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Shabbat Re'eh
Candle Lighting: 20:49
End of Shabbat: 22:01
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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JUST GIVE!
There are eight levels of charity, each greater than the next
- Mishneh Torah, Laws of Gifts to the Poor 10:7-14 |
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in Service Times
Weekly Services
Daily: Sun-Fri
Shacharit: 8:00 am Mincha: 15:15 Arvit: Nightfall
Call for location
Shabbat
Friday Night: 20:00
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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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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Kosher French
Cuisine Restaurant
Rue Archimede 63
(0)2 742 06 00
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Friday night Kabalat Shabbat 20:00
Friends,
MAZEL TOV! MAZEL TOV!
With gratitude to the Almighty I would like to share my joy and happiness upon the birth of our new son this past Wednesday morning at 11:50 in Brussels, Belgium. Thank G-d, Mom and baby are doing great.
I would also like to wish a hearty Mazel Tov to Rabbi Levi & Ruth Matusof upon their birth of a baby boy on Thursday.
May we always be able to share many simchas together.
Please join us tonight for a Sholom Zachor* at our home at Rue Archimede 62. Open house from 21:45.
Looking forward to seeing you.
Please stay tuned for more details regarding the Bris** which will, G-d willing, take place on Wednesday, August 19.
Shabbat Shalom Michoel Rosenblum
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The Weekly WordBy: Rabbi Levi Y. Garelik -Rabbi of The European Synagogue
This Shabbat is a very "blessed" Shabbat and very special for our community. We are blessed with two new members in our community: the Matusof and Rosenblum families were each blessed with an addition to their families, a baby boy. There is a custom that on the first Friday night after the birth, relatives and friends visit the home of the baby to congratulate and celebrate together. This gathering is called "Shalom Zochor" and is followed several days later by the circumcision, "Brit Mila".
This Shabbat is also blessed because we "bless" the new Hebrew month, the month of ELUL.
We find a singular connection between the two special occurrences of this week, the month of Elul and circumcision.
The general theme of the month of Elul, is Teshuvah, "returning" to G-d. Throughout the year we may have been lax in certain areas and the month Elul is when G-d gives us a chance to reflect and repair the areas that need to be fixed.
Therefore, the word E'L'U'L contains several acrostics for the initial letters of several key phrases which convey the inner essence and meaning of the month of Elul:
One of them is: Es Levavcha V'es L'vav, which means: G-d will remove (lit. circumcise) the barriers from your hearts and from the hearts [of your descendants]....
Why does G-d use the word "circumcise"? Because just as Bris Milah (circumcision) is the first mitzvah into which a Jew is initiated and it also effects the infusion of the G-dly soul into the child, similarly the spiritual circumcision -- removing the barriers of the heart -- is the initial stage of a person's Divine service and the first step of teshuvah. For, when the heart is ensconced and concealed and hard as a stone (Heaven forbid), the person finds no opening to initiate Divine service. So the barriers must first be removed so that he may rise above the passion and hedonism of the corporeal world and then he can begin to approach the Divine service of G-d. Therefore the mitzvah of circumcision was given to us even before the giving of the Torah; as such, it serves as a spiritual preparation for receiving the Torah.
We take this opportunity to wish a very hearty Mazal tov to both families and may they have many many more joyous occasions in the years to come. Shabbat Shalom!
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Yes you should!
You can make a difference
now more then ever!
Thank you
The European Synagogue Ohel Eliezer
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IBAN E85001557733306 |
The Parsha in a Nutshell
"See," says Moses to the people of Israel, "I place before you today a blessing and a curse" -- the blessing that will come when they fulfill G-d's commandments, and the curse if they abandon them. These should be proclaimed on Mount Gerizim and Mount Eibal when the people cross over into the Holy Land. A Temple should be established in "the place that G-d will choose to make dwell His name there" where the people should bring their sacrifices to Him; it is forbidden to make offerings to G-d in any other place. It is permitted to slaughter animals elsewhere not as a sacrifice but to eat their meat; the blood, however (which in the Temple is poured upon the Altar) may not be eaten. A false prophet, or one who entices others to worship idols, should be put to death; an idolatrous city must be destroyed. The identifying signs for kosher animals and fishes, and the list of non-kosher birds (first given in Leviticus 11) are repeated. A tenth of all produce is to be eaten in Jerusalem, or else exchanged for money with which food is purchased and eaten there. On certain years this tithe is given to the poor instead. Firstborn cattle and sheep are to be offered in the Temple and their meat eaten by the Kohen (priest). The mitzvah of charity obligates a Jew to aid a needy fellow with a gift or loan. On the Sabbatical year (occurring every seventh year) all loans are to be forgiven. All indentured servants are to be set free after six years of service. Our Parshah concludes with the laws of the three pilgrimage festivals -- Passover, Shavuot and Sukkot -- when all should go to "see and be seen" before G-d in the HolyTemple. |
A BIT OF HUMOR
WHO'S THE BOSS?
My boss was complaining in our staff meeting the other day that he wasn't getting any respect.
Later that morning he went to a local sign shop and bought a small sign that read, "I'm the Boss". He then taped it to his office door. Later that day when he returned from lunch, he found that someone had taped a note to the sign that said, "Your wife called. She wants her sign back!" |
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Carrying Kosher products, including fresh daily baked goods, groceries, wines and much more. | |
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