B"H
 
Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach
17555 Atlantic Blvd. (ground floor King David)
April 10, 2008 5 Nissan 5768
 
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WHO HAS TIME TO  MAKE SHABBAT
 
THE DAY BEFORE PASSOVER?
 
WE DO!
 
Shabbat header 

It is the DAY BEFORE PASSOVER SO leave the cooking to us and enjoy!  Feed your stomach and your soul as we enjoy an inspiring Shabbat together. 

Friday, April 18 Evening Services 7:30 PM Followed by a Gourmet Dinner.
Saturday, April 19 Morning Services 7:30 AM Followed by a sit down lunch
 
Cost: Adults $50 Children 10 and under $25
Space Is Limited.
 
TO RESERVE CLICK HERE 
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This Weeks Kiddush Sponsor
Benny  Segal and Avi Neimark
 
You too can sponsor a Kiddush.  Contact us to reserve a date.
CHECK US OUT
The escape hatch, there is a way out but you need to be small enough to slip through Click here to read more.
Jewish Youtube

"What makes you happy?" There is an old Chassidic saying: Depression isn't a sin, but nothing leads to more sin than depression & joy isn't a mitzvah but nothing leads to more mitzvahs than joy. Here's an insightful clip about joy. Enjoy! Click here to watch

A Bit of Wit

Mr. & Mrs. Goldberg had just got married.

On their way to their honeymoon, Mr. Goldberg said to his new wife "Would you have married me if my father hadn't left me a fortune?"

She replied, "Darling, I would have married you no matter who had left you a fortune."

PARSHA IN A NUTSHELL

Last week's Parshah described the signs of the metzora ("leper") -- a person afflicted by a spiritual malady which places him or her in a state of ritual impurity. This week's Torah reading begins by detailing how the recovered metzora is purified by the Kohen (priest) with a special procedure involving two birds, spring water in an earthen vessel, a piece of cedar wood, a scarlet thread and a bundle of hyssop.

A home can also be afflicted with "leprosy" by the appearance of dark red or green patches on its walls. In a process lasting as long a nineteen days, a Kohen determines if the house can be purified or it must be demolished.

Ritual impurity is also engendered through a seminal or other discharge in a man, and menstruation or other discharge of blood in a woman, necessitating purification through immersion in a mikvah.

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Kosher Week
Kosher Wine Tasting at Publix this Sunday From 2-5 pm
 
This week starting April 11th has been designated "A Week of Kosher Awareness" and Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach and Publix supermarkets will be making the most of it with displays, videos, cookbook raffles, delicious Kosher treats and more.  Please let us know if you would like to volunteer for this project.
 
To Learn More about Kosher
 
Click Here

Candle Lighting Time
7:24 pm

Kabbalat Shabbat
7:15 pm
 
Morning Services
9:30 am
Followed by a gourmet kiddush
 
Evening Services
7:15 pm
 
Shabbat Ends
8:18 pm
 
Sunday Morning Services
9:00 am
Followed by a delicious breakfast
 
Weekday Morning Services
8:00 am
Followed by a delicious breakfast
 
Tuesday Senior's Class
10:30 - 11:30 am
Israel: The Land & The Spirit
ASK THE RABBI
Dear Rabbi-

 

My best friend just got engaged after only a month and a half of dating. She met the guy through the Jewish dating system, a Shidduch, and they are an amazingly well-suited couple. What I don't understand is, how after such a short while can they possibly know enough to decide to live with each other for the rest of their lives? It can take years to know that you have found the right one. I don't understand how people "just know" in as little as a month or two. Can you explain?

 

Answer:

 

A guy is sitting in a bar and a girl comes and sits down nearby. They catch each other's eye and smile.

 

The guy says "Hi, my name's Hank. Can I buy you a drink?"

 

The girl says, "Before you do that, I would like to know if you are thinking of marriage or just looking for something casual. I am ready to settle down and would rather not waste my time. Also, are you the family type? I really want to have a lot of kids. What are your values? Do you have strong beliefs and convictions? I do and I want to share them with my husband. I would also like to know what vision you have for your future. Once we get past this, we can start the small talk."

 

Hank goes back to watching the football.

 

But doesn't this woman have a point? Wouldn't it make sense to find out these things before starting a relationship? Isn't it silly to risk becoming emotionally attached to someone who is on a totally different page to you? If they aren't ready for marriage and you are, if they don't want a family and you do, if they don't have the same value system as yours, then why start going down a path that will only lead to heartache? Every relationship is a risk, but shouldn't the risk be a bit more calculated and a bit less random?

 

The problem is, in today's world of dating, it is completely uncool to discuss any of these heavy topics in the first 6 months of a relationship. But how stupid is that? You only face the real relationship issues once you are so entangled as to not be able to see clearly anymore.

 

The traditional Jewish dating system is different. Before you even meet, you find out the facts about each other. By speaking to a mutual friend or rabbi or some other trustworthy outsider, you can get a basic picture of a person without even laying eyes on them. Before ever seeing their face you can know what their values are, where they are going in life and whether they are on the same general page as you.

 

You only date someone who has the same values as you. You would only agree to meet someone who shares your beliefs, holds dear the same values, and has a similar list of priorities in life. 

 

Once you have all that information, the actual date is just to see if you click, if you can communicate, understand each other, like each other and are attracted to each other. Most of the big questions have already been answered, you already know that the fundamentals are there, on paper it's all good, now you need to see if there is a real connection. With the deeper issues out of the way, this doesn't take long.

 

And in this system, you only date for marriage. You will either become engaged, or go back to being complete strangers. No messy grey areas, no lingering attachments, no relationships without commitment, no drawn-out entanglements that are going nowhere, no random romances that were doomed from the start.

 

The Shidduch system is not perfect. But it's far better than any other dating system I have seen. It definitely beats sitting in a bar watching the football.

E-TORAH

Did you know that it is possible for a person to be murdered and not even know about it, even carrying on life as usual?

How can this be? This week's Torah reading speaks of the affliction known as tzaraat. The commentators explain that tzaraat was a punishment for the transgression of speaking lashon hara. Lashon hara, which translated literally means "the evil tongue" or "evil speech," includes slander, gossip and rumors, amongst other things.

As the old British wartime adage goes, "Careless talk costs lives." The Talmud relates in the name of Rabbi Shmuel bar Nachmani: "Why is the evil tongue called a thrice-slaying tongue? Because it kills three people: the person speaking, the person spoken to, and the person being spoken about." It may not kill them physically, but it is character assassination.

Maimonides adds a further dimension--sometimes a person may say something that is not quite slander or gossip. Yet, as his statement passes from person to person, it eventually does cause harm, trouble, fright or hurt to the party being spoken about.

For example, even praising a person, if done in front of that person's enemy who is liable to react negatively, could come under the category of slander or gossip.

The Orchot Tzadikim ("Ways of the Righteous") comments that, "Before you speak, you are the master of your words. After you speak, your words master you." How often we feel imprisoned by our own words after we have said something that we wish we hadn't or know we shouldn't have.

The Midrash relates that Rabbi Shimon ben Gamliel asked his servant, Tevi, to buy him something good from the market. The servant returned with some tongue. Rabbi Shimon then asked his servant to buy something bad from the market. The servant returned with more tongue. "How can this be? I asked you to buy something good, you bought tongue -- I asked you to buy something bad, you also bought tongue?" "It has good and bad--when it is good, it has a lot of goodness. When it is bad, it is very bad."

We speak thousands of words every day. Words have enormous power. May we merit to use them only for good purposes.

Shabbat Shalom,

Rabbi Yisrael and Toby Baron
Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach