nationals of Jordan, Egypt, Morocco, Bahrain and South Sudan, even if they have citizenship of a second country, will not be allowed to visit the West Bank except under exceptional or humanitarian circumstances.

This last point is thought to have attracted particular displeasure in Washington as it potentially discriminates against US citizens. Israel has been trying for years to negotiate a visa waiver programme with the US.

Its often the case with the occupation that mid-level clerks will come up with something that seems sensible to them, even though there is no justification for it, or clarity on who authorises you to make these decisions about how Palestinians can live, said Jessica Montell, the executive director of HaMoked, which filed an injunction request on behalf of 19 individuals.

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Elements of this policy are clearly not compatible with Israeli rights law or international law, and a slap in the face for Israels partners in the US and Europe too.

The document says the new entry rules will define the levels of authority and the manner of processing from foreigners who wish to enter the Judea and Samaria area, the Israeli government term for the West Bank. Israeli authorities say that travel restrictions into and out of the territory are necessary for security reasons.

Cogat, the Israeli military civil body responsible for implementing government policy in the occupied Palestinian territories, did not respond to a request for comment.

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Israel delays travel restrictions on West Bank in apparent gesture to Joe Biden - The Guardian

House Appropriations seeks to cut off US funding to UN Israel investigation – Jewish Insider

Posted By on June 30, 2022

The House Appropriations Committee adopted amendments to the 2023 State Department and foreign operations funding bill that aim to cut off U.S. funding to the United Nations commission investigating Israel and prevent the U.S. from revoking the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps terrorist designation.

The full Appropriations Committee voted on a series of amendments to the State, Foreign Operations and Related Programs 2023 funding bill on Wednesday before voting to advance the legislation to the full House.

With the support of some Democrats, the committee approved an amendment that seeks to block any U.S. funding from going to the U.N. Human Rights Councils Commission of Inquiry investigating Israel, established following the May 2021 conflict with Gaza.

This amendment ensures taxpayer dollars will not go to this highly controversial commission that has been roundly denounced by members on both sides of the aisle, as well as numerous senior officials from the Biden administration, Rep. Guy Reschenthaler (R-PA) said.

Rep. Barbara Lee (D-CA), who leads the subcommittee on state, foreign operations and related programs, said the amendment was unnecessary and an effort to make Israel a wedge issue. She argued that the U.S. has no ability to specifically reduce funding to any individual activities conducted by the U.N. Human Rights Council.

The State Department has indicated that the only way to implement this amendment is to reduce our payment to the United Nations, Lee said, making the case that this move would weaken our leverage as a council member and would not affect the work of the commission.

Lee also noted that the original draft of the legislation included language supporting efforts to push back on the Commission of Inquiry and anti-Israel bias at the U.N.

Reschenthaler insisted that his amendment would only impact Commission of Inquiry funding.

The committee later approved an amendment by Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-FL) seeking to block the administration from withdrawing the IRGCs terrorism designation and mandate that it complies with the terms of the Iran Nuclear Agreement Review Act and submit any potential Iran nuclear agreement to Congress for review.

The administration has decided against delisting the IRGC and committed to submitting any deal to Congress. Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz (D-FL) called the amendment a political gimmick and a cynical attempt to force a vote on something that is not an issue. She introduced an amendment modifying language in the original text which she said went beyond the scope and responsibility of the Appropriations Committee.

Her amendment to the original amendment passed, with the support of multiple Democrats who have expressed skepticism regarding efforts to re-enter the Iran agreement.

The committee rejected an amendment that aimed to block the administrations move to create an independent Office of Palestinian Affairs within the U.S. Embassy in Israel, a change that Republicans have claimed is an effort to divide Jerusalem in contravention of U.S. law. Existing law contains no specific provisions that would appear to bar the administrations move.

Lee argued that the move merely allows for direct reporting to the State Department, and would bolster U.S. credibility in the region and benefit Israels security.

American diplomacy and engagement are not the rewards to our friends and not the things to hold over the heads of our supposed foes, she said. Diplomacy and engagement serve our own interests.

The panel also voted down an amendment regarding a section of the legislation that requires the secretary of state to submit reports on the activities of the U.N. Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) and the UNHRC to Congress before U.S. funding can be provided to either body.

Language included in the legislation each year requires the secretary of state to report on whether UNRWA funding or operations are supporting terrorist activity and whether UNRWA is making efforts to ensure that agency-funded educational materials are free from material that induces incitement or encourages discrimination, among other provisions. Foggy Bottom must also certify that U.S. participation in the UNHRC is important to the national interest of the United States and that the council is taking significant steps toward reform, including removing Israel as a permanent agenda item.

This language has typically been included in the text of the bill itself but was moved to an accompanying report from the committee chair this year. The bill includes a line requiring the State Department to follow the instructions relating to reports to Congress laid out in the bill report. The proposed amendment would have moved the language from the committee report into the bill.

Diaz-Balart, who introduced the amendment, described it as essential to ensure proper oversight and use of U.S. funding. Rogers speculated that the State Department would attempt to ignore the reporting requirement if it was not included in the bill text.

Lee insisted that the committee was not loosening any conditions related to the Human Rights Council or UNRWA, and emphasized that the pre-existing conditions would remain mandatory.

We have a duty as appropriators to update and streamline our own bills, Lee said. Reporting requirements regularly appear in report language and do not need to be in the bill This language is the same as whats in [last years] bill.

The bill, as approved by the Appropriations Committee, also includes $1.5 million for the U.S. special envoy to monitor and combat antisemitism, a 50% increase over 2022; $1.5 million for the special envoy for Holocaust issues, also a 50% increase; $3.3 billion in security assistance to Israel; $2 million for joint sustainability efforts, $50 million for the Middle East Partnership for Peace Fund; $8 million for regional Arab-Israeli science cooperation and $5 million for refugee resettlement in Israel.

Rep. Lois Frankel (D-FL), a member of the Appropriations committee, had urged committee leadership to double the antisemitism envoys funding, according to a source familiar with her efforts.

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House Appropriations seeks to cut off US funding to UN Israel investigation - Jewish Insider

UCSD gets $1M gift to expand archaeological studies of Israel, eastern Mediterranean – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Posted By on June 30, 2022

UC San Diego has received a $1 million bequest from the late Orange County philanthropist Norma Kershaw to expand its wide-ranging archaeological studies in the eastern Mediterranean, particularly Israel.

Much of the money will be used to support cyber-archaeology, which combines archaeology, computer science, engineering and the natural sciences in ways that help scientists to create rich visualizations of research sites and artifacts.

UCSD captures some of this 3-D digital data with the use of flying drones and underwater camera systems, both of which were used to explore and analyze a 3,500-year-old submerged town along the coast of Greece, the university says.

The program is led by Tom Levy, an archaeologist who works at the UCSD-based Qualcomm Institute, a technology test bed. He says hes especially interested in examining how the culture, climate and environment of theeastern Mediterranean have changed over the past 10,000 years. Hes already conducted such work at Tel Dor, an archaeological site along the coast of Israel.

Norma was a visionary who believed in the importance of archaeology for understanding who we are and how we got here, Levy said in a statement.

For Norma, the aim of creating endowments at leading U.S. universities was her specific love for the archaeology of Israel, and, on a larger scale, to contribute to the greater good of the American society.

Kershaws earlier support included donated money for endowed chairs at UCSD and UCLA.

Excerpt from:

UCSD gets $1M gift to expand archaeological studies of Israel, eastern Mediterranean - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Jewish Population of the World

Posted By on June 30, 2022

Historic Jewish PopulationCountries with the Largest Jewish PopulationJewish Population By Region Americas Asia Oceana Africa Europe

Population

1880

7,800,000

1900

10,600,000

13,500,000

1922

14,400,000

1925

14,800,000

15,700,000

1939

16,728,000

1945

11,000,000

11,500,000

1950

11,297,000

1955

11,800,000

1960

12,079,000

1970

12,585,000

1980

12,819,000

1990

12,868,000

2000

13,250,000

2010

14,049,000

2018

14,606,000

Population

% of World Jewry

2

Israel

6,998,000*

46.1%

3

France

446,000

2.9%

4

Canada

393,500

2.6%

5

U.K.

292,000

1.9%

6

Argentina

175,000

1.2%

7

Russia

150,000

1.0%

8

Germany

118,000

0.8%

9

Australia

118,000

0.8%

10

Brazil

91,500

0.6%

11

South Africa

52,000

0.3%

13

Ukraine

43,000

0.3%

14

Mexico

40,000

0.3%

15

Netherlands

29,700

0.2%

Country

Total Population

Jews

65,000

100

Canada

38,200,000

393,500

United States

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Jewish Population of the World

Good Within Bad – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 30, 2022

In a previous column, we mentioned the idea of giving thanks to Hashem even for our misfortunes. Id like to elaborate on this point further.

Rebbe Nachman of Breslov tells us that all of our suffering comes from a lack of knowledge. If we would be able to focus on the ultimate purpose of our suffering and misfortune, we would realize that it is all a great favor from Hashem.

On that day, Hashem will be one and His name will be one (Zecharia 14). This is a famous pasuk that we say three times a day in Aleinu. But isnt Hashem and His name already One? Our Sages answered this question as follows: During the current pre-messianic era, we say the beracha Hashem is the true judge when something seemingly bad occurs, and the beracha Hashem is good and does good on good news. However, in the future Messianic era, we will make the blessing Hashem is good and does good on everything (Pesachim 30a).

In other words, the difference between the current era and the future messianic era is our ability to recognize Hashems goodness within the bad. This is the meaning of Hashems name currently lacking Oneness.

Rebbe Nachman puts it like this: So it turns out that the concept of One is the ultimate goal, and that goal is all good, since the purpose is only good. Even all the trials and tribulations and bad things a person experiences if they are viewed within the context of the ultimate goal, then certainly they are not bad at all; rather, they are great gifts. Without a doubt, all tribulations come intentionally from Hashem for a persons ultimate good, whether they were sent to remind a person to do teshuva, or whether to cleanse the person of their sins, etc. So, it turns out that all forms of suffering are actually great gifts, for Hashems intent is certainly only for the good (Likutey Moharan I, 65).

Our current task in the pre-messianic era is to have faith that all the trials and tribulations we go through are a great favor from Hashem, despite our inability to comprehend this with our finite minds.

When we take this leap of faith and accept our suffering with joy, we bring salvation not only to ourselves but to the entire world as well, as the Gemara tells us: Rabbi Yehoshua ben Levi says, All who accept their tribulations with joy bring salvation to the world' (Taanis 8a).

May Hashem help us to accept everything with joy and thereby bring true salvation to ourselves and the world.

Continued here:

Good Within Bad - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

From Loneliness To Oneness: The Endless Expansion of Self – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 30, 2022

There is a widespread problem that plagues humanity, leaving us lonely and disconnected. Many people live their lives in a state of ego a state of mind in which one views themselves as an isolated being inside their own body; their own mind, their own world, alone and independent. The consequences of this state of mind are obvious. Since everyone else in the world is separate from us, we will feel disconnected from them; we will also likely feel the need to compete with them to beat them in order to gain self-worth, in order to convince ourselves that were good enough. This often means pushing others down just to feel like were better than them. We might even hate certain people or even go so far as to hurt them because they dont make us feel good or perhaps because they challenge our own self-worth. But most of all, this state of consciousness leaves us lonely, abandoned, and empty. (This state of ego also makes us feel independent and separate from Hashem, resulting in the ultimate feeling of spiritual emptiness.) However, there is another option.

Living as a Soul

Rather than succumbing to separation and isolation, we can choose to live in a state of soul, a state of oneness. This means living with the understanding that, while we are each unique individuals, at our spiritual and existential core we are all one. At root, we are an interconnected self, a single consciousness, with a single soul. This is the concept of Klal Yisrael a singular, unified self. The Rambam states that one who disconnects himself from the Jewish People has no portion in the World to Come (Rambam, Mishneh Torah, Teshuvah 3:6.). This is intuitive, though. Klal Yisrael is one entity, a single body, a single self. If a leaf falls from a tree, it withers; if a finger is detached from its body, it dies. If you remove yourself from your source of existence, you cease to exist.

We Dont Experience This

However, it is clear that most people do not experience this state of oneness. We do not naturally perceive ourselves as part of a cosmic self. In fact, the starting point of every persons state is ego and selfishness. Research has shown that children perceive themselves as the center of the universe and believe that they are all that exists. It is only with time that they come to realize that they are but one of billions of people existing in this world, each with their own unique life experience and inner world. However, many people cease their existential and experiential growth at that point. They dont expand further, breaking down the boundaries of consciousness, realizing that they arent an isolated being but are rather a part of a bigger whole. They live the rest of their lives as an ego, alone, hollow inside. So, the question becomes: How do we break down the walls of our limited ego to expand our sense of self outwards? The key to this deep principle lies in understanding the gifts that the Jewish People donate toward the building of the Mishkan (Tabernacle).

The Purpose of Gifts

The Torah describes the voluntary gifts that the Jewish People donate toward the building of the Mishkan (Tabernacle), the place where Hashem was most potently manifest in the physical world. The emphasis of these donations is their voluntary nature Hashem commands Moshe to collect from Klal Yisrael whatever their hearts inspire them to give. Rashi explains that in addition to the required contribution (of machatzis hashekel), Hashem allowed them to give whatever they personally felt compelled to donate (Shemos 25:2). Why is this so? Why not specify a required amount? To answer this question, let us take a deeper look at the nature of giving.

We Only Love Ourselves

Rav Eliyahu Dessler explains that naturally, we only love ourselves (Michtav MeEliyahu, Kuntress HaChessed). This is not surprising, as each of us only experiences life from our own individual perspective. I can only know what I want, what I need, what I feel. It takes a lifetime of work to understand another person on this level and to be as committed to their needs as you are to your own. True love, however, is when someone else becomes an extension of your consciousness, when you feel their needs and hopes and dreams as strongly as you do your own.

The love that most people experience does not compare to this ideal. Just think about the way we throw the word love around. Someone might say I love chicken, but then turn around and say, I love my wife. Can these two experiences really be compared? When a person says they love chicken, do they really mean that they love chicken? Of course not! If they loved chicken, it wouldnt be dead on their plate. What they actually mean is that they love the way chicken makes them feel. Its themselves that they love. The problem, though, is that too often when people speak of love, they are referring to this same kind of love. More often than not, when we say we love someone, we really mean that we love how they make us feel. If this is true, then what is true love, and how can we create it?

True Love

True love is absolute oneness. Its when individual pieces connect in such a way that they create something transcendent, greater than the sum of the parts. The ideal is for man and wife to experience this oneness in their relationship. This ideal was modeled in the very creation of humanity: As the Midrash explains, Adam and Chavah were originally created as one androgynous being, a physical manifestation of a deeper existential oneness. They were then broken apart and forced to rebuild that original oneness. The ideal and goal that we must learn from this is clear: each one of us must strive to build deep, existential oneness with our own life partner. Chazal add a layer of depth to this and explain that before a man and wife are born, they exist as a single neshama. When they are born into this world, they are broken apart and exist as two distinct beings. The goal is to then travel the world in search of your soul-mate, choose each other, and then rebuild that original oneness. Adam and Chavah are created as one before being split apart to model the oneness that we are striving toward as husband and wife. So, if at root we are one, but our natural experience in this world is twoness and multiplicity, then how do we both build and develop an awareness of this oneness?

How to Create Oneness

Rav Dessler explains that the mechanism for creating love and oneness is giving. The logic is as follows: We naturally love ourselves. We also find, though, that parents love their children. Why is this? Its because children are an extension of their parents. We love anything that has a piece of ourselves in it, as we personally identify with it, seeing it as an extension of ourselves. This is why we find ourselves loving our ideas, our pets, and all the creative projects that we have spent countless hours working on. When we invest ourselves into something, we see a part of ourselves manifest within it, which naturally fosters our love for that object, person, or idea.

Its interesting to observe that parents almost always love their children more than children love their parents. However, based on Rav Desslers explanation of love and giving, this makes perfect sense. Parents give an infinite amount of themselves to their children. Beyond just giving over their physical DNA, they devote endless time, energy, money, and care to their children. This is also why the Hebrew word for love is ahava. The root of this word is hav, which means to give. Only when you give can you experience true love, true oneness. (At root, all oneness and connection already exists; we simply dont experience it. The act of giving and expansion of self does not actually create connection; it reveals the deep oneness and connection that already exists at a root level, helping us become ever more aware of the true nature of reality. Thus, what we are, in fact, creating is a higher level of awareness.)

The Mishkan: Paradigm of True Oneness

The theme of oneness is prevalent throughout the Mishkan. Rashi quotes the Midrash which says that the Menorah was not created by fusing separate pieces of gold together; rather, it was carved from a single block of gold (Shemos 25:31). This idea of oneness is prominent in many other parts of the Mishkan as well. This is because the Mishkan (and Beis HaMikdash) is where the physical world connects to and fuses with the spiritual world. It is the focal point of Hashems connection to, and manifestation within, this world. It is the place where all of Klal Yisrael come together to become one, first as a nation, and then with Hashem. The Menorah was created from a single block of gold, reflective of a much deeper idea. Just as the Menorah begins as a single block of gold before becoming manifest as branches and pieces, the Jewish People are a single soul at root expressed as a multitude of individuals.

Creating a Bond of Oneness with Hashem

The donation process of Klal Yisrael exemplified this process of creating oneness and love. The Jewish People had to give of their own volition, to choose to donate their possessions to Hashem. This is because love and oneness can only be created and manifest through genuine giving. Hashem gave the Jewish People the opportunity to create a bond of oneness and love with Him. Only by giving themselves to Hashem and recognizing Him as the source of their existence could the Jewish People truly create this bond of love and oneness. It is therefore no coincidence that these donations were directed toward the building of the Mishkan, the very center of oneness, and the place where the Jewish People would connect directly to Hashem.

Think about your own life. Are you walled in? Are you afraid of being loved? Of loving others? Are you living as an ego or as a soul? Are you expanding outwards, giving yourself to others, or are you isolating yourself, living empty and alone? Let us be inspired to give ourselves to others, to build genuine love, and to endlessly expand beyond our limited sense of self into true oneness with our family, our friends, all of Klal Yisrael, and ultimately, Hashem Himself.

Original post:

From Loneliness To Oneness: The Endless Expansion of Self - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com

What’s The Real Purpose Of Aleinu? (Part II) – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

Posted By on June 30, 2022

The Beer Heitiv in Orach Chayim [132:3] teaches us that we should say the Aleinu prayer with awe and reverence since Hashem and His Heavenly retinue listen to its recital and proclaim afterwards, Ashrei haam shekacha lo, ashrei haam sheHashem Elokav Fortunate is the nation that has such a lot, fortunate are the people that Hashem is their G-d. The Kolbo states that this prayer is so lofty that it should always be said standing and it is because of this that the word Aleinu has the same gematria, numerical value (166), as the word uma-umad, which means to be standing.

The Rokeiach teaches us that the author of Aleinu is none other than our great leader Yehoshua. The Rokeiach elaborates that Yehoshua created it upon entering and conquering Eretz Yisrael. He further explains that Yehoshua proclaimed, Shelo asonu kgoyei haaratzos He did not make us like the nations of the land, when he saw firsthand the depravity of the seven nations of Canaan and saw the contrast between them and the greatness of Klal Yisrael. The Seder HaYom further details that Yehoshua wrote Aleinu in praise of the miraculous conquest of Yericho, when Hashem caused the impenetrable walls there (which were as wide as they were high so they couldnt even be toppled) to miraculously sink into the ground.

When I saw this Seder HaYom, it made me realize a beautiful answer to a question asked to me by one of my students. Reb Eliezer Steinberg showed me that each of the first seven words of Aleinu contain the Hebrew letter lammed. Aleinu lishabeiach laAdon hakol, laseis gedulah lyotzier. He questioned me about this unusual phenomenon. At the time, I answered him that the focus of the prayer Aleinu is to thank Hashem that we are Jews and that we are the chosen nation, different than all other people. I explained further that, what is the special gift that Hashem bequeathed us since we are his special people? The answer is clearly expressed in Birchas HaTorah: Asher bochar bonu mikol haamim, vnosan lonu es Toraso He chose us from all His nations and granted us His Torah. Thus, the special gift is Torah! The letter lammed means lamad, to learn, and therefore we start this prayer of thanks for being Jewish with seven lameds representing that we have the gift of learning for all seven days of the week.

The very next word after the first seven is Bereishis, for Rashi tells us in the beginning of the Torah that the world was created for the Jewish people who are called Bereishis and for the Torah which is called Bereishis, which is the message we are thanking Hashem for with the seven lammeds.

But now, with the information of the Seder HaYom, we can say simply that the lammed is the tallest letter of the Hebrew alphabet signifying the tall walls of Yericho. And the seven lameds represent the seven times that Yehoshua went around the walls until they miraculously sunk into the ground. Thus, the prayer of Aleinu now also carries for us the eloquent memory of our acquiring Eretz Yisrael from Hashem as our national possession.

The stanza in Aleinu, Laseis gedulah lyotzeir Bereishis To ascribe greatness to the Creator of the Beginning, is actually a curious phrase. It would have been more appropriate to say, Lyotzeir Shamayim vaaretz Who created Heaven and earth. Three and a half years ago, when Hashem blessed me to marry my second Rebbetzin, Mrs. Shoshy Weiss, tichya, I spoke under our chuppah and said that this phrase, lyotzeir Bereishis, can be understood to mean that Hashem creates new chances for people and fresh beginnings. In my case, it was another chance after losing my first Rebbetzin. But it can mean many things: A fresh chance at a new job, a new chavrusa, a new place to live. Hashem is always giving us new chances for even greater happiness.

In the merit of our praising Hashem, may we be blessed with long life, good health, and everything wonderful.

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What's The Real Purpose Of Aleinu? (Part II) - The Jewish Press - JewishPress.com


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