An important letter to the public from Rav Shimon Galai & Rav Mordechai Shmuel Edelstein: “We are coming with a fervent request for one of our fellow citizens of our city, Bnei Brak, who teaches Torah and a father to a large family. He has found himself in serious financial trouble, he is drowning in medical debt and his home is about to collapse… But he still needs a lot of help to rehabilitate his family. Certainly, whoever helps this family will merit Heavenly help and much success in everything they do.

Monday (6/15/20)Morning R’ Shulem Elya TellerFather Mrs. Sosi TellerMother
The post Hayalda Miriam Teller ע”ה מרים בת שלם אליהו appeared first on The Yeshiva World.

Friday (6/12/20)Afternoon Mrs. Robin (Cookie) TobiasDaughter 347-831-3526 Mrs. Shari GoldzalDaughter 917-453-7057
The post Mrs. Greta Bachenheimer ע”ה גנענדל בת יוסף appeared first on The Yeshiva World.

Monday (6/15/20)Morning R` Shragai BrillBrother 516-225-6152 Mrs. Shoshana FeinsteinSister 718-494-3330, 718-753-7478
The post R` Jonah Brill ז”ל יונה בן צבי appeared first on The Yeshiva World.

Monday (6/15/20)Morning Mrs. Chaya SchwartzDaughter 718-951-6992
The post R` Menachem Dov Brody ז”ל מנחם דוב בן שלמה זלמן appeared first on The Yeshiva World.

U.S. employers laid-off 7.7 million workers in April — a deep the economic hole that was created by the closure of thousands of offices, restaurants, stores and schools during the pandemic. The Labor Department also said in a Tuesday report that job openings plummeted and hiring all but disappeared in April. The number of available jobs fell 16% from March, to 5 million. Hires declined 31% to 3.5 million. The grim April — which followed an even bleaker March with 11.5 million layoffs — suggests that the economy could take time to recover nearly a decade’s worth of gains that vanished in about 60 days. Hiring did rebound in May as 2.5 million jobs were added on net, the government said in a separate report Friday.

Frustrated and bitter, Americans are turning to campaigns, protests and violent demonstrations in an attempt to ‘fix a broken system’. 10+ weeks into lockdown, with a death toll of over 100,000 and thousands of businesses shuttered for good, morale is low and the future is full of question marks.  So what’s the Torah approach to crisis-management?  As Jews, we’ve seen it all before. The circumstances are unique to our generation. But is there a proven approach to handling tough situations? Rabbi Shaya Cohen, founder of Priority-1, suggests tapping into an age-old method. One which has proven itself time and again to be more than just another schlissel-challah segulah. A practical plan of action to help us pull through circumstances beyond our control.

Hi my name is Nosson Broir, father of 7 children with the oldest girl which is 22 years old and currently in a special children institution. CLICK HERE TO DONATE NOWI was a סופר for living, and was barely able to break even.This was until 7 years ago, when my wife was diagnosed with Cancer.The day has been darkened on us since, and for years i accompanied her in Sharei Tzedek hospital every few weeks for treatments.3 years ago they found that it has spread to her head, and she went through very severe treatments.She was basically paralyzed in bed and could not perform simple bodily functions.

IBM says it is getting out of the facial recognition business over concern about how it can be used for mass surveillance and racial profiling. A letter to U.S. lawmakers Monday from new IBM CEO Arvind Krishna said the tech giant “has sunset its general purpose facial recognition and analysis software products.” Krishna was addressing Democrats who have been working on police reform legislation in Congress in response to the death of George Floyd and others in law enforcement interactions that have sparked a worldwide reckoning over racial injustice. The sweeping reform package could include restrictions on police use of facial recognition.

Pages