Several frum yeshiva students from Skokie, Illinois made a tremendous kiddush hashem
Zev Goldstein and several other boys were walking outside the yeshiva on Thursday morning when they noticed dollar bills in the sum of tens of thousands of dollars blanketing the ground.
Coby Kamish, one of the boys who saw the money, attempted to return it to a man they saw running and picking up bills, but the man told them to “keep it.” It turns out that the man was not the owner of said money but was rather pocketing it for himself.
Looking across the road, the boys noticed an armored truck at a Bank of America ATM, and realized that the bank notes had somehow escaped the confines of the vehicle and spilled out, possibly due to very high winds in the area.
Choosing to do the right thing, the teenagers phoned the Skokie Police Department and reported their find. The police took control of the money and thanked the boys for their incredible display of choosing morals over money.
Skokie Police say they cannot disclose yet how much money fell off the armored truck, nor if there is surveillance footage of the incident.
(YWN World Headquarters – NYC)
11 Responses
Kind of using the words “kiddush hashem” a bit lightly.
You don’t have to be Jewish to be honest
A tremendous kiddush hashem. Credit should go to the Yeshiiiiva
What the Skokie boys did is worth infinitely more than bundles of cash.
That young boys had the maturity to understand that and act accordingly is impressive.
Ashreihem!
The boys, their parents and their mechanchim deserve a lot of credit.
A kiddush Hashem so sorely needed with all of the recent bad news we’ve read.
They shoulda given it to me 🙁
They missed an opportunity to give tzedaka.
huge kiddush hashem
credit goes to their parents!!
Golfer, give credit to the yeshiva. A proud Chicagoan
Why should they have given it to you?
Here we go again “KIDUSH HASHEM”
/KidooshˈHah- Shem/
Learn to pronounce
adjective
anything done by Orthodox Jewish person that is nice or emotionally satisfying,(regardless if same action is done also by non- jews. if it is very impressive the term “HUGE” may be added “Huge Kidush Hashem”.
bigchoosid
its a verb not an adj
“to do a kidush hashem”