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ב''ה
Friday, Cheshvon 12, 5770 / October 30, 2009
                                              Vol. III No. 26

Weekly E-letter

Building 
 
 
In This Issue
The Weekly Word...
The Parsha in a Nutshell
A BIT OF...HUMOR
Shabbat Lech Lecha
Candle Lighting: 17:04
Shabbat Ends: 18:11
 
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

Home Improvement
 
Harsh words, demands and ultimatums -- these shake the very foundations of a marriage and a home, tearing its walls apart until each one stands alone.

Gentle words, understanding words, listening words -- this is the trunk from which a marriage grows, the foundation upon which a home stands.

A home cannot be repaired unless its foundation is firm. Once a couple learns to speak as friends, their marriage can endure everything, forever.

  - Bringing Heaven Down To Earth


 

This weeks E-letter
is dedicated in merit of:
 
Ligal bat Marina
&
Uri Yhuda ben Klara
 
May they be blessed with many heathy years.

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 -Rav of The European Synagogue
 
Parshas Lech Lecha
Moshe Rabbeinu (Moses) instituted the practice that Jews gather each week to hear the Torah being read. Since then, the verses of the holy Torah have been read uninterruptedly for over 3300 years, and in our synagogue included.

In this week's Torah portion of Lech Lecha, it describes how G-d made a covenant with Abraham that He will give the Land of Israel to his children. As the verses say [below are quoted only some excerpts]:

"G-d appeared to Abraham and He said "I will give this land [Israel] to your descendants...Please raise your eyes and, from the place where you are positioned, look northward, southward, eastward and westward, because I will give all the land that you see to you and to your descendants for eternity... get up and walk through the land, across its length and its breadth, for I am going to give it to you...I have this land to your descendants from the river of Egypt until the great river..."".

The Land of Israel has been recorded to be the possession of the Jewish Nation since the time of Abraham. G-d promised to give the Land to him and his children, and so too to Isaac and Jacob in turn that their children will inherit the Land.

Next week we will read in the Torah how Abraham bound Isaac at the Akeida on the Temple Mount; in a few weeks we will read how Jacob slept there and dreamed of angels.
 
The Land of Israel is not just a material possession of the Jews. There is an essential, intrinsic connection to the soul of each Jew from the heart of the Land. Therefore, no one can take Israel away from the Jews, just as it is impossible to steal a soul. Additionally, the Land does not belong to any one individual that he can claim the right to give it away. It is the collective physical and spiritual property of the entire Jewish Nation, to cultivate, defend, and to nurture generations of Jews until the coming of the redeemer.
 
Shabbat Shalom
The Parsha in a Nutshell
Genesis 12:1-17:27

 

Chumashim
G-d speaks to Abram, commanding him to "Go from your land, from your birthplace and from your father's house, to the land which I will show you." There, G-d says, he will be made into a great nation. Abram and his wife Sarai, accompanied by his nephew Lot, journey to the Land of Canaan, where Abram builds an altar and continues to spread the message of a One G-d.
 
A famine forces the first Jew to depart for Egypt, where beautiful Sarai is taken to Pharaoh's palace; Abram escapes death because they present themselves as brother and sister. A plague prevents the Egyptian king from touching her and convinces him to return her to Abram and compensate the brother-revealed-as-husband with gold, silver and cattle.
 
Back in the Land of Canaan, Lot separates from Abram and settles in the evil city of Sodom, where he falls captive when the mighty armies of Chedorlaomer and his three allies conquer the five cities of the Sodom Valley. Abram sets out with a small band to rescue his nephew, defeats the four kings, and is blessed by Malki-Zedek the king of Salem (Jerusalem).
 
G-d seals the Covenant Between the Parts with Abram, in which the exile and persecution (Galut) of the people of Israel is foretold and the Holy Land is bequeathed to them as their eternal heritage
 
Still childless ten years after their arrival in the Land, Sarai tells Abram to marry her maidservant Hagar. Hagar conceives, becomes insolent toward her mistress, and then flees when Sarai treats her harshly; an angel convinces her to return and tells her that her son will father a populous nation. Ishmael is born in Abram's 86th year.
 
Thirteen years later, G-d changes Abram's name to Abraham ("father of multitudes") and Sarai's to Sarah ("princess"), and promises that a son will be born to them; from this child, whom they should call Isaac ("will laugh"), will stem the great nation with which G-d will establish His special bond. Abraham is commanded to circumcise himself and his descendents as a "sign of the covenant between Me and you."

A BIT OF HUMOR

Apple and Honey 
There was a Chinese pilot and a Jewish pilot on a flight to NYC. For some reason, they weren't too fond of one another, and there was a long, tense silence that accompanied them on their trip. Finally, the Jewish pilot said something to the Chinese pilot:

"I don't like the Chinese. They bombed Pearl Harbor."
"No, no, no," said the Chinese man. "That was the Japanese."
 
"Chinese, Japanese, Vietnamese, same thing." 
Another half hour of tense silence. 
The Chinese pilot finally said to the Jewish pilot, "I don't like the Jews. They sank the Titanic."
 
"No, no, no! That was an iceberg!"

"Iceberg, Goldberg, Rosenberg, same thing."
Looking forward to another great Shabbat together!
 

Michoel Rosenblum
The Shul
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