"You've Crossed a Red Line"
Massive Online Fury Erupts Over 'Eretz Nehederet's' Blasphemous Mockery of Yanuka Rabbi | WATCH
Outrage boils over Eretz Nehederet's vile mockery of holy Yanuka Rabbi, leftist elites cross red line, possibly sparking boycotts and fury.

In yet another shameless attack on Jewish sanctity by Israel's radical leftist media elite, the satire show "Eretz Nehederet" has sparked a nationwide storm of righteous outrage with a promo for tonight's episode featuring a grotesque parody of Rabbi Shlomo Yehuda Be'eri, the revered "Yanuka," a Torah prodigy whose wisdom and melodies uplift thousands.
Portrayed as a bumbling "Tinuka" by comedian Daniel Chen, complete with organ-playing antics and a fawning aide (Ortal Tsabari), the sketch ridicules the rabbi's unparalleled Torah mastery and devotion, drawing furious condemnations from faithful Jews: "You've crossed a red line, don't mess with Tzaddikim!"
Calls for boycotts and divine justice flood social media, exposing the show's anti-religious agenda.
The promo, dropped today ahead of the broadcast, showcases the "Tinuka" as a "phenomenon with encyclopedic Torah knowledge" who "binges on Torah," with the aide groveling: "Who am I to check the rabbi? I'm dust at his feet."
This vile distortion twists the Yanuka's real-life accomplishments, which include reciting vast swaths of Tanach and Talmud from memory while composing soul-stirring music, into cheap leftist laughs, ignoring his role as a beacon of purity in a secularized society.
Critics slam the Keshet 12 production as a deliberate assault on Jewish values, part of a broader war by Tel Aviv elites against the Torah world.Social media ignited instantly, with hundreds of enraged comments slamming the blasphemy.
"Eretz Nehederet has completely lost it, mocking a Tzaddik like the Yanuka? This is playing with fire, and those who harm Torah giants will face consequences!" one user thundered, echoing widespread warnings of heavenly retribution. "Shame on you! There's a limit to every prank—with Tzaddikim, you don't play. This isn't funny, it's tragic, hands off our rabbis," another blasted, as hashtags like #BoycottEretzNehederet trended.
Even secular voices chimed in: "This crosses into outright disrespect, ridiculing a man's faith like this is low, even for satire."The Yanuka, a young sage whose teachings draw massive crowds despite his blindness, represents the spiritual revival sweeping Israel, far from the show's cynical caricature.
Even the show's defenders insist this veers into outright Chilul Hashem (desecration of God's name). "While Iran slaughters protesters and leftists apologize for tyrants, Eretz Nehederet wastes airtime bashing holy men, proving their priority is dismantling Jewish tradition," one commentator raged.
As the full sketch airs tonight, the backlash is poised to explode, potentially cratering ratings for a program long accused of anti-religious bias.