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Chaim

Chaim

@Whaim613

انضم Mayıs 2023
550 يتبع489 المتابعون
Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@Osint613 Should have started with this.
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Ben Shapiro
Ben Shapiro@benshapiro·
Felt like a good day to repost this. Shabbat Shalom!
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Isaac Choua
Isaac Choua@ChouaIsaac·
Something, something, ancient tradition... Shabbath Shalom 🤲🏽
Isaac Choua tweet media
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Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@Chusidel I mean, I don’t even have a taiva for bread today, I can live. My first chametz will be challah Friday night and even then only because I’m Sephardi and have to, matzah is back to mezonot.
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Shloime Zionce | שלומי זייאנץ 👑
Hot take: I’d rather eat a crunchy piece of Matzah with Gefilte Fish and Chrein on Motzei Pesach, than stand in line for four hours with hundreds of rowdy overstimulated and unshowered people for a lame pie of half baked pizza and soggy fries.
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Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@Average_NY_Guy I dont get what you mean. If we look back in history, many societies survived this and much worse.
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AP
AP@Average_NY_Guy·
Antisemitism is at a level I never imagined I’d see here in the United States. No society can survive this kind of hatred.
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Chaim أُعيد تغريده
Belaaz News
Belaaz News@TheBelaaz·
🌾 SEFIRA REMINDER: Hayom Chamisha Yamim Laomer • Powered by Rayze.it | Featured Client: קרן עולם התורה
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Heimish Humor
Heimish Humor@HeimishHumor·
It's weird, but on Passover, no matter how much you eat, you don't feel full.
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Chaim أُعيد تغريده
Israel Heritage Foundation
Israel Heritage Foundation@IHF_Heritage·
Erie silence at Jerusalem's Western Wall, usually bustling. Rishon L'tzion Rabbi Kalman Ber, Rabbi David Yosef, and Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz dance amidst the quiet, bringing hope on Passover, a time of faith & hope!
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Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@netanyahu @yosich53 Just pray at the kotel and call it a protest of the supreme court?
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Benjamin Netanyahu - בנימין נתניהו
לא יאומן. בזמן שיהודים מוגבלים בחג בתפילה בכותל, בג״צ אישר הפגנת שמאל בתל אביב. חופש מחאה הוא חשוב, אבל חופש תפילה חשוב לא פחות. בזמן מלחמה מי שקובע את סידורי הביטחון זה רק פיקוד העורף
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Chaim أُعيد تغريده
Hasidic
Hasidic@hasidic_1·
המבדיל בין קודש לחול
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Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@ldkop My friend had it at the Seder, it seemed well laid out and more practical than I was expecting
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Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@AmitSegal People should just go pray at the kotel then, just call it protesting the court.
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Amit Segal
Amit Segal@AmitSegal·
Six police horses and more than 600 anti-war protesters walk into a bomb shelter. This isn’t the setup to a joke—it’s a description of last night in Tel Aviv. It certainly sounds like a joke. After all, why were there more than 600 protesters on the street when the Home Front Command has restricted all gatherings to 50? Well, a collection of left-wing groups wanted to protest the war—and the government—so clearly this was a matter of life and death. That was the reason the Israeli Supreme Court cited when it convened for an emergency hearing on Friday night to address the protesters’ petition. The protesters requested permission for 1,000 participants. The Home Front Command responded that 150 would be manageable. The president of the court, Yitzchak Amit, chose to split the difference—and then lean a bit further toward the protesters—landing on a final number of 600. Without getting into the broader issue of judicial reform, I didn’t realize the court had the power to make 450 people immune to missiles. The protesters, for their part, tested the court’s protective powers by ignoring the cap it had imposed. While police were dispersing the protest, something incredibly predictable occurred: rockets were fired at Tel Aviv. Which brings us back to the setup: six police horses and more than 600 anti-war protesters walk into a bomb shelter. Thankfully, the punchline was neither explosive nor ironic. But it easily could have been. To read the rest of today's newsletter click the link below. newsletter.amitsegal.net/p/its-noon-in-…
Amit Segal tweet media
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Chaim أُعيد تغريده
The White House
The White House@WhiteHouse·
President Donald J. Trump Wishes a Happy Passover.
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Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@catturd2 Shoulda stopped at “af post”
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Chaim
Chaim@Whaim613·
@Average_NY_Guy I need to find a little more of that disproportionate success somewhere, if you find any extra please send it my way 😂
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AP@Average_NY_Guy·
People love saying Jews are “disproportionately successful,” and then some go on and say it must be scams, fraud, something shady. But anyone who stops for a second and thinks about what that actually means realizes it makes no sense. You’re talking about millions of Jews, spread across different countries, speaking different languages, living in completely different systems, over hundreds and thousands of years. Most of them never met each other. And somehow they all landed on the same fraud strategy? There’s no mechanism in the world that could even make that work. There are plenty of real reasons for Jewish success. I’m not getting into all of them. Just one that you can actually see with your own eyes and is relevant now. We raise our kids to question everything. From when they’re little, “why” is not something you shut down. It’s something you encourage. A kid who keeps asking questions is not being annoying, he’s doing exactly what he’s supposed to be doing. We don’t raise kids to just nod along and repeat. We raise them to understand, to push back, to take something apart and see how it works. And if you want to see this in action, look at Passover. The entire Seder is built around questions. It’s not a meal where everyone is sitting quietly and listening. The whole night revolves around the child asking the Mah Nishtanah, the Four Questions. And it’s not just that we tell them to ask. The entire setup of the night is designed to get those questions out of them. We change everything. We dip foods in ways we never do during the year. We lean while we eat like free people. We break the matzah in a way that looks strange to a kid. The whole meal feels off compared to a regular night, all on purpose, so a child stops and says, “hey, what is going on here?” My little boys went to sleep ridiculously early tonight so they can be up and sharp for the Seder. They’ve been practicing the questions. Their rebbes prepared them. They’re not coming to sit quietly, they’re coming ready, excited, and almost impatient to ask and be part of it. So when you do this year after year, generation after generation, you end up building people who don’t just go with the flow. They ask. They notice. They challenge. They figure things out on their own. And that shows up very clearly in life and in business. When you’re used to questioning everything, you don’t just accept what’s in front of you. You ask one “why” and you start catching what doesn’t make sense. You spot bad deals early. You understand where the real opportunity is because you actually took the time to break it down. That’s a real explanation. Not scams. Not fraud. Just a culture where you are trained from the beginning to ask “why” and not stop until he understands the answer.
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AP
AP@Average_NY_Guy·
If you can’t be there to hear it, here’s what a Seder sounds like. The singing might be better than most, but the setup is basically the same. Wishing everyone a happy and kosher Passover.
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