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Surviving One of the Holocaust’s Worst Pogroms

April 10, 2018
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Night was setting in. Henry Solomon was surrounded by dead and dying Jewish people as he huddled against the back wall of the police station courtyard in Iasi (pronounced Yash), Romania. He – and those around him – had been told to report in to exchange their identification cards for new ones. But when they arrived, they encountered a very different scenario. What Henry found instead when he entered that courtyard was one of the most gruesome pogroms of the Holocaust.

It had been planned for days. Germany had invaded Russia, and German tanks and soldiers now swarmed through the city of Iasi. Germany insisted the Jews had provided the necessary information that had allowed Russia to bomb the train station.

Tensions in town grew quickly. Frightened non-Jewish families painted crosses on their houses or windows in hopes of being left alone. They knew what was coming.

When an airplane overhead released a signal flare the night of June 28, 1941, shots rang out simultaneously all over town. German soldiers began rampaging through the city, pounding on doors, arresting Jewish men and killing many indiscriminately.

Once-friendly neighbors turned on the Jewish people, joining in the wave of vicious aggression. “Our Christian neighbors, whom I considered my friends, came out of their homes with iron bars, hoes, spades and guns” and began to attack, report Lazar Leibovici (Times of Israel).

The streets were littered with the bodies of Jewish people who had been shot: men, women and children. Those still alive were rounded up by German soldiers and Romanian police, to be detained at police headquarters.

Holocaust worst

Henry’s family lived at the intersection of three streets. His father refused to let anyone go outside. Instead, they hid and kept watch at the windows. When soldiers came to one side of the house, the men slipped out another. But Henry had slept at the family’s shop the night before and, unaware of the danger, he went on to the police station as instructed.

Haim Solomon told the story of what his brother saw when he arrived. Aligned on either side of the entrance were Germans and Romanians who savagely assaulted the Jews as they passed, hitting each over the head with brutal force or shooting them in the temple (U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum, USHMM).

Henry was among those few who cleared the gauntlet alive and unwounded. As twilight fell and he found himself near the back wall of the complex, he knew he had to do something. Without being seen, he and another detainee scaled the wall and fled.

They found a woodshed by a house with a cross painted on the front. Inside, stacks of firewood reached to the ceiling. They moved aside enough logs to create a place to lie down and hide … then covered themselves with the wood and waited quietly.

Throughout the night and the next day, the shootings and arrests continued. By mid-day on June 29, 5,000 to 6,000 Jewish people were assembled at the police station. Around 2:30 p.m., a false air raid siren blared, and soldiers opened fire on the corralled Jewish people.

“The massacre continued for several hours,” notes the USHMM, “until the executioners were exhausted, and less than half of the Jewish prisoners remained alive.”

Jewish

Meanwhile, as Henry remained hidden under firewood, his brother Haim continued to hide in the family‘s home, peering through ground-level basement windows and watching as Jewish people were marched down the streets and kicked or shot if they didn’t go fast enough – including their local rabbi. . His body lay in the street for days before neighbors felt safe enough to retrieve it. At that time, nearly a week later, the Solomons began to go outside again.

But the Iasi Pogrom wasn’t over. The Jewish people who had survived the massacre at the police station had been herded to the depot and packed tightly into the cars of two trains. Hundreds “succumbed to heat exhaustion, suffocation, dehydration and suicide during the journey aboard crowded, unventilated freight cars in the heat of summer” (USHMM).

Train

The first train carried roughly 2,500 people and traveled in a circle for 17 hours before it stopped. More than 650 dead were removed to a mass grave. Soldiers denied water to survivors, and the journey continued. At each of several stops, hundreds more Jewish people were discovered dead. Local troops hired Gypsies to remove the bodies; their payment was anything of value they could plunder from the dead.

Fewer than 1,100 survived the Iasi death train that arrived in Calarasi on July 6. The second train carried 1,902 Jewish people compressed into 18 cars, and only 708 arrived alive.

At the destinations of both trains, survivors were detained for one to three months. They were then allowed to return to Iasi and any other surviving family members.

Up to 13,000 Jewish people died during the Isai Pogrom and the death trains that followed. In total, 6 million Jewish people died in the Holocaust. They were beaten, tortured, starved and executed. They endured cruel medical experiments, rape, and all manner of inhumane treatment.

The Iasi Pogrom is yet another reason we must never forget the Holocaust.

The 2018 commemoration of Yom HaShoah (Yom Hah-SHO-ah) – Israel’s Holocaust Remembrance Day – begins at sunset on Wednesday, April 11.

At 11 a.m. on Thursday, April 12, a siren will blare throughout Israel, and the nation’s activities will come to a halt. Cars will stop on the streets; shoppers will cease browsing; teachers will interrupt their lessons; employees will set aside their work. And they will stand – some stop their cars and stand beside them – for two minutes, to show their respect for those who suffered and died during the Holocaust.

We invite you to remember as well. If you’d like to participate in two minutes of stillness to commemorate the great “Catastrophe” (the meaning of the Hebrew word Shoah), you can do so at 11 a.m. in your local time zone, or choose to be still at the same time that Israel does. When it is 11 a.m. in Israel on April 12, it will be 4 a.m. on the East Coast (EDT) or 1 a.m. in the West (PDT and Arizona).

Israel’s Unit 8200 Takes on Global Terrorism

April 05, 2018

In biblical times, communities appointed watchmen to guard the city against impending danger, whether it was thieves trying to make off with a town’s food supply or invading armies seeking to overthrow a kingdom.

 

God has assigned a similar Israeli group today to safeguard the global community against terrorism.

Staffed by young cyber experts, Unit 8200 is the largest arm of Israel’s military. According to the British think tank, Royal United Services Institute for Defense and Security Studies, “Unit 8200 is probably the foremost technical intelligence agency in the world and stands on a par with the NSA in everything except scale.”

Israel founded Unit 8200 way back in 1952 using primitive surplus American military equipment. The unit today plays a crucial role in thwarting terrorist activities. Among their stealth roles is tracking ISIS fighters who, once forced from the battlefield, burrowed into countries around the world.

In an interview with Ynet, Israeli Defense Forces Chief of Staff Gadi Eisenkot said, “We pass on information to countries when we know something is in the works.” Hence the elite group is now credited with spoiling sophisticated plots, including:

  • A major ISIS scheme to bomb a civilian airliner headed from Australia to the United Arab Emirates
  • Dozens of Iranian hacking attacks against private and public organizations in Israel, Turkey, Qatar, Kuwait, United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Lebanon
  • Many attacks against Israel by lone-wolf Palestinians in the West Bank.
     

In February, when Israel accepted credit for warning Australia of the impending airliner attack, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, “I can tell you that this is one of many, many such actions that we (took) preventing terrorism around the world.”

A senior Unit 8200 officer explained that “a part of 8200 deals with operational activity beyond the borders. Our missions include incorporating offensive cyber tools as well as tools that help shape perception, alongside cyber defense.

“The cyber world has become a tool to achieve military and diplomatic goals,” the officer continued. “Today, it's not just about reaching arenas like Syria and Iran, but also to bypass technological giants without getting caught.”

Israel scouts for tech-savvy recruits in high school and places them in Unit 8200 during the customary military service for all young Israelis. These online soldiers spread across the country, living on the frontlines to identify and neutralize cyber threats. Their superior training often leads these workers to found high-tech firms when they leave the “They’re good because they have a lot of practice; they live in a tough neighborhood,” said Frank Cilluffo, associate vice president and director at the Center for Cyber and Homeland Security at George Washington University. “Israel punches well above its weight on cyber-related issues.”

Praise God for inspiring Israel to use its advanced intelligence capabilities to fill a biblical watchman role – not only for Israel, but for the world!

 

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.

How You Can Pray

  •  Pray for divine guidance as these watchmen guard the world.
  •  Pray for all the young men and women in Israel’s military service to have the blindness fall from their eyes so they can recognize Yeshua (Jesus) as the long-awaited Jewish Messiah.
     

What Your Gift Will Do

  • When you give to Jewish Voice today, you support the efforts of many JVMI partners as they work full time to achieve Arab-Israeli reconciliation, and share the Good News of Yeshua with young people in the Israeli army.
  • In Israel, your gifts provide practical, emotional and spiritual assistance to elderly Holocaust survivors, including much-needed and financially out-of-reach dental and vision care. You are also helping our partners in Israel to provide critical care to struggling single mothers, widow and orphans, as well as Jewish people who are new immigrants to the Land.

As a token of our appreciation for your gift of $55 or more today, we’ll send you this beautiful wall plaque to remind you to pray for Israel daily.

Designed exclusively for Jewish Voice Ministries and our partners, this beautiful wall piece is fashioned in the shape of the State of Israel and made of genuine olivewood, native to the Holy Land. The plaque is etched with the words, “Pray for the peace of Jerusalem” and the Scripture reference of Psalm 122:6. Each piece of art is one of a kind, with distinct wood grain and colorations –characteristic of natural olivewood. It measures 17-inches tall and is the perfect accessory for narrow, difficult-to-decorate wall spaces. Hang it where you’ll see it daily and remember that your gift is blessing Israel, just as the Lord has asked us to do!

Messianic Jewish Passover Devotional – Day 7

April 05, 2018
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Remembering God’s Presence

As God called the Israelites out of Egypt, He established His presence with them right way. He assured the newly freed slaves that He was with them to guide and protect them.

 

Adonai went before them in a pillar of cloud by day to lead the way and in a pillar of fire by night to give them light. So they could travel both day and night. The pillar of cloud by day and the pillar of fire by night never departed from the people.”

―Exodus 13:21

 

God’s presence never left the Israelites. Messianic Jews and others who have placed their faith in Yeshua (Jesus) have received the gift of God’s Holy Spirit to dwell within them. God is always present with us, and He will never leave or forsake us.

 

Don’t you know that you are God’s temple and that the Ruach Elohim (ROO-akh El-oh-HEEM) [Spirit of God] dwells among you?

―1 Corinthians 3:16

 

“… For we are the temple of the living God just as God said, ‘I will dwell in them and walk among them; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.’”

―2 Corinthians 6:16

 

Through God’s presence in us, we have access to every spiritual blessing we need to live and carry out the work He designed for us. God knows our weaknesses, and He is able to shore us up with courage and equip us with power. By His presence, He gives us joy, comfort, guidance, wisdom and so much more. God is ever present to hear our hearts and fill us with His love.

 

Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Yeshua the Messiah, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Messiah.”

―Ephesians 1:3

 

His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness, through the knowledge of Him who called us by His own glory and virtue.”

―2 Peter 2:3

 

“…God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Ruach ha-Kodesh (ROO-akh Ha-koh-DESH) [Holy Spirit] who was given to us.”

―Romans 5:5

 

Personal Reflection

Passover reminds us to look back at how God met the needs of the Israelites in the wilderness and invites us to consider afresh what He has done for us personally. God commanded the Israelites to remember, and it’s easy to see why. As we intentionally reflect on God’s presence and work in our lives, we rejoice in His faithfulness and strengthen our trust in Him.

Reflect on how God’s presence has empowered or comforted you in the past. Rejoice in the gift of His presence with you then and with you now. Jot down these memories on your growing list accumulated as you’ve followed along with these daily Passover devotionals. They will be a treasure for you to revisit in the future.

Get the Passover Infographic

This enlightening infographic will teach you the meaning of the Passover seder plate, the elements to include and the significance behind them.

Messianic Jewish Passover Devotional – Day 4

April 02, 2018
matza

Remembering Leaven

We are in the midst of the Feast of Unleavened Bread. For seven days, Jewish people are to eat no leaven, such as yeast. It is a reminder of the Passover in Egypt when, through God’s hand, the Hebrew slaves were liberated and had to leave hurriedly before their bread had risen.

Every year, Jewish people are diligent to ensure they consume no leaven, so they remove it not only from their food but also from their homes. The search for leaven before Passover includes the examination of every cupboard and each nook.

 

For seven days you are to eat matzot (MAHT-zote) [unleavened bread], but on the first day you must remove hametz (khah-METZ) [leaven] from your houses.”

―Exodus 12:15a

 

The New Covenant uses the term leaven as a metaphor for sin. It warns that just a small amount has a powerful effect, and that we should be careful to avoid it.

 

“… Don’t you know that a little hametz leavens the whole batch of dough? Get rid of the old hametz, so you may be a new batch, just as you are unleavened – for Messiah, our Passover Lamb, has been sacrificed. Therefore let us celebrate the feast not with old hametz, the hametz of malice and wickedness, but with unleavened bread – the matzah of sincerity and truth.”

―1 Corinthians 5:6-8

 

Yeshua (Jesus) died to deliver us from the power and eternal consequence of sin but, in our daily lives, we remain vulnerable to sin’s temptation. The apostle Paul repeatedly charges us as Believers to “put off” our old ways of sin and “put on” the new life we have already received through Messiah. As we do, we become more like Yeshua, bringing Him glory and accessing the abundant life He has given us.

 

With respect to your former lifestyle, you are to lay aside the old self corrupted by its deceitful desires, be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new self – created to be like God in true righteousness and holiness.”

―Ephesians 4:22-24

 

So, though we are no longer slaves to sin as we were before we placed our faith in Yeshua, it can entangle us and rob us of the joy available to us in Messiah. Therefore, we are to diligently avoid it.

Observing Passover, we eat unleavened bread for seven days and remember the Children of Israel and their liberation. As Messianic Jews – Believers in Yeshua - we also reflect on the freedom Jesus obtained for us through His death on our behalf. We have been delivered from the bondage to sin, and we rely on the Holy Spirit, who empowers us to put aside sin in our daily lives.

Personal Reflection

God made the way for the Israelites to leave Egypt and their slave days behind. Through Yeshua, He made the way for us to leave our bondage to sin and enabled us to walk in the new freedom and joy which His shed blood provides.

Think back to instances when the Holy Spirit gave you victory over temptation and sin in your daily walk with God. What are some Scriptures that can help inspire you to persevere in laying aside the “sin that so easily entangles us” (Hebrews 12:1)? Record some of your personal deliverance stories and helpful verses. Add them to your list of remembrances gathered through following these daily Passover devotionals.

 

Get the Passover Infographic

This enlightening infographic will teach you the meaning of the Passover seder plate, the elements to include and the significance behind them.

How Israel Protected the World from Nuclear Terrorism

March 30, 2018

Shortly after midnight on September 6, 2007, bombs destroyed Syria’s almost-finished al-Kibar nuclear reactor. The international community was never able to account for the facility’s equipment or Syria’s nuclear materials.

No one claimed responsibility at the time of the attack, but the world suspected Israel.

Sure enough, just last week – more than a decade later – Israel fessed up.

 Defense Forces Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. Gadi Eisenkot said, “Israel will never accept an existential threat against it. That was the message in 2007, and that is the message to our enemies in both the near and distant future.”

 

The Strike Thwarted ISIS Nuclear Capabilities

Emphasizing Eisenkot’s resolve, the terror group ISIS overran Syria in 2011. From 2014 until 2017, ISIS maintained control of the area once housing the reactor. Many believe Israel’s strike saved the world from a nuclear ISIS, which could have spread its destruction worldwide by cooking up dirty bombs.

 

“When faced with today’s reality, the decision to destroy the reactor is one of the best decisions made in Israel over the past 70 years,” said Lt. Gen. Amikam Norkin, commander of the Israeli Air Force (IAF). “The principles according to which the IAF prepared for the attack are also the IAF’s principles today.”

 

The North Korea Connection

Important questions remain unanswered. Who has been hiding those missing al-Kibar nuclear materials all this time? Why did Israel claim responsibility for the attack 10 years later?

Many eyes have turned toward North Korea. 

According to the Jewish Policy Center, “Post-attack analysis highlighted North Korea’s connection to al-Kibar.” They noted troubling similarities between the Syrian facility and North Korea’s reactor in Yongbyon.

Hours after Israel acknowledged the attack, a Washington-based think tank inserted alarming speculation into the conversation. The Institute for Science and International Security released a report urging an investigation into a 2015 article in Germany’s weekly news magazine Der Spiegel

Der Spiegel’s editorial claimed that North Korea helped Syria hide the equipment and materials from al-Kibar. Further, North Korea may be helping Syria construct an underground nuclear reactor that intelligence officials believe they discovered.

The report went on to suggest an Iranian connection to this new nuclear base.

 

Life in a Horrible Neighborhood

Israelis daily face conditions that many in the U.S. can’t imagine. These include constant threats of terrorism, radical Islam, and impending war on all borders. Now, several enemies either have or soon could have nuclear weapons capable of raining devastation on any Israeli city. 

In fact, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, during an interview with an American radio host, acknowledged that Israelis live in a “horrible neighborhood.”

Despite the chaos that surrounds Israel, the United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network recently ranked it the 11th happiest country in the world for the fifth year in a row. The survey asks citizens of each country questions related to their quality of life.

 

“Israel … is beating most of the Western countries,” said Netanyahu. The poll attributed the high ranking to several factors, including that Russian immigrants in Israel live a happier and better life than before. Additionally, answers revealed that Israel’s youth “have a real confidence in the future.”

 

While Israel lagged the top 3 happiest countries of Norway, Switzerland and Canada, it outperformed the United States, which placed 18th in the study, released last week and officially called the World Happiness Report.

By comparison, the Palestinian territories didn’t crack the top 100, ranking only 104th on the happiness scale. Syria was the least happy place in the Middle East, checking in at 150 on the list of 156 countries worldwide.

 

How You Can Pray

There is no doubt that Israel is surrounded by countries striving to annihilate her. Please pray for peace and protection for the Jewish people, who strive to maintain a brave and positive attitude.

Praise God for:

  • Giving Israel advanced intelligence capabilities.
  • Keeping the Jewish people in Israel safe in their “unsafe neighborhood.”

Pray for:

  • God’s protection of the men, women and children who make Israel home.
  • Wisdom for the leaders of Israel and her allies in the wake of efforts by Iran, Syria and North Korea to place nuclear weapons in the hands of terrorists.

Right now, Jerusalem is on high alert as Passover begins. The two recent terror attacks in Meyo Dotan and Jerusalem’s Old City – which claimed the lives of three Israelis – along with Hamas’ just-announced plan for a six-week, 100,000-person demonstration on the Gaza Strip border, have defense forces across the country and Border Police out in force. As always, pray for the Peace of Jerusalem, but especially during this time of heightened concern.

 

How Your Gifts Help

  • Your gift to Jewish Voice today helps support efforts for Arab-Israeli reconciliation.
  • Throughout Israel, your gift to Jewish Voice helps bring aid to Jewish people in need, including vision and dental care to vulnerable Holocaust survivors.

As a token of our appreciation for your gift of $40 or more today, we’ll send you the special study guide package for Jonathan Bernis’ newest book, Unlocking the Prophetic Mysteries of Israel. This includes the study guide book, plus the companion 7-disc DVD set. In this set, you’ll move to the next level with study material not found in the book, including why End Times’ prophecy can only be understood in the context of Israel and the Jewish people.

 

 

Messianic Jewish Passover Devotional – Day 1

March 30, 2018
Passover

Remembering the Passover Lamb
 

Moses kept pressing Pharaoh to let the Jewish people go, and each time Pharaoh refused, Adonai subjected Egypt to another plague. As the last and worst calamity was near, God informed the Hebrew slaves what to do to escape it.

The Angel of Death would descend upon the land and take Egypt’s firstborn, both human and animal. Each household of Israel was to select an unblemished lamb, care for it four days, and then sacrifice it. They were to paint its blood on the lintel and doorposts of their homes and, by this, the coming death would pass over their households.

The blood will be a sign for you on the houses where you are. When I see the blood, I will pass over you. So there will be no plague among you to destroy you when I strike the land of Egypt.”

―Exodus 12:13

It was a great and mighty miracle of salvation. The lamb’s death, and its blood as a covering, saved the Jewish people in Egypt. In the New Covenant, John the Immerser identified Yeshua (Jesus) as the Lamb of God (John 1:29), and the apostle Paul refers to Him as our Passover Lamb.

“…for Messiah, our Passover Lamb, has been sacrificed.”

―1 Corinthians 5:7

 

Yeshua died to offer His blood as a covering for our sin. When God looks at those who have placed their faith in Him, He sees the righteous, shed blood of Jesus, and He spares us from spiritual death. Instead of an eternity apart from Him, we now have eternal life. Yeshua, our Passover Lamb, secured our salvation and gave us abundant life.

For God so loved the world that He gave His one and only Son, that whoever believes in Him shall not perish but have eternal life.”

―John 3:16

 

I have come that they might have life, and have it abundantly!”

―John 10:10

Personal Reflection

God commanded the Children of Israel to remember the Passover throughout their generations. Passover reminds us to look back at how God met the needs of the Israelites in the wilderness, and it invites us to consider afresh what He has done for us individually. As you go through this daily Passover devotional series, you’ll be encouraged to ponder various ways God has provided for you and to make note of them. Each day, you’ll add to a collection of blessings you can review in the future to refresh and strengthen your faith.

Take some time on this first day of Passover to reflect on the gift of Yeshua’s sacrifice on your behalf. Consider the promise of Heaven, bought for you by His shed blood, and how that encourages you today. Think also of the gift of new life He has given you to enjoy now on Earth. How has He enriched your life?

 

Get the Passover Infographic

This enlightening infographic will teach you the meaning of the Passover seder plate, the elements to include and the significance behind them.

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