Emes Ve-Emunah
A Forum for Orthodox Jewish thought on Halacha, Hashkafa, and the issues of our time.
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Monday, March 09, 2026
The IDF and the Golden Calf
| Satmar Rebbe of Kiryas Joel |
I am occasionally forwarded the blog’s opinion pieces.
Despite some “over-the-top” rhetoric, I often find myself agreeing with many of
the points being made.
Today I was sent what appears to be a translation of a
lecture delivered by the Satmar Rebbe of Kiryas Joel at the Shalosh Seudos meal
this past Shabbos to his Chasidim.
If the translation is accurate, the remarks are not merely
controversial—they represent a profound moral failure. When Jewish soldiers are
risking their lives to defend fellow Jews, to portray their actions as a form
of idolatry is not simply an ideological disagreement. It is a distortion of
basic Jewish moral sensibilities.
Following in the footsteps of his uncle, R’ Yoel
Teitelbaum—who published a scathing attack against Rav Kook, the spiritual
progenitor of Religious Zionism, and who famously described the miracles of the
Six-Day War as maaseh Satan (the work of the devil)—the Satmar Rebbe compared
the IDF to the Egel HaZahav, the Golden Calf of last week’s Torah portion...
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Sunday, March 08, 2026
Putting Carlson in His Place
“Tucker has lost his way,” Trump told ABC News correspondent Jonathan Karl in an interview. “I knew that a long time ago, and he’s not MAGA. MAGA is saving our country. MAGA is making our country great again. MAGA is America First, and Tucker is none of those things. And Tucker is really not smart enough to understand that.”
I’m finding it harder and harder to criticize the president,
even knowing all the ‘bad stuff’ about him accumulated since he first took
office.
But as I have said in the past in his defense, the president
does have a conscience. It isn’t always about ego. Or getting maximum support
even it includes bigots and antisemites. Especially when it comes to Orthodox
Jews, for whom it seems he has the highest regard. (Which is not the case for non-Orthodox
Jews, most of whom despise him about which the feeling is mutual.)
What triggered this presidential response was yet another
far-out conspiracy theory from Tucker Carlson about Chabad:
“You may know people who give money to Chabad or run Chabad—super nice people, engaged in all kinds of charitable activities,” Carlson told his followers about the global Hasidic sect in a video he posted Thursday. “But what is Chabad exactly?”
Carlson went on to claim, “Chabad has been pushing in a pretty subtle way, unless you look carefully, for the reconstruction of the Third Temple”—the fabled structure that, according to ancient Jewish teachings, heralds the arrival of the messiah. Building the temple, he says later in the video, “is considered so esoteric and weird and crypto-historical and religious and kind of culty. What’s Chabad? No one ever mentions it.”
He accused Chabad of sitting at the center of what he said was an effort to wage a holy war in the Middle East aimed at destroying the Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque—Muslim holy sites built on the remnants of the ancient Jewish Temple, known as the Temple Mount—in order to clear the way for its reconstruction.
Thursday, March 05, 2026
The YU Paradigm as the Model for Torah Jewry
That is the paradigm. And that view has increasingly been perpetuated ever since Rav Aharon Kotler established his yeshiva, Beth Medrash Govoha, in Lakewood. The idea of working for a living - even while establishing regular times for Torah study - is considered to be B’dieved, - pursued only as a last resort. Women raised in this paradigm generally refuse to date men who choose that path.
I have always believed that the truth of Judaism is more closely represented by the Yeshiva University (YU) model, which sees working for a living as much of a L’chatchila as learning full time.It doesn’t really make much difference to me whether the
underlying philosophy of that model is Torah U’Madda, Torah im Derech Eretz, or
Torah U’Parnassah. While there are clear ideological differences, the result is
largely the same. YU is a yeshiva that produces learned baalei batim
and, in some cases, gedolim who devote their lives to Torah study. Much
the same as Lakewood students. YU reflects the idea that the God never intended
His people to live exclusively in the warm cocoon of a Torah-only lifestyle.
That attitude was made clear by one of the most revered talmidei
chachamim of the 20th century, Rav Baruch Ber Leibovitz. He was
asked by Rav Shimon Schwab whether his Hirschian philosophy of Torah im Derech
Eretz was a L’chatchila. His answer was clear: No, it was not. He
claimed that Samson Raphael Hirsch intended it only as a B’dieved for
his community and his time. That is still how the Lakewood world tends to see
it now, even though it is clear from Rav Hirsch’s writings that he meant it as
a L’chatchila.
For me, it is a simple matter...
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Wednesday, March 04, 2026
Whose Side Are Democrats On?
| Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer |
The issue is the war against Iran being waged by the US. The
lack of clarity involves why the US is doing it. That charge is mostly issued
by Democrats and a few Republicans in near-universal language. They keep saying
that the president has offered no clear reason for the attack and no clear
objective. They claim, with some justification, that they are getting mixed
messages, or that assertions of an imminent attack from Iran have no basis in
fact.
This is where the Trump administration is dropping the ball.
Instead of trying to justify the war against Iran based on a direct imminent
attack - which at best is questionable - they ought to be articulating the real
reason for it. A reason that, in fact, anyone with half a brain already knows,
and which therefore deserves unequivocal support. A reason articulated by the
many supporters of the war.
Which is as follows: Iran’s fanatical religious beliefs
include the destruction of the Jewish state, which they consider an affront to
Islam — and in the process, the seven million Jews living there. That, my
friends, is what is called genocidal intention. As an important ally of the
United States, it is in US interests to prevent that from happening...
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Tuesday, March 03, 2026
Bomb Iran
After the murderous religious Nazis of Islam took over Iran
in 1979 (and in the process took 52 U.S. embassy workers hostage for 444 days),
the sentiment in much of the civilized world was that Iran had become a rogue
nation that needed to be stopped before it spread its murderous theology across
the globe.
A parody of the The Beach Boys’ hit song Barbara Ann was
released in 1980 that reflected that sentiment. A sentiment few believed would
ever translate into reality. Until it did a few days ago on Shabbos, Parshas
Zachor.
Parshas Zachor is when we read about the Torah’s requirement
to erase the very memory of Amalek, which in our day can be applied to any
individual or nation that seeks to destroy the Jewish people. That is why we
read this portion of the Torah on the Shabbos before Purim. Which is today.
Purim is the story of ancient Persia (today’s Iran), then
under the control of Haman - the Amalek of his time. He sought to wipe the
Jewish people off the map and prepared to do so swiftly. It was on Purim that
the tables were turned on Haman and he himself was destroyed. The Jewish people
of ancient Persia had their freedom restored and were once again able to
practice Judaism openly.
Modern-day Persia (Iran) had its own Amalek...
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Monday, March 02, 2026
Netanyahu and The US Israel Alliance
I say this knowing full well that many people I deeply
respect might choke at even the suggestion. They have expressed unmitigated hatred of the man for good reason, blaming him for many of the ills besieging Israel
right now. And, by
extension, the Jewish people all over the world. I completely understand where
they are coming from. In fact, I could probably repeat verbatim all the serious
problems they have with him, which they believe have harmed Israel’s reputation
almost irredeemably.
To cite just a few:
...aligning with extremist right-wing parties to form a
coalition;
...allowing Charedim to avoid conscription in order to keep
them in his coalition;
...using ruthless tactics to stay in power;
...alienating colleagues and former supporters for political
purposes (he probably has more political enemies than any politician Israel has
ever had);
...being indicted for
corruption, for which he is currently standing trial;
...his unpopular attempt to overhaul Israel’s judicial system;
...insulting a sitting president on more than one occasion,
thereby alienating members of that president’s political party and reducing
bipartisan support for Israel;
...sharing responsibility for the October 7th massacre
by virtue of a mistaken policy of appeasement toward Hamas;
...his heavy handed prosecution of the war in Gaza which has caused
a rise in antisemitism worldwide;
...and being quite arrogant about his own leadership ability.
To put it more simply, he is seen as an amoral power-hungry narcissist who
would sell his mother to stay in power.
While there is truth to some of these concerns, I remain
convinced that Benjamin Netanyahu is the most consequential leader Israel has
ever had—in more ways than one.
Netanyahu is also Israel’s longest-serving prime minister. How could a man so reviled by much of the Israeli public, fellow politicians, and by so many people worldwide and about half of congress - be elected prime minister for so long...?
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Sunday, March 01, 2026
A Game Changing Moment in History
| Iran's mass murderer is dead (IHRS) |
In both cases, there was a regime that mass-murdered its own
people with a goal of eventual world domination. And in both cases, members of
Congress argued that since there was no immediate, direct threat to the U.S.
mainland, we should not get involved. In the current conflict, they add that
the president violated the Constitution by declaring war. Which is the purview
of Congress.
It is truly mind-boggling that there are people in Congress
who profess to care about atrocities being perpetrated against innocent
civilians yet could not care less about the massacre of tens of thousands of
Iranians in very short order by a rogue Iranian nation. I guess the only human
lives they care about are the Palestinians in Gaza.
I keep hearing that there was no imminent threat to the U.S.
Maybe so, but there was the constant daily threat by Iran to tens of thousands
of their own citizens. Who have already experienced the deadly consequences of
their regime’s displeasure at their protests. If a powerful nation is in a
position to help those people overcome their murderous regime, I think it has a
moral obligation to do so. Just as the U.S. did in World War II when it was
Germany committing such crimes. Then it was Hitler. Now it is Khamenei.
I could therefore not be more pleased with what happened
over Shabbos. In a joint military exercise with Israel - the first of its kind -
Khamenei was killed along with his top military commanders and strategists. I
believe it was the Israeli Air Force that was responsible for that particular strike.
What a joint mission like this says about Israel’s military
and intelligence capability is that Israel is an invaluable asset to the U.S.,
and that the IDF and U.S. forces are comparable and compatible in their
military capabilities. It also helps put the intelligence failures of October 7th
behind us and restores Israel to its former glory. Furthermore it makes a
mockery of claims by antisemites like Tucker Carlson and his fellow travelers,
who keep insisting that Israel has no value to the U.S. - and is only a
liability.
For the first time in 47 years, since the terrorist regime
seized power in Iran and took 53 American hostages for 444 days, the U.S. has
finally done something about it. I don’t think it is an exaggeration to say
that Iran is one of the greatest dangers to world peace since Nazi Germany. And
for the first time since America’s victory over Nazi Germany and Japan, the
U.S. military has shown itself worthy of being called the most powerful nation on
earth.
Iran, on the other hand, has proven itself to be the danger
to the world it has long been accused of. Not just to Israel. Not just to the
U.S. by attacking its military bases in the region. But even to its own Arab
neighbors.
Not only did Iran fire ballistic missiles at Israel, it
fired missiles at Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, the UAE, Kuwait, and Qatar.
Arab nations that wanted to remain neutral and refused to allow their airspace
to be used by U.S. and Israeli air forces. By firing on those countries, Iran
united them against itself and effectively opened their airspace.
If one wants to see the moral justification for this attack, all they need do is...
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Friday, February 27, 2026
The Consequences of Illiteracy
| Tyler Oliveira (VIN) |
Rabbi Yair Hoffman does a wonderful job describing this
fellow’s modus operandi in his VIN piece:
He built his YouTube channel on a simple formula: find a community that looks different, show up with a camera, and let the algorithm do the rest. He filmed addicts overdosing in Vancouver without consent. He amplified the debunked pet-eating hoax about Haitian immigrants in Springfield, splicing in unrelated arrest footage to manufacture fear. The subjects change. The method never does.
Then Tyler came for the Jews.
In January 2026, he drove to Kiryas Joel, a Satmar Hasidic village of 44,000 in Orange County, and produced a forty-minute video titled “Inside the New York Town Invaded by Welfare-Addicted Jews.”
(Oliveira also did a hit piece on Lakewood which deserves
its own commentary but is beyond the scope of this post.)
I think the title speaks for itself. Based on the massive
media coverage given to the Hasidic community—much of it negative—Oliveira
appears to have come to his conclusions about that community first and then
went about filming and editing to fit that predetermined narrative.
Rabbi Hoffman rightly exposes this fellow for the
publicity-seeking charlatan that he really is—a fellow who cares little about
the truth and purposely avoids or edits out anything that would contradict his
preconceived conclusions. To call him a lowlife would almost be a compliment
compared to how disgustingly amoral he is—especially when he tries to come off
as someone exposing wrongdoing for the betterment of society.
Truly disgusting.
That being said, I happened to see some of that footage a
while back. In particular, I recall one young Hasidic fellow from Kiryas Joel
being interviewed who could not have been more embarrassing to the Jewish
community. Every negative stereotype one has ever imagined about that community
seemed embodied in this one individual. He could barely speak English, and his
responses played right into the narrative Oliveira suggested in the title of
his video.
Now, I’m sure not every Hasid in that village is as
illiterate or relies on the welfare system to help support his family. I’m
equally sure that if Oliveira did find a Hasid who was articulate, he may well
have edited him out of the video.
But I have to ask...
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Thursday, February 26, 2026
Why Support for Israel Has Been Diminished
| California governor, Gavin Newsom |
Presidents and party chairmen, senators and key members of
the House all considered it a plus to address that body. The only people who
rejected AIPAC were the usual anti-Israel politicians of the type that
supported BDS. But they were always considered to be on the fringe of the
American political landscape.
That has changed. It seems the opposite is now happening —
mostly (and unsurprisingly) in the Democratic Party. It is almost toxic to be
associated in any way with AIPAC. The most recent candidate to eschew their
support is Gavin Newsom, who is widely considered to be running for the
Democratic nomination for president in 2028. He has said he never took money
from AIPAC and never will.
It isn’t only Democrats. Sadly, what was once near-universal
Republican support for Israel has now become a matter of debate. Even though I
still believe the vast majority of Republicans support the Jewish state and
would easily accept AIPAC support, there is a serious attempt by some
Republicans to disabuse their party entirely of that support.
That effort is led in part by a number of popular ‘conservative’ podcasters,
Tucker Carlson chief among them. With millions of followers who lap up every
word he says. So - even though the majority of Republican politicians still
strongly support Israel, for the first time in a long while there is anti-Israel
pressure from among their ranks. I am, however, gratified to see most of them
resisting that pressure.
But still, it is disheartening to see any erosion of support
at all. The question is why? Why is this happening?
I think it is safe to say that Israel’s war in Gaza was the
tripwire. Media coverage was relentless in depicting images of Palestinian
suffering in Gaza. Israeli airstrikes were followed by images of death and
destruction, and a media narrative — often shaped by anti-Israel Palestinian
reporters — had its impact.
After two years of images like that and the accompanying
narrative broadcast on the nightly news, made it seem as though Israel was
indiscriminately killing Palestinians. Which anti-Israel progressives started calling
genocide. Two years of those daily images like that made it almost impossible to
refute that charge.
That caused a huge drop in American support and helps
explain why political support has changed. Many (perhaps most) politicians
stick their fingers in the air to see which way the wind is blowing - and
that’s how they decide what their political positions will be.
It takes a lot of courage to examine the veracity of what’s being reported and to understand the context of those images. Courage is something most politicians do not have in abundance...
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