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| JEWISH YOUTUBE |
After Passover we begin a process called the "Omer". Spiritually, this means that we begin refining our character over the course of 7 weeks. and when we're 'perfect' we become truly ready for the holiday of Shavuot - when we receive the Torah.
To do this we need to learn the kabbalah of our spiritual make up. Here are the first two lessons - enjoy.
LESSON 1 Click here to watch
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A BIT OF WIT |
A Sunday school teacher asked her children as they were on the way to service, "And why is it necessary to be quiet in Temple? One bright little girl replied, "Because people are sleeping." |
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PARSHA IN A NUTSHELL |
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On the mountain of Sinai, G-d communicates to Moses the laws of the sabbatical year. Every seventh year, all work on the land should cease, and its produce becomes free for the taking for all, man and beast.
Seven sabbatical cycles are followed by a fiftieth year -- the jubilee year, on which work on the land ceases, all indentured servants are set free, and all ancestral estates in the Holy Land that have been sold revert to their original owners.
Behar also contains additional laws governing the sale of lands, and the prohibitions against fraud and usury. |
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Grand Lag B'Omer Festival
This Thursday Evening @ 6:00 PM
May 22, 2008
Location: 6100 Hollywood Blvd.
Hollywood, Florida
(Parking at the Duty Free Americas building)
Featuring:
Yossi Piamenta live in concert
Moshiach Times Band
The Shuls Boys Choir
accompanied by Cantor Yaakov Motzen
FREE ADMISSION
a project of Chabad of Florida |
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Candle Lighting Time 7:42 pm
Kabbalat Shabbat
7:45 pm
Shabbat Morning Chasidut Class
9:00 am followed by:
Morning Services
9:30 am
Followed by a gourmet kiddush
Ethics of Our Fathers Class
Evening Services
7:30 pm
Shabbat Ends
8:38 pm
Sunday Morning Services
9:00 am
Weekday Morning Services
Tuesday Senior's Class
10:30 - 11:30 am
Israel: The Land & The Spirit
Thursday Parsha Class
9:00 pm
With Rabbi Yehuda
Friday Torah Studies
1:00 - 2:00 pm
With Rabbi Baron Delivered in English
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LAG B'OMER |
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY KABBALAH
Across the globe today, there seems to be an infatuation with kabbalah - Jewish Mysticism. And it all began on Lag B'omer (the 15th day of the Jewish month Iyar), the festival we will celebrate this coming Thursday.
In the 2nd century, there lived one of the greatest men in Jewish history - Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai. Aside from his piety and scholarly achievements, his mystical teachings have forever changed the face of the Jewish world. He was the first to reveal the innermost secrets of the Torah, a tradition undisclosed to the masses until this point in time. These teaching are recorded in 'The Zohar' - "The Kabbalistic Book of Light".
Lag B'omer is the day of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai's passing. On this day he turned to his students and proclaimed, "Until now, I have held certain secrets close to my heart. But now, before I die, I wish to reveal all." On this day, the Kabbalah was revealed in its entirety.
In Jewish literature, the Kabbalah is referred to as 'the orchard'. Why an orchard? What lesson were our sages conveying by linking an orchard to the kabbalah? The answer to this question, I feel, is especially relevant to today's "Kabbalah Craze".
Just as an orchard is only alive, vibrant, and colorful while firmly rooted in the ground, when it receives nourishment from its source, so the Kabbalah can only be learned based on and within the context of the Torah upon which it is based. When the two are separated, when Kabbalah takes on an independent life of the Torah and its mitzvoth, the Kabbalah becomes lifeless and remains just another fad - here today gone tomorrow.
In this vane, as we enter the Lag B'omer season, as the Kabbalah celebrates its birthday, let us explore the depths of the Torah. Let us commit ourselves to studying and delving into the rich traditions and heritage we have inherited from our ancestors. Within this context the most profound Kabbalistic and esoteric secrets of the Torah will serve as a guiding light, navigating us through our tumultuous lives.
Let's do a mitzvah today! |
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ASK THE RABBI |
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Dear Rabbi:
My acting career seems to be at a dead end. Every time I come close to a huge role something goes wrong and I miss out. I have tried every avenue I can think of, even changing agents, but it hasn't helped. I am professional, hard-working, dedicated and I believe I have talent (this has been confirmed to me by others too). But I am starting to think I simply wasn't meant to be an actor. Should I just come to terms with being a failure?
Answer:
My friend, there is only one thing you need to come to terms with. You are not an actor. You may be good at acting, but that is not who you are, it is what you do. Stop identifying yourself by your career. You need to discover an identity that is beyond your work. That way, success and failure in your career will not spell success or failure in your life.
In our world of inverted values, a man is called successful because he has made a lot of money. He may have abandoned his third wife, be estranged from his children, have no friends and his dog ran away from him. But he's done well at work, and people say, "I wish I had his luck."
We achieve true success when we succeed in our relationships. If you are a caring friend in times of need, if you treat your parents well, if you are a supportive and understanding spouse, a devoted and caring parent, then you are a success. Those who contribute to the community, not just money but time and effort, those who have developed happy relationships with G-d and man, they are real success stories.
As long as we identify ourselves with our profession - I am an actor, a sales person, an IT technician - then we are pinning our success as a person on our career success. But it's not true. We are not defined by our job. What we do to make a living is different to what we do to make a life. We work to make a living. But to make a life we must love, connect, serve a purpose and find meaning.
This is the gift of Shabbos. One day a week we step out of our workday roles and return to our true self. We are not staff members but rather members of a community; we are not employers or employees but rather brothers and sisters, children, parents and friends. We are not working for a boss to do our job, but rather working for The Boss to fulfill our mission.
You may be great at doing your work. Or maybe not. But it's more important to be good at being human. When it comes to being human, even a failed businessman can be the greatest success story, and a struggling actor can be a star. |
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E-TORAH |
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Everyone wants freedom. It is a basic human need. To some extent, even animals seek freedom and show signs of unhappiness if they do not have it.
However, the question of what freedom consists of has not been clearly answered. Many people spend their lives chasing something they call freedom. But at some point they may well turn round and say they have been deceived.
Our Parshah gives us a insight into the nature of our freedom. Perhaps it challenges some of our assumptions.
We all know that a central theme in Judaism is the fact that we escaped from the slavery of Egypt --and reached "freedom." But in this week's Parshah G-d says about us: "The Jewish people are My servants. They are My servants because I brought them out of the land of Egypt..." (Leviticus 25:55).
Are we free, or are we servants? The Hebrew text could even be translated to read not "servants" but "slaves." Is this our destiny? To be slaves?
From the point of view of the Torah, our greatest freedom is the fact that we are servants or even "slaves" of G-d. G-d is eternal, boundless: totally beyond limitations. G-d is infinite freedom. The closer our connection and bond with G-d, the closer we are to true freedom. It may sound paradoxical, but if we can become total "slaves" to G-d, utterly submitting ourselves to His will in every detail of our lives -- then we will be totally and utterly free.
This point is in fact made in the Torah itself. The reason why it states that we are servants (or "slaves") of G-d is in order to explain that we may not be permanent slaves to any human being. Indeed, there is a positive commandment to redeem any Jew who might be in a position of abject servitude or slavery. This is because, by his or her very nature, the Jew is bonded as a servant to G-d. In relation to all humanity and all existence the path of the Jew is one of unlimited freedom.
"Who Has Not Made Me a Slave"
In 1941, 30,000 Jews were herded by the Nazis into the Kovno ghetto in Lithuania. There they were treated like slaves, and worse. They were beaten, tortured, murdered. Yet at the same time, some aspects of life went on. In the synagogues there were morning prayers.
One morning, the man leading the prayers came to the blessing, "Blessed are You, G-d.... Who has not made me a slave." He cried out in anguish: "How can I say this prayer? We are slaves!" His words gripped the hearts of the other worshippers. When we are literally slaves to the Germans, how indeed can we thank G-d for not making us slaves?
The question was addressed to a rabbi in the ghetto, and his answer has been preserved. We should say the prayer, because spiritually the Jew is always, free. Our physical bodies may be enslaved, but not our souls. Nothing can enslave the soul, the essence of the Jew | |
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Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Yisrael and Toby Baron Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach
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