Archive for June, 2007

Canadian Soldier Initiates Restoration of Bosnian Cemetery

Monday, June 25th, 2007

kevarim.jpgFor Capt. Gabriel Granatstein, it’s mission accomplished – or almost. Granatstein is the young Canadian Jewish soldier who discovered a derelict Jewish cemetery in a Muslim village in Bosnia while serving with a peacekeeping mission this past year – as reported HERE on YW. 

Granatstein raised 2,500 euros, or about $3,600 (Cdn), mainly from family and friends back in Montreal, to help restore the Beth Olam cemetery in Jezero-Privilica, about 15 minutes from Bihac in the northwest region of the country.

That amount was matched by the municipality of about 30,000 people, a huge sum in a place where the average monthly wage is $250 and it’s still a struggle to provide electrical power because the infrastructure destroyed during the war has not been fully rebuilt, Granatstein said.

Work on the cemetery was just beginning when he left Bosnia at the end of March and the first phase is now complete.

The 200-year-old cemetery was overgrown and filled with garbage when Granatstein, 26, came upon it during his regular patrols of the mountainous region.

All that was left were 20 or 30 half-toppled, weather-beaten monuments and a crumbling concrete wall on one side. The only clue that this was a Jewish cemetery was the Hebrew inscriptions faintly visible on some markers.

No Jews live in the vicinity today.

The cemetery has now been cleaned up: an entranceway very similar to the one it once had has been installed, and the foundations have been poured for a new wall.

The only known extant photograph of the cemetery when it was in good condition, obtained through a researcher in Israel, served as a guide to reconstructing the entranceway, which consists of a concrete arch with the name Beth Olam carved out on it and wrought-iron gates.

The local authorities have pledged to keep up the cemetery indefinitely.

On June 20, Granatstein will be the guest speaker at an event organized by the Montreal Holocaust Memorial Centre (MHMC). Part of the proceeds from the fundraiser will go to the cemetery project.

Granatstein wants to see the fence completed and, if the money allows, some of the monuments restored. He plans to deliver the cheque personally to Bosnian officials during a private trip back to the country in August.

The Canadian mission in Bosnia has now been wound up after 12 years.

Granatstein credits a local Muslim leader, Salko Rekanovic, with bringing the cemetery’s sorry state to the attention of the foreign peacekeepers. For several years, he had been asking for help, but with no success.

Click HERE to read the complete article on CJN.

Petirah & Levaya of R’ Mendel Falik Z”L

Monday, June 25th, 2007

candle14.gifYW regrets to inform you of the sudden Petira of R’ Mendel Falik Z”L – long time Rebbe in Yeshiva Torah Temimah. The Levaya will I”H take place Monday evening at 8:00PM in Shomrei Hadas on 14th Avenue and 39th Street. The Kevurah will take place in Eretz Yisroel. Boruch Dayan Emmes…

2:20 PM EST : Boro Park ; Major MVA

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Major mva at 18th Ave & 61 st. All angencies on scene reporting numerous injuries . Requesting additional EMS units & medics to the scene

Bank of Israel keeps interest rate at 3.5%

Monday, June 25th, 2007

The Bank of Israel has kept the interest rate for July unchanged at 3.5%. The Bank of Israel said, “At this stage, the current level of the Bank of Israel interest rate is consistent with bringing the rate of inflation back to within the target range by the end of 2007, assuming that the exchange rate remains around its current level. Against a background of this year’s economic growth and that expected next year, according to econometric models, local prices continue to rise by the rapid rate of more than 3%. However, at this stage, there are no signs of inflationary pressures.”  (Globes)

1:16PM EST: Manhattan: Bank Robbery

Monday, June 25th, 2007

NYPD are requesting a level 1 police response in regards to a confirmed bank robbery at 2275 Broadway at 82nd Street. Unknown how much money was taken.

1:14PM EST: Brooklyn: Partial Building Collapse

Monday, June 25th, 2007

FDNY is on the scene at 108 Steuben Street near Myrtle Avenue with a partial building collapse. No injuries are being reported at this time. Battalion chief is requesting the NYC Buildings Department to respond.

U.S. Stocks Rise as Bond Yields Decline; General Motors Gains

Monday, June 25th, 2007

U.S. stocks advanced after bond yields fell and investors speculated General Motors Corp. is close to a settlement with the United Auto Workers union.

GM climbed to the highest in four months after Goldman, Sachs & Co. advised clients to buy shares of the biggest U.S. automaker. Telephone companies and utilities rallied the most in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index as lower interest rates make their dividends more attractive.

The yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury note fell 3 basis points to 5.10 percent. Prices rose on speculation hedge- fund losses linked to subprime mortgage loans will fuel demand for safer bonds. Crude oil futures fell the most in two weeks.

(Bloomberg News Service)

Two Kassam Rockets Land in Israel

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Ynet is reporting that two Kassam rockets fired from the northern Gaza landed in an open field in the western Negev. No injuries were reported

Sharm el-Sheikh Summit Underway

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Prime Minister Ehud Olmert arrived in Sharm el-Sheikh on Monday, meeting with Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak and then Palestinian Authority Chairman Mahmoud Abbas to begin a four-way summit with the Palestinian, Egyptian and Jordanian leaders. The prime minister is scheduled to meet with Jordan’s King Abdullah II later Monday. (Haaretz)

Hachnosas Sefer Torah aboard a US Aircraft Carrier

Monday, June 25th, 2007

ac cover.jpgA Sefer Torah rescued from Lithuania was permanently placed on the US aircraft carrier Harry S. Truman. The carrier is one of the few Navy vessels to have its own Sefer Torah. Few ships are large enough to need one, said Sam Werbel, an organizer of a dedication ceremony Sunday attended by 500 community members and dignitaries. The audience included Holocaust survivors.

Sen. Carl Levin, chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, attended Sunday’s dedication. He said Truman’s namesake carrier was a fitting home for a Torah that would help service members “grow in their appreciation of our Jewish faith.”

WVEC

Rav Shteinman Taken to The Hospital

Monday, June 25th, 2007

tehillim new.jpg

June 25 10:54AM EST: According to the YW sources in Eretz Yisroel, Hagoen Rav Shteinman Shlita is scheduled to I”H be released from the hospital either today or tomorrow. Please be advised that there is some discrepancy as to what his exact name is for Tehillim. Our sources insist that the name posted here is correct. Either way, please continue to be Mispallel for his Refuah Shelayima.

June 24, 9:12AM EST: Early Sunday morning, Hagoen Rav Aron Leib Shteinman Shlita was taken to the Mayney Hayeshua Hospital in Bnei Brak after not feeling well. He is reported to be in stable condition. Please be Mispallel for אהרון יהודה לייב בן גיטל לרפו”ש. (Click on image to ENLARGE a Kappital Tehillim.)

Diniver Rebbe in LA

Monday, June 25th, 2007

The Diniver Rebbe Shlita has traveled to LA to raise funds for his Mosdos in New York. He is staying at the home of R’ Berel Weiss.

Yartzheit of Baal Shefa Chaim Klausenberg

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Today is the Yartzheit of the Baal Shefa Chaim from Klausenberg ZATZAL. Thousands are making their way to his Kever in Netanya at this time. There is Yartzheit Seuda’s taking place in Klausenberg B”M in Netanya, and in Sanz-Klausenberg B”M in Boro Park today.

World Bank Board to Name Next President

Monday, June 25th, 2007

Robert Zoellick, President Bush’s former trade chief and No. 2 diplomat, appeared certain to win approval as the World Bank’s next president. The World Bank’s 24-member board scheduled a closed-door meeting Monday to take up Zoellick’s nomination, which was put forward by Bush. No other countries nominated candidates. Zoellick would succeed Paul Wolfowitz, who will step down on June 30, ending a stormy two-year tenure at the poverty-fighting institution. (AP)

 

Let Religious New Yorkers Be Heard

Monday, June 25th, 2007

i love ny cover.jpg(From the NY Sun :) New York’s Court of Appeals made a wise and brilliantly articulated decision when it ruled, back in 2006, that the question of same-gender marriage was not a constitutional question but one for the Legislature. The court didn’t tell the Legislature how to vote, but it did call for a debate on the matter.

“We believe the present generation should have a chance to decide the issue through its elected representatives,” Judge Robert Smith wrote for the majority. “We therefore express our hope that the participants in the controversy over alternative lifestyle marriage will address their arguments to the Legislature; that the Legislature will listen and decide as wisely as it can.”

It’s hard to imagine the court had in mind anything like the night time vote which the Assembly, with scant warning and without any public hearings, passed a same-gender marriage bill this week in a process that effectively snubbed religious New Yorkers. This issue was flagged in a press release issued Wednesday by the Agudath Israel of America, which speaks for fervently religious Jews.

Orthodox Jewry isn’t the only religious community that was stunned at the fact that, as the Aguda’s executive vice president for government and public affairs Rabbi David Zwiebel, pointed out, the Assembly’s Judiciary Committee “never even scheduled a hearing on the proposal, as should be customary for controversial, revolutionary legislation of this sort.” But it has made its arguments with typical cogency.

Rabbi Zwiebel argued that a hearing would have “brought to the fore,” as he put it, “numerous problems” with the bill, including “its negative impact on religious communities like ours.” The Aguda warned that “members of communities like ours will incur moral opprobrium and may risk legal sanction if they refuse to transgress their beliefs” in the face of the legalization of alternative lifestyle marriages. The views voiced by the Aguda are shared by all factions of Orthodox Judaism, the Catholic Church, and scores of religious communities throughout our city and state.

The speaker of the Assembly, Sheldon Silver, knew precisely what he was doing. Our Jacob Gershman encountered him on May 30 and asked him about the hearing process in general. The speaker rattled on about how hearings are needed to give lawmakers a fuller sense of the public’s concern on congestion pricing, as it would in the case of a bill to expand the state’s database of deoxyribonucleic acid. He called hearings an important forum for guiding lawmakers on issues that affect many people.

Mr. Gershman then asked him about hearings on the gay marriage bill. “There are only so many public hearings that we’re going to do,” the speaker snapped. The docket tells the story. In the last two weeks, Assembly committees have held public hearings on energy conservation, tax incentives for businesses, and the agricultural market. But the question of gay marriage, which would alter the definition of a contract that has existed since the founding of the state, appears on no hearing list in the Assembly.

So of what is the Legislature afraid? Our guess is that it is the fact that the campaign for gay marriage has been advanced in New York state – and many others – on, at least in part, a false premise. Namely that opponents of same-gender marriage are bigots. This was evident in the first lower court ruling in favor of same-gender marriage, issued two years ago in Manhattan state court by Judge Doris Ling-Cohan, who started her opinion with a disquisition on the racist anti-miscegenation laws that were on the law books in a number of states in the not so distant past.

The state’s highest court quickly saw through Judge Ling-Cohan’s error. In the majority opinion in Hernandez v Robles, Judge Robert Smith wrote: “The traditional definition of marriage is not merely a by-product of historical injustice.” Of the strongly held belief by many that marriage is for a man and a woman only, Judge Smith had this to say: “a court should not lightly conclude that everyone who held this belief was irrational, ignorant or bigoted.” New Yorkers had a right to expect the Legislature to give our religious communities a hearing.

Not that advocates of same-gender marriage are without their standing, either. They have been well-organized and effective and are no less passionate about the issue than is the religious community. It is no small thing that advocates of same-gender marriage have been gaining ground in a number of states. Massachusetts’s own legislature, once thought to be prepared to put a stop to same-gender marriage following a radical ruling from its highest court, recently flinched from forcing the issue. The result is that Toeva couples will continue to be able to marry in the Bay State.

In Albany, the Senate is unlikely to do what the Assembly did this week. If the Senate doesn’t take the issue up before the end of 2008, the Assembly will be forced to take up this issue again. Which means that the rush this week can serve as a wake-up call to the religious community that it cannot count on the legislative leadership to give them a hearing; they will have to press for it, demand it even, and stay on their toes. Our own belief is that marriage is a contract that is far too important, sacred even, to alter without everyone being given a chance to express his or her concerns.

IAF Fires Missile Into Gaza Strip & Kills Terrorist

Monday, June 25th, 2007

According to the JTA, The IAF fired a missile at a vehicle traveling in the Gaza Strip last night & killed an Islamic Jihad terrorist. It was the first such strike in Gaza since Hamas took over the strip nearly two weeks ago. The IDF said the terrorist was responsible for firing Kassam rockets into Israel.

1:48AM EST: Tzefas: Massive Fire Kills Children

Monday, June 25th, 2007

breaking news1.jpg1:48AM EST: Firefighters are battling a blaze in Tzefas on Rechov Tzahal at this time. Initial reports were that at least seven were hurt, four of them seriously. Unfortunately as of this time, two children – ages one & two – have been R”L been pronounced dead in the hospital. UPDATED 1:57AM EST: The fire is under control; Parents are in critical condition as well as a three year-old and a six-year-old.

UPDATED 8:55AM EST: Arutz 7 is reporting that Israeli police are saying that the fatal fire was caused by lit candles.

12:50AM EST: Bronx: Police Car MVA

Monday, June 25th, 2007

A police car has just been involved in a serious accident involving another vehicle carrying children passengers; University Avenue & West 190 Street. No further info is available at this time.

Report: Condi Rice Smashed Pollard Release Deal

Monday, June 25th, 2007

sharon rice cover.jpgAccording to the Maariv newspaper – as reported by the JTA, US Secretary of State Condi Rice reportedly rejected a plan to set Jonathan Pollard free.

The report states that on the eve of the Gaza withdrawal, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon put together a plan that Israel would free jailed Marwan Barghouti, if the United States would in turn release Pollard.

According to the newspaper, Israel’s ambassador to Washington at the time, Danny Ayalon, approached Condi Rice with the plan – but she quickly squashed it.

“Pollard’s release is out of the question,” Ma’ariv quoted her as telling Ayalon. “Danny, I’d advise you not to pursue this any further. Pollard betrayed his country and that issue is taboo in Washington.”

Hachnosas Sefer Torah at Yeshiva Torah Ohr

Monday, June 25th, 2007

to cover.jpgClick HERE to view additional images. On Sunday afternoon there was a Hachnasas Sefer Torah Yeshivas Torah Ore / Kollel Ruach Chaim. The sefer was donated L”N R. Ehrman ben Yosef and his wife Raisel bat R. Chaim Weinstock by their children. Photo Credits: Yehuda Boltshauser.