On the surface, it looked like a pious poem titled "Talks of Holiness," and Olam Katan, a weekly parsha sheet handed out in synagogues across Israel, published it. But when read together, the first letter of each line forms an acrostic that says something very different.
On the surface, it looked like a pious poem titled "Talks of Holiness," and Olam Katan, a weekly parsha sheet handed out in synagogues across Israel, published it. But when read together, the first letter of each line forms an acrostic that says something very different: Kacki (crap), Pipi (penis), tusik (tush), and nod (fart).
[Source: דוסים מצייצים via MostlyKosher.]