Debunking Viral Claim About the Talmud and Minors


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Mamdani’s election signals a turning point for American Jews, pushing us to confront rising hostility, rethink old assumptions, and decide what kind of future we’re building for ourselves and our children.
For nearly eight decades, American Jews experienced a rare sense of security in New York. The city offered law, stability, and boundless opportunity. More than anywhere else, New York embodied the postwar promise that Miss Liberty proclaimed: “Here, you can become what you strive to be; here, the door stands open.”
That door has not slammed shut but it no longer feels fully open. Something essential has shifted. And the election of Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York City stands as an urgent warning signal.
New York, the most Jewish city in America, has elected a man who parrots Hamas talking points, repeats the “genocide” libel against Israel, and wraps it all in the language of “social justice.”
The window of what is “acceptable” has moved so far that what once would have ended a political career is now a strategy.
Using antisemitic tropes no longer disqualifies a candidate; it energizes him. Micha Danzig points out that the window of what is “acceptable” has moved so far that what once would have ended a political career is now a strategy.
Mamdani’s victory is not just about one radical politician. It tells us something about the voters, the parties, the media, and the culture that made him possible. It tells us that AOC and the Squad were not political aberrations but the trend. And it reveals where America may be headed in the future.
That’s why this election matters far beyond New York.
For three generations, American Jews lived in what may have been one of the most blessed exiles in our history. No ghetto walls, no yellow badges. Universities and boardrooms flung open. Jewish doctors, lawyers, professors, artists, entrepreneurs helped build the country that had opened its arms.
Jews believed that here, antisemitism is fringe. Here, the system will protect us.
To be sure, Jews said the same thing about Germany; but America is different.
October 7 shattered that illusion. And the Mamdani election shatters it in another way.
After the worst massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, “From the river to the sea” became a campus chant. Jewish students barricaded themselves in libraries, mezuzahs were ripped from dorm doors, and mobs surrounded synagogues while universities issued statements about “complexity.”
Now a man who calls Israel “genocidal,” who stands with those who chant for “globalize the intifada,” becomes the mayor of the city that once symbolized our safety.
This is not Warsaw 1938 or Baghdad 1941, but the pattern is painfully familiar.
As Micah Danzig warns, in cities that were once a third Jewish – Warsaw, Minsk, Baghdad, Tripoli – the process was always the same:
what was unspeakable became debatable;
what was debatable became respectable;
what became respectable very quickly became policy.
We are not there but we are much farther along than we were ten years ago.
Many Jews are already reaching for comfort:
There’s truth in some of that. Most Americans are not classical Jew-haters. There are still many allies and decent neighbors.
But there are complex forces at work that make a simple rebound unlikely:
Could American politics swing back on other issues – crime, immigration, economics? Of course. But there is no law of history that says it will swing back for the Jews.
Spain “corrected” itself centuries after expelling its Jews. So did Germany. That did not help the Jews who believed they were permanent citizens of golden eras that suddenly ended.
Jewish history offers a clear lens for moments like this — and it’s remarkably consistent.
The Torah describes the Jewish people with a striking phrase: “Behold, it is a people that dwells alone, and is not counted among the nations” (Numbers 23:9).
Originally uttered by Bilaam, a hostile sorcerer hired to curse the Jews, it is a description of Jewish reality across millennia. Not isolated, but distinct. Not better, just different in a way that the surrounding world has never fully absorbed.
And across history, that difference has triggered a familiar mix of fascination, resentment, and projection. Every time Jews convinced themselves they were finally seen as “just like everyone else,<b” reality eventually corrected them.
The Torah calls Abraham “Ha-Ivri,” literally “the one on the other side.” The Midrash explains: “The whole world stood on one side, and Abraham stood on the other.”
Jewish identity begins with a person willing to stand alone when the moral majority lost its bearings. That is not a relic of antiquity. It is a through-line of Jewish history, a reminder that Jewish survival has often depended not on blending in, but on holding firm when the world insists you’re the problem.• When a Society Loses Its Compass
In another episode, Abraham enters a city and immediately fears for his life, not because of crime or politics, but because he senses the culture has stopped valuing basic moral limits. He makes a chilling observation: “There is no fear of God in this place, and they will kill me” (Genesis 20:11).
He wasn’t commenting on theology. He was diagnosing a society where the sanctity of human life, truth, and moral limits had lost meaning.
Today, when public rhetoric turns unhinged, when calling Israel “genocidal” becomes a résumé enhancer, when mobs can cheer terrorism without shame, we are witnessing the same kind of moral confusion Abraham confronted.
Jewish history teaches that when societies normalize hostility toward Jews, they are already in ethical free fall.
In every one of these moments, Jews told themselves: “This time is different.”
And it was, until it wasn’t.
Jews need to stop telling themselves that Mamdani is an aberration, that campus mobs are just “kids,” that antisemitic slogans are merely “criticism of policy.”
Thane Rosenbaum has written about the “denial disease” – the Western refusal to recognize evil for what it is. Jews are not immune. We want to believe the system will protect us; that if we’re good citizens, support the right causes, sign the right statements, it will all blow over.
Most American Jews will not be on the next Nefesh B’Nefesh flight, moving to Israel. They have jobs, families, mortgages, aging parents. Saying “it’s over and time to get out” is not realistic for most Jews.
But every Jew today should at least ask:
For some, the answer will be making aliyah, moving to Israel. For others, it may be a staged plan: dual citizenship, stronger ties to Israel, serious thought about where grandchildren will be safest and most Jewish. For all, it should mean shifting from “we are Americans who happen to be Jewish” to “we are Jews whom God has, for now, placed in America with a mission.”
The golden door that opened after the Holocaust was a Divine gift. It is not guaranteed forever.
The “golden era” of American Jewry may well be ending. Not with a bang but a whimper. Not with pogroms and edicts, but with hashtags, primaries, and mayors who embrace our enemies.
This is painful, but not entirely surprising to anyone who has a bird’s eye view of Jewish history.
The golden door that opened after the Holocaust was a Divine gift. It is not guaranteed forever. If its hinges are now creaking, maybe that is also a sign from God, a nudge to remember who you are, where you ultimately belong, and the role you play in the unfolding destiny of the Jewish People.

This article will save lives - some people will wake up. Thank you
“It can’t happen here.” Oh , yes it can. I am sure the Jews in 1933 Germany regarded Hitler as a psychotic pipsqueak not to be taken seriously, and kept silent to avoid being labeled as “troublemakers.” We cannot make the same mistake with Mamdani and his supporters. We must speak out forcefully and vote “religiously.”
This article and comments sadden me immensely. I had hoped that we would be past the fear mongering.
Antisemitism is on the rise, but not in the way that you all think it is. I wish we in the Jewish community would understand a core truth: making America safer for minorities, even those we disagree with, is how we stay safer ourselves. Increases in islamophobia lead to increases in antisemitism; we’re all “others” to most people. And turning on a guy for what? Saying he’d be in NYC than visit a foreign country? Refuse to denounce “globalize the intifada”? This is incredibly weak stuff. And turning on fellow Jews who supported his campaign by smearing them as traitors or kapos is disgusting. I support Israel’s right to exist but it’s a country like any other, and not immune from criticism.
Ian, your closing remark reveals your ignorance of Jewish history & the threat posed by Mamdani and other antisemitic anti-Zionists who target The Jewish State and The Jewish People simply for being who we are. You "support Israel's right to exist"? Mazal Tov - Mamdani and his ilk do not. You claim that Israel is "not immune from criticism"? Congratulations - no one claims they are - yet you ignore the overwhelming majority of UN resolutions smearing Israel for any perceived claim of wrongdoing (e.g., defending her citizens by fighting back in Hamas' existentialist October 7th invasion, massacre of unarmed civilians & war crimes).
Two things can be true, brother: that Hamas has committed horrific crimes/massacres and will seek to do it again; and that Israel has also committed crimes/massacres and will do so again. I’m not blind to how catastrophic October 7th was…I’m also not going to pretend, as all my people seem to want to do, that this conflict began on October 7, 2023. That there aren’t generations of bad blood. I refuse to close my eyes to the crimes of either side.
Loving your people and country means having honesty, even in its ugly chapters. I’m an American and I’m not blind to the antisemitism growing in this country. But I do not fear it from Mamdani even half as much as I do from the political right, which has ALWAYS been the strongest haven of antisemites in my country and continues to be.
Jewry has no future in America. This is primarily because of the policies devised and foisted on this once great country by the majority of Jews. Reds, red diaper babies, Frankfurt school, feminist movement; all have contributed to the destruction of America and what few Jews there are in America that appreciated the country—not the America
of tikkunist fanatics who ruined it and ruined the few jews who didn’t deserve to be ruined.
Rule #1 The BOSS is always right
Rite #2 If the BOSS is wrong, see, Rule #1
This may be the dilemma with Mayor Mamdani,
But it may also be the dilemma with Pres. Trump
Must we be loyal to our leaders, to get their favor, or can we disagree, and oppose them? Do we really want truth? Do we want democracy? Do we want sanity? Thanks
PARADOX The politics of democracy is a paradox.
On the one hand, we put our faith in the leaders we elect.
But on the other hand, we have to hold them accountable.
There is no guarantee that any leaders we pick will support our cause, period.
If we had a parliamentary system, we might have votes of no confidence, but we don't.
Let us keep praying for the good...
the same old argument..stay in the the golden ghetto US or the Grim Ghetto Russia or go up to israel...every Jewish person will have to make this choice not just for himself but for future generations of Jews...
https://aish.com/next-year-in-berlin-ach-du-lieber/
It's about time all of us Jews, supposed progressive liberals, wake up to where the "left" has gone. We need to rethink our politics!
Rabbi Raphael Shore has written a remarkably insightful article. It is a warning written out of a heart that wants the best for his own dear Jewish people. I live in Ireland where the anti-Semitism is all pervasive albeit the vast majority of our nation have never met a Jewish person in their lives. While we are part of a group of Christians who love & support the Jewish people both in Ireland & elsewhere I would sadly have concerns for their future here.
We have indeed seen all this before, but this time we have somewhere to go.
Now bet your bottom dollar that a big aliyah promoted by daft Moslem diaspora will have the Moslem World weeping when the new immgration settles the Jordan Valley Golan Negev and Judea & Samaria.
I never thought the way that this author thought. I was more realistic. Jew hatred is the oldest hatred in the world and it’s been around for thousands of years—way before Jesus was ever a tear in his mother’s eye.
"Everything should be made as SIMPLE as possible, but not SIMPLER"
(Einstein idea)
It will take time to see how Mamdani acts, as NY Mayor.
I don't think answering HATE with HATE, is the answer.
We can only do our part to strengthen our faith in Hashem.
Rabbi,
Mamdani's election should cause American Jews to oppose further legal immigration.
He and other anti-semites are entering America, as well as other western nations, via LEGAL means. I know support for legal migration has long been a bedrock principle of American Judaism, but now it has become an existential threat to the survival of Jews in Western nations; this is true in Germany, France, Britain, Sweden, and virtually all Western lands.
Legal immigration must be halted.
Our real problem is the lack of Jewish education among the Jews first and foremost. The fact that 30% of Jews voted for him is the first indication that we need to fix our tribe first. I spoke for many years that the best investment the Jewish community should do is to donate to Jewish schools. Every kid should have an opportunity to attend a good Jewish school. Otherwise, we will raise a generation of anti-Israel, anti-Jewish ignorant democratic socialist, Mamdani supporters ignoramus.
The problem is that a lot of people can't afford to send their kids for a Jewish education, plus Yeshivas have a money problem, and teachers don't get a salary that they could live on, so rich people should find a way to help support the Jewish education of the kids, to be knowledgeable about their Jewish heritage, I think other states or countries help money wise to help, parents give their children a good Jewish education
You’re wrong. There’s more than enough communal funds for this and that’s been affirmed by major donors and community leaders.
Eruv: will it be dismantled under this Muslim's policies?
Chanukah is approaching and so are the miracles season. With Hashem help the evil plans of this hateful mayor will be frustrated. This year with God help we shall have Chanukah and Purim together. Before this hateful mayor there were many and they all went to the trash bin of history. The same will be happen to this man. Am Israel chai. Do not be afraid and do not despair. We shall have Chanukah and Purim together this year and those who hate us and want to destroy us ( globalized the intifada jihadists) will be no more. Trust God. Am Israel chai. Amen ve Amen.
God loves all.Her/His children, Jews and Palestinians and all.people. Only be creating societies where all.are valued can we have peace justice and yes love.
True.The problem is that the Palestinians want to kill us.Loving them won't help a thing!!!That's not what G-D wants.He wrote in the Torah that it is a sin to kill.Would you love a Palestinian that wants to kill you?
Jews have an opportunity they never had in other times in the exile--they have the right to defend themselves. It's time Jacob starts to become re-acquainted with the skills of Esau...without becoming Esau.
That's a tall order, "rabbi," and you should know better about the essence of "Kol Yaakov, "which does not negate dealing with Esau &/or Yishmael, as the case may be, but not on their evil terms!
The father from Jacob Isaac had the answer," the voice of Jacob and the hands of Esau" when Issac gave Jacob the blessing disguised as Easu, that is the hint for future generations
This is the Democratic party. Yes there are Democrats who are not haters and are not socialists but they haven't been the Democratic party since the late 60ies. For 55 or so years the Democratic party has been extreme left and keeps becoming more so. Look at recent presidents; Obama and Biden and the way they treated Israel, our greatest ally in thre Middle East. I am saying all this to ask, WHY DO MOST THE JEWISH PEOPLE IN AMERICA VOTE FOR DEMOCRATS?
Lifelong Democrat and Orthodox Jew. I vote mostly for Democrats because too many GOP are anti-immigrant, anti-POC, opposed women’s rights, and yes, some are also antisemites, just as some on the left are antisemites.
Sadly antisemitism is one of the few things the far left and right agree on.
That’s true. However, what was once a centrist party, the democrats, is now overwhelmingly far left. There’s no meaningful center left.
It was Jews who dragged the democrats leftward into Marxism. Read anything by David Horowitz; he confessed everything.
the different is that the democrats put antisemites center stage and allow Palestinians to narrate the terms. Democratic Jew is an oxymoron. You may be an orthodox, but it doesn’t give you ani credit.
@Rabbi Raphael Shore
From the exit poll, we know that 1/3rd of Jewish voters voted for Mamdani.
What hope is there when 1/3rd vote for anti-semites?
Exactly. Jews do this to themselves. It’s unfathomable to me how Jews vote against their own self interest.
It’s very simple, Liz: 1/3 of Jews don’t consider themselves Jews and don’t like Judaism or, perhaps more to the point, the opprobrium that goes along with it. That, not to mention simply not wanting to be different at all.
This is nonsense, Israel is not Judaism, once you connect a country run by men to a religion, then all the horrors that country commits will be payed for by people of that religion that didn’t vote for it. Many people in Israel disagree with the current ruling power in Israel. Many Jews are protesting. This is not a horror for Jews, instead it’s a step in acceptance of our differences. You hating a man because he’s against brutal killings, does not represent Judaism. Stop the prejudice bullying. Muslims and Jews and Christian’s can coexist under democracy if everyone can pull their heads out of their protectionist blind fold.
I am a Jew and I am a Zionist. When this mayor says " globalize the intifada" he is want to see me , my family dead. He wants October 7 again and again. This mayor is a jihadist and full of hatred for Jews and Israel. I pray to God for a miracle. Instead of Chanukah may we have Purim and all the evil plans of this mayor who is full of hatred be frustrated. Am Israel chai.
Not instead, but rather in addition to!
Don't forget the victory of the few righteous Jews against the many reformed Hellenists and other enemies of the loyal Jews during Chanukah.
"Am Yisrael chai" is misused by many to refer to the Land of Israel but it actually refers to the Nation / People of Israel who have existed for millennia without the land (far from ideally, of course) but would have completely assimilated and disappeared, cv"s, without the Torah.
Word for word, sadly, a perfect essay. Descriptive of our current nightmare.
This is so true, and not just in the US. In Canada the Jew hatred and violence is condoned by the Hamas atrocity loving Liberal Party with the Irish Catholic,PM Carney, in power, who is a long time Jew hater and Israel demonizer. The non-elected Jewish leaders use the same mantras - "It will blow over", or "the silent majority is pro-Jewish", which is laughable as Canada has always had a history of extreme Jew hatred except for the last couple of decades. Their solution - crawl on their bellies to Carney, begging for security, as if a true Jew hater who supports the two million radical jihadists they have allowed to pour in without much or any vetting, including Gaza, cares one iota.
Please can Aish set up a way to print articles without making it so difficult?
Please!!!
Use the "printfriendly" feature in the list of social buttons. It just prints the text of the article itself and a bit more. It also allows you to set exactly what you want to print.
The ways of the world, even in America, confirm that Aliyah is likely, ultimately, the wisest decision – as hard as it may be to make the move. However, sadly, until the majority of Israel stops disrespecting Hashem and turns from it’s dark secular/reform ways back to genuine Torah observance, even Aliyah will not guarantee safety for your family.
I believe the Golden Era of American Jewry is coming to and end with hashtags AND pogroms. Consider what happened the Park Ave. Synagogue a few nights ago. I hope to stay at my job for 2 more years before retiring in Israel.
" not with a bang but whimper" . This line comes from a T.S. Elliot poems which ends
with these lines
" this is the,way the,world ends.
Not with a bang but a whimper"
Its,worth reading this classic poem.
Note: TS,Elliot, a great writer and poet was antisemetic
Excellent article, straight to the point.
Very well documented and explained.
Thank you
"I will bless those who bless you and curse those who curse you." Like all Americans, Jews are blessed to be here. As the great Mike Rapport told me, "THIS (America) is the Promised land."
Can't be so great if he said that, and today it's quite clear that it's foolish to think that way!!
American Jews are decidedly NOT like all Americans as far as too many of the other US citizens are concerned, so let's not waste time arguing about that!
If you set yourself apart and claim to be different from others, can you blame others if they see you as different?
Those words were said of the Jews, not of America. On the contrary it was the US which was blessed by hosting Jews and now will suffer its decline for turning against them.
It means, don't take crap from enemies. Stand up for yourself! Be vocal and be proud. The haters aren't as strong and smart as they assume.
You're right: they're not, but they can still do plenty of damage with their hatred born of stupidity and fed on lies.
You'd better be careful about your advice, though, because it's an oft-repeated and rather empty message. Just try being vocal (never mind proud!) when faced by hateful crowds frothing at the mouth; you'd do well to get a rabies shot first.
What an important and painfully on target article, one that that bears reading and re-reading. At the same time it’s hard— at least these days —to make the case that Israel is the safest place to be as a Jew, even as I can’t help thinking that.
Israel IS the safest place! Come home!! You will not regret it!
Israel does not have room for all of us. We have to stand up to this wave of antisemitism here.
I wish you a healthy dose of emunah, faith in God!
The One who has kept His people alive throughout centuries of dispersion, persecution, etc., has room for us all.
There is plenty of space in Israel for all Jews.
Think how strong Israel would be if 12 million Jews lived there instead of just 6 million.
What about affordable housing? Not all of us can afford 2-3 million NIS for an apartment?
It's unfortunately not the safest place for a Jew because we are still in exile until Moshiach comes!!
But it's after all the Land that Hashem watches over constantly.
Best to be here rather than in chutz l'aretz when Mashiach comes!
If Israel is save what did Oct 7 2023 happen?
Because of violent divisions between Jews. We need to learn to disagree more respectfully.
According to the Exit Poll, 1/3rd of the Jewish voters in NYC voted for Mamdani.
May they be shamed for all of Eternity!
Tragic. Due to ignorance. They dont know who they are. Dont know their roots or Jewish history. Very sad 🙁
Not to worry, they will be! But not only that, they'll get their just desert right here as well!
70% of Jews did not vote for mamdini. the 30% are 18-24 year olds. a demographic that today is equal to 12-16 year olds. they are not adults not even young adults. we live a hundred years now. things have changed in many ways. Israel is the only safe place even if a bomb falls on you. it takes money. seniors who made a good living are now on social security. 80plus means you're trapped in this Marxist Islamic sewer.
Yes- they have betrayed Jewry
I don't live in NYC and therefore was not eligible to vote in the mayoral election. with that said there is no way I would have voted for Mamdani. However, I want to raise another point re: the term woke. It has been misused and overused. We should substitute the terms oblivious and benighted for the term woke. After all, aren't we really trying to point out that people are oblivious, benighted and unaware? These terms are the exact opposite of woke.
You are giving way too much power to Mamdani.
You are fear mongering, and encouraging cowering. This is weakness.
If everyone does aliyah, the problem will not go away.
It will just create a convenient bullseye for the rest of the world.
Think about it. If you are evil, and you succeed in pushing a people out, you feel more powerful, not less. You feel empowered to continue in that path, even feeling righteous.
It is our responsibility to push back on the tide of hatred, and re-right the world where ever our feet tread.
Our presence throughout the whole world brings holiness to all parts of the world.
Strengthen yourself, and each other.
Be vigilant to your safety. We were never supposed to become relaxed in the diaspora.
Expect strife. It has existed since Cain.
Indeed. We are not supposed to be in the diaspora! Hashem gave us the Land of Israel, to make it our own, to flourish and multiply therein. NOT in foreign lands!
Unfortunately history has shown, as the article so eloquently states, that when the tide turns against the Jews, it does not get better. It's frightening how fast people, especially young people, are becoming indoctrinated into this line of thinking. I have seen statements from many Holocaust survivors who all say: what we are experiencing parallels Germany 1930-1935. The scary difference is that back then there was no social media that fueled the anti-semites and their agenda. This is a speeded up version of that era! Imagine, TruthfulOne, if you gave the same advise to German Jews when they argued that they needed to leave because of the increasing antisemitism. My husband's grandfather sensed this in 1925!
Thank G-d they got out. Most of his extended did not believe him and perished