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

I am happy to share with you that we will be hosting a communal Shabbat Dinner at Chabad House one Friday night each month, with one of our rabbis and their families participating and leading the Shabbat Dinner. I hope the community will take advantage of this beautiful opportunities to spend Shabbat together each month!

Please mark your calendar with the dates of the Shabbat dinners:
November 3, 2006 • December 8, 2006 • January 12, 2007 • February 2, 2007 • March 16, 2007 • April 20, 2007 • May 18, 2007 • June 8, 2007.

Services: 6:00 p.m. • Dinner: 7:00 p.m. $20 Adults; $10 Children; $60 Family Maximum. RSVP required by the Wednesday prior to each event. Call us at 516-767-8672 ext. 1 or email [email protected].

Our very first Shabbat dinner for the year will take place next Shabbat. Join us for meaningful & enjoyable Shabbat experience, complete with song, stories, insight and of course great food and fabulous company! I look forward to having you join us next week!

Best wishes for a Shabbat Shalom!
Rabbi Shalom M. Paltiel

 

 
Upcoming Programs for Kids!
Take a peek at all the great fun we have in store for your children. We'll keep you informed of dates & details, stay tuned!

AIM (Additional Ivrit Mastery) Program
Weekday afternoon
Chai Five Mitzvah Club
(grades 1-5)
1st Tuesday of every month
Youth Zone (grades 6-8)
1st Sunday of every month
Coming Soon!
Bat Mitzvah Club
Stay Tuned for Info!
CTC:
Chabad Teen Club!
 
B"H
Candle Lighting Times for
Port Washington, NY
[Based on Zip Code 11050]
Shabbat Begins:
Oct. 27 2006
5:40 PM
Shabbat Ends:
Oct. 28 2006
6:39 PM
Parshah Noach
 
Shul Family News

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO:
10/30 Jeff Kobrinsky
11/1 Mr. David Rosen
11/2 Leonard Lebovitch

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY TO:
10/25 George Kalinsky & June
Azoulay
10/26 Dr. & Mrs. Robert Spatz

CONDOLENCES:
To Mrs. Charney on the passing of her father, Leon Dorsman / Label ben Meyer


Kiddush Calendar

The Kiddush at Chabad is sponsored by Mr. & Mrs. Mahgerefteh in celebration of their son, Jonathan's Bar Mitzvah!

If you'd like to sponsor the Kiddush at Chabad, please check our online calendar and email your date of choice to Gary Litvak directly. You may also call Maria at 767-TORAH.


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

Monday - Friday at 7:00 a.m.

Friday night at 6:00 p.m.
Note change of time


Shabbat Morning at 9:30 a.m. followed by Kiddush Luncheon at noon

 
A STORY
Two Choices
Submitted by Farshad Noorani

What would you do?....you make the choice. Don't look for a punch line, there isn't one. Read it anyway. My question is: Would you have made the same choice?

At a fundraising dinner for a school that serves learning-disabled children, the father of one of the students delivered a speech that would never be forgotten by all who attended. After extolling the school and its dedicated staff, he offered a question: "When not interfered with by outside influences, everything nature does is done with perfection. Yet my so! n, Shay , cannot learn things as other children do. He cannot understand things as other children do. Where is the natural order of things in my son?" CONTINUE

 
This Week on www.ChabadPW.org
Question
Does Everyone Believe in G‑d?
"Believe in yourself. There's nothing you can't do, if you put your mind to it. " Nothing you can't do? Sounds pretty divine. A pity it's not true...
 
Inner Dimensions
The Rainbow in the Cloud
To touch some of heaven's radiance, then curve gracefully back towards the earth in a glorious ray of colors that are manmade reflections of G‑d's truth and hope for mankind
 
Essay
Who's Painting the Leaves?
"I know all about astronomy," insisted the rabbi. "Tvinkle, tvinkle little stah."
 
Comment
Population Explosion
I guarantee that no person has ever declared on their deathbed, "I wish I'd had fewer children"
     
The Jewish Calendar
Friday
Shabbat
Sunday
Today in Jewish HistoryLast Jew comes home (2nd Temple Era)
Today in Jewish HistoryPassing of R. Meir Shapiro (1933)
Laws and CustomsPrayers for rain
Monday
Tuesday
Today in Jewish HistoryPassing of Rosh (1327)
Wednesday
Thursday
Today in Jewish HistoryPassing of Methuselah (1656 BCE)
Today in Jewish HistoryRachel (1553 BCE)
Today in Jewish HistoryR. Nachum of Chernobyl (1797)
Friday
Shabbat
 
Daily Thought
Reason To Celebrate

If you did things right, celebrate that you have a G‑d who appreciates your good work.

And if you fell on your face, celebrate that you have a G‑d who does not abandon you when you fall.

Perhaps you might even allow Him to pick you up.

 

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 Noach

G‑d instructs Noah — the only righteous man in a world consumed by violence and corruption — to build a large wooden teivah ("ark"), coated within and without with pitch. A great deluge, says G‑d, will wipe out all life from the face of the earth; but the ark will float upon the water, sheltering Noah and his family, and two members (male and female) of each animal species.

Rain falls for 40 days and nights, and the waters churn for 150 days more before calming and beginning to recede. The ark settles on Mount Ararat, and from its window Noah dispatches a raven, and then a series of doves, "to see if the waters were abated from the face of the earth." When the ground dries completely—exactly one solar year (365 days) after the onset of the Flood—G‑d commands Noah to exit the teivah and repopulate the earth.

Noah builds an altar and offers sacrifices to G‑d. G‑d swears never again to destroy all of mankind because of their deeds, and sets the rainbow as a testimony of His new covenant with man. G‑d also commands Noah on the sacredness of life: murder is deemed a capital offense, and while man is permitted to eat the meat of animals, he is forbidden to eat flesh or blood taken from a living animal.

Noah plants a vineyard and becomes drunk on its produce. Two of Noah's sons, Shem and Japeth, are blessed for covering up their father's nakedness, while his third son, Ham, is cursed for taking advantage of his debasement.

The descendents of Noah remain a single people, with a single language and culture, for ten generations. Then they defy their Creator by building a great tower to symbolize their own invincibility; G‑d confuses their language so that "one does not comprehend the tongue of the other," causing them to abandon their project and disperse across the face of the earth, splitting into seventy nations.

The Parshah of Noach concludes with a chronology of the ten generations from Noah to Abram (later Abraham), and the latter's journey from his birthplace of Ur Casdim to Charan, on the way to the Land of Canaan.

 

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