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Unbridled Anti-Semitism

November 06, 2018
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The Nazis called them “demonstrations.” But Kristallnacht, “the night of broken glass,” was far more than simple protests; it was a nationwide spate of violent, unbridled anti-Semitism.

On November 9 and 10 in 1938, across Germany and in other territories controlled by Hitler’s regime, an estimated 7,500 Jewish-owned businesses were vandalized and looted. Nazi soldiers and Hitler Youth invaded Jewish homes, intimidated and assaulted families, and murdered Jewish men and women who would not cooperate. They raided countless Jewish residences and burned or destroyed 267 synagogues, killing 91 Jewish people in the process. As the pogrom spread, tens of thousands of Jewish men were arrested, and most were transferred to concentration camps.

It’s important to remember that Germany had been discriminating against Jewish people for more than five years before Kristallnacht. When Adolf Hitler became Chancellor in 1933, his anti-Semitism began with calling for boycotts of Jewish businesses, banning property ownership by Jewish people and restricting the types of employment allowed them. The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 stripped Jewish citizens of many rights as the regime advanced its agenda to eventually remove the Jewish people entirely.

What prompted Kristallnacht?

In late October 1938, the Nazis arrested 17,000 Jewish people from Poland who were living in Germany and deported them back to their homeland. However, Poland refused them entry, which created a ghetto of nationless Jewish people near the border. Seventeen-year-old Herschel Grynszpan heard of the treatment his father received among the deportees. Outraged, he shot Ernst vom Rath, third secretary in the German Embassy in Paris. Vom Rath died of his wounds on November 9, sparking the events of Kristallnacht.

Kristallnacht was portrayed as a spontaneous response to the unfortunate murder. However, history indicates the killing actually provided a convenient cover for what was a well-coordinated attack on the Jewish people throughout Germany and beyond.

A survivor’s memories

Marga Randall remembered Kristallnacht as the night when everything changed. She was 8 years old that night, living in Schermbeck, Germany, with her family and grandparents. She had first experienced Hitler’s strengthening stranglehold on the Jewish people four years earlier, when her father took a telephone call from the Gestapo one night. They said they were coming to arrest him. Her father suffered a heart attack and dropped dead right in front of then-4-year-old Marga, the phone still in his hand.

On Kristallnacht, the threats of Nazi ideology came after Marga herself. At 10 p.m., she awoke to sounds on the street below her room. She ran to the window and was so frightened by what she saw that her teeth chattered. A mob of Hitler’s Brown Shirts and Youth held torches in one hand and bricks in the other.

“They were coming toward my house. Our house,” Marga said in her videoed testimony for Yad Vashem, The World Holocaust Remembrance Center. Marga ran downstairs to her family, and they took shelter in a small, inner room with no windows. In the dark, they huddled together, “and we screamed – because we didn’t know if we would survive the night,” Marga said.

The Nazi’s stormed into the house, shouting as they vandalized the rooms. They forced Marga and the others to leave their home. The family walked through the cold, dark woods until they reached a Catholic hospital where nuns took them in. An hour later, the Nazis came to the hospital and made them return home.

“There wasn’t a chair [left] for my grandmother to sit on,” Marga remembered. The Nazis had “hacked the furniture apart,” she said. “My grandfather’s beautiful, yellow canary had been trampled to death.”

Spontaneous demonstrations? “This was so highly organized,” Marga said in her Yad Vashem recording. The Nazis who raided and destroyed her home were not from her own village of Schermbeck, but from a nearby town farther north. The Schermbeck Nazis had gone south to a different village to do the same. “It seems it’s easier to hurt someone you don’t know,” Marga said. The events of Kristallnacht had been carefully planned.

Marga and her immediate family moved to Berlin, where they lived in partial hiding until they immigrated to the United States in 1941. Mere weeks afterward, her remaining family members in Germany were deported to concentration camps, where they perished. According to the Senator John Heinz History Center, Marga returned to visit Schermbeck more than 40 years later, and then spent the rest of her life speaking and sharing her story to increase awareness about the Holocaust.

During those years, Marga lived in Squirrel Hill, Pennsylvania, the pleasant community just outside Pittsburgh recently shattered by the worst act of anti-Semitism in U.S. history (Pittsburgh synagogue shooting). It is believed that she attended the Tree of Life Synagogue – where 11 people were murdered and two injured merely because they were Jewish. The man who walked in and opened fire during a circumcision ceremony that Shabbat morning told police, “All these Jews need to die” (Fox News).

Why remember Kristallnacht?

Anti-Semitism is alive. It seethes in internet chat rooms, on social media and in the conversations of people who stoke a shared hatred.

Anti-Semitism simmered for years in 20th century Europe. Inch by inch, the ideology grew until it erupted into a night of organized terror and assault on Jewish citizens. Kristallnacht proved to be a turning point. Hitler saw that non-Jewish citizens would stand by, observe without objection – and even participate – as mob violence played out against Jewish people.

After Kristallnacht, he brazenly ramped up his plan to exterminate the Jewish people. Six million Jewish people were murdered in the Holocaust. In some countries, 90% of the Jewish population perished.

Anti-Semitism grew unchecked in Nazi Germany. In the wake of the Pennsylvania synagogue shooting, the anniversary of Kristallnacht is a reminder that we must not repeat that passivity. We must confront anti-Semitism to curb its existing momentum and prevent it from gaining more footholds. We must – in love – be voices against anti-Semitism, in whatever form it takes, whenever we encounter it.

 

See also Jewish Voice’s response to the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting.

 

JVMI Ministering in Israel Today

November 05, 2018
JVMI in Israel

Jewish Voice Ministries International (JVMI) is honored to work with more than 60 ministry partners in Israel today. These “partners on the ground” reach deeply into communities throughout Israel offering practical aid, spiritual guidance and the Good News that Yeshua (Jesus) is the long-awaited Jewish Messiah.

“People don’t care what you know until they know that you care,” says JVMI CEO Rabbi Jonathan Bernis. And it’s true. When someone is enduring a difficult, painful time, it’s hard for them to focus on anything but their troubling circumstance.

That’s why Jewish Voice is committed to meeting people at their point of need to see them through some of the most challenging times of their lives. It is after receiving that much-needed care that these secular Jewish people ask, “Why did you care enough to do this?” And that’s what opens the door for us to share the Good News of the Gospel of Jesus with these people who are usually hearing it for the first time and why they’re ready to listen.

Our Israel office works to provide real help and spiritual hope to hurting people in Israel today.

JVMI’s carefully selected Israeli ministry partners go through a rigorous vetting process. We ensure that they are properly licensed to operate in Israel; and that they comply with the governing rules and laws and are fiscally responsible. Jewish Voice also ensures they accomplish the goals of their mission and remain dedicated to Messiah.

Get the Israel Prayer Guide

Do you want to know how to pray for Israel in greater detail and depth? Jewish Voice Ministries has put together this Intercessory Prayer Guide for Israel that provides focused, targeted requests to help you pray for the nation of God’s People. We hope this prayer guide can help both Messianic Jews and Christians pray their support for Israel.

Here are some of the ways JVMI reaches out to people in need in Israel today:

Humanitarian Aid

Through a network of ministry partners, Jewish Voice helps struggling Israelis with basic needs such as food and clothing. JVMI’s outreach to elderly Holocaust survivors provides much-needed dental procedures and eyeglasses that are far out of the reach of their meager, fixed incomes. In this way, we not only share the love of Yeshua but also enable this dwindling generation of survivors to live more safely and comfortably in their final years. Through our Israel office, JVMI also facilitates compassionate care to individuals and communities needing emergency aid in times of crisis.

Addiction Rehabilitation

Though it is the ancient Holy Land, Israel today is a modern nation with contemporary problems. Jewish Voice ministries in Israel come alongside men, women and teens caught in the web of drug addiction, alcoholism and prostitution. Many of those who are struggling also face homelessness. Through counseling, rehabilitation, sharing the Gospel and facilitating discipleship, we’re helping transform the addicted with new life in Messiah and restored lives.

Helping Women at Their Darkest Hours

Jewish Voice’s Israel ministries help women in crises such as domestic violence, those who are incarcerated and pregnant women considering abortion. Jewish Voice helps women in Israel today to turn their lives around through crisis counseling, life-skills training, and discipleship.

Messianic Congregations

Jewish Voice is helping raise up the next generation of Jewish leaders in Israel today. JVMI works with Messianic congregations to mature and equip the body of Messiah, share the Good News of Yeshua, and serve communities with practical programs meeting essential needs. As we grow the Messianic community in Israel, we extend the reach of the Gospel throughout the Land of Israel.

Immigration and Aliyah

God promised to bring His people back to the Land, and He is actively fulfilling this prophecy even now (Ezekiel 11:17, 34:13, 37:21). Throughout the world, Jewish people who have never lived in Israel long to go “home” to the Land of their faith. Several of our Israeli ministries reach out with significant aid to the immigrant community living in Israel today ‒ particularly those who made aliyah (ah-lee-YAH) from Ethiopia and former Soviet countries. Material aid and tutoring along with language and computer classes help new immigrants integrate into Israeli society.

Israeli-Arab Reconciliation

The pursuit of peace between Israelis and Arabs remains a critical, pervasive matter in Israel today. JVMI programs and partners in Israel work to facilitate good Arab-Israeli relationships through reconciliation through Messiah Yeshua, who is Himself our peace (Ephesians 2:14).

Education

Ministry is magnified through education. Training Believers how to share the Gospel with Jewish people and use their gifts to edify the body of Messiah bears exponential fruit. Jewish Voice works with educators in Israel today training up individuals to glorify God with their lives and further His Kingdom.

Your gift to Jewish Voice helps Israelis in these vital ways and more. In all, Jewish Voice ministries in Israel include more than 60 partners. When you give to Jewish Voice, you provide direct help to hurting Israelis. Your gifts support JVMI programs and partners on the ground in Israel today and open the door to sharing the Good News of Yeshua with them.

Get "A Rabbi Looks at the Last Days"

Few topics captivate our minds or fill our hearts with fear like the end times. In this book, Jonathan Bernis comes with the perspective that is both startling and hopeful, unpacking the mysteries of this cryptic time and what it means for you.

Limited Time: Double YOUR GIFT to reach more Jewish people

October 31, 2018

I’m writing with wonderful news about how you can share help, healing and hope with even more Jewish people.

Thanks to a $150,000 matching gift provided by several supporters, whatever you give now will be DOUBLED!

You read that right. Your gift by Friday, November 30, will be matched – dollar for dollar – to reach TWICE as many Jewish people with physical healing AND the opportunity to know the hope of Yeshua (Jesus).

When you give, you’ll not only bring physical healing to Jewish people. You’ll also provide the Good News of Yeshua (Jesus) as our Messiah and Redeemer who wants to save all who turn to Him, especially my Jewish people.

Jewish People

Reach more Jewish people now!


I pray the gift-multiplying potential of these matching funds will inspire you to stand with us generously right now to make a life-transforming – and even life-saving – difference for a Jewish person like Birtukan, who came to visit our Medical Clinic in Enfranz, Ethiopia.

On the first day of the Clinic, about 2,000 people lined up, each hoping for treatment. Because it was a short day, we were able to help only about 500 of them. 

While that’s an amazing effort, to be sure, it’s shocking to see the extent of the need. As the day went on, the lines packed in tighter and tighter in the hope of getting help, showing the genuine desperation.
 

Birtukan’s story


Among those who came was a woman named Birtukan, which means “orange flower.” She told us that, because she’s Jewish, she has suffered terrible persecution. She has not only been rejected by her community but physically beaten.

Her neighbors don’t trust her and accuse her of having “the evil eye” – the ability to cause bad things to happen. It’s a common superstition in the area.

Birtukan came to one of our Clinics because she’d been turned away from the hospital in Ethiopia, an hour away. She was desperate for help.

After an exam and a promise to help, the team invited her to visit our nearby Prayer Tent, where she shared more of her sad story. One of our counselors shared the Good News with her and, praise God, she accepted Jesus as her Messiah!

Thankfully, we were able to perform surgery on Birtukan to fix her failing vision. Her father told us her vision had improved dramatically. They were so thankful and blessed us for what we had done for her.

I want to extend their blessing to you and so many other partners in this work. Thank you – thank you! – for your support. You’re healing bodies and sharing the saving love of Jesus with His people in Ethiopia and so many other desperate lands.

We need to continue praying for and ministering to Birtukan. She’s been told her husband, a non-Believer, will leave her if she doesn’t renounce Yeshua.

But so many more like Birtukan need help. Since they have little money for health care, free treatment and medicine are a dream. Most of us, living comfortably as we do, can’t even relate to this kind of need.
 

Give more help, more healing, more hope


In the coming months, Jewish Voice hopes to invest $3,663,295.70 in Medical Clinics across Africa. Our goal is to provide medical, eye and dental care for 60,000 Jewish people just like Birtukan, who struggle to survive in the face of persecution and the worst living conditions you and I can imagine.

Many have no way to get care. So they just go without, allowing minor health issues, easily treated here in the West, to become serious, and even life-threatening.

By working together, we can prevent this. To not take action would be a terrible injustice to these people. So I’m looking to you and other partners to help with the cost of supplies, equipment, and travel for our team of medical professionals, support staff and volunteers.

 

Don't miss this rare chance to DOUBLE your gift now

It costs just $30 to provide one Jewish person with humanitarian aid AND the opportunity to hear the Good News.

That means – with the matching funds – your gift will be automatically DOUBLED to help TWO people. 

So please give as generously as you can, knowing your gift will reach TWICE as many people.

And when you give, please know that you’ll not only bring physical healing to Jewish people but also the Good News of Yeshua as Messiah and Redeemer.

We’re planning our next Medical Outreaches right now. Won’t you please send your most generous gift possible to provide both physical and spiritual care?

A peek inside our prayer closet ...

October 31, 2018
praying

Several weeks ago our staff here at Jewish Voice Ministries International participated in a ministry-wide week of prayer and fasting. We have done this twice annually for the last couple of years. It has been a powerful experience, both concerning what the Lord does in our own hearts as well as in us as a ministry. This time was no exception.

Although the work of ministry continues during these special weeks, the work of prayer increases as we have worship and prayer times available every hour of the work day all week. There is also one full day when we come together for worship, prayer and hearing from the Lord together.

During this most recent week of prayer and fasting, as always, Jonathan Bernis prayerfully shared his heart for the ministry and us as a team. Staff members gave testimony of ways in which the Lord touched them and answered prayer. We also spent time in prayer for you, our partners, lifting you up with gratitude and thanksgiving.

As we listened to the Lord together, the theme that emerged in our hearts was that God is bringing us into a new season and calling us to partner with Him to see it birthed.

“Here I am, doing a new thing; now it is springing up –

do you not know about it?”

 —Isaiah 43:19a, TLV

Below are some of the prayer items that came from this fall’s set-apart time with God. Please join us in praying forward into all He is calling us to.

Please pray that we will:

  • Respond to the wooing of the Lord to spend time just being with Him, worshiping, abiding, listening, going deep in Him and His word
  • Be diligent to press into the Lord for discernment and understanding, especially regarding what, when, where and with whom He is calling us
  • Not settle for good ideas but press in for “God ideas,” pursuing the Spirit of the Lord to birth ministry that is of the Spirit
  • Keep short accounts and be in a constant state of acknowledging and turning from sin and turning to the Lord, eager to receive His refreshing
  • Not only be reconciled to God and one another as needed but wholeheartedly take on the ministry of reconciliation which has been entrusted to us so that we might be used by God to see lives transformed and all Israel saved
  • Press in with renewed vision and passion, praying to the Lord of the harvest for resources and workers to send many into the field and reap eternal fruit unto salvation

Let’s pray:

Father, as Isaiah 43 beckons, we want to be those who see and discern what You are doing in this new season. We want to dwell in Your Presence, go deep in Your word, hear Your voice clearly, and follow You faithfully. We pray this for ourselves and each of our dear partners as well. In Yeshua’s glorious name, Amen.

A Response to the Massacre at Tree of Life Synagogue

October 29, 2018

Hebrew prayer

 

 

 

He Who makes peace in heavenly realms, May He make peace for us and for all Israel, and let us say, amen.
– Mourner’s Prayer, Jewish Prayer Book

This past Saturday, in the middle of a circumcision ceremony in a Shabbat worship Service, an armed gunman entered Etz Chaim Tree of Life Jewish Synagogue, shouting hateful slurs, and proceeded to murder eleven congregants in the deadliest attack in American Jewish history.

The gunman, Robert Bowers, told authorities while being taken away in custody:

“I just want to kill Jews.”

We at Jewish Voice mourn the loss of our Jewish brethren and stand in solidarity with the Jewish community worldwide in condemning this attack. We continue to pray for the full healing and recovery of the injured worshipers and law enforcement officers who responded to protect the synagogue members and apprehended the shooter.

As the hours progress, the details unfold, and the numbness and shock of such senseless violence give way to a flurry of emotions and opinions both locally and internationally, the Etz Chaim Synagogue tragedy will doubtless fuel the fires of hostile debate: gun control, the dangers of social media loners’ unchecked hate speech, the sharp political divisions in our nation and the fear and violence they invite.

But before all that, in this tragic hour, we at Jewish Voice remember ‒ and encourage you to remember ‒ several truths which can and should steady our thinking and affect our actions as we grapple with Pittsburgh:

Firstly, anti-Semitism (an irrational hatred toward or prejudice against Jewish people) is alive and well. While the Etz Chaim shooting was unprecedented in its deadly scope within the American Jewish community, acts of violence or destruction based solely on prejudice against and hatred toward Jews are an ongoing reality throughout world history. In fact, several of the victims in Pittsburgh were of the age to have had parents or siblings who could have been killed in the Holocaust ‒ the largest and most destructive anti-Semitic atrocity in the history of mankind. What motivated Hitler was also what motivated Robert Bowers: a prejudice that believed that Jewish people were and are the cause of his problems; therefore, they should be destroyed.

In 2017 alone, the anti-Defamation League reported a 57% increase in documented anti-Semitic acts in the United States ‒ the largest single increase in three decades of tracking. More globally, we at Jewish Voice continue to come face-to-face with threats, acts of destruction, physical violence, and even murder, against members of the Jewish communities we serve around the world ‒ in Europe, Africa, Israel, and beyond. The common denominator? Anti-Semitism ‒ vicious prejudices and seething hatred solely because of Jewish identity. The most unlikely and shocking source of so much of the anti-Semitic thinking we encounter? Leaders and groups who call themselves ‘Christian.

Now, more than ever, we at Jewish Voice call upon Believers in the Jewish Messiah, Jesus, to unite ‒ regardless of political affiliation or ethnic background ‒ to be re-sensitized to the reality that anti-Semitism is one of the Enemy’s most dangerous, but historically most effective, means to attempt to wipe God’s Chosen People off the face of the earth. And the Enemy’s most diabolical means of circulating such a dangerous worldview? Planting it within the Body of Believers worldwide ‒ the Church. We call upon Believers to reject any theology which rejects God’s Chosen People Israel, and to actively challenge ‒ with truth and love ‒ anti-Semitic words and actions wherever when they arise.

Secondly, we are commanded in the Scriptures to rejoice with those who rejoice, but also to mourn with those who mourn. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu stated Sunday, “The entire people of Israel grieve with the families of the dead.” Tragedy is not a stranger to Jewish communities worldwide, and when tragedy strikes, we are accustomed to joining together to remember that, though we endure suffering, we live on. We also gather, often reciting the Mourner’s Prayer together, to remember that there is a God in Heaven who lives and endures, whose name endures, and who is able to make peace in our lives and the lives of our people even in times of grief.

At Jewish Voice, we encourage you this week to take time to mourn with those who mourn the senseless loss of life in Pittsburgh. Call and contact your Jewish friends, family members, and neighbors to let them know you are standing with them and with the Jewish community in mourning, and that you share their grief. And, of course, take this opportunity, upon every sighting of the half-staff American flag between now and this Wednesday at sunset, to pray for the Jewish community ‒ in Pittsburgh and in the cities where you live. Pray that God would comfort those who mourn, would bring hope to those who despair, and would bring shalom to those bound up with fear, anxiety, or anger as a result of this tragic past Shabbat.

Thirdly and finally, we exhort you to take bold steps this holiday season, with even more zeal in light of the Pittsburgh massacre, to share with your Jewish friends and neighbors about the One who can bring the only lasting shalom and security: the promised Messiah, Yeshua. The temptation during times of trouble of the Jewish community is for Christians to shrink back, give space, and not ‘offend’ their Jewish friends with their faith. However, we at Jewish Voice encourage and exhort you not to shrink back! Hearts are open to the Lord in times of trouble, and we encourage you to share, in love, the hope and salvation of the One by whose stripes we have been healed ‒ the One in whom all the promises of God for His people Israel (and for all peoples!) have always been ‘yes.’

Pray also for the Messianic ministries and congregations in your area like Jewish Voice ‒ that we would take bold steps, and that the Lord would open incredible doors in this season to reach out with faith, hope, and love, to our Jewish brethren who are grappling with grief, fear, and confusion. We simply cannot do what we do without your faithful prayers and support.

Thank you for standing with our Jewish people in Pittsburgh and around the world. We count on your love, prayers, and support ‒ even more so in times of trouble.

May He create peace for you, for us, and for all Israel. Amen.

Your friends at Jewish Voice Ministries International

Israel uses technology to bless beyond its borders

October 26, 2018

Despite a rise in global anti-Semitism and anti-Israel resolutions originating from the United Nations and international courts, the world last week received a reminder of how God continues to bless Israel and all who bless her.

The planet’s most advanced cardiac hospital opened in Jerusalem, offering care to persons of all races, religions, and backgrounds.

I will bless those who bless you, and whoever curses you I will curse;

and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you.

– Genesis 12:3

A Country the Size of New Jersey

“Israel is becoming a world leader in medical Artificial Intelligence (AI),” The New York Times declared last week.

“There are dozens of new health care start-ups in a country that has a population just shy of New Jersey’s,” The Times continued, in its series of articles on nations leading the AI field.

If there’s any doubt Israel uses its technology to bless beyond its borders, consider the story of Musa, a Muslim Palestinian baby who received a Jewish Israeli baby’s heart at a Tel Aviv hospital.

“There were several miracles associated with this complicated surgery,” said Dr. David Mishaly, chief surgeon at Sheba’s Pediatric and Congenital Heart Surgery Unit. “By a twist of fate – a miracle – Musa, was able to receive the new heart from a Jewish child, whose parents had agreed a few hours earlier to donate the heart.”

In April, The Tower reported that an Israeli-based international nonprofit organization received the 2018 United Nations Population Award for its “mission of improving the quality of pediatric cardiac care for children in developing countries and creating centers of competence in these countries.”

According to The Tower, the work of this single Israeli organization “saved the lives of more than 4,400 children from 58 countries in Africa, South America, Europe, Asia and throughout the Middle East, and trained more than 100 medical team members from these countries.”

That’s just one of many Israel-based organizations committed to making a difference through God’s blessing of advanced technology.

Carrying on Israel’s Generous Tradition

The health service that opened last week – the Irma and Paul Milstein Heart Center in Jerusalem’s Hadassah Medical Center – will carry on Israel’s tradition of generosity. The center occupies roughly 48,500 square feet of the hospital’s Sarah Wetsman Davidson Tower and was made possible by a $10 million donation from Americans Irma and Paul Milstein.

According to Prof. Chaim Lotan, director of the Heart Institute at Hadassah Medical Organization, the new facilities “catapult us 50 years” into the future.

The Milstein’s son, Howard, said at last week’s dedication that his parents “saw Hadassah’s mission statement as the highest expression of the founding ideals of the State of Israel: To forge ‘links between patients of all nationalities, races and religion who come to its doors for healing.’

“Here at Hadassah, all patients – Jewish, Christian, Muslim, Druse, secular and religious – receive dignified care from a top-flight team of equally diverse medical workers,” he said. “As such, Hadassah is also a bridge to peace.

“If you need proof of that, look no further than the Syrian children who, in the midst of a horrific humanitarian crisis, have been brought to Hadassah for treatment of congenital heart defects,” the younger Milstein said. “The Milstein family resonates with that. We, too, are engaged in supporting a multi-faith effort to alleviate the Syrian crisis.”

Join with us in prayer:

  • Thanking God for giving Israelis a heart for people of all nations and the technology to deliver on their generosity
  • Asking for continued blessings on Israel as this tiny nation develops even more break-through technology with which to bless the world
  • Petitioning God to use Israel’s technology to help bring peace to the Middle East and abate the growing tide of anti-Semitism globally

Your gift to Jewish Voice today helps support Israeli-Arab peace initiatives. It also provides medical and dental aid to elderly Holocaust survivors in Israel, in addition to reaching them with the Good News that Yeshua (Jesus) is their long-awaited Jewish Messiah.

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