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Tuesday, 20 July 2021

THE HOLIDAYS

 I FEEL SORRY WATCHING ALL THE

 PARENTS GETTING READY FOR THE 

HOLIDAYS, BUYING ALL THE THINGS THE

 OTHER PARENTS BUY. OTHERWISE YOU

 WOULD BE CONSIDERED BAD PARENTS

THIS IS THE WORST PERIOD IN TIME FOR

 THE PARENTS, AND G-D HELP THEM 

IF ON THE HOLIDAYS THE OUTHER

 CHILDREN HAVE SOMETHING WE HAVE

 NOT GOT ! ! ! 

AND THIS IS CALLED HAVING A GOOD

 HOLIDAY.

Tuesday, 13 July 2021

AMERICA LAND OF THE FREE

 

NEW: Elie Kligman Drafted To MLB; Davens Three Times A Day, Will Not Play On Shabbos; Second Jewish Player Drafted In Two Days

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Friday, 9 July 2021

THE KAPISNITZER REBBE Z.L.

 

URFSIDE TRAGEDY: Chaim Rosenberg Z”L Of Flatbush Found In Rubble; Daughter & Son-In-Law Remain Missing R”L

After a grueling two weeks, the body of R’ Chaim (Harry) Rosenberg Z”L of Flatbush was found and identified in the rubble of the Surfside condo collapse. He was 52.

Chaim purchased the second-floor condo only last month, hoping that its views of the Atlantic Ocean would help him find solace after a turbulent year that saw the loss of his wife, Anna Rosenberg A”H, to cancer, and both of his parents to COVID-19.

Chaim was a longtime Mispallel at Rabbi Weinfeld’s Shul in Flatbush.

In recent months Chaim had dedicated himself towards launching Mercaz Shalom, a young adult center for mental healing, located on the campus of Mayanei Hayeshua Hospital in Bnei Brak, Israel, in memory of his late wife.

His daughter, Malki Weisz, and her husband, Benny, of Lakewood, N.J., were staying with him at the time of the collapse. The Weiszes remain missing as at this time.

Arrangements are being made with Hatzolah Air and family friends to have the Niftar flown back to NY tonight for a tentative Levaya on Friday.

An in depth article of the Niftar is being worked on.

Boruch Dayan HaEmmes…


RABBI YACOV HORNSTEIN FROM N.Y.

 

ONCE CAME IT TO THE REBBE, AND


 THE REBBE WAS CRYING, HE ASKED


 THE REBBE, WHY WAS THE REBBE


 CRYING ?


THE REBBE ANSWERD HE HAD JUST


 READ IN THE NEWSPAPER TWO


 SOLDIERS HAD BEEN KILLED IN


 ISRAEL.


THAT IS WHAT BEEING A JEW IS ALL



 ABOUT.


A REBBE WHO CAN CRY ON A


 TRAGEDY, HE READS IN A NEWS


 PAPER THAT IS A REBBE. 


 I HOPE YOU UNDERSTAND MY POINT.



Thursday, 8 July 2021

WHEN I LOOK AROUNDN , I SEE SO MANY FRUM JEWS WANT TO BE A GOY .

 IT IS A VERY STRONG  STATEMENT, 

BUT TRUE,

 NUMBER ONE IS EATING IN THE STREET,

 MY DEAR WIFE A.H.

NEVER EAT IN THE STREET OR GAVE HER

 CHILDREN TO EAT IN THE STREET, THAT

 IS THE REASON THEY ARE GREAT IN

 TORAH.

THESE CHILDREN  COME OUT OF

 CHADER AND SCHOOLS EATING NONE

 STOP.

THIS IS A BRAKEDOWN OF TZENIS

 ( MODESTY )

BUT THE BIGEST BRAKEDOWN OF  

( MODESTY ) IS THE KOSHER MOBILE

 PHONE JEWISH WOMEN WHO WILL NOT

 WEAR A WIG, BECAUSE OF MODESTY

 TALK ON THEIR PHONES LIKE THE

 GOYIM.

THEY WANT TO DO WHAT THE GOY, 

DOES WE CAN DO IN A KOSHER PHONE 

THERE IS NO EDUCATION IN THE

 SCHOOLS OR CADORIM, AS THE

 BLESSING.

"  SAYS THANKING HASHEM THAT HE DID

 NOT MAKE ME A GOY "

I DO NOT THINK THEY OR EVEN THE

 GREAT RABBIS UNDERSTAND THIS

 BLESSING.

Wednesday, 7 July 2021

JEWS SHOULD MOVE AWAY FROM FLORIDA

 

Tropical Storm Elsa Gaining Strength, Lashing Florida Keys

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Wind moves the grass and palm trees under a cloudy sky after the passage of Tropical Storm Elsa in Havana, Cuba, Monday, July 5, 2021. (AP Photo/Ramon Espinosa

The weather was getting worse in southern Florida on Tuesday morning as Tropical Storm Elsa began lashing the Florida Keys, complicating the search for survivors in the condo collapse and prompting a hurricane watch for the peninsula’s upper Gulf Coast.

In addition to damaging winds and heavy rains, the Miami-based U.S. National Hurricane Center warned of life-threatening storm surges, flooding and isolated tornadoes. A hurricane watch was issued for a long stretch of coastline, from Egmont Key at the mouth of Tampa Bay to the Steinhatchee River in Florida’s Big Bend area.

The Tampa area is highly vulnerable to storm surge because the offshore waters and Tampa Bay are quite shallow, experts say.

But on the barrier island beach towns along the Gulf Coast, it was largely business as usual with few shutters or plywood boards going up. Free sandbags were being handed out at several locations, and a limited number of storm shelters opened Tuesday morning in at least four counties around the Tampa Bay area, although no evacuations have been ordered.

Nancy Brindley, 85, who lives in a seaside house built in 1923, said she has experienced 34 previous tropical cyclones and is not having shutters put on her windows. Her main concern is what will happen to sand on the adjacent beach and the dunes that protect her house and others. She’s staying through the storm.

“The main concern here is, if it doesn’t speed up and decides to stall, there will be enormous erosion,” she said.

Friends Chris Wirtz, 47, and Brendan Peregrine, 44, were staying put at a beachfront inn with their families. Both are from Tampa, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) across the bay and have been through storms many times.

“Before we left, we knew it was coming,” Wirtz said.

Peregrine said the two families had been coming to the Pinellas County beach for 10 years. He noted they have ample supplies and a charcoal grill to cook on if the power goes out.

“We can hunker down for days,” Peregrine said.

Still, some people were taking no chances. Annie Jones, 51, has lived along the Gulf Coast her entire life. She was buying ice and food at a local grocery store in advance of the storm.

”“I’ve seen this happen over the years and I decided to load up,” Jones said. “I thought it’s best to beat the crowd. My vision is to be prepared.”

Bands of rain were expected to reach Surfside on Florida’s Atlantic coast, soaking the rubble of the Champlain Towers South, which collapsed June 24, killing at least 32 people. Search and rescue crews have worked through rain in search of more than 100 others listed as missing, but must pause when lightning threatens, and a garage area in the pancaked debris already filled with water Monday, officials said.

Elsa’s maximum sustained winds stood at 60 mph (95 kph) early Tuesday. A slow strengthening is forecast through Tuesday night and Elsa could be near hurricane strength before it makes landfall in Florida. Its core was about 65 miles (105 kilometers) west-northwest of Key West, Florida, and 215 miles (345 kilometers) south of Tampa. It was continuing to move to the north-northwest at 10 mph (16 kph).

The forecast included the possibility of tornadoes across South Florida on Tuesday morning and across the upper peninsula later in the day.

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis expanded a state of emergency to cover a dozen counties where Elsa was expected to make a swift passage Wednesday, and President Joe Biden approved an emergency declaration for the state ahead of the storm.

Forecasters predicted Elsa would hit coastal Georgia and South Carolina after Florida. Georgia’s coast was under a tropical storm watch, as was much of the South Carolina coast. Forecasters said tornadoes could strike in the eastern Carolinas and Virginia as Elsa moves north.

The storm surge could reach 5 feet (1.5 meters) over normally dry land in the Tampa Bay area if Elsa passes at high tide, forecasters said. Commander Col. Ben Jonsson said only essential personnel were being allowed Tuesday morning on MacDill Air Force Base, which is located along the bay on the South Tampa peninsula.

Tampa International Airport planned to shut down Tuesday at 5 p.m.

At a Tuesday morning news briefing, DeSantis reminded residents not to focus on the Tropical Storm Elsa’s so-called “cone of concern” because the storm’s “impacts are expected well outside that area.”

“And if you look at how the storm is it’s incredibly lopsided to the east,” DeSantis said. “So most of the rainfall is going to be east of the center of the storm.”

Elsa’s westward shift spared the lower Florida Keys a direct hit, but the islands were still getting plenty of rain and wind Tuesday. Tropical storm warnings were posted for the Florida Keys from Craig Key westward to the Dry Tortugas and for the west coast of Florida from Flamingo northward to the Ochlockonee River.

Cuban officials evacuated 180,000 people against the possibility of heavy flooding from a storm that already battered several Caribbean islands, killing at least three people. But Elsa spent Sunday and much of Monday sweeping parallel to Cuba’s southern coast, sparing most of the island from significant effects.

Elsa is the earliest fifth-named storm on record, said Brian McNoldy, a hurricane researcher at the University of Miami.

JEWS SHOULD LEAVE THE

 PLAYGROUND OF AMERICA ,IT IS A

 CURSED PLACE