Total Pageviews

Friday, 30 April 2021

Lag Baomer STAMPEDE: Deadly Crush in Israel as Festival Crowds Trample V...

לראשונה! שעתיים וחצי של התעוררות דקדושה נוסטלגית, מכ"ק מרן הגה"ק בעל "לב...

Israel: At least 44 killed in stampede

Reb Meilech Screaming Kra Ro'a Gzar Dinenu In Meron Shortly before The T...

I AM THINKING VERY MUCH

 Another witness from Beit Shemesh said in a radio interview: “The whole time there were people passing through and everything was going smoothly. Suddenly there was terrible crowding. I looked up and saw five police officers who were simply standing there and stopping people from passing.”

“People begged, cried, screamed that they’re going to die, that they can’t breathe, but they didn’t open the passageway. Children were fainting in their parents’ arms. When the police finally allowed people through, everyone collapsed one on top of the other.”

WHEN I USED TO GO TO ISRAEL I WENT VERY LITTLE TO THE KOSEL AND SYNAGOUES 

LIKE GUR ETC, ETC, AS I COULD NOT STAND THE LOCKED IN FEELING WITH ALL THE

BARRIERS AND GATES

THIS IS BY THE RELIGOUS AND NOT RELIGOUSM THE PENING. OF PEOPLE

I WILL BE THINKING TWICE BEFORE I GO AGAIN FOR A HOLIDAY THERE 

THEY WILL NEVER CHANGE

 

“People Are Going To Die” – J-m Deputy Mayor Warned Police 2 Hrs. Before Disaster

J-m Deputy Mayor Yossi Deitsch extricates himself from the crowd 2 hours before the disaster

Two hours before the unfathomable mass casualty occurred, Jerusalem Deputy Mayor Yossi Deitsch warned the police that a tragedy was imminent, B’Chadrei Chareidim reported.

Deitsch told B’Chadrei that he took part in the Boyaner hadlaka two hours before the tragedy and already then he felt the dangerous crushing force of the crowd. “I was being crushed in an unprecedented manner,” he said.

Due to the crowding, he decided to give up on his usual custom of standing and davening at the western entrance, next to the area where the tragedy occurred, and returned home early. His life was saved but sadly, so many others weren’t.

Deitsch slammed the police, saying that he warned them of imminent disaster. “What occurred could have happened two hours beforehand at the Boyaner hadlaka,” he said. “The police saw the crowding but didn’t take appropriate action to relieve it. Instead of opening an exit way, they threatened them with pepper spray.”

“I turned to a police officer and warned him that people were going to die. I told him: ‘You’re not ashamed? You see that people are going to die!’ But there was no one to talk to,” Deitsch asserted.