Candle Lighting: 20:34
End of Shabbat: 21:49
Blessing Transliteration:
Boruch A-toh Ado-noi E-lo-hei-nu Me-lech Ha-olam A-sher Ki-de-shan-nu Be-mitz-vo-sov Ve-tzi-va-nu Le-had-lik Ner Shel Shabbat Ko-desh.
It is a great mitzvah and responsibility to honor the Sabbath by lighting candles 18 minutes before sunset on Friday evening. This unique commandment, entrusted to the Jewish woman, is rich with meaning and purpose.
It is very important to know the exact candle-lighting time, as we are not allowed, under any circumstances, to kindle these lights after sunset. |
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And you shall count for yourselves from the morrow of the Shabbat, from the day on which you bring the Omer offering, seven complete weeks they shall be; until the morrow of the seventh week, you shall count fifty days... And you shall proclaim that very day a holy festival
- Leviticus 23:15
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Birthday
Linda Rose
Tzirel Neuwirth |
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in Service Times
Weekly Services
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Shacharit: 8:00 am Mincha: 15:15 Arvit: Nightfall
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Shabbat
Friday Night: 19:00
Kabalat Shabbat
Followed by Kiddush, with the famous Tarte au chocolate of the Balthazar. Sponsored by: Balthazar Kosher Restaurant
Shabbat Morning: 10:00
Shacharit &
Torah Reading
Followed by a Kiddush.
The Children's
Shabbat Program Weekly on Shabbat from 11:00 till 12:15. |
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Friday evening, count 16 days to the Omer.
Friday night Kabalat Shabbat 19:00
Friends
Hi and Shalom,
I hope you enjoyed you Passover vacation!
Vacation!? Some might be asking especially some moms who did not stop for a second, making sure the whole family was enjoying etc... and no doubt we thank them dearly for all. At any rate vacation is a change from the norm,so if you went to the other side of the world or stayed at home for Passover we underwent a totally different experience.
When the Jewish people left Egypt they were not only freed from physical labor but they were also mentally freed from the slave frame of mind enabling them to move on and embrace what was awaiting them ahead.
As the month of Nissan the month of redemption comes to an end let's make sure we take that freedom with us.
Join us this shabbat as we celebrate Rosh Chodesh Iyar.
May it be speedily now that we merit true freedom with the coming of Moshiach! Shabbat Shalom, Michoel Rosenblum |
The Weekly WordBy: Rabbi Levi Y. Garelik -Rabbi of The European Synagogue
This Shabbat is Rosh Chodesh, the first day of the Hebrew month of Iyar. The month of Iyar is distinct from the other months for there is a specific Mitzvah to be fulfilled on each day. This mitzvah is the commandment to count the Omer, the forty nine days between Pesach and Shavuot. Each night, a blessing is recited and that day's number said out loud.
The first counting of the Omer was when the Jewish people left Egypt and were told that they would soon receive G-d's greatest treasure, the Torah. Their excitement and anticipation was so great that the Jews counted each day that passed, knowing that each one was bringing them closer to the time when they will accept the Torah at Mount Sinai. G-d was pleased with the eagerness with which the Jews were looking forward to the day when they would get closer to Him by fulfilling the commandments written in the Torah, and instructed that the Jews count these forty nine days (from the Exodus until Shavuot, when G-d gave us the Torah,) every year, to re-instill in us the longing to learn the wisdom of the Torah and the desire to become nearer to G-d by doing the Mitzvot He instructed us. The Talmud tells us that when a child begins to speak, one should start to teach him verses from the Torah. This tradition is rooted in the very beginning of the Jewish people, when they counted the Omer and displayed their enthusiasm for the holy words that are written the Torah. Shabbat Shalom
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The Parsha in a Nutshell
Tazria-Metzora Leviticus 12:1- 15:33
The Parshahs of Tazria and Metzora continue the discussion of the laws of Tumah v'Taharah, ritual impurity and purity. A woman giving birth should undergo a process of purification, which includes immersing in a mikvah (a naturally gathered pool of water) and bringing offerings to the Holy Temple. All male infants are to be circumcised on the eighth day of life. Tzaraat ("leprosy") is a supra-natural plague, which can afflict people as well as garments or homes. If white or pink patches appear on a person's skin (dark pink or green in garments or homes), a Kohen is summoned. Judging by various signs, such as an increase in size of the afflicted area after a seven-day quarantine, the Kohen pronounces it tameh (impure) or tahor (pure). A person afflicted with tzaraat must dwell alone outside of the camp (or city) until he is healed. The afflicted area in a garment or home must be removed; if the tzaraat recurs, the entire garment or home must be destroyed. When the metzora ("leper") heals, he or she is purified by the Kohen 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. 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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This week's eletter is dedicated in honor of:
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For future dedications in honor of a celebration or in memory of a loved one, please contact The Shul. info@theshul.eu |
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A BIT OF HUMOR
Two Jewish mothers met for coffee "Well, Mildred," asked one. "How are your son and daughter doing?"
"To tell you the truth," answered the second, "my Daniel has married a real good-for-nothing. She doesn't get out of bed until eleven. She's out all day spending his money on Heaven knows what and when he gets home exhausted, does she have a nice hot dinner for him? Psha!
"She makes him take her out to dinner at an expensive restaurant."
"And Layla?" "Ah! Layla has married a saint. He brings her breakfast in bed, he gives her enough money to buy all she needs, and in the evening he takes her out to dinner at a beautiful restaurant.
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