Archive for August, 2008

Obama Chooses Running Mate: Joseph Biden

Saturday, August 23rd, 2008

ob.jpgSenator Barack Obama has chosen Senator Joseph Biden Jr. of Delaware to be his running-mate, turning to a leading authority on foreign policy and a longtime Washington hand to fill out the Democratic ticket, people told of the decision said.

Obama’s selection ended a two-month search that was conducted almost entirely in secret. It reflected a critical strategic choice by Obama: To go with a running-mate who could reassure voters about gaps in his resume, rather than to pick someone who could deliver a state or reinforce Obama’s message of change.

Biden is the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and is familiar with foreign leaders and diplomats around the world. Although he initially voted to authorize the war in Iraq – Obama opposed it from the start – Biden became a persistent critic of President George W. Bush’s policies in Iraq.

(Associated Press)

IDF Calls for Vigilance by Soldiers Against Abduction Attempts

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

IDF officials report terror organizations have stepped up efforts to abduct soldiers, reminding military personnel they are prohibited from hitchhiking.

Towards enforcing the ban, undercover military police units this week arrested 25 soldiers who were caught taking ride. In many cases, soldiers violating the ban are sent to jail for periods of 14 days.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

President Peres Warns Against Russian Missiles in Syria

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

President Shimon Peres on Thursday warned of the danger of positioning Russian ballistic missiles in Syria.

Mr. Peres stated such a reality would pose a worldwide threat, explaining that weapons of mass destruction without the means of launching them are less threatening, but the two together pose a threat that must concern the international community.

Mr. Peres’ statements come in response to reports that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s visit this week to Russia was for the purpose of acquiring Russian-built ballistic missiles, which the Russian media states will be deployed in Syria.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

Petira of Rebbitzen Ethel Miller A”H

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

candle726.gifYWN regrets to inform you of the Petira of Rebbitzen Ethel Miller A”H, the wife of Hagon Rav Avigdor Miller ZATZAL – at the age of 97.

There are two Levayas scheduled: 9:30AM Sunday morning in Lakewood at Rav Simcha Bunim Cohen’s Shul (Ateres Yishaya); Sunday afternoon at 12:30PM at “Rabbi Millers Shul”, [Bais Yisroel Torah Center] 1821 Ocean Parkway – between Avenue’s R & S. The Kevura will take place in Eretz Yisroel.

Boruch Dayan Emmes…

Bank of China Sued in Los Angeles Court for Aiding Terror Attacks in Israel

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Suit by victims of rocket attacks and suicide bombings in the Jewish state details how Bank of China transferred millions of dollars to Hamas and Islamic Jihad terrorist groups, and rebuffed demand by Israeli counterterrorism officials to halt payments.

Over 100 victims of terrorist attacks carried out by the Hamas and Palestine Islamic Jihad (PIJ) terror organizations in Israel between 2004 and 2007 have filed an historic civil action in Los Angeles Superior Court against China’s largest bank, the Bank of China Ltd. (“BOC”). The suit, Zahavi v. Bank of China, seeks both compensatory and punitive damages.

The plaintiffs allege in their civil complaint that starting in 2003, BOC executed dozens of wire transfers for the Hamas and PIJ totaling several million dollars. These dollar transfers were initiated by the PIJ and Hamas leadership in Iran and Syria, were processed through BOC’s branches in the United States and were sent on to a BOC account in China operated by a senior operative of the Hamas and PIJ. From there, the funds were transferred to Hamas and PIJ leaders in the Gaza Strip and West Bank and used to carry out terrorist attacks.

In April 2005, Israeli counterterrorism officers met with officials from the Chinese Ministry of Public Security and China’s Central Bank regarding these Hamas and PIJ wire transfers. The Israelis demanded that the Chinese officials take action to prevent BOC from making any further such transfers. Despite the Israeli warnings, the BOC – with the Chinese government’s approval – continued to wire terrorist funds for the Hamas and PIJ.

The plaintiffs, who are represented by attorneys Federico C. Sayre of Los Angeles, Robert J. Tolchin of New York and Nitsana Darshan-Leitner of Israel, include the family of Afik Zahavi, a four year-old boy who was murdered on June 28, 2004 in a Hamas missile attack in the town of Sderot. The toddler was on his way to nursery school when he was killed.

Other plaintiffs include the families of Emi Elmaliah, and Michael Saadon, who were murdered on January 27, 2007 in a suicide bombing in a bakery in Eilat. The attack was carried out by a PIJ bomber from Gaza.

Attorney Nitsana Darshan-Leitner stated that: “BOC knowingly assisted Hamas and the Islamic Jihad to carry out terrorist attacks with the full approval of the Chinese government, and rejected requests by the Israeli government to cease and desist. BOC even had the chutzpah to make these funds transfers through its U.S. branches right under the nose of the U.S. Justice Department, despite the fact that Hamas and the PIJ are designated terrorist organizations and that such wire transfers are a crime under American law. We expect BOC to now pay very heavily for its support for terrorism.”

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

ALERT – Sullivan County: Items Stolen From Dozens Of Cars

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

YWN has learned that dozens of cars have been broken into in the past week in the Monticello area. The most recent rash of break-ins was early Friday morning (Thursday night), and the thieves hit the Monticello area (Freeds Bungalows, Syms etc) on Fraser Road near Old Liberty Road.

A few days ago, cars parked at Alpine Estates on Route 42 were robbed, as well as Beverly Hills & Ichud (Ideal Bungalows) were broken into as well.

In most cases, just GPS systems were stolen (more than 50!), but other items have been taken also.

The Sullivan County Sheriff Department, under the dedicated leadership of Sheriff Mike Schiff, and Undersheriff Eric Chaboty has assured YWN that everything is being done to apprehend the suspects. “Extra patrols are being placed on the roads, and we will be focusing on camps, colonies, and developments in the area”, Mike Schiff told YWN.

Undersheriff Chaboty told YWN that people should be vigilant, lock their car doors, and not leave anything valuable in plain sight.

“Detectives are working on this case as we speak, and we will do everything in our power to make arrests as soon as we can”, Chaboty said.

(Yehuda Drudgestein – YWN Sullivan County News Desk)

Rabbi Avi Shafran: Tangled Up In Jews

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

shafran.jpgAnti-Israel diatribes spring from Iran’s leaders like fleas from a dog, but a recent Iranian Parliament statement stood apart, containing as it did a remarkable admission.

The statement was in reaction to a comment by Esfandiar Rahim Mashai, the Iranian vice president for tourism, who contended that Iran is “a friend for all people in the world, even Israelis and Americans.”

Calling for Mr. Mashai’s dismissal because of that “unforgiveable mistake,” the parliamentarians went on to declare that “We do not recognize a country called Israel and so we cannot recognize a nation called Israel.”

The internal logic of the declaration aside, it would seem to depart from the common trope among “progressives” that Iran’s leaders, and others like them, hate only contemporary Zionism, not Jews.

The statement laid bare something more.  Not only is a “country called Israel” illegitimate in the signatories’ eyes; so is “a nation called Israel.”  Perhaps that means Israeli citizens – disturbing enough.  Or perhaps it means the “Israel” of antiquity, who carry the name that Hashem bestowed on Yaakov Ovinu.

The Agudath Israel movement is not part of either the secular or religious Zionist camps, and indeed was founded in 1912 in large part to distinguish itself from both the part of the Jewish world that saw a Jewish state as a high political ideal and the part that invested the quest for a contemporary Jewish state with spiritual significance.  And while Agudath Israel today is deeply committed to Israel’s security, and its adherents in Israel fully participate in the country’s democratic system, we “Agudists” remain theologically distinct.

Still and all, we recognize that much, if not most, of the negative sentiment aimed at Israel is tightly tangled up with hatred for Jews.

The point was made back in 1975, after the infamous “Zionism is Racism” United Nations resolution.  The greatly missed Rabbi Moshe Sherer, z”l, the then-president of Agudath Israel of America, wrote that “Though the resolution was supposedly aimed only at secular ‘Zionism’… the slander is an attack on the entire Jewish people.”

Even if the hatred was aimed only at certain Jews, he continued, “we [Agudath Israel adherents] would feel precisely the same responsibility to come to the defense of our brethren.  While we may have our own quarrel with secular Zionism, when Jews are libeled, their affiliation does not matter; our love for our brothers and sisters draws us to their side.”  But what is more, he pointedly stressed, “the U. N. resolution is aimed at all Jews, for it assails the historical Jewish right to Eretz Yisrael.  The Torah bestowed that right, and any attack on it is an attack on Judaism and the Jewish people.”

One can certainly be critical of Israel and not be an anti-Semite.  But equally true is that there is a symbiotic relationship in some circles between criticism of Israel and hatred of Jews.  Whether the chicken of anti-Zionism or the egg of anti-Semitism came first is of only academic interest.  The final fricassee is animus for both.   Which is why visibly Jewish European Jews, loyal citizens of their respective countries, are attacked by Arab hooligans, and Jewish cemeteries vandalized with anti-Israel graffiti.

I had a correspondent (actually, still do, if one considers his forwarding me articles and my consigning them to my trash file to constitute correspondence) who is a professor at the University of Alberta.  He first wrote me a year or so ago with a pleasant note about an article I had written about Jewish ethics.  When I thanked him, though, he quickly turned the topic to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  His take – essentially that whatever Israel does is evil, whatever Palestinians do is noble – was so bizarre that I had to tell him it sounded like the sort of libels against Jews with which history is rife.

He took great umbrage, insisting that his criticism was only of Israel, not Jews.  Gently ending our conversation, I responded that I would take him at his word but remained at an utter loss to understand what could possibly lie behind so skewed a perspective as his.

So he put me on his e-mail list for receipt of articles from websites dedicated to applauding premeditated murder and condemning self-defense (at least when the self-defender is Israel).  I click the messages away, unopened, to e-mail Hades.  A recent one’s subject box, though, caught my eye.  It read something like “This is kosher?”

The attachment was the first among the scores that had arrived over the year whose subject was not one or another of Israel’s “crimes.”   It was a news report about workers’ claims of mistreatment at the embattled Agriprocessors meatpacking concern in Iowa.  Now what on earth, I thought, does that have to do with Israel?

The answer was “nothing,” of course.   Like the Iranian parliament, the good professor had simply revealed the broader scope of his ample ill will.

© 2008 AM ECHAD RESOURCES

[Rabbi Shafran is director of public affairs for Agudath Israel of America.]

IDF Opens Bir Naballah Checkpoint to Arab Motorists

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

As the Government of Israel continues its implementation of good-will and reducing restrictions policies on PA (Palestinian Authority) residents, the military was instructed to open the Bir Naballah Checkpoint to PA motorists.

The move marks the third IDF checkpoint removed in August, with this one situated south of PA-controlled Ramallah, not far from Jerusalem’s northern border near the Atarot Industrial Park. Israel continues to relax security on PA motorists, but is receiving nothing in return from PA Chairman Mahmoud Abbas (Abu Mazen).

IDF soldier Nachshon Wachsman was murdered by terrorists in Bir Naballah in October 1994. IDF Sayeret Matkal Captain Nir Poraz fell in the line of duty during a failed rescue attempt in the village.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

Israel: New Pharm Stores to Close on Shabbos

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

Israel’s New Pharm pharmacy chain, which has 18 stores nationwide, is planning to close all the branches by Yom Kippur.

To date, about one-third of the stores have been closing on Shabbos, as per the decision of the new CEO, Rami Shavit. Shavit, who is not Shomer Mitzvos, announced at a press conference earlier in the week that while he personally is not religious, he believes in Hashem and feels there will not be any bracha from opening stores on Shabbos. He went on to explain that while he is aware the religious public, which represents a respectable client base, will be pleased with the policy decision, the move was his alone and he was not pressured by rabbis or any organization to close the stores on Shabbos.

In response, rabbonim have responded, telling Shavit they are confident the Shomer Shabbos community will make an effort to support his stores as a result.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

President Peres Warns Against Russian Missiles in Syria

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

President Shimon Peres on Thursday warned of the danger of positioning Russian ballistic missiles in Syria.

Mr. Peres stated such a reality would pose a worldwide threat, explaining that weapons of mass destruction without the means of launching them are less threatening, but the two together pose a threat that must concern the international community.

Mr. Peres’ statements come in response to reports that Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s visit this week to Russia was for the purpose of acquiring Russian-built ballistic missiles, which the Russian media states will be deployed in Syria.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

Rabbonim: Do Not Support Resorts that Desecrate the Shabbos

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

The Rabbinical Committee for Kedushas Shabbos in Israel has released a proclamation reminding vacationers during the ben hazmanim vacation period to avoid visiting and supporting resorts that are not Shomer Shabbos.

People wishing to make inquiries may take advantage of the committee’s information number, 02-640-0160, which operates 24 hours a day. The committee is trying to keep the hotline information current, constantly updating the database with information regarding vacation resorts.

The rabbonim feel that if chareidi vacationers are stringent in their adherence to supporting only Shomer Shabbos resorts, more attractions will undertake to close on Shabbos, realizing the potential fiscal gain by such a move.

One warning issued by rabbonim pertains to Kfar Blum, which presents itself as suitable for the chareidi public, but in essence, the attraction is not Shomer Shabbos and should not be patronized. In its adverts, Kfar Blum shows chareidim enjoying the resort, which can easily mislead unsuspecting vacationers.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

Text-Messaging Injuries Blamed on Distraction

Friday, August 22nd, 2008

ywtext.jpgText messaging may not seem an obvious safety concern. But the American College of Emergency Physicians warns that being distracted by text messaging at inappropriate times — such as when crossing streets — can result in serious injury or death.

Teens and young adults, in particular, “are arriving in emergency departments with serious and sometimes fatal injuries, because they were not paying attention while texting,” ACEP President Dr. Linda Lawrence said in a news release.

“People are texting, and they trip and fall on their faces — usually people in their 20s. We see a lot of face, chin, mouth (and) eye injuries from falls,” said Dr. James Adams, professor and chairman of the department of emergency medicine at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, in Chicago.

More serious injuries occur when people who are busy texting collide with cyclists, rollerbladers and others.

“Some (people) are actually on (Chicago’s busy) lakefront path texting while walking or exercising. We see people rollerblading or biking while texting. They are usually very skilled but sometimes crash and fall when they are not watching where they are going,” Adams said.

Dr. Matthew Lewin, an emergency physician at University of California, San Francisco Hospital, offered an example of how texting can be deadly.

“In March, (we) were driving and saw a woman in her 20s step off the curb and get struck square by a pickup truck. She was unconscious, and it appeared she’d suffered a massive brain injury,” Lewin said. “You could tell she saw the truck at the last moment, because her cell phone was dropped right where she was struck just off the curb, and she was thrown about 20 or 30 feet. It was horrifying.”

The woman was still alive after being struck but died after she reached the hospital.

The ACEP offers the following safety tips:

*Don’t text or use a cell phone while doing physical activities that require sustained attention.
*Never text or use a hand-held phone while operating a car or motorcycle, and use caution when using headsets.
*Keep cell phones and other electronic devices in easy-to-find locations, such as phone pockets or pouches. This will prevent you from becoming distracted by having to rummage through purses, backpacks or clothing trying to find the devices.
Ignore calls or messages that arrive when you need to concentrate on demanding tasks such as driving. Better yet, turn devices off beforehand.
*Don’t text in any situations where excessive inattention may compromise safety, such as while sitting alone at night, waiting for a bus, or in a crowded area where there’s an increased risk of theft.

(Source: American College of Emergency Physicians, news release, July 28, 2008)

UTJ’s Uri Maklev Takes Knesset Oath of Office

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Uri Maklev, a former Degel HaTorah Jerusalem City Councilman, was sworn into office as a new United Torah Judaism MK, replacing Yaakov Cohen, who stepped down as per the rotation agreement between Degel HaTorah and Agudas Yisrael. Cohen was expected to step down when the Knesset took its summer recess.

Maklev took the oath of office yesterday, Wednesday, during a special Knesset session which took place during the summer break.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

Netanyahu: Release of Terrorists Crosses the Line in Terror War

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Commenting on the cabinet decision to release 199 terrorists and security prisoners, opposition leader Binyamin Netanyahu on Wednesday stated the move “crosses the line in the war on terrorism” questioning the decision.

“What are we receiving in return” asked the former prime minister, who accuses the government of “losing direction,” citing the fortification of Hizbullah, the Hamas threat, rocket attacks against southern Israel and a government willingness to compromise on Jerusalem as examples of government failures.

(Yechiel Spira – YWN Israel)

BREAKING: White Powder in Letter at McCain's Denver Office

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

Officials report that white powder was found in mail sent to John McCain's campaign office in Colorado.

(Fox News)

Video Article: Anniversary Of Sbarro Pizza Bombing

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

sbb1.jpgThe anniversary of the horrific Sbarro suicide bombing in Israel is today, Thursday 8/21/08, the Twentieth of AV. The following video is a story of how a person was saved from the Sbarro Pizza bombing in Israel and then saved again from the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center.

Click HERE to watch this amazing story being released first on YWN: “You’re Watching Me – Produced By Yossi Gross”, sung by Michoel (Pruz) Pruzansky.

The Sbarro restaurant suicide bombing took place on August 9, 2001 in Jerusalem, Israel.

At the time of the bombing, the Jerusalem branch of the Sbarro pizza restaurant chain was located at the corner of King George Street and Jaffa Road in Jerusalem, one of the busiest pedestrian crossings in Israel. Just before 2:00 p.m. on a summer holiday afternoon, when the restaurant was filled with customers and pedestrian traffic outside was at its peak, a suicide bomber thought to be carrying a rigged guitar case or wearing an explosive belt weighing 5 to 10 kilograms, containing explosives, nails, nuts and bolts, detonated his bomb.

In the blast 15 people (including 7 children) were killed, and 130 wounded. Both Hamas and the Islamic Jihad initially claimed responsibility. Several Hamas members were subsequently captured by the authorities, tried, convicted and imprisoned. The suicide bomber who died in the course of carrying out the attack was later identified to be Izz al-Din Shuheil al-Masri from the Palestinian West Bank town of Aqabah. Izz al-Masri was 22 at the time and the son of a successful restaurant owner, and from an affluent land-owning family. He was escorted to the restaurant by Ahlam Tamimi, a 20-year-old female university student and part-time journalist, who had disguised herself as a Jewish tourist for the occasion. Ahlam Tamimi was sentenced to 16 life terms. She later commented that “I am not sorry for what I did” and does not recognize Israel’s existence. The person who constructed the explosives was a man named Abdallah Barghouti. For his part in this and a string of other attacks, in which 66 civilians were killed, he was handed down 67 life sentences in 30 November 2004.

5 of the 15 people killed were a set of parents along with their three children (two other of their children survived).

(Moshe Altusky – YWN)

YWN Ride-Sharing Feature Sees Smashing Success!

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

pb.jpgJust eight weeks ago, YWN launched a ride-sharing website in partnership with “Help-A-Yid”. Boruch Hashem, we are proud to report that more than four thousand people have found rides through this new system – which is saving people lots of gas money. Additionally, more than 100,000 people have searched for rides in just three weeks!

Since it’s launch, the site features have changed a bit (thanks to user input & feedback), and it is now much easier to find a ride, and offer a ride.

If you are able to, please do a Mitzvah, and offer a ride to those who can’t afford to drive, or don’t know how to drive etc. Rides can only be matched if there are Baalei Chesed who offer rides!

Please note, that although this service is doing wonders by helping people get to & from the Catskills this summer, there has also been a large increase in site-traffic for rides at other areas. The goal of this new feature is to provide rides all year long, in all neighborhoods.

The link can be found on the YWN homepage, on the left side under the “Community” button, or by clicking HERE.

Any info regarding this feature, should use the contact button on the Ride-Share web-page, and not the YWN contact info.

(YWN Desk – NYC)

Tentative Deal Gives NYPD Officers Raises

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

nypd4.gifAccording to WNBC & the Associated Press, NYPD officers have negotiated a tentative new contract that gives police raises of 17 percent over four years.

It is the first Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association contract in more than 10 years that has not had to be decided by a state arbitration panel.

News 4 reports that the deal gives police officers a four percent raise in each of those four years and contains no substantial givebacks. The new deal is retroactive to Aug. 1, 2006. It runs to July 31, 2010.

Maximum pay goes from about $65,500 to $76,000.

The following statement was released by Mayor Bloomberg:

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Patrick J. Lynch, President of the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association (PBA), announced that a tentative contract settlement has been reached with the PBA on a collective bargaining agreement covering the period from August 1, 2006 through July 31, 2010.  The agreement, which is subject to ratification, covers over 23,000 police officers. This settlement marks the first time an agreement has been reached across the bargaining table with the PBA since 1994.

“We have the 23,000 police officers of the NYPD, as much as anyone, to thank for the low crime and heightened quality of life we enjoy in this City,” said Mayor Bloomberg.  “The most important aspect of the contract is that it will raise the starting salary for rookie cops from $36,000, to over 40,000, and that will be retroactive to 2006. I have always believed that the best contract agreements are those that are reached at the bargaining table, and this is a good example of that.”

“Officers in the New York City Police Department shoulder responsibilities that exceed those of other officers across the country,” said Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly. “They have helped drive crime down to record lows. They more than deserve the increased compensation reflected in this new agreement.”

“This negotiated contract, the first for the PBA in almost 15 years, continues to move us toward a market rate of pay that our police officers have earned and so rightly deserve,” said PBA President Lynch said. “It brings a police officer’s top salary at contract’s end to $76,488 and our total monetary compensation package to over $94,000.  The agreement also includes, for the first time, an historic escalator clause that links longevity pay and health and welfare benefits contributions to the percentage change of wage increases, ensuring that those substantial benefits automatically rise in the same proportion as salary.   That link will serve to magnify each future increase in an officer’s earnings while insuring the long-term stability of our health and welfare funds for both active and retired officers.  Additionally, major changes to work rules, including ones that allow police officers to mutually exchange tours and to better utilize existing sick leave will vastly improve the quality of life for our members.  We are pleased that a dramatic change in the negotiating atmosphere has allowed for a real exchange of ideas and has resulted in a contract that deserves police officer’s support.”

(YWN Desk – NYC)

Out Of The Mailbag: Jewish Kindness

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

yw logo.jpgDear YWN,
 
I would like to share a personal story with you that highlights some of the best aspects of Klal Yisroel.
 
This past Sunday, I was driving to Toronto from Brooklyn with my wife and four children. All was going well and we were making good time, until approx 10:30 pm. We were a few miles out of the Clarence Rest Stop on the NYS Thruway, not far from Exit 50 (near Buffalo), when a tar-like smell began to creep into my nostrils. I looked down at the RPM gauge of my minivan, and sure enough, the dial was gesticulating wildly, irrespective of whether I was accelerating or not. It was clearly a transmission problem (I had just had my transmission replaced about two months ago.) The mechanic had assured me that all was fine, however, clearly, all was not fine!
 
I quickly pulled over to the side of the road, put on my 4 way flashers and began to call for roadside assistance. However I was very uncomfortable sitting in a car right on the side of the busy highway. The shoulder was not very wide, and the highway was dark and deserted. Every passing car and truck would make a huge “whoosh” as it passed by and our car would shake a bit. Clearly this was not an ideal location, to say the least.
 
For better or worse, I decided to try and make it to the next service area, which was some 2-3 miles away. My minivan groaned under the strain, and would not go more than 30 mph, but baruch hashem we did make it to the safety of the service area.
 
As we were pulling in, I noticed another frum family sitting in a minivan. My wife quickly approached them and asked for some assistance. Here we were, hundreds of miles from home, and over 100 miles from our destination, in middle of the night (by this time it was after 11pm), with no way of getting to Toronto!
 
This kind family, a couple with some teen aged daughters, gladly offered to take two of my children to Toronto where my in-laws would pick them up! We quickly prepared a document for the Canadian border, explaining our predicament and allowing this wonderful family to cross without any hassles.
 
While we were arranging this ride, and waiting for the tow truck, another frum fellow approached me. He is a member of the Toronto Hatzolah, and was just returning from a visit to the States as well. If I tell you that this man was a ba’al chesed, it would be the understatement of the year. Not only did this kind man put me at ease, but he did the following: He and his wife and children followed my car as it was being towed some 15 miles (out of his way!). Then after the tow truck had deposited us at the closed service area, he drove me to the Buffalo airport, assisted me in getting a rental car, waited for me while the paperwork was being completed, then drove alongside me back to the service area to pick up my luggage from my broken vehicle, and even took a few items that would not fit back to Toronto for me!! This man and his family literally spent a few hours assisting me, at a very late hour, many hours into their trip. At a time when most people would be very anxious to arrive at their destination, this tzaddik made me feel like he had all the time in the world.
 
All this for a total stranger!! The driver of the tow truck asked me: “Are you guys traveling together?” I told the driver that in fact, I did not even know this person until just a few minutes ago. The driver was incredulous, and said that would never happen with his people. it goes without saying that this was a tremendous Kiddush Hashem.
 
I know that the two wonderful Toronto families who assisted me would value their privacy, so I will not disclose their names. But I did want to give a public thanks on this forum to two selfless families who embody some of the best middos that Klal Yisrael has. I was so proud to be a frum Jew that night. I truly was.
 
Mi K’Amcha Yisroel!!

————
NOTE: Yeshivaworld welcomes your “Out Of The Mailbag” letters & comments. Letters may be edited or shortened for clarity. Submit all letters by clicking HERE – titled “Mailbag”, or click HERE and post them at the YWN Coffee Room.

The views expressed in this column reflect the opinions of the individual writers and do not necessarily reflect the views of Yeshiva World News LLC. These individual opinions are also in no way meant as a P’sak Halacha or Hashkafa. As with all matters, be sure to consult with a Rov with all questions.

NY Post: Bloomberg Considering Third Term

Thursday, August 21st, 2008

nypb.jpgFrom today’s NY Post: Mayor Bloomberg is considering extending term limits through a deal with the City Council that would allow him another four years, while also boosting lawmakers’ time in office, sources told The Post.

Bloomberg has publicly said he intends to leave when his term ends on Dec. 31, 2009, but has privately expressed interest in undoing the city’s cap of two four-year terms with a legislative change, not a public referendum, sources said.

Bloomberg has recently indicated he believes he has plenty of time next year to work out an arrangement with the council, sources said.

“It’s more ‘yes’ than ‘no’ right now,” a source said. “They think they have time to wait until after the [November] election.”

At a press conference today, the mayor for the first time left the door open to considering an extension of term limits.

Bloomberg explained that the City Council has the legal power to pass a bill that would change term limits, which was enacted and reaffirmed by public referendum.

“I don’t know what the City Council is going to do,” he said. “My job, if the City Council comes to us with a piece of legislation, we will look at it, we will consider it and we’ll make what I hope is an informed judgment into what is in the best interest of the city.”

The mayor stressed that he has no plans to run again himself.

But he indicated he’s open to amending the law to limit legislators to three terms, instead of the current two.

“There are a lot of people who say they are set at an inappropriately short level,” he said. “Rational people can have that view…”