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24.12.2024

I can't read it so I wore it

Fashion Week’s maddest moment transpired in Brooklyn Supreme Court on Wednesday. A drug suspect, forbidden by a judge from reading quotations from the Talmud at a pre-trial hearing created an outfit made entirely from Jewish, Hebrew text

I can't read it so I wore it
צילומסך

Aaron Akaberi wore a shirt that he had modeled from newsprint sheets covered in the Hebrew letters of the deceased Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson.

Akaberi added a hat made of white paper displaying the "Seven Commandments."The collection meant to show Judge Martin Murphy, who had denied to let him read Jewish texts at an initial pre-trial hearing.

Akaberi, 30, charged with possession of cocaine, LSD, marijuana, MDMA, and other substances. He has an unusual history of involvement in bizarre incidents.

Notwithstanding his costume, Akaber had nowhere to go, since his hearing was postponed to a later time.

He was kicked from the United States Air Force Academy because of his “Aaronism,” behavior which conflicted with his ability to train.
Akaberi then made headlines in 2006 when he took a 12-day hunger strike at Binghamton University to protest not receiving his Rastafarian approved gastronomical needs.

Law enforcement sources now describe Akaberi as “extremely dangerous” and a “manipulative psychopath.”

Akaberi refused to discuss his current legal situation with The Post, solely reemphasizing that he pleaded “not guilty.”
Brooklyn Aaron Akaberi Hebrew Fashion Week’s maddest moment Supreme Court

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'בחדרי' גם ברשתות החברתיות - הצטרפו!

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