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ב''ה
Friday, Cheshvon 5, 5770 / October 23, 2009
                                              Vol. III No. 25

Weekly E-letter

Building 
 
 
In This Issue
The Weekly Word...
The Parsha in a Nutshell
A BIT OF...HUMOR
Shabbat Noach
Candle Lighting: 18:18
Shabbat Ends: 19:24
 
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.
 
ENJOYING  IT?
 
BE A PART OF
IT!!!
 
The European Synagogue Ohel Eliezer
 
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Thank you!

thought for the day

Practice Makes Perfect
 
You don't achieve a higher awareness with a flash from above.

Train yourself, consistently, every day, until you become used to seeing each thing in a higher way.

  - Bringing Heaven Down To Earth


 

Candle 
This eletter
is dedicated in loving memory of: 
Eliezer ben Menachem Tzvi A"H whose yartzeit was this past Tuesday.

For future dedications in honor of a celebration or in memory of a loved one, please contact The Shul. info@theshul.eu

in Service Times

 

Weekly Services 

Daily: Sun-Fri

Shacharit: 8:00 am
Mincha: 15:15
Arvit: Nightfall

Call for location

 

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.
Howard
Carrying Kosher products, including fresh daily baked goods, groceries,  wines and much more.
FRIDAY NIGHT SERVICES 19:00
The Weekly Word
By: Rabbi Levi Y. GarelikRav -Rabbi of The European Synagogue
 

This week's Torah portion, Noach, contains the narrative of Noach and the Great Flood which covered the earth in his generation. After about a year, Noach opened the window of his floating ark to check on the sodden and water-logged world, to see if it had finally dried.
 
It was then that G-d spoke to Noach and issued the command: "Go forth from the ark, you, and your wife, and your sons, and your sons' wives with you."

Why did Noach need a special command from G-d to induce him to leave the cramped quarters he had endured for so long? Why didn't Noach exit the ark joyously of his own accord as soon as he saw that the land was dry?

Noach's reluctance to leave may be understood in light of the great miracle which occurred inside the ark itself. All the animals within it, the ferocious and the tame, miraculously co-existed peacefully with each other, contrary to their natural inclinations and instincts.

Chasidic philosophy explains that the atmosphere in Noach's ark was similar to what will happen when the Messiah comes, when "the lion will lay down with the lamb" and peace will reign on earth. Noach, his family and all the animals in the ark enjoyed a peace which will return to the world only with the Final Redemption and the Messianic Era.

Therefore, Noach was hesitant to leave the peaceful environment of the ark for the natural order that had existed before the Flood. He therefore needed G-d's encouragement to disembark and begin the next chapter in mankind's history. By doing so, he sent a "message" to all of mankind to follow in his footsteps, namely, that we are here to fulfill the purpose of creation -- the establishment of a dwelling place for G-d down below in the physical world which will usher in the Redemption speedily in our times.

Shabbat Shalom
The Parsha in a Nutshell
Genesis 6:9-11:32

 

Chumashim
G-d creates the world in six days. On the first day He makes darkness and light. On the second day He forms the heavens, dividing the "upper waters" from the "lower waters." On the third day He sets the boundaries of land and sea and calls forth trees and greenery from the earth. On the fourth day He fixes the position of the sun, moon and stars as timekeepers and illuminators of the earth. Fish, birds and reptiles are created on the fifth day; land-animals, and then the human being, on the sixth. G-d ceases work on the seventh day, and sanctifies it as a day of rest.
 
G-d forms the human body from the dust of the earth and blows into his nostrils a "living soul." Originally Man is a single person, but deciding that "it is not good that man be alone," G-d takes a "side" from the man, forms it into a woman, and marries them to each other.
 
Adam and Eve are placed in the Garden of Eden and commanded not to eat from the "Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil." The serpent persuades Eve to violate the command, and she shares the forbidden fruit with her husband. Because of their sin, it is decreed that man will experience death, returning to the soil from which he was formed, and that all gain will come only through struggle and hardship. Man is banished from the Garden.
 
Eve gives birth to two sons, Cain and Abel. Cain quarrels with Abel and murders him, and becomes a rootless wanderer. A third son is born to Adam, Seth, whose tenth-generation descendant, Noah, is the only righteous man in a corrupt world.

A BIT OF HUMOR

Apple and Honey 
A nice young worker from the Post Office, was sorting through her regular envelopes, when she discovered a letter addressed as follows: G-D c/o Heaven

Upon opening the envelope, a letter enclosed told of how a little old lady, who had never asked for anything in her life, was desperately in need of $100 and was wondering if G-d could send her the money.

Well the young lady was deeply touched and arranged a collection from her fellow workmates. She collected $90 and sent it off to the old lady.

A few weeks later another letter arrived addressed to G-d, so the young lady opened it and it read:

"Dear G-d, Thank you for the money, I deeply appreciate it, however I only received $90. It must have been those jerks  at the Post Office."
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