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A BIT OF WIT |
David walks into Macys department store and goes straight to the perfume department. He says to an assistant, "Today is my wife Debbie's birthday and I would like to buy her a nice bottle of French perfume." The assistant says, "That will be a nice surprise for her." David replies, "It sure will - she's expecting a diamond necklace."
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Click here to read "SHH..the neighbors are listening". |
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PARSHA IN A NUTSHELL |
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Aaron is commanded to raise light in the lamps of the menorah, and the tribe of Levi is initiated into the service in the Sanctuary. A "Second Passover" is instituted in response to the petition "Why should we be deprived?" by a group of Jews who were unable to bring the Passover offering in its appointed time because they were ritually impure. G-d instructs Moses on the procedures for Israel's journeys and encampments in the desert, and the people journey in formation from Mount Sinai, where they had been camped for nearly a year. The people are dissatisfied with their "bread from heaven" (the manna) and demand that Moses supply them with meat. Moses appoints 70 elders, to whom he emanates of his spirit, to assist him in the burden of governing the people. Miriam speaks negatively of Moses and is punished with leprosy; Moses prays for her healing and the entire community waits seven days for her recovery.
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Shabbat
Candle Lighting Time 7:55 pm
Kabbalat Shabbat
8:00 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
7:45 pm
Shabbat Ends
8:52 pm
Weekday Services
Sunday Morning Services
9:00 am
Weekday Morning Services
Adult Education
Tuesday Senior's Class
10:30 - 11:30 am
Israel: The Land & The Spirit
Thursday Night Farbrengen
8:30 pm
Friday Torah Studies
1:00 - 2:00 pm
With Rabbi Baron Delivered in English
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ASK THE RABBI |
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Dear Rabbi: Are men considered the head of the family in Judaism?
ANSWER
A husband and a wife are a single entity according to the Torah. In a single entity, everthing is necessary and has it's own value. For example, your mouth and your ears are both a part of your body. One speaks and one hears. They cannot both speak or listen. But a person is not healthy if he is missing either one - they are of equal importance. Similarly, a husband and a wife each have their own roles. Their roles are not the same, but they are equally important. If you have one without the other, then neither are complete. In keeping with our analogy of the different parts of the human body, the man is the head and the woman is the heart. The head and the heart must both perform their vital roles to keep the single entity, the body, healthy. When a husband and wife realize that they are one entity, there is no hierarchy, no inequality, no friction - only harmonious sharing of roles, abiliteis and talents - meshed to create a single healthy being.
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E-TORAH |
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Ok, I admit it. I'm not sure how I would have behaved if I were in the position of the Jews back in the wilderness. We always criticize their lack of faith in G-d and the rough time they gave Moses. Even as G-d was providing them with the most incredible miracles -- bread from heaven and water from rocks -- they were busy moaning and groaning throughout. But would I have acted differently? Who knows? You think it was easy to live in a desert, even with all the miracles in the Bible? I suppose a lot depends on a person's attitude and perspective in life. Recently, I heard a powerful insight in the name of Rabbi Moshe Feinstein, one of the outstanding authorities in Jewish law of our time (he passed away in 1986). He was speaking of the generation of Jewish immigrants to the United States who spawned what became known as the "lost generation." Why was it that the children of parents who were religious, or at least traditional, moved so far away from the Judaism of their parental homes? Rabbi Moshe argued that it could be summed up in one simple question of attitude. Did those parents convey to their children that Judaism was a burden or a boon, a pleasure or a pain? Was the constant refrain these children heard at home, Oy, it's hard to be a Jew! or Ahh, it is good to be a Jew! Was being Jewish in those early days in America something to sigh about, or something to celebrate and sing about? Whether children grew up hearing that Judaism was a pain or a privilege would determine whether they embraced it happily or escaped from it at the first opportunity. According to Rabbi Moshe, on that hinged the success or failure of an entire generation. Indeed, we know of many Jews who survived the Holocaust and because of their horrific experiences perceived being Jewish as a death sentence, G-d frobid. There were those who sought to run as far away as possible from Europe. Many found their way to Australia and became "closet Jews." Some never even told their children that they were Jewish. It was for this reason that the late Chief Rabbi of the United Kingdom, Rabbi Immanuel Jacobowitz argued that while Holocaust education was important, there was a danger in over-emphasizing the Holocaust in Jewish Day Schools. We want our children to see that Judaism is a blessing, not a curse. Our Jewishness should not be dark and depressing, but bright and joyous. I remember having a discussion with a group of businessmen some years ago where we were trying to put together a slide show to promote one of our local institutions. We were looking for a particularly powerful scene. One prominent doctor suggested that, for him, the single most powerful scene in Jewish life was the Rabbi walking into the house of mourning carrying his bag of prayer books. To him, that may have been powerful, but for me -- as a rabbi -- I'd never heard anything as depressing. What am I, the Angel of Death? The Jews in the wilderness had their own issues. We should try and learn from their mistakes and be more faithful and trusting in the leadership of the Moses of our own time. But beyond that, let us not whine and whimper about the challenges of Jewish life. Let us convey to our children that Judaism is a joy and a privilege. Then, please G-d, they will embrace it for generations to come.
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Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Yisrael and Toby Baron Chabad of Sunny Isles Beach
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