Question
Dear Rabbi, This is so embarrassing. We are horrified and don’t know what to do. We are not Jewish. We are Catholic, but most of our close friends are Jewish. We are strong supporters of the Jewish people and the state of Israel, where we have been. We have attended the bar and bat mitzvahs of the children of our friends. We have been to Passover seders. Some of our friends consider us honorary Jews. We have a beautiful 19-year-old mentally challenged daughter who lives with us. She doesn’t appear visibly handicapped. Anyone who meets her might think she is smart by the way she talks. She has been with us to the Sabbath and holiday meals of our friends and to bar and bat mitzvahs and Jewish weddings and to Israel too. And she has Jewish friends she hangs around. We live across the street from a public park. Recently, an anti-Israel, pro-Palestinian protest rally was staged at this park. We were at work during the day when it happened and would probably not have known about it if not for what happened with our daughter. It was a day she had off from her job at a restaurant. She saw the rally outside the window and became curious. She walked across the street into the crowd, not knowing what she was getting into. All the organizers wanted was a body and perhaps someone noticed her naivety. They gave her a Palestinian flag to wave and a sign that read “Free Palestine” under the guise of it being a human rights cause. Just as luck would have it, a reporter snapped a photo of whom he perceived was a beautiful young woman with an eye-catching smile at that very moment. That photo appeared on the front page of our local newspaper. The picture has apparently gone viral on social media. She does not have the mind to comprehend the situation in the Middle East, no matter how much we try to explain it to her. She has no recognition that those people or their cause are bad. She does not understand the implication of what she did. All she understands is that she was on the front page of the paper. And she is proud of her 15 minutes of fame. Wherever we go with her in public now, strangers are approaching us and saying they recognize her from the news. She wants to be wanted, and when someone put her in the spotlight, it made her feel important. We are in shock.

Question
Shalom aleichem Rabbi Lauffer. Thank you for answering my last question. If one's t-shirt has a drawing of the sun and a person on it, would it be forbidden to wear that t-shirt, considering that he will be bowing down during davening with it on. I saw that only protruding images of the sun would be forbidden to keep. Would the drawing of the sun on the t-shirt be considered protruding if it has some substance to the lines that are used to draw it, in other words, one can feel the drawing's lines when he passes his finger over the drawing. Or would this not be considered protruding. Thanks a lot.

Question
There is a rabbinic prohibition on drinking alcohol at a gentile bar. Does this prohibition only apply to a gentile place designated specifically as a bar, or does it include drinking alcohol at any non Jewish restaurant, even if alcohol sales are a minority of its business