Chabad of Port Washington
Chabad of Port Washington · Email: [email protected] · Voice: 516-767-8672 · Web: http://www.chabadpw.org/
 
A Word From the Rabbi

During these quiet months of summer, please consider coming to visit us at shul. It might be a novel idea just to take an ordinary Saturday during July or August and turning it into Shabbat, by joining others at shul for prayer, learning and lunch.

I know this sounds like a novel concept. After-all, why would a good Jewish boy (or girl) hang out in a place like shul if it's not the High Holidays... But I just thought I'd mention it. Our Shabbat atmosphere is friendly and family-like. Every week we learn together as we explore the weekly portion of the Torah, plus a delicious lunch sets the stage for social interaction.  

Shabbat Shalom!
Rabbi Shalom M Paltiel

 

 

 
 
News at Chabad

Who wants to be a Minyanaire?
We need extra minyan help during the weekly morning minyans for the summer months. Please come and lend a hand. Give us a morning once a week. We begin at 7 am sharp and are done by 7:30. You could make the difference.

Membership Drive:
Click here for more info and to sign up online

Can We Count on You?


NEW WEEKLY FEATURE! Torah Thought

Devarim is the Parshah associated with Tisha B'Av, the Jewish national day of mourning. On this Shabbat, we hear the famous Haftarah (reading from the Prophets) of Chazon, the "Vision of Isaiah," always read immediately prior to Tisha B'av. And after Shabbat, we will recall the destruction of our Holy Temple nearly 2,000 years ago.

But why remember? The world cannot understand why we go on about the Holocaust—and that was only 60 years ago! For over 19 centuries, we have been remembering and observing this event and it has become the saddest day in our calendar. Why? Why not let bygones be bygones? It's history. What was was. Why keep revisiting old and painful visions?

They say that Napoleon was once passing through the Jewish ghetto in Paris and heard sounds of crying and wailing emanating from a synagogue. He stopped to ask what the lament was about. He was told that the Jews were remembering the destruction of their Temple. "When did it happen?" asked the Emperor. "Some 1700 years ago," was the answer he received. Whereupon Napoleon stated with conviction that a people who never forgot its past would be destined to forever have a future.

Jews never had history. We have memory. History can become a book, a museum, and forgotten antiquities. Memory is alive. And memory guarantees our future.

Even amidst the ruins, we refused to forget. The first temple was destroyed by the Babylonians. As they led the Jews into captivity, the Jews sat down and wept. "By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept remembering Zion." What did we cry of? Our lost wealth, homes and businesses? No. We cried for Zion and Jerusalem. "If I forget thee 'O Jerusalem, let my right hand lose its cunning. If I fail to elevate Jerusalem above my foremost joy, then let my tongue cleave to its palate." We were not weeping for ourselves or our lost liberties but for the heavenly city and the Holy Temple. Amidst the bondage, we aspired to rebuild, amidst the ruins we dreamt of returning.

And because we refused to forget Jerusalem, we did return. Because we refused to accept defeat or accept our exile as a historical fait acompli, we have rebuilt proud Jewish communities the world over, while our victors have been vanquished by time. Today there are no more Babylonians and the people who now live in Rome are not the Romans who destroyed the Second Temple. Those nations became history while we, inspired by memory, emerged revitalized and regenerated and forever it will be true that Am Yisrael Chai — the people of Israel lives!

I remember hearing a story from the Holocaust of a Torah scholar and his nephew. In the concentration camp, they studied the Talmud together. They were learning the tractate Moed Katan, a part of the Talmud which, ironically, discusses the laws of mourning. And when the time came that the uncle saw himself staring death in the face, he said to his nephew, "Promise me that if you survive you will finish studying this book of Moed Katan." Amidst the misery, desolation and tragedy, what thought preoccupied his mind? That the Talmud should still be studied. This was his last wish on earth. Was it madness, or is it the very secret of our survival?

Only if we refuse to forget, only if we observe Tisha B'av, can we hope to rebuild one day. Indeed, the Talmud assures us, "Whosoever mourns for Jerusalem, will merit to witness her rejoicing." If we are to make it back to Zion, if our people are to harbor the hope of being restored and revived, then we dare not forget. We need to observe our National Day of Mourning this Saturday night and Sunday. Forego the movies and the restaurants. Sit down on a low seat to mourn with your people; and perhaps even more importantly, to remember. And, please G‑d, He will restore those glorious days and rebuild His own everlasting house. May it be speedily in our day.


On Being Jewish

Submitted by: Rob Salzbank

Probably dozens of times a year, you'd find parents in Orthodox neighborhoods deciding to pick that name for their newborn baby girls. But Tom and Katie? Yes, that Scientology movie star couple of Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes picked the name Suri for their new daughter. They did, they said, because Suri has its roots in biblical Hebrew, is a variant on the name Sarah, which means "princess." CONTINUE

 
B"H
Candle Lighting Times for
Port Washington, NY
[Based on Zip Code 11050]
Shabbat Begins:
Jul. 28 2006
7:57 PM
Shabbat Ends:
Jul. 29 2006
9:01 PM
Parshah Devarim

Shul Family News

CONDOLENCES:
To Danny Shilian on the passing of his brother. May he and the entire family know only of simchot.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO:
Benjamin Lerner
Lisa Salstein


New Video on our Site

New Video on our Site:
Chabad of Port Washington Celebrates its own Bar Mitzvah!

Documentary on Chabad's Growth Since its Inception in 1991 (17 min)

 
Featured Page on our Site

Short Article & Pictures of Chabad's 15th Anniversary Dinner!

Click here to view


Vote for Israel!

Israel is losing the CNN vote.

We must vote for Israel on the CNN web site. This survey is shown all over the world, and will have a strong impact on the world public opinion. Click here, roll down to QUICK VOTE, and vote yes' for supporting Israel action.

Pass it on to every one you know.


Schedule of Classes

Saturday Torah Study Class
Rabbi Paltiel at 8:45 -9:30 a.m.

Sunday Torah Study Class with Rabbi Paltiel at 10:00 -11:00 a.m.

Saturday Women's Discussion Group with Dr. Chaya Glogauer after lunch

 
Schedule of Services

Tisha B'Av Schedule:

Wednesday Aug 2
8:00 PM Tisha B'Av Service
9pm Trip to visit gravesite of the Lubavitcher Rebbe

Thursday, Aug 3
7am tisha bav morning service
7pm mincha and maariv (along with Talis & Tfillin)

~ ~ ~

Monday - Friday at 7:00 a.m.
Friday night at 6:30 p.m.
Shabbat Morning at 9:30 a.m. followed by Kiddush Luncheon at noon
Sunday at 9:00 a.m.


Daily Quote
In learning Torah the Jew feels toward G‑d like a pupil with his master; in prayer—like a child with his father
— Hayom Yom, Tammuz 26

Israel Questions & Answers

You Asked
AskMoses.com Answered!

Question of the Week:

I am the only Jew in my office so I face a daily barrage of questions about Israel's actions in Lebanon. I don't know who appointed me as Israel's spokesman and I am not armed with the answers. Can you help?

Answer:

At times like this, every Jew becomes an ambassador for Israel. Even if you don't agree with everything Israel does, any decent person must stand up for Israel's right to self-defense.

We can leave the military and political issues to the experts, but we should all be clear on the moral questions raised by this war. Let's look at a few of the most commonly asked questions.

Click Here for More

 
This Week on www.ChabadPW.org
Comment
To Be a Body
Imagine a person tapped under a collapsed building. There is a small fissure in the rubble—just large enough to allow him to extend his hand to his rescuers. We are that hand
 
Voices
The Bris
Why can't they just allow us our little strip of land and leave us alone?
 
Story
The Rabbi and the Cow
There was a rabbi, a very good and pious man, who wanted to see justice in the world...
 
Current
Fearing Our Own Strength
Israel will fight back until Hamas and Hezbollah accept a cease fire, at least for the time being. Yet that is exactly what we must fear...
     
The Jewish Calendar
Thursday
Friday
Shabbat
Laws and CustomsShabbat of Vision
Laws and CustomsEthics: Chapter 2
Sunday
Today in Jewish HistoryPassing of "Ari" (1572)
Monday
Tuesday
Today in Jewish HistoryFirst Temple Invaded (423 BCE)
Wednesday
Today in Jewish HistorySpies Return (1312 BCE)
Today in Jewish HistoryCivil War in Jerusalem (67 CE)
Laws and CustomsFast Begins this Evening; Pre-Fast Meal
Thursday
Tisha B'Av
Today in Jewish HistoryExodus Generation Condemned to Die in Desert (1312 BCE)
Today in Jewish HistoryHoly Temples Destroyed (423 BCE and 69 CE)
Today in Jewish HistoryFall of Betar (133 CE)
Today in Jewish HistoryExpulsion from England (1290)
Today in Jewish HistorySpanish Expulsion (1492)
Today in Jewish HistoryAMIA Bombing (1994)
Laws and CustomsThe Fast of Tish'ah B'Av
Friday
Laws and CustomsEnd of "Nine Days"
Shabbat
Laws and CustomsShabbat of Consolation
Laws and CustomsEthics: Chapter 3
 
Daily Thought
The Source

It is not true that Abraham and Moses gave the world the ideas of morality and value of life. These ideas were known to Adam and to Noah — only that with time, humankind had mostly forgotten them.

What these giants brought to the world was a greater idea: That the values essential to humanity's survival can only endure when they are seen as an outcome of monotheism. They must be tied to an underlying reality, and that reality is the knowledge of a Oneness that brings us into being.

 

From the wisdom of the Lubavitcher Rebbe; words and condensation by Tzvi Freeman. To order Tzvi's book, "Bringing Heaven Down to Earth, click here.

 
The Parshah In a Nutshell
Parshat Devarim

On the 1st of Shevat (37 days before his passing), Moses begins his repetition of the Torah to the assembled Children of Israel, reviewing the events that occurred and the laws that were given in the course of their 40-year journey from Egypt to Sinai to the Promised Land, rebuking the people for their failings and iniquities, and enjoining them to keep the Torah and observe its commandments in the land that G‑d is giving them as an eternal heritage, into which they shall cross after his death.

Moses recalls his appointment of judges and magistrates to ease his burden of meting out justice to the people and teaching them the word of G‑d; the journey from Sinai through the great and fearsome desert; the sending of the Spies and the people's subsequent spurning of the Promised Land, so that G‑d decreed that the entire generation of the Exodus shall die out in the desert. "Also against me," says Moses, "was G‑d angry for your sakes, saying: You, too, shall not go in there."

Moses also recounts some more recent events: the refusal of the nations of Moab and Ammon to allow the Israelites to pass through their countries; the wars against the Emorite kings Sichon and Og, and the settlement of their lands by the tribes of Reuben and Gad and part of the tribe of Menasseh; and Moses' message to his successor, Joshua, who will take the people into the Land and lead them in the battles for its conquest: "Fear them not, for the L-rd your G‑d, He shall fight for you."

 

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