Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Blood challah bread

 Blood challah bread

It's still the blood of children. The beet thing is just a lie to get you to not run a DNA test on the bread.

 

 In Medieval Europe, the murders of young girls and children used to spike around the Jewish holidays of Passover/Purim/Rosh Hashanah.

Jews wont tell you this, but traditionally all challah and matzah bread dough was stained red. You can still find this variation in some Eastern European and Russian villages with isolated Jewish communities.

Guess what it was colored with? Blood, of course. Nowadays they pretend it was beetroot all along, but no, traditionally it was always blood.

Our ancestors talked of how the Jews would dye their bread and wine redder with children’s blood. The Jews call this libel. Who are you going to believe, your European ancestors or the lies of Jews?

 On all of these holidays, red wine is drunk. Guess what’s in the wine that makes it even redder? Oh yeah, blood.

The other red stuff in these meals, traditionally like cow tongue, replaces which used to be the tongue of a child’s. Tongue is a mainstay of Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine. In fact, there are dozens of different variations, from gedempte zung, sweet and sour tongue, to pickelfleisch, pickled flesh.

Pomegranate red seeds now replaces the entrails of children that Jews used to eat on Rosh Hashanah, after the knowledge of their secret eating habits became widespread and known to the goyim.

You know the two puncture marks in a persons neck after they are bitten by a vampire in movies? That is derived from the holes and puncture marks that used to be found on child victims of Jews. From where their blood had been drained to make red challah bread and red Jewish wine.

Jews used to enrage Europeans so much that they threw them down wells: entire families of Jews, chucked down wells. What could possibly make a village so angry as to do such a thing? Take a guess. Most mob violence is caused by violence to children by foreigners.

If you don’t believe me that’s fine, but even Israeli historians like Ariel Toaff have come out and admitted that yes Jews used blood in their Kabbalah rituals. The blood of children is seen as most pure and powerful of all.

Kabbalah states ‘the blood is the soul’. Jews believe that by drinking children’s blood they are consuming their souls and making themselves more powerful and youthful. This is a very ancient school of thought. When Jesus commands his followers to eat his flesh and drink his blood, he was following similar vampiric Kabbalah magick.

Question. Why are there so many paintings from the 11th to the 18th century just about rabbis murdering children? Dozens of them, that I know of. 

 

 

 

Based on thirteenth-century Kabbalistic literature, specifically discussions regarding the "secret of the blood" (sodha-dam) and its connection to the "other side" (sitra ahra), this concept refers to the dangerous, improper use of raw spiritual and physical power.

The "Soul Blood" (Dam ha-Nefesh): In this context, "soul blood" often refers to menstrual blood (dam niddah), which, within Kabbalistic interpretation of that era, is sometimes viewed as having intense, raw, and potentially chaotic life force.

The Wrong Way/Left Path (Magic): If this "blood" or spiritual power is directed toward the "wrong way"—meaning impurity or the demonic realm (sitra ahra), rather than divine holiness—it follows the path of magic (kishuf) and becomes associated with demonic forces.

Spilling Blood: In this mystical framework, using this power for sorcery or failing to properly separate from blood impurity is seen as feeding the "other side," which results in the metaphorical or literal "spilling of blood" (death or the loss of life-force).

Confirming again Jewish blood magick is one of their core Kabbalist beliefs. 

The Tree of Death, or Qliphoth/Qlippoth, is a Kabbalistic concept representing the inverse, "shadow" side of the Tree of Life.
It consists of ten impure, chaotic, or demonic forces that inversely mirror the Sefirot (divine attributes). It’s commonly used in ‘Wrong Path’ Kabbalah and Left Path magick.

Lilith & the Red Goddess: Lilith is known as the Queen of Sitra Ahra and the "Goddess of Bloody Moon," frequently associated in Left-Hand Path occultism with blood rituals, sacrifice, and the "Red Goddess" archetype.

Kabbalistic Concept: Sitra Achra is considered the "shells" (Qliphoth) that conceal God's presence, stemming from the sefirah of Geburah (Severity/Judgment).
Symbolism of Blood: In esoteric, non-orthodox, Kabbalah traditions, blood is used as an offering to Lilith or as a means of personal empowerment through the "darkness". 

Ariel Toaff is an Israeli author, the son of Rome’s chief rabbi.
He initially set out to write a book debunking the idea of Jewish blood rituals.
To his shock, upon examining European and old Yiddish and Hebrew Ashkenazi manuscripts, he instead found mountains of evidence that Jews were indeed using human body parts and blood in their chabad and Kabbalah rituals. He was forced to heavily censor and redact his findings and was attacked by Jews all over the world for exposing their ‘secrets’.

What Toaff Documents in Passovers of Blood

1. Foreskin or Blood as a Healing Ritual

Toaff cites medieval Ashkenazi customs involving the ceremonial mixing of a child’s foreskin blood with wine. In that version, the mohel, along with the child and mother, might taste it, accompanied by a prophetic blessing such as “Thanks to your blood, you live!” Additionally, any remaining mixture could be poured beneath the synagogue’s Ark—believed to ward off harm to the community. This practice was still noted in places like Worms into the 17th century .
2. Magical and Exorcistic Symbolism

Toaff frames this as more than just medical tradition—it rooted circumcision in a cosmic and protective ritual. The blood (and foreskin) symbolized a metaphoric bond with divine protection, exorcising threats both worldly and spiritual. The rabbi who performs the bris and finishes it with his mouth must lick and consume some of the penile blood for personal health and longevity, but also as a mark of commitment to his spirituality and the mysticism of Jewish lineages.

 3. Empirical Tradition Beyond King’s Law

These practices appear in kabbalistic handbooks and compendia of magical remedies—known as segullot—preserved within Ashkenazi tradition. Medical texts from the German-Jewish milieu recommended using powdered dried blood, preferably that of a child’s, to staunch wounds—not just circumcision, but also nasal bleeding. The idea was that the child’s blood would merge with the adults body and give healing and youthful properties to the patient.

These are just the parts that are unredacted and that Jews would allow to become acknowledged all over the world. Toaff received endless death threats and was even under surveillance by Mossad for publishing his book. He was forced to redact and take back large parts of his research. The truth was not allowed to come out.

In reality, heaps of evidence for ritualistic child murder and sanguinarian blood drinking rituals was also found, but Toaff faced too much outcry to publish these findings.

Around April and Easter is when most ‘blood libel’ accusations would come around in Medieval times.
Often it was a child found laying face down in the thawing snow; with a slit throat or small stab or puncture wounds all over his or her body and head. Or their body would be found floating in a river or a Jewish synagogue immersion pool called a Mikvah.

There are many child saints in Europe whose deaths were attributed to Jews. Simon of Trent, William of Norwich, and Harold of Gloucester to name a few.

The mocking of Christ which is evident in the Talmud would often be attributed to the torture and humiliation the child victims had gone through. 

Another very similar ritual style murder of a child happened in Russia, near a village populated with many Jews. Again; the child was found with constellation patterns carved into his skin, and exanguination and blood loss was the cause of death.

In Judaism, constellations—referred to as Mazzarot—are recognized as celestial creations of God that correlate with the twelve months of the Hebrew calendar, mapping out Judaic time.