1 Kislev 5784
Chodesh Tov!
I knew this month would focus on the Battle with the Erev Rav/Judeo-Christians/Hellenists, but I didn't expect it right out of the gate.
The incidents came to light on Monday during a Knesset discussion about expediting the conversion process for those currently serving in the IDF.
Why do they even care at all?! It's EGO. The separation WHICH WE ARE COMMANDED TO MAKE insults them, as if they are not as good as we are. But, in their own countries they forced the separation because they felt that we were beneath them. How dare we, in a country that we rule over, imply that they are any different from us?
Here is the pitiful story accompanied by a picture of a scantily dressed young woman posing seductively. Keep in mind as you read that every one of these people was desecrating Shabbat without a care in the world, for which as goyim they bore no guilt, but let's not pretend they seriously wanted to be Jews!!
Alina Falahati, 21, a Russian-Israeli woman who was murdered by Hamas at the Nova music festival on October 7, was buried ‘outside the fence’ of the cemetery in Beit She’an, because at the time of her death, she had not yet completed the process of converting to Judaism, and as such was not considered eligible for burial.The incident came to light on Monday during a Knesset discussion about expediting the conversion process for those currently serving in the IDF. “Alina was murdered as a Jew,” Falahati’s mother Olga said at the hearing, her voice choking up. “In the obituary notice, they didn't write that we were sitting the shiva mourning period, they said that we were receiving guests."Oded Forer, who chairs the Knesset’s Aliyah, Absorption, and Diaspora Affairs Committee, responded that he was “ashamed on behalf of the State of Israel that you were treated this way.” He called Falahati’s treatment “the greatest insult to someone who sanctified the land of Israel with their blood, who left their place in exile to come here. I want to be buried next to such a person,” he declared, “even if it means being buried outside the fence.”The committee also discussed the case of the Kapshiter family of four, who were all killed by Hamas terrorists on October 7 while on their way home from Ashkelon to Beersheba. Yania (Yevgeni) Kapshiter, killed alongside his wife, Dina, and two children, Aline, 8, and Eitan, 5, was denied a Jewish burial in the Dimona cemetery, and so he, like Falahati, was buried ‘outside the fence.’The surviving family members, the children’s grandparents, decided to bury the entire family together ‘outside the fence,’ even though the others were entitled to be buried inside the cemetery itself.The politicians and religious authorities at the hearing reacted to the stories with shock.
Elazar Stern, the Yesh Atid MK, said he “apologize[d] on behalf of all Judaism,” saying “This is not the Judaism we are a part of. Not our children’s, not our grandchildren’s [and] not my Judaism.”Rabbi Haim Amsalem, a former Shas MK, said the treatment of these families bordered on criminal. “There is no description,” he said, “that can capture this very wrong thing.”MK to Rabbinate: 'If you don't change the rules, we'll get rid of them for you.'Rabbi Eliezer Simcha Weiss, who sits on the Rabbinate’s committee for honoring the dead, said he would propose a special representative to find solutions to problems like these, “so that there will not be a great trouble like this.” He added that “they did not distinguish between Jews and non-Jews in the brutal attack. We can do everything in line with Jewish law.”Forer said that “such damage to even one family is severe,” and asked “that this be the instruction that comes down from the Chief Rabbi to every rabbi: expect difficult cases. Jewish law knows how to solve problems.” Rabbi Edo Pachter, who accompanied Olga Falahati to the committee, said that in his opinion the rabbinate should apologize to Falahati.Rabbi Chaim Weisberg, chief rabbi of the IDF, said the situations discussed in the hearing did not occur within the IDF. “We fight together and are buried together,” he said. “There is no burial ‘outside the fence.’Yulia Malinovski, an MK from the Yisrael Beiteinu party, said that there are now 7,000 soldiers in the IDF who are not Jewish according to Halacha. “The mere fact that a person has enlisted in the IDF,” Malinovski said, “is Judaism in my eyes. He is ready to die for the sake of the country.” Malinovski told IDF representatives not to wait for soldiers to ask for a conversion, but rather to present a solution to the problem themselves. “You can arrange wedding canopies in army camps,” she said, “this is all a question of will.”"If on the subject of conversion and burial, you won't change the limits," she said, "the people will blow up the limits for you. Today, we're asking you. In the future, we will demand it."Malinovski connected the issue to a broader notion of what must be rethought in the aftermath of the massacre. “What happened on October 7 was not only the collapse of the security ‘conception,’” she said, referring to a blind spot among the authorities, “but also the halachic one. If we do not address this, after everything is over, we will fall apart from the inside. If you want to be part of the nation and the country,” she said, “you must not remain in the old ‘conceptions.’”Porer summarized the discussion similarly. “There is ‘before Simchat Torah,’” he said, referring to the October 7 attack, “and there is ‘after,’ as far as the people of Israel are concerned. Let it be clear,” he said, “that those who have chosen to bind their fate with the Jewish people, those who are here in the country to fight for our right to live here, my demand is to go towards him.”
This Battle is nowhere near over. In fact, it is just getting started!! The enemies of God and His Torah and His holy people are only willing to tamp down the hatred when they think we are coming closer to them. They have no inclination whatsoever to come closer to us. And what's more, they are not going to agree to share this country with us any longer if we insist on keeping Torah Temimah.
To be continued, and continued, and continued... iy"H!
I agree with you 100%... but what can we do??? This is the battle Hashem has to fight for us... how can we fight the Eruv Rav???
ReplyDeleteGod willing, I'll be answering this question in the coming days.
DeleteHere are a couple of details I saw elsewhere which did not appear in the JPost article...
ReplyDeletePlahti was not Jewish according to the Orthodox interpretation of Jewish law, and therefore could not be buried among Jews, according to Rabbi Yosef Yitzhak Laseri, the Beit She’an head of the Chief Rabbinate,....
“With all the sensitivity and empathy that we feel, Alina Plahti was not Jewish,” he said. “She began a conversion process during her army service, but, to the best of our knowledge, dropped out and was not pursuing a conversion process at the time her death. Therefore, according to the procedures of the Chief Rabbinate, she needed to be buried outside the main Jewish burial space.”
...Relatives of some of the victims of the attack in Be’eri, for example, threatened to sue the government unless the bodies of their loved ones were released for cremation, which is legal in Israel, but frowned upon by the Rabbinate.
And to think, Hamas might have had the courtesy to do it for them like they did do many others.