Sunday, May 3, 2020

Hebrew U Study: Israel Could Control Covid-19 Without Lock-down By David Israel and If Half the Country’s Deaths Were In Georgia, Would New York Shut Down?By Dennis Prager and Don't Tread On US!!! and Judaism doesn't believe in Infallible leaders

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Yehuda Lave, Spiritual Advisor and Counselor

Yehuda Lave is an author, journalist, psychologist, rabbi, spiritual teacher, and coach, with degrees in business, psychology and Jewish Law. He works with people from all walks of life and helps them in their search for greater happiness, meaning, business advice on saving money,  and spiritual engagement. Now also a Blogger on the Times of Israel. Look for my column

Love Yehuda Lave

Judaism has no equivalent to the Catholic doctrine of papal infallibility

. There is an entire tractate of the Talmud, called Horiut, predicated on the assumption that even members of the ancient Sanhedrin, they greatest Rabbis of the generation were capable of erring, even in halachic matters.

But it is nonetheless a principle of Jewish thought that those most imbued with Torah-knowledge and who have internalized a large degree of the perfection of values and refinement of character that the Torah idealizes are thereby rendered most qualified to offer an authentic Jewish perspective on matters of import to Jews. Expert doctors, too, even if they are fallible, as they must be, are still the most qualified people to offer medical advice.

Torah leaders, like parents, may seem to children, might seem unreasonable at times. But, just as parents always remain parents, Torah leaders remain Torah leaders.

Two people can study exactly the same sources and have diametrically opposed approaches to them, because they have completely different worldviews. The  Rambam, who had a believe in the natural, believed in naturalizing miracles - others see that as heretical. 

There is no reason why the leadership of a "great Torah authority" who is entirely locked into a particular worldview should be accepted by someone with an entirely different worldview.

 There is a comparison to "expert doctors"; it's more like saying that an average, scientifically-educated Western person should submit to an "expert healer" in China. It's a completely different system of thought. 

It is simply not the case that a great Torah sage is always a great leader. Leadership is much more complicated than that. Rav Eliezer Melamed  (Eliezer Melamed is an Israeli Orthodox rabbi and the rosh yeshiva of Yeshivat Har Bracha, rabbi of the community Har Bracha, and author of the book series Peninei Halachah) says 

"Gadlute be Torah (Torah greatness, eminence) necessitates anall-embracing, fully accountable handling of serious issues facing the generation, including the attitude towards Am Yisrael in all its diversity and various levels – both religious, and non-religious; the attitude towards mitzvoth of yishuv Haaretz (settling the Land) andthe on-going war which has surrounded it for over a century; the attitude towards science and work, and the contemporary social and economic questions."

Expertise in Torah does not even necessarily make one wise in worldly affairs.. The Sages themselves pointed out that one can be a Torah scholar (by their standards!) and yet lack da'at (knowledge)- and they described such a person as being worse than a putrid carcass!

It is important in Judaism however, not to air our dirty laundry in public. In the Jewish world, it is accepted that there can be differing points of view. To the outside world which does not understand the nuance of what is being discussed, it looks like the entire religion is based on falsehood, because the outside world doesn't have the concept of these, and these both being the world of the eternal G-d.

In the past, before the world of the internet, people had the good sense to have Jewish discussions privately. In the Torah world, it was understood that learned people could have a different point of view.

Today, Halacha is dragged into the newspaper, and since the more controversial something else the more readers it gets, the writers go out of their way to trumpet unaccepted positions as being the accepted position. They try in the press to make out the Torah scholars as fools.

The most recent example during Passover was the Zoom controversy. While there were initial discussions over whether electricity would be allowed over Shabbat over 100 years ago, the majority of the Orthodox Rabbis decided electricity was similar to fire and therefore could not be used on Shabbat and Holiday days.

Where there other viewpoints over the years? Yes. Some Rabbis initially allowed electricity over Yom Tovs (Jewish holidays) as opposed to Shabbat. Everybody had their say, but it was all part of the discussion process with final majority opinion. That is how Judaism works.

We follow the majority opinion, because one can nearly always find a dissenting minority opinion that disagrees. If we followed the minority there would never be a consensus on practically anything. So, as a result, we follow the majority on deciding the bottom line.

The newspapers and press, however, love to play up controversy as I said before. It is therefore important to give respect to a Torah leader, even if you don't follow his opinion, because of the importance of his point of view. On some items, you are forced to follow the majority, even if you don't agree.

The official COVID-19 lockdown started March 23 and will likely start to peak around May 1st. That is EXACTLY 40 days.

The Latin root of the word "quarantine" is "forty". So, what does the Bible say about 40?

The flood lasted 40 days.

40 years Moses fled Egypt.

40 days Moses stayed on Mount Sinai to receive the Commandments.

Exodus lasted 40 years.

40 days for a woman to rest after giving birth.

The optimum number of weeks for human gestation is 40.

A group of theologians thinks the number 40 represents "change". It is the time of preparing a person, or people, to make a fundamental change.

Something will happen after these 40 days. Remember, whenever the number 40 appears in the Bible, there is a "change".

Please know that during this "quarantine" rivers are cleaning up, vegetation is growing, the air is becoming cleaner because of less pollution, there are less theft and murder.  Healing of our earth is happening, families are getting more in touch and connected, better appreciating loved ones and what they have, and most importantly, people are turning to their faith. The Earth is at rest for the first time in many years and hearts are truly transforming.

Remember we are in the year 2020, and 20 + 20 = 40.

Lastly, 2020 is a perfect vision. May our sight focus on the Lord and living according to his perfect vision for us knowing he holds us in the palm of his hand.

May these days of "quarantine" bring spiritual renewal to our souls, our nation, and our world.

As we learned above there are always a couple of points of view as we learn from this story:

A Jewish Success StoryA young man asked Morris, an old wealthy man, how he made his money.

Morris took off his glasses and said, "Well, son, it was 1932 during the heart of the Great Depression. I was down to my last nickel.

"So I invested that nickel in an apple. I spent the entire day polishing the apple and, at the end of the day, I sold the apple for ten cents.

"The next morning, I invested those ten cents in two apples. I spent the entire day polishing them and sold them at 5:00 pm for 20 cents. I continued this system for a month, by the end of which I'd accumulated the sum of $1.60.....

"Then my wife's uncle Bernie died and left us two million dollars."

 

 

Hebrew U Study: Israel Could Control Covid-19 Without Lockdown By David Israel

In a new study titled Managing COVID-19 Pandemic without Destructing the Economy, Profs. David Gershon, Alexander Lipton and Hagai Levine show that based on real-life data, Israel and other countries could have controlled COVID-19 without lockdown.

In theory, authorities can stop an epidemic by using the medieval method of quarantining all the population for a prolonged enough period. However, the economic and social toll of a long lockdown these days is catastrophic in any dimension. Expected consequences include enormous unemployment and social aspects of quarantine, such as isolation and loneliness, low access to healthcare, drug abuse and domestic violence, hunger and social unrest and on top of it the destruction of the economy will cause an enormous deficit that will weigh down the economy for years. It is expected to ask if the lockdown is really necessary or is it an act that governments triggered too late when the pandemic has already spread out massively. Often governments state that the purpose of the lockdown is "to flatten the curve", or in simple words to ensure that the health system does not exceed its full capacity. In the case of COVID-19 the likely measure is if the number of beds in the intensive care unit (ICU) is enough for all the patients that require ICU.

Prof. David Gershon and Prof. Alexander Lipton from the Jerusalem Business School at the Hebrew University, both well-known experts in Finance and Fintech and Prof. Hagai Levine from the School of Public Health of the Hebrew University, a leading infectious diseases epidemiologist and public health physician, developed a very detailed and precise model to calculate the consumption of ICU beds and hospital beds in general during the spread-out of the pandemic. The model considers each of the stages of the disease and separates between different population groups (for example by their vulnerability to the disease, residential density, behavioral characteristics, etc) and calculates the rate of infection, hospitalization and ICU beds for the different populations.

The model was calibrated with real time data from recent research articles about COVID-19 in different countries with information about infection rates, hospitalization and death cases as well as number of patients in ICU.

According to the model, if a country adopts a policy of social distancing as much as possible, including at work, 14 days self-quarantine of every person with symptoms such as fever or cough, testing all individuals with symptoms and hygiene measures including facemasks in public places, then in most cases there is no need in lockdown. By now, all the high risk population is aware of the danger and the need to over protect itself in general more than the low risk population. Naturally, frequent testing is an advantage that improves the control on the infection but the model assumes that there are limitations with the number of tests that can be provided.

One of the conclusions of the model is that in countries where the number of ICU beds for COVID-19 patients is above 60 ICU beds per million (depending on the ratio between the high and low risk population and the level of compliance of the population to the hygiene measures) then no lockdown is necessary and when the number of ICU beds for COVID-19 per million people is below 60 then a temporary partial quarantine of the high risk population may be required but in any case the economy and society can continue to operate.

When the numbers that correspond to Israel are plugged into the model then under the worst assumptions and without any lockdown the number of ICU beds for COVID-19 patients will not exceed 600. It was published that before the COVID-19 burst there were 2000 beds in Israel and currently around 3000 beds. This means that the lockdown was unnecessary and could be stopped and replaced with a responsible policy of hygienic behavior in public places mentioned before.

One can explore the results of the model one countries like Sweden, Singapore, Taiwan and South Korea. In all these countries there was never a lockdown and the health system never got close to full capacity, even though the number of ICU beds per population is less than in Israel. Another evidence is provided by the Gertner Institute research of the Israeli Ministry of Health, showing that in March 9, when the disease just started in Israel, the infection rate was very high (the reproduction number was 3.0) and thanks to awareness of the population to the disease and the caution measures taken by the majority of the population the infection rate decreased significantly (the reproduction number was 1.3 on March 22), before the start of the lockdown period. Since the beginning of the lockdown the further reduction in the infection rate was minor and most likely is a result of the behavior of the population and not the lockdown itself.

With regard to countries like Italy, Spain and the United states where despite the lockdown thousands of people died, the explanation is two-fold. First, in these countries the number of people that die every year from seasonal flu is extremely high, among the reasons is the exceptionally high percentage of high risk population due to aging, and second, most likely when the lockdown was placed the number of infected people was already enormous, and no hygiene measures were adopted before, which could have reduced the infection rate significantly.

Prof. Gershon, Levine and Lipton call for a systematic investigation of the death cases that are caused by the lockdown itself in the short and long term. Such an investigation might show that the growth in the number of death cases related to lockdown is higher than the death cases related to COVID-19. It may have a similar effect to "Iatrogenesis" in medicine, a phenomena where the medicine is more detrimental than the disease itself. It is important that all decisions regarding public policies and restrictions be taken based on real time data, and published to the public.

If Half the Country's Deaths Were In Georgia, Would New York Shut Down? By Dennis Prager

According to The New York Times coronavirus report, as of Sunday afternoon, April 19, there were 35,676 Covid-19 deaths in the United States. Of those deaths, 18,690 were in the New York metropolitan area. That means that more than half – 52 percent – of all deaths in America have occurred in the New York metropolitan area.

What makes this statistic particularly noteworthy is that the entire death toll for 41 of the other 47 states is 7,661. In other words, while New York has 52 percent of all Covid-19 deaths in America, 41 states put together have only 21 percent of the Covid-19 deaths. And all the 47 states other than New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut have less than half.

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Now let's imagine that the reverse was true. Imagine that Georgia and North Carolina – two contiguous states that have a combined total of 21 million people – had 18,690 Covid-19 deaths, while metro New York had 858 deaths (the number of deaths in North Carolina and Georgia combined).

Do you think the New York metro area would close its schools, stores, restaurants, and small businesses? Would every citizen of the New York area, with the few exceptions of those engaged in absolutely necessary work, be locked in their homes for months?

Would New Yorkers accept the decimation of their economic and social lives because North Carolina and Georgia (or, even more absurdly, Colorado, Montana or the rest of what most New Yorkers regard as "flyover" country) had 18,960 deaths while they had a mere 858?

It is, of course, possible. But I suspect that anyone with an open mind assumes that New Yorkers would not put up with ruining their economic and social lives and putting tens of millions of people out of work because of coronavirus deaths in North Carolina and Georgia, let alone Montana and Idaho (and, for the record, I would have agreed with them).

And the media, which controls American public opinion more than any other institution, including the presidency and Congress, would not be as fixated on closing down the country if it were killing far more people in some Southern, Midwestern, Mountain or Western states than in New York City.

The media is New York-based and New York-centered. New York is America. The rest of the country, with the partial exception of Los Angeles (also a media center) and Silicon Valley, is an afterthought.

Having grown up and attended college and graduate school in New York, and having lived in three of the city's five boroughs, I know how accurate the most famous New Yorker magazine cover ever published is. The cover's illustration depicted a New Yorker's map of America: New York City, the George Washington Bridge and then San Francisco. The rest of the country essentially didn't exist.

One would have to visit people who had never left their rural village in a developing country to find people more insular than New York liberals, which is what nearly all New Yorkers are.

One of the turning points of my life occurred when I was 24 years old and went to give a talk in Nashville, Tennessee. My assumption, having lived all my life in New York, was that I would be meeting and talking to what essentially amounted to country bumpkins. Not only were they not New Yorkers; they were Southerners.

What I found instead was a beautiful city with kind and highly-sophisticated people. No one I met was as cynical as most New Yorkers, who confuse cynicism with sophistication. It was on that trip that I decided to leave New York. When I moved to California two years later, my friends, and every other New Yorker I spoke to on visits back to New York, asked why I left and when I was coming back. To most New Yorkers, to leave New York is to leave the center of the world; it is leaving relevance for irrelevance.

In his latest column, New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman inadvertently revealed how New York-centric his view of America is. Friedman, like virtually all his colleagues at The New York Times, opposes opening up any state in America at this time. He writes: "Every person will be playing Russian roulette every minute of every day: Do I get on this crowded bus to go to work or not? What if I get on the subway and the person next to me is not wearing gloves and a mask?"

Only a New Yorker would write those two sentences. In the 40 years I have lived in the second-largest city in America, I have never ridden on the subway or any other intra-urban train or bus. The vast majority of Americans everywhere outside of New York City go to work, visit family and friends, and go to social and cultural events by car – currently the life-saving way to travel – not by bus or the subway.

But Friedman is a New Yorker, and because his fellow New Yorkers walk past one another on crowded streets and travel in crammed buses and subway cars, South Dakotans should be denied the ability to make a living.

Watch: Rabbi Yeshayahu Heber laid to rest

Gift of Life chairman, who died of coronavirus, laid to rest in Jerusalem. His son: Dad suffered a lot but never stopped smiling.

Rabbi Yeshayahu Heber, chairman of the "Gift of Life" organization who died from the coronavirus at age 55, was laid to rest in Jerusalem overnight Thursday.

The funeral procession left from the Shamgar funeral home and headed towards Har Hamenuchot in Givat Shaul.

The 55-year-old Rabbi Heber was hospitalized in serious condition at a Jerusalem hospital two weeks ago. On Thursday evening, doctors pronounced him dead. He is survived by his wife and two children.

 

 

"How much dad helped everyone endlessly, with marital harmony, money, good advice, by listening," his son eulogized him over the phone, due to the fact that the family is still in isolation. "He contained everyone in his huge heart. Anyone can say he is his best friend."

"Dad went through a lot of suffering in his life, it was many years before he had children. The period of the dialysis, kidney transplant, and even when stories were told about the association - the smile never came off his face. He was always strong, always strengthened everyone. Even people who did him wrong, he forgave them."

The son said: "He would say 'Jews who need me - I can't say no.' Everyone felt he was there just for them. Mom wanted to say thank you to all the people who prayed for his health, who were there during this time and to the Hadassah Hospital, the wonderful staff and Rothstein who did everything they could for him."

The Chief Rabbi of Israel, Rabbi David Lau, eulogized Rabbi Heber and said, "What a friend you were, you were full of heart, full of Torah, a big smile, filled with goodness. You said that the Blessed One gives a person one heart, one liver, but two kidneys so he can donate one. You donated yours and you caused given others to give theirs to others."

"What a person you were, a whole person in the Torah, a whole person at heart, a whole person in dedication, what a wonderful person. You walked between us here and always with a smile on your face."

Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu eulogized Rabbi Yeshayahu Heber earlier on Thursday.

"I wish to express deep regret over the passing of Rabbi Yeshayahu Heber, the founder and director of the Matnat Chaim Association, which helps patients in need of a kidney transplant. Rabbi Heber himself underwent a kidney transplant, and he instilled in the general public the awareness of the importance of donation. At the same time, he worked to connect donors with recipients, and accompanied the process throughout. Thanks to him, hundreds of people in Israel have been given a new life," Netanyahu said.

"Rabbi Heber was an exemplar of humanity, kindness and mutual responsibility. We all hoped he would recover from the coronavirus, but unfortunately, he passed away tonight. My deepest condolences to his family. May his memory be for a blessing," the Prime Minister added.

Pictures of the funeral at this web address:

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/279128?utm_source=activetrail&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=nl

 

The Biggest Media Lies During the Pandemic , "Fake News" is Alive and Well

Breitbart news, compiled some of the biggest misleading news pieces and outright lies over the course of the COVID-19 Pandemic.  The reporting is getting so insane, it is impossible to keep up with the constant stream of lies, misquotes, Chinese propaganda, left wing opinion disguised as news and intellectually dishonest "click bait".

For example the N.Y Daily News, posted a story linking The Poison Control Center,managing a total of 30 cases of possible exposure to disinfectants between 9 p.m. Thursday and 3 p.m. Friday, and comparing this to last year when poison control responded to 13 cases of the same issue, linking this somehow to Trump's question about the possibility of injecting disinfectants, which itself was twisted into a international media panic suggesting that Trump instructed people to inject Lysol and bleach. The click bait headline declared "A spike in New Yorkers ingesting household cleaners following Trump's controversial coronavirus comments",  upon reading the story, there is no evidence suggesting anyone who called into poison control , injected anything because of the president, they called in exposure to disinfectants, something which is frequently reported to poison control hotlines.  The result of the deceptive news, thousands of people re-post the story on social media, spreading a story which essentially proved nothing and sole existence of writing the piece was to connect Trump to something negative.

Here are some of the incredible things Breitbart reported on .

  1. New York Times: Trump Ignored Experts Who Wanted Country Closed in February

The far-left New York Times blasted President Trump on Easter Sunday with a litany of serial lies that claimed the president knew the coronavirus was coming and ignored medical experts who were urging him to close the country all the way back in February.

Dr. Anthony Fauci debunked this lie (and this entire narrative) the following day when he informed the public that Trump not only took the advice of his medical team the very first time he was advised to shut down the country, but that he has always accepted their recommendations and has done so immediately.

What's more, the very idea that medical experts were urging Trump to shut down the country in February is absurd. On the last day of February, Fauci said it was still safe to go to the movies, malls, and gyms. As late as March 9, Fauci was telling everyone it was still okay to hold campaign rallies in certain areas and safe for the healthy to take a cruise.

 

  1. CNN's Chris Cuomo Remained Heroically Quarantined Until Cleared

After he was diagnosed with the China virus, for weeks and weeks and weeks, CNN and Chris Cuomo  was selflessly holed up in his basement as a means to protect his family and the rest of us from infection. This bald-faced lie extended to CNN event programming that showed Fredo triumphantly exiting his basement for the first time.The truth, though, is that Cuomo violated his quarantine on Easter Sunday with a 30-minute trip to some property he's developing. The trip included his wife and kids. Cuomo's wife and 14-year-old son were both eventually infected. As of today, Chris Cuomo is the only American  while knowing he was infected and, therefore, infectious, deliberately violated his quarantine and put others at risk of a deadly disease.

 3. Trump's Council on Reopening the Country Is Staffed with Only Donors and Supporters ABC News hid from the public the names of those on the council who do not support Trump. This was a case of literal "fake news"

4. Biden Adviser Claimed 100 Million Americans Would Be Infected by Now

During a March 27 appearance on MSNBC's Morning Joe, Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, a member of Joe Biden's coronavirus advisory group, shrieked about how 100 million Americans would be infected within four weeks.

"Right now, if you look at the numbers, we probably have a million COVID-19 cases in the country," he said while no one pushed back. "And if this is doubling every three to four days, that means that we'll have 100 million people who have COVID-19 in about four weeks, and that's a frightening thought." He was only off by 99 million and change. Not a single reporter will refer back to this interview and ask Dr Emanuel  or Joe Biden about this

5.  Trump Hired a "Labradoodle Breeder" to Lead Coronavirus Task Force

On Wednesday, fake news wire service Reuters fired off this horseshit headline: "Special Report: Former Labradoodle Breeder Was Tapped to Lead U.S. Pandemic Task Force," which quickly flew around the world. More desperate lies. Describing Brian Harrison as a "labradoodle breeder," someone who served at the Department of Health and Human Services under both George W. Bush and President Donald Trump, is like describing Walt Disney as a newspaper boy. Yes, for a time Harrison worked in the family breeding business. Yes, for a time

6.   Dr. Rick Bright Was Fired over Opposition to Hydroxychloroquine

Some guy named Rick Bright is claiming he was booted by the White House over his opposition to hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for coronavirus.

Naturally, the fake media ran wild with this story. The truth, though, is that Bright's removal was in the works all the way back in January over his incompetence. Oh, and we now have internal emails proving he praised hydroxychloroquine. During Thursday's coronavirus briefing, CNN's Kaitlan Collins and her crone face shrieked at and heckled Trump over this, even though the far-left Politico had debunked it hours earlier.

Protesters In Pennsylvania Say Coronavirus Lockdown Is An 'Overreaction' | NBC News NOW

Hundreds of people broke social distancing rules to rally in Harrisburg, Penn. It's one of several protests nationwide against the coronavirus stay-at-home orders. NBC News' Maura Barrett reports from the rally where many are frustrated with the transparency of the governor.

Don't Tread On US!!!

Don't tread on us our protests around the country # work.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mh2pqwFl4dM&feature=youtu.be

See you tomorrow bli neder We need Moshiach now

Love Yehuda Lave

Rabbi Yehuda Lave

PO Box 7335, Rehavia Jerusalem 9107202

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Friday, May 1, 2020

The Mask-The loss of our smiles! and a humor article on surviving Passover and Coronavirus News Through the Eyes of Holocaust Survivors and a friend of mine, Arieh King to be Appointed Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem, Forgoes Salary and Ministry says it can do 15,000 virus tests daily, but nobody’s showing up

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Yehuda Lave, Spiritual Advisor and Counselor

Yehuda Lave is an author, journalist, psychologist, rabbi, spiritual teacher, and coach, with degrees in business, psychology and Jewish Law. He works with people from all walks of life and helps them in their search for greater happiness, meaning, business advice on saving money,  and spiritual engagement. Now also a Blogger on the Times of Israel. Look for my column

Love Yehuda Lave

The Mask: The loss of our smiles!

Human beings need social interaction to exist on many levels: personal relationships, including family and friends and professional, including business and academic interactions, and so forth. A lack of physical affection can actually kill babies.
But touch is even more vital than this: Babies who are not held, nuzzled, and hugged enough can stop growing, and if the situation lasts long enough, even die
We are now bearing witness to the difficulties and challenges related to Covid-19 that have struck people throughout the world.
The world of ZOOM and other meeting/teaching platforms have exploded to meet the needs of social interaction, a continuation of business meetings, and teaching from pre-school to graduate programs.
As is true regarding everything in life, nothing is perfect, and ZOOM, which is great, gives each individual participant options to mute oneself and to turn off the video, leaving a black screen with just a name identifying the person. There are many advantages to this for the participant. He/she can take phone calls, eat and drink without disturbing others, and play games instead of focus on the Zoom class.
The shutting down of the video camera decreases and almost eliminates the connection that we so desire and cherish. The ability to see a person's face allows for a meaningful 'connection' to each participant. Without, Zoom becomes just a taped Youtube class.
Jewish tradition teaches that there is no comparison between hearing and seeing the face of a person. The Kabbalists explain the Hebrew word for face is panim which can also be translated as inward. A person's face reflects what is inside of that individual's being; by looking at someone's face we are able to view the essence of that person. Moshe Rabbeinu wanted to see Hashem panim el panim, face to face. The desire was not to see what God looks like (because Hashem is not a physical being) but rather to see the essence of What Hashem is.
This gift that Hashem has instilled within human beings, the gift of seeing/reading the face of those with whom we are communicating, is now minimized by our situation to make do with something that compromises the natural way.
The law in Israel is we now wear masks to avoid potential transmission of Covid-19 from person to person. The expression a person has on his/her face and particularly the expressions emitted by the mouth speaks volumes. If you do not believe me, just take a look at how many emoji faces there are on your phone.
While the expression the eyes are the entranceway to the soul and the eyes definitely give a direction as to an individual's point-of-view, it is the mouth that gives support to the entire face. The mouth controls the description of the face, shaping the message to transmit happiness, sorrow, anger, excitement, etc. We communicate not only by speaking, or through the use of sign language, but also through facial and mouthing expressions. I, and I'm sure many of you, know how to communicate with one's mouth without emitting a single sound.
How does one give Zdeka (charity) when you have nothing to give. You give a smile, and the other reciprocates and smiles back. The acknowledgment and recognition a person gives to someone else makes the other feel good, as if he or she were receiving something warm, something to be cherished. A smile is contagious; an outgoing smile is reflected upon the recipient's face, shining back to the person who sent it.
In short, the smiles given are reflections of the sender. Nowadays, when I venture out, I am only able to see another's eyes and eyes alone cannot be read. It is the combination of eyes with the mouth which sends the messages, but when the mouth is covered, we are prevented from adequately being able to convey or receive such nonverbal messages.
I try to show courtesy and pleasantness to those around me, Jew and gentile alike. Wearing a mask, I find it very difficult to transmit a friendly feeling to another human being. Additionally, I tend to use the ability to read someone's mouth to connect to the person.
In the book of Leviticus, the Rabbis teach ten different reasons or sins why a person would develop Tzoraas and end up being quarantined outside the camp of the Jewish people. The number one or most famous reason was the speaking of Loshon Hora (something we call evil speech). This is a direct result of someone's wrongful speech and the misuse of the gift of the mouth, forcing a person to 'cover' that mouth and face by being sent away and not being a part of the nation of Israel.
So often, we read sections of the Torah that we think are outdated and do not apply to us in our time. One obvious example is Tzoraas, the spiritual leprosy that we do not see and therefore cannot check today. Nevertheless, this message and the relevance of Tzoraas are alive and well today in our midst, particularly as we 'protect' ourselves by wearing a mask. Perhaps the wearing of a mask today or using a ZOOM screen when interacting is not just hiding or preventing the spreading of a virus.
I would say it's the message that we may be guilty as well of the sins that lead to Tzoraas; the result of wearing a mask and observing social distancing is to give us time to reflect that just maybe we may have something like Tzoraas. The actual physical affliction does not appear, but the effect of it may be making its way inside through a hidden, masked cover-up preventing us from truly 'seeing' and smiling at each other.

How We Survived Passover in Quarantine

Apr 19, 2020  |  by David Kilimnick

 

The coronavirus kept us from shul, but it did not keep us from the Seder. Many celebrated with their immediate families, and many celebrated alone. But we all found a way to celebrate. This is how I celebrated, as well as the people in my neighborhood – in quarantine.

We Cleaned a Lot More

We had too much time to clean before the holiday this year. We found stuff to clean that didn't need cleaning and we cleaned it. I spent two hours on the kitchen sink. I don't know if enamel absorbs chametz but if it does, I got it out. I hope it's a Mitzvah to ruin kitchen appliances before Pesach.

I cleaned way beyond the requirement. I know this because I found garlic powder that expired in 2003. To note, garlic can be used around 17 years past expiration date. As long as you are willing to eat kugel that tastes a little off.

Bought a Lot of Matzah Meal

When we heard that they were running out of toilet paper and eggs in Israel, we bought more Matzah meal. For some reason we mistook a worldwide food staple with crushed up Matzah.

Actually, it's tradition to overstock on Pesach food. That's how the tradition of eating Matzah balls started. People stocked up on matzah meal and then realized that they needed to do something with it.

Didn't Have to Come Up with Excuses for Not Accepting the Invite

Passover is a time when we are extremely stringent about kosher laws, and many have a tradition of not eating out on Pesach at all. This year, not breaking Matzah with your fellow Jews was the neighborly thing to do. From now on, when I don't want to spend time with people, I am going to tell them it's for their health.

Still Rushed

We had a month at home to prepare for Pesach, and we cleaned for ten hours a day. We still had more to clean on Tuesday morning before the holiday.

The most important Jewish lesson of every family: No matter how much you prepare for the holiday, you will have to rush and scream at the kids. Why the shower was still cold when you started showering the night before, will never make sense. It's all part of tradition.

Cooked More

You thought it was going to be less cooking, without having any guests, but you have kids. Over Pesach the kids started complaining. They're angry you didn't make them pizza. Ungrateful little…

OK so you start making the Matzah meal pizza and it takes you three hours. Now you're regretting that you ever bought the Hadassah Pesach Cook Book.

Stood in the Street

Jews love standing and talking. We do it at the shul Kiddush, we do it at the Bar Mitzvah party. Why not do it at home? Quarantine won't keep us from this. So we stand on our porches talking to our neighbors, while eating.

We don't care that our neighbors don't want to talk to us. Where are they going to go?

Ate Like Royalty at the Seder

We finally had room at the seder table, and people could sit at a distance, like royalty. It's a tradition that we eat like kings on Passover and lean while we drink the wine. And like a king, there was a lot more room for me this year to stain my shirt. For the first time, I didn't ruin anybody else's suit.

Vegetables Were Cleaned More at the Seder

This is the first year the vegetables were cleaned well. The cleaning and disinfecting message got out. I could definitely taste the Clorox in my parsley.

Seder Ended with Crying

What makes the Seder is the focus on the children. And that means crying. Like any good game, the Seder ends with the find the Afikomen game and kids crying. That's why we force the kids to play a game of hide and go seek with the Matzah at midnight, where there is only one winner who can get the prize, three hours after their bedtime.

Less Questions at Seder

As I was alone I had to ask myself the questions. My answers were not that good.

Hid the Afikomen from Myself

I couldn't find it. I felt like a fool. Now I can't get myself the bike I wanted.

Inhouse Games

Our neighbors were influenced by the videos you saw on social media. Playing the games in the home is a staple of the quarantine.

 

They took the treadmill M&M game and did it kosher for Pesach style with macaroons. If you could catch more than one macaroon in your mouth and chew it before the next one comes you get five points. Nobody was able to chew and swallow a macaroon in less than three minutes. Nobody got past the first macaroon before choking.

Video of Your Kid Crying

You took away the Matzah pizza and told the kid it was casserole and they cried, and you videotaped it. Now you're a Jewish Youtube sensation and your friends think you are funny as anything for exploiting your child. Mazal tov.

To end the holiday, we cleaned. We put away the dishes and cleaned up the house of unleavened bread. I am still cleaning. I can't think of any other activity to do during quarantine.

God willing we'll be able to celebrate together next year, so that I can stop cleaning, and I will have somebody who can answer my questions and find the Afikomen. Right now, I just need to find somebody to eat my Matzah balls and fake pizza.

Coronavirus Through the Eyes of Holocaust Survivors

For some hidden children of the Holocaust, being isolated at home is a throwback to wartime traumas, while others see no similarities

 by Judy Maltz 

In the summer of 1943, thousands of Jews from the town of Brzezany in Nazi-occupied Galicia (now in western Ukraine) were herded to a nearby cemetery and shot dead. Among the few survivors was 8-year-old Shimon Redlich. He spent the next six months hidden with his mother and grandparents in an attic in the empty Jewish ghetto. When their living conditions became unbearable, they moved to another hideout at a nearby village in the home of a Ukrainian woman, where they spend the next six months.

For someone who loves being out and about, Redlich, a professor emeritus of Jewish history at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er Sheva, finds it difficult being cooped up at home these days because of the coronavirus lockdown.

It throws me back into my childhood in hiding," he says in a Skype conversation from his home in the central Israeli city of Modi'in.

Redlich, now 85, attributes this sense of déjà vu to the unpredictability of his situation. "Back then, we didn't know whether the Germans would discover our hiding place, and that would spell the end for us," he says. "Now, I can't say whether I'll get sick, in which case, given my age category, that might be the end of me too."

The absence of a daily routine, he says, is also reminiscent of those days.

"In normal times, the day is broken up into clear segments," he explains. "That doesn't happen now. It's as if time becomes fluid – and that was very much my feeling then, too."

Then, as now, he was constantly surrounded by the same faces. And then, as now, any foray into the world beyond his confined quarters required planning and preparation. "Today, that means putting on a mask and gloves," Redlich notes

His train of thought is momentarily disrupted by a knock at the door. It is his wife, requesting help bringing in the groceries that have just been delivered to their doorstep. Redlich is instantly reminded of another similarity.

"Of course we have all the food we need right now, but there is still this obsession with it," he says. "You're constantly worrying about whether you'll have enough to last until the next delivery. And what I remember from our days in hiding was this constant preoccupation with the food and whether it would last us."

Many struggling with the stay-at-home rules mandated by the pandemic are turning for inspiration these days to Anne Frank – the Holocaust diarist who spent more than two years in a hideout in Amsterdam before being discovered and sent to various concentration camps, eventually dying in Bergen-Belsen in early 1945.

As someone who lived under similar conditions, Redlich understands why her story resonates so much these days.

"Such comparisons are not relevant when it comes to the more extreme situations, like the death camps," he says. "But for those of us who were in hiding, there are definitely parallels to be drawn."

Dolly Chinitz, another hidden child, is not so sure. "You can't compare," says the 90-year-old in a phone conversation from her retirement home in Jerusalem. "We were like hunted prey, we were being targeted for death, and we had to lay low if we wanted to survive. It's just not the same thing. This is a sickness. You either get it or you don't, you either get well or you don't – but everybody is in the same boat."

One similarity

Finding a viable hideout was often the only way for Jewish children to survive the Holocaust. Some were lucky enough to find Christian families who took them in. Others escaped death by hiding in underground bunkers or caves. Sometimes they hid with other family members, but not always.

Chinitz and her twin sister Mari were 14 when the Nazis invaded their hometown of Budapest. Their mother, who had been arrested, sent the two girls into hiding with a Christian woman and her son. They spent six weeks in this home, during which time the two girls suffered physical abuse. Because they could not leave the house, Chinitz recounts, they had no way to protect themselves during air raids. "It was such a terrible time," she says. "How can I compare that to today where I have a beautiful large apartment, a balcony and all the food I need?"

Naomi Waldman, 90, hid for two years in an abandoned house in Antwerp, along with her parents. She has vivid memories of the day Nazi troops broke into the building while she and her parents, having been forewarned, hid in the attic. "My aunt came in and let us know that the Nazis were gone, but we thought it was a trick and refused to come down from the attic," she recalls, in a phone conversation from her Jerusalem home.

Six months later, the Nazis returned, but this time Waldman and her parents were caught unawares. They were loaded onto a truck and taken to a transit camp, where they were separated. But miraculously, she relays, they all survived, including her five older siblings.

"I've been asked whether there is anything similar between my experience today and my experiences then. For me, the only similarity is the hoarding of food," she says.

"We're all sitting in our beautiful apartments with all the conveniences," she adds. "Nobody is chasing us. Nobody is tormenting us. So even if these are very difficult times – especially if you're all alone, as I am – there's really no comparison."

Sharon Kangisser Cohen, the editor of Yad Vashem Studies, a scholarly journal published by Israel's national Holocaust commemoration institute, recently co-edited a large study of child survivors.

"I would say that, on a theoretical level, we know that certain situations trigger memories of the past, and one would think intuitively that isolation would trigger some of these wartime memories," she says, noting that many Israeli Holocaust survivors were traumatized during the first Gulf War when they were ordered to wear gas masks to protect themselves from the possibility of chemical warfare.

But based on recent conversations with a group of Holocaust survivors, she continues, the coronavirus crisis does not seem to be awakening the same old fears and anxieties. "I did speak to one woman, who tends to be very emotional and was very upset that she had to spend the [Passover] seder alone this year for the first time since the war. But most of the others I spoke with did not seem to think this was a comparable situation. Perhaps the only thing that resonated for them was not knowing when it would end."

Most of the concerns they raised, Kangisser Cohen notes, had little to do with their own personal situation. "They were more worried about the political crisis in the country and about how their children were going to manage financially," she relays. "My impression was that there's no real sense of immediate danger because of the coronavirus."

'Anxious and frightened'

Andy Griffel was whisked out of the Jewish ghetto in Radom in October 1942, right after his mother gave birth to him. He spent the first three years of his life hidden by a Christian family in the Polish town. He remembers little, if anything, about his experiences in hiding. "From everything I was told, those were actually very good years," says the 77-year-old lawyer, who splits his life between the United States and Israel.

But Griffel considers himself unique among Holocaust survivors in Israel – even among the hidden children, who tend to be younger. "I'm not in an old age home and not really living alone," he says. "I go out with my dog four to five times a day, and because he's friendly I get to interact with lots of kids – of course, with the 2-meter distance rule. The experience of hiding seems to affect different people differently, so I wouldn't want to make any generalizations."

Neither does Shoshana Sprecher, 79, remember much about the three-month period she spent hiding under the roof of a coffee shop with her mother in a small town in southwestern France. She believes the experience has scarred her nonetheless.

"What happens to you in your childhood, you take it with you all your life, and I guess that's why being inside and alone today makes me feel anxious and frightened," she says. Although she understands that these are different times, Sprecher says that seeing the police out in large numbers on the streets to enforce the lockdown makes her nervous. "I know they are good people, but this is something that goes back to my childhood and it is difficult for me," she says.

Although Chinitz, the survivor from Hungary, rejects comparisons between now and then, that doesn't make being alone any easier. "I'm a people person," she says. "I like to have people around me – I touch people, I kiss people – and so I'm climbing the walls."

Her longtime partner lives in the same retirement facility, but they haven't been allowed to see one other. "I've never felt this alone in my life," she says. "Even in my mother's womb I had my sister, so I'm taking this very badly. I believe that many of us will pay a big emotional price for all this isolation."

a friend of mine, Arieh King to be Appointed Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem, Forgoes Salary

Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion will be promoting City Councilman Arieh King to be a Deputy Mayor of Jerusalem as part of the coalition agreement with King's party. King has decided that during the Coronavirus crisis he will not be taking a salary for the new position, according to a report in JDN.

The appointment will be voted on at the next council meeting.

Knesset Allows Courts to Issue Arrest Warrants in Cases Involving Coronavirus Health Risks

By a vote of 27-7, the Knesset plenum in the early hours of Friday morning passed a government-sponsored bill which enshrines in primary legislation the arrangement according to which a civilian court, as well as a military court, will be authorized to order the arrest of a suspect or extend his or her detention, even if the investigation of their case cannot be advanced in light of the health risks involved in interrogating someone who has contracted the coronavirus, or is in quarantine due to the corona disease.

The arrangement relates to a crucial suspect or witness. The bill, an amendment to the Criminal Procedure Law, states that a judge may order an arrest under these circumstances only after he/she has been convinced of its justification and has carefully considered the severity of the offense, the expected delay in the progress of the investigation and the harm caused to the suspect.

The explanatory notes attached to the bill state that the emergency regulations issued by the Health Ministry regarding social distancing and quarantine make it virtually impossible to "carry out investigative activities that demand the participation of people who are required to be in isolation without endangering those who come in close contact with them – such as holding confrontations and transporting (suspects or witnesses)."

In some cases, according to the bill, mainly when severe offenses or security offenses are involved, effective frontal interrogation cannot be conducted when the person who is required to be in quarantine and the interrogator, or interrogators, are wearing protective face masks, "this due to the need to carry out the interrogation for an extended period of time and due to the need to see facial expressions and physical reactions, and create direct communication."

Ministry says it can do 15,000 virus tests daily, but nobody's showing up

Without enough people showing symptoms of COVID-19 to get tested, authorities plan to roll out randomized sampling in high-risk areas to get a clearer picture of the spread of the virus

Israel now has the lab capacity to test up to 15,000 people for COVID-19 daily but demand has gone down as fewer suspected cases show up to have swabs taken, the Health Ministry said Tuesday.

Israel has been struggling, along with many other countries, to raise the number of tests it performs per day, and in recent days that number has dropped below 10,000 coincidings with a marked decrease in the number of confirmed cases reported since the start of the week.

Due to a downturn in coronavirus test referrals and "a decrease in the number of people with corona symptoms who want to be tested," the ministry said that the number of people being tested has gone down, with only 9,031 tests performed on Saturday, of which 160 were found to be  COVID-19 positive.

On Sunday, 8,393 tests were performed and 88 people were found to be positive. On Monday, 9,546 tests were performed and 110 people were found positive.

The ministry announced that it plans to launch random testing initiatives in areas with high infection rates to make up for the lack of sick patients seeking tests. It said a recently signed deal with the China-based Beijing Genomics Institute will soon allow Israel to conduct up to 20,000 daily tests.

A previous plan to perform randomized tests in Bnei Brak, the country's hardest-hit virus hotspot, was nixed earlier this month, reportedly after the Health Ministry and local officials raised objections.

Most carriers of COVID-19 are thought to have only mild symptoms or none at all, and experts fear that asymptomatic patients can transfer the contagion to others, making massive testing a critical element in getting a grip on the true spread of the virus.

In recent days, Israel's infection rate has appeared to fall off significantly, with only a few dozen new cases being reported every 12 hours, and the government has announced steps to ease restrictions on businesses and travel. On Monday morning, the ministry reported just 68 new cases since Sunday morning, the lowest number since mid-March, when cases first began to ramp up.

On Tuesday, the ministry announced another 123 new cases since the day before.

In the two weeks prior, Israel had seen over 200 cases daily, with the ministry reporting daily testing numbers above 10,000.

Magen David Adom medical team members, wearing protective gear, handle a coronavirus test from patients in Jerusalem, April 17, 2020. (Olivier Fitoussi/Flash90)

Israel has long struggled to provide sufficient tests amid a global scramble for supplies.

In mid-April, the Defense Ministry announced that a plane carrying enough chemical reagents to conduct some 100,000 PCR coronavirus tests had landed in Israel.

Researchers at Hebrew University in Jerusalem claimed last week that Israel will soon have the technology to boost daily coronavirus testing to hundreds of thousands of people.

See you Sunday bli neder Shabbat Shalom

We need Moshiach Now!

 

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Rabbi Yehuda Lave

PO Box 7335, Rehavia Jerusalem 9107202

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