|
Shabbat Vayishlach
Candle Lighting: 16:20
Shabbat Ends: 17:35
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
Fortis 001- 5577333-06
IBAN BE85001557733306
Thank you! |
|
For two-and-a--half years, the House of Shammai and the House of Hillel debated. These said: It is better for man not to have been created than to have been created; and those said: It is better for man to have been created than to not have been created. In the end, they voted on it and concluded: It is better for man not to have been created than to have been created; but now that he was created, he should search his deeds.
- Talmud, Eruvin 13b
|
|
|
in Service Times
Weekly Services
Daily: Sun-Fri
Shacharit: 8:00 am Mincha: 15:15 Arvit: Nightfall
Call for location
ShabbatFriday Night: 18:00 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
Sponsored in honor of:
chaya rosenblum on the occassion of her 2nd birthday. The Children's Shabbat Program Weekly on Shabbat from 11:00 till 12:15. |
|
|
Carrying Kosher products, including fresh daily baked goods, groceries, wines and much more. |
|
Kosher French
Cuisine Restaurant
Rue Archimede 63
(0)2 742 06 00
| |
FRIDAY NIGHT SERVICES 18:00
Shalom, I hope you had a great week!
This weeks Torah portion has important powerful message which we can all learn from and integrate it into our daily lives.
We learn that Jacob could have chosen to steer clear of his brother Esau but rather he chose to take this challenge head on and he had great success.
In our lives we all face our own challenges, let us take the powerful message from this week's Torah portion and find the strength and courage to face and overcome our challenges, and surely we too will succeed in our endeavors.
Please join me along with Sarah and our family as we will be celebrating the 2nd birthday of our dear daughter Chaya.
Looking forward to a very special Shabbat with you and your friends.
May we celebrate only joyous and happy moments with the coming of Moshiach now.
Shabbat Shalom Michoel Rosenblum | |
This weeks E-letter is dedicated to:
Mrs. Sarah Rosenblum For her dedication and undivided attention to all our children at The Shul! |
For future dedications in honor of a celebration or in memory of a loved one, please contact The Shul. info@theshul.eu |
The Weekly Word
By: Rabbi Levi Y. Garelik  - Rav of The European Synagogue
As mentioned in the previous weeks, we are now in the middle of celebrations of "lights". This coming week, on Friday, we will be celebrating the holiday of Chanukah, and on this Sunday we will be celebrating the establishment of the study of the esoteric part of Torah known as Hassidut, referred to as the illumination of Torah.
How is Chanukah associated with the esoteric aspect of Torah? The Jews, after defeating the Syrian-Greeks who had endeavored to prevent them learning Torah and performing mitzvos, cleaned up the Bais HaMikdash (Temple) which the Greeks had defiled. When they wanted to light the Menorah, they could not find any untampered oil. After much searching, they found only one flask with the High Priest's seal still intact. The flask contained only enough oil to light the Menorah for one day, but a miracle happened, and it lasted for eight days.
All substances in the world are paralleled in Torah. More specifically, water, wine and oil correspond to different levels in Torah. Water alludes to the esoteric aspect of Torah; wine, a higher level than water, alludes to the secrets of the Torah, the esoteric; oil, which is higher even than wine (oil floats on top of wine), corresponds to the "secrets of secrets" of the Torah.
Oil, then, alludes to the innermost secrets of the Torah, and oil is also the miracle of Chanukah. The function of oil is to provide light, to shine forth to the outside. Indeed, the Chanukah lights are placed "at the entrance of one's house on the outside." Thus Chanukah is the idea of the revelation and dissemination of the Torah's secrets, symbolized by the Chanukah candles, to the outside. Therefore, in our times we find the two phenomena: Secrets of Torah are learned by the masses and Menorahs are also being lit in public places, so the world can shine with the light of Torah. So please join as at the public lighting of the Menorah, and of course join us at the EJCC for the classes in the esoteric part of Torah and together let's light up the world!! For Chanukah classes, children's programs and celebration details, please visit ejcc.eu.
Shabbat Shalom!
|
| The Parsha in a Nutshell
Genesis 32:4-36:43
Jacob returns to the Holy Land after a 20-year stay in Charan, and sends angel-emissaries to Esau in hope of a reconciliation, but his messengers report that his brother is on the warpath with 400 armed men. Jacob prepares for war, prays, and sends Esau a large gift (consisting of hundreds of heads of sheep and cattle) to appease him. That night, Jacob ferries his family and possessions across the Yabbok River; he, however, remains behind and encounters the angel that embodies the spirit of Esau, with whom he wrestles until daybreak. Jacob suffers a dislocated hip but vanquishes the supernal creature, who bestows on him the name Israel, which means "He who prevails over the Divine." Jacob and Esau meet, embrace and kiss, but part ways. Jacob purchases a plot of land near Shechem, whose crown prince -- also called Shechem -- abducts and rapes Jacob's daughter Dinah. Dinah's brothers Simon and Levi avenge the deed by killing all male inhabitants of the city after rendering them vulnerable by convincing them to circumcise themselves. Jacob journeys on. Rachel dies while giving birth to her second son, Benjamin, and is buried in a roadside grave near Bethlehem. Reuben loses the birthright because he interferes with his father's marital life. Jacob arrives in Hebron, to his father Isaac, who later dies at age 180 (Rebecca has passed away before Jacob's arrival). Our parshah concludes with a detailed account of Esau's wives, children and grandchildren, and the family histories of the people of Se'ir among whom Esau settled. |
|
A BIT OF HUMOR
A man came to a bar on a nightly basis, ordering two glasses of Crown Royal. When the bartender asked him why he never changed his order, the man explained that he had a friend with whom he drank a nightly glass of Crown Royal for many years. "My friend was drafted and died in Korea," the man sighed, "and I decided to immortalize him by drinking two glasses of Crown Royal every night. One glass I drink for him; the other for myself." One night, after thirty years, the man entered the bar and ordered a single glass of Crown Royal. "What happened?" asked the bartender. "Oh," the man responded, "I quit drinking." | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|