Home Depot Employee Set to Wed Killed by Shoplifter

On Tuesday, April 18, an unfortunate event occurred when 26-year-old Blake Mohs, a security guard at Home Depot in Pleasanton, California, was killed while trying to prevent a robbery.

He had noticed a female suspect attempting to steal a phone charger worth less than $100, and when he confronted her, a struggle began, and he chased her to the loading dock. At that point, the suspect pulled out a firearm and fired at Mohs before fleeing the scene. Despite being rushed to a hospital, he did not survive.

Mohs had been an Eagle Scout since he was 14 and was on the brink of marrying his fiancée Kasey, whom he had met five years ago while volunteering at a Scout camp. His parents, Eric and Lorie Mohs, spoke of their son’s devotion to the Scouts and his dreams of a future with Kasey.

The suspect, 32-year-old Benicia Knapps, and her boyfriend, 31-year-old David Guillory, were apprehended along with Knapps’ 2-year-old child in the car.

A gun was located close to the incident. Knapps, a licensed security guard with a history of theft, is facing charges of murder, robbery, child endangerment, and conspiracy. At the same time, Guillory is accused of child endangerment, evading police, and driving the wrong way.

Mayor Karla Brown of Tri-Valley, including Pleasanton, expressed her sorrow for Mohs’ family, friends, and everyone else impacted by the tragedy. She noted his commitment to the Tri-Valley organizations and the sadness of his life is cruelly cut short.

80 Dead After Stampede at Large Gathering

A tragic event occurred in Sanaa, the capital of Yemen, on Wednesday, April 19. It is estimated that 80 people were killed in a stampede during a celebration to observe the end of Ramadan.

These individuals were impoverished and had gathered to receive aid when shots were heard, resulting in a frenzied panic. Videos of the aftermath of the misfortune circulated on social media.

A Houthi official reported that more than 300 people, including women and children, were injured in the stampede. The nation’s interior ministry declared the event as “unstructured financial aid from some merchants without coordination from the Ministry of Interior,” Those who died or were hurt were taken to hospitals.

Two of the merchants responsible for the tragedy have been locked up. It is speculated that Houthis released their weapons into the air as an attempt to control the crowd, but the rounds struck an electrical wire, resulting in an explosion that provoked greater fear.

Houthi rebels were said to have blocked the school off to journalists. Sanaa has been under control of the Houthi rebels since 2014. The ensuing conflict has caused more than 100,000 deaths, making it one of the most significant humanitarian crises in the world, according to the United Nations.

Three Arab Israelis arrested after attempted kidnapping of young Jewish woman

Police were alerted to the scene after receiving a call that the woman was screaming.

By World Israel News Staff

Three residents from the southern Arab town of Lakiya were arrested on Friday evening for attacking and attempting to kidnap a woman and breaking through a police checkpoint when fleeing the scene.

The three men, whose ages range from 19-26, attempted to kidnap a woman, with whom one of them was acquainted, from her apartment in Kiryat Malakhi, around 30 miles north of Lakiya. The men tried to force her into their vehicle but she fought them.

Police were alerted to the scene after receiving a call that the woman was screaming. The three fled, but not before assaulting another resident of the southern Israeli town and stealing his mobile phone.

The suspects smashed through a police barricade with their vehicle but were stopped further on the road after officers shot their tires. They were caught following a chase on foot.

Chief Superintendent Mevorach Avraham from the Kiryat Malakhi police station listed the suspects’ “grave crimes” which he said, included “an attempted kidnapping, a robbery, and endangering human lives.”

He praised the police’s “quick response” as well as “cooperation between police stations” to catch the suspects.

“We will work to bring the suspects fully to justice, and ensure that they are kept away both from the victim of their crime as well as from the public,” he said.

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Lapid at protests: ‘If you hadn’t taken to the streets, Israel would no longer be democratic’

An estimated 150,000 took part in the Tel Aviv protest for the 16th consecutive Saturday.

By World Israel News Staff

Tens of thousands of people protested in Tel Aviv and other Israeli cities against the government’s judicial reform plans for the 16th consecutive Saturday, with members of bereaved families lighting candles in memory of fallen soldiers ahead of Memorial Day.

The protests have been ongoing despite the government’s announcement earlier this month suspending the legislation until after May.

“The public understands that the sword of the dictatorship is still on its neck, threatening to destroy everything we built,” protest organizers said.

Opposition Leader Yair Lapid spoke at a rally in Hod Hasharon, a suburb of Tel Aviv.

“This week, between Holocaust Remembrance Day and Independence Day, is the week of Israeliness. On Tuesday we will remember that we are the only country in the world where between the saddest day and the happiest day, there are exactly sixty seconds.

“If you hadn’t taken to the streets, the disaster would have already happened. Israel would no longer be democratic,” he said.

“One day you will tell this to your grandchildren and your great-grandchildren about how in 2023, you marched through the streets wrapped in a flag and saved the State of Israel. How before Independence Day, you fought for your country, you fought and won.”

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Washington Post ‘confuses facts’ equating reality of Jewish Temples, Muhammad ascension

“There is zero debate that two temples stood in that place in scholarly literature,” said New York University professor Lawrence Schiffman. “Mohammed’s ascent ‘happens’ from there only because it is the Temple site.”

By Menachem Wecker, JNS

An article that appeared in The Washington Post just before Passover seems to equate the historical reality of the Jewish Temples in Jerusalem and that of the Muslim prophet Muhammad’s miraculous “night journey” to heaven.

“In Jewish tradition, the Temple Mount is the site where the First and Second Temples once stood. For Muslims, it [sic] known as the Noble Sanctuary, the place where the prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven,” wrote Louisa Loveluck, Niha Masih and Miriam Berger. “The night of violence at the al-Aqsa compound, known to Jews as the Temple Mount, adds fuel to an already combustible situation.”

An earlier version of the story had noted: “In Jewish tradition, it is the site where the faith’s First and Second Temples once stood. For Muslims, it is the place from which the prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven.”

Professors with relevant expertise told JNS that there is no debate in the scholarly community about the reality of the two Jewish Temples, whereas the question about whether Muhammad was a prophet who took a miraculous heavenly journey is not seen as a matter of fact, particularly for those who are not believing Muslims.

“There is zero debate that two temples stood in that place in scholarly literature. Mohammed’s ascent ‘happens’ from there only because it is the Temple site,” Lawrence Schiffman, professor of Hebrew and Judaic studies at New York University, told JNS.

“The story about Muhammad going on a miraculous horse all the way from Arabia to Jerusalem and ascending to heaven is a religious belief. It’s like saying that Jacob prayed there,” he said.

The locations of the Herodian Temple, and the Hasmonean Temple before it, “can be proven archaeologically, and is a hard fact,” said Schiffman, adding that numerous Islamic sources prior to the modern period recognized that fact. (In more recent years, some Palestinian leaders have denied long-standing Jewish presence in Israel.)

“They are trying to be neutral, but that confuses the facts,” Schiffman said of the Post.

‘Literary sources, however, are ample’

Steven Fine, professor of Jewish history at Yeshiva University and director of its Center for Israel Studies, and a founding editor of the Jewish art and visual culture journal Images, agreed.

“It is an historical fact that the Jewish temples were built on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Archaeological evidence for the Temple rebuilt after the return from the Babylonian captivity and continuing until 66 C.E. is not contested,” he told JNS.

There is scarce archaeological evidence of the First Temple, which is associated with King Solomon, since Herod rebuilt and expanded the Temple Mound in the year 20 or 19 BCE, “and also because Muslim authorities do not allow scientific excavation of the site,” said Fine.

“Literary sources, however, are ample,” he said. “No historian doubts the presence of an Israelite Temple on Mount Zion in biblical times.”

Based on the Koran and later Muslim tradition, it is true that to Muslims, the site known as the Noble Sanctuary is where the prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven, according to Fine. “The claim regarding Muhammed is a matter of faith.”

Washington’s paper of record has had prior difficulty with its reporting on the sacred site in Jerusalem.

“An earlier version of this article misidentified the Jewish temple built by King Solomon. Solomon built the First Temple, not the Second,” the Post stated in a May 23, 2013 correction. “The article also incorrectly referred to Herod as the builder of the Second Temple. Although the temple is sometimes called Herod’s Temple in honor of his expansion of it, the original construction occurred centuries earlier.”

In 2006, the Post appeared to suggest the opposite of its recent story. A discovery “strengthens Jewish ties to the site known to Jews as the Temple Mount and to Muslims as Haram al-Sharif, or the Noble Sanctuary. The site of ancient Jewish temples contains Islam’s al-Aqsa mosque and the Dome of the Rock and is revered as the place where the prophet Muhammad ascended to heaven,” it reported.

It also suggested that the Jewish Temples were a fact in 19861989—in an article that notes that what was Judaism’s “holiest shrine” and that “in the centuries since then,” it has “become Islam’s third-holiest site, where Moslems believe Mohammed ascended to heaven”—2002 and 2013.

The 2013 article quotes an Arab Israeli parliamentarian who insisted “There is no such thing as the Temple Mount! … It does not exist. It is not there.”

2016 Post article, which states that “Jews call it the Temple Mount, believed to be where the first and second temples once stood,” again questions the history of the Temples.

Asked if the Post recently changed its policy to express skepticism towards the scholarly consensus that the two Jewish Temples are historical facts, a spokesperson for the paper did not immediately respond.

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Si Allarga la Ribellione all’Impero del Dollaro | Grandangolo – Pangea

La rassegna stampa internazionale di Byoblu | 95° puntata

Mentre il segretario USA alla Difesa Austin convoca in Germania il “Gruppo di contatto per la difesa dell’Ucraina” per fornire sempre più armi a Kiev e alimentare la guerra in Europa,  …

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Faith lifted Pittsburgh Jews in long wait for massacre trial

Three Jewish congregations, resolute in their defiance of the hatred that tried to destroy them, are still waiting for justice.

But united in their horror and grief, they haven’t been standing still as the criminal case for the massacre that changed everything has crawled through the federal court system.

Four and a half years ago, a gunman invaded the Tree of Life synagogue on a Sabbath morning and killed 11 worshippers from the three congregations that shared the building — Dor Hadash, New Light and Tree of Life. The shooting, in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood at the heart of Jewish Pittsburgh, was the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history.

On Monday, jury selection is scheduled to begin in the long-delayed trial of the suspect, accused of dozens of charges including hate crimes resulting in death.

The three congregations are wary of what’s to come. Some members may be called to testify, and they’re bracing for graphic evidence and testimony that could revive the traumas of the attack on Oct. 27, 2018 — often referred to around here as simply 10/27.

The tension can be felt in private conversations and encounters — the griefs, the anxieties, the feelings of being in a media fishbowl.

But each in their own ways, members are finding renewed purpose in honoring those lost in the attack, in the bold practice of their faith, in activism on issues like gun violence and immigration, in taking a stand against antisemitism and other forms of bigotry.

“We don’t want to be silenced as Jews,” said Rich Weinberg, chair of the social action committee for Dor Hadash. “We want to be active as Jews with an understanding of Jewish values. … We are going to still be here. We will not be intimidated.”

That was evident even in subtle details of a Passover service held earlier this month in New Light’s chapel, joined by some members of Dor Hadash.

Some offering Yizkor, or remembrance, prayers were doing so in honor of slain loved ones. One prayer was read in memory of the “Kedoshim of Pittsburgh, murdered al kiddush Hashem” — holy martyrs, killed while sanctifying God’s name. The prayer, modeled on prayers for Jewish martyrs of medieval Europe, has been woven into the ritual fabric of Jewish Pittsburgh.

One of those leading Passover prayers was Carol Black, who survived the attack that claimed the life of her brother, Richard Gottfried, and two other New Light members, Melvin Wax and Daniel Stein. They had led much of New Light’s ritual worship.

“Rich and Dan and Mel were our religious heart,” said Stephen Cohen, co-president of New Light. “And we had some very big shoes to fill.”

Members such as Black and Bruce Hyde have stepped into them. Hyde said when he once read a passage that had been read by Stein, he felt his presence: “He was up there with me.”

Cohen said the congregation had three priorities after the attack: to memorialize those lost, to continue their ritual life and to further religious education. New Light, like Tree of Life, is part of the moderate Conservative denomination of Judaism.

The congregation dedicated a monument honoring its three martyrs — shaped with images of Torah scrolls and prayer shawls — at its cemetery, where it also created a chapel adorned with stained glass windows and other mementos honoring the victims.

New Light Co-President Barbara Caplan said her dream for the congregation is “that we have many more years of Friday night services, Saturday morning services, holidays together, where we just go on being the family that we are.”

Cohen said the congregation has been overwhelmed by support from Christian, Sikh and other communities and wanted to build on those relationships. It has held Bible studies with local Black churches, and members visited the Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina, drawing solace from a congregation that lost nine members to a racist gunman in 2015. “I’ve never been part of a group hug of a hundred people,” Cohen recalled.

All three of the modest-sized congregations have been meeting in nearby synagogues since the attack closed the Tree of Life building.

Rabbi Jeffrey Myers had been leading Tree of Life Congregation for just over a year when he survived 10/27. He carries the scarred memories of the gunshots that killed seven members: Joyce Fienberg, Rose Mallinger, Cecil and David Rosenthal, Bernice and Sylvan Simon and Irving Younger. Andrea Wedner, Mallinger’s daughter, was wounded in the attack.

Myers continues to speak forcefully against the bigotry behind it.

His mission is “primarily to help my congregation community heal,” Myers said. “But beyond it is to speak up, to be a voice, to say, ‘No, this isn’t okay. It’s not acceptable. It never was. And it can never be.’”

He’d like to think the trial will expose the dangers of rising bigotry, but “it takes a concerted effort to be able to … walk a mile in someone else’s shoes,” he said. But it affects more than Jews. ”Someone who is an antisemite is most likely also the possessor of a long laundry list of personal grievances and other groups that that person does not like.”

Members are each recovering in their own ways, congregation president Alan Hausman said.

Each week when he makes announcements, Hausman said he includes this one: “It’s OK not to be OK, and we will get through this together.”

On Sunday, the day before jury selection, the Tree of Life Congregation is having a closure ceremony for its historic building. The congregation and a partner organization plan a major overhaul of the site, which will combine worship space with a memorial and antisemitism education, including about the Holocaust.

“We’re not really leaving, we will be back,” said Hausman.

“Hopefully we’ll be once again a happy, grounded, 160-year-old congregation,” added member Audrey Glickman, a survivor. “Back to being a solid group of people who come together regularly and do our thing.”

Dor Hadash, founded 60 years ago, is Pittsburgh’s only congregation in the progressive Reconstructionist movement of Judaism. Many members are drawn to its interlocking focuses on worship, study and social activism.

It was that activism that appears to have drawn the shooting suspect — who fulminated online against HIAS, a Jewish refugee resettlement agency — to the address where Dor Hadash met. The congregation was listed on HIAS’ website as a participant in a National Refugee Shabbat, which wove concern for migrants into Sabbath worship.

On 10/27, members Jerry Rabinowitz and Dan Leger were gathering for a Torah study when they heard the gunshots and ran to help. Rabinowitz was killed, and Leger seriously wounded.

But the attack has only emboldened Dor Hadash members.

They were soon organizing what became a separate group, Squirrel Hill Stands Against Gun Violence, advocating for gun safety legislation. And they redoubled their support for immigrants, refugees and their helpers such as HIAS. The congregation has sponsored a refugee family originally from the Democratic Republic of the Congo. And they have taken a strong stand against rising antisemitism and white supremacy.

“I think advocacy has been a huge part of our healing,” said Dana Kellerman, communications chair for Dor Hadash. Advocacy “isn’t just about making myself feel better,” she added. “It is about trying to move the needle so that this doesn’t happen to somebody else.”

The congregation has been growing since the attack, said its president, Jo Recht. The historically lay-led congregation has hired its first staff rabbi, Amy Bardack. Her formal installation is this Sunday — a date that wasn’t specifically chosen in advance of the trial but that provides a welcome occasion of celebration.

“There are a lot of people who are seeking some way to help so that the world is a more compassionate place,” Recht said.

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Israeli-Ukrainian volunteer captured and killed by Russian forces

“If I don’t go to protect the land of my ancestors, how will I look our children in the eyes?”

By World Israel News Staff

An Israeli-Ukrainian was captured and killed by Russian forces in Ukraine, where he was a volunteer soldier for the Ukrainian army, Ukrainian media reported.

Oleksandr Dubovik was killed in Zaitseve, in the Bakhmut region in December.

Oleksandr “Partizan” Israeli volunteer that fall in battle at Bakhmut.
“If I don’t go to protect the land of my ancestors, how will I look our children in the eyes?”
A person with a unique destiny. A native of Dnipro, he moved to Israel , had a home, a family, and a job. pic.twitter.com/tNGC4mSAiR

— Knukli (@11Knuk123) April 21, 2023

According to a report by Ukrainian media outlet Ukrinform, Dubovik had immigrated to Israel with his wife and two children, aged nine and two, before Russian forces invaded Ukraine on February 24, 2022.

Dubovik then decided to return to his home country as a volunteer fighter.

Dubovik is survived by his wife and two children as well as his parents and younger siblings who also reside in Israel.

On December 23, Oleksandr Dubovik “Partyzan” was seriously wounded when his unit was ambushed near Bakhmut. ruzZian soldiers found him & executed him.
He was born in Dnipro but moved to Israel before the war with his family.
Hero #lviv #RussianWarCrimes pic.twitter.com/0G8rMkoEhC

— TheLvivJournal (@LvivJournal) April 22, 2023

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‘New York Times’ buries Palestinian terrorists’ murder of Dee sisters, mother

Instead of prominent reference to one of the most disturbing recent killings, the paper of record noted there was “tension.”

By JNS

A New York Times story about the Palestinian terror attack and subsequent murder of Lucy Dee, and her daughters Maia, 20, and Rina, 15, as they were driving in their car during Passover didn’t mention their names and obscured the tragedy under an anodyne headline.

“It is a compelling, crushing story. And yet The New York Times didn’t highlight the latest killings in its vague headline, which mentioned only ‘tensions,’ ” wrote Gilead Ani, a senior researcher at the Committee for Accuracy in Middle East Reporting (CAMERA), in a recent analysis. “It didn’t report on the attack in any proportion to its importance, with just four paragraphs of its 35-paragraph story focused on the attack.”

As the CAMERA analysis noted, the Times reported on Palestinian food three times in recent months, including on the day of the funeral of the Dee sisters.

“It does raise questions about the paper’s priorities when we hear more from sisters Tala and Galia Abu Hussein about how their mother arranged the rice, chicken and vegetables on a plate than we hear from any member of the Dee family about the terror that tore them apart,” Ani wrote.

He added that Times headlines tend to use passive voice with Palestinian attacks (“West Bank Erupts in Violence as Officials Pledge to Work for Calm,” “At Least 2 Dead as Driver Rams Bus Stop in East Jerusalem” and “At Least 7 Killed in Attack in Jewish Area of East Jerusalem”). When talking about Israel, however, the headlines are active: “Israeli Raid on West Bank City Kills Nine Palestinians, Officials Say” and “Israeli Raid Kills at Least 5 Palestinians in West Bank.”

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Assailant attacks staff and visitors with knife at Berlin Jewish Hospital

The motive of the attacker, a psychiatric patient at the hospital, is unclear.

By World Israel News Staff

Police on Friday shot an assailant who attacked staff and visitors with a knife at a Jewish hospital in Germany’s capital of Berlin on Friday afternoon.

The 45-year-old man, who police said was a psychiatric patient, entered Jewish Hospital on Heinz-Galinski-Strasse, in northern Berlin, and went on a rampage threatening staff, patients and visitors. Police were alerted around 2:30pm local time, but the man would not heed the officers’ request to surrender his weapon. Officers then shot him in the leg, according to local reports.

The attacker was being treated at the hospital for addiction and was moved to another ward after he was shot.

The motive for the attack is unknown.

Founded more than 260 years ago, Jewish Hospital received its name for the Berlin Jewish community which first funded it.

The hospital provides medical care for people of all religions.

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