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

Dear Friends,

One of the new innovations taking place at Chabad this year is the establishment of a Junior Congregation Program which will take place once a month. The program will be highly organized and will offer a meaningful prayer as well as recreational experience for the children.

The first Junior Congregation program will take place tomorrow morning - 10:30 to noon. Bring the kids, place them into the JC, and then perhaps stop by the shul to spend the hour and a half with us–the adults, in prayer and discussion. Your kids will join us in shul towards the end of the service, they will lead the latter parts of the prayer service, and then we will all enjoy a delicious catered lunch. Try it. You might like it. Your kids will love it!

By the way, kudos to Rabbi Weinberg for this program as well as the other numerous programs he is bringing in for our youth. (See this email for lots more programs he is offering, including a CTC outing to meet Matisyahu – don't we all wish we could be teens again for a day?) A special congratulations to “W” for the fact that our

Hebrew School has grown by 20% since he has taken office, only four months ago; a pretty amazing feat – don't you think?!

“W” – keep it up! This W's ratings are through the roof!

Shabbat Shalom!
Rabbi Shalom M. Paltiel

P.S. Read next week's column where I will give you an update on the amazing accomplishments at C.A.S.H. under the leadership of Rabbi G and his team. Stay tuned!


OUR NEW YOUTH PROGRAMS!
AIM: Additional Ivrit Mastery Program
CTC: Chabad Teen Club
Junior Congregation
Bat Mitzvah Club
Chai Five Mitzvah Club

News from Chabad Teen Club (CTC)

CTC is about to go from 0 to 60 in about 4.2 seconds.

This Sunday (November 5) from 1:30 – 4:00 pm @ Chabad we're going to be outlining several projects that we're going to be undertaking from now until the end of December. The first of these will be to prepare some relief aid items to bring with us next Sunday (November 12) on our visit and tour of The Neighborhood Coalition for Shelter, Homeless Drop-in Center and Residence.

CTC President Ari Maleken and I have prepared the CTC calendar for the entire year, including a whole lot of amazing community service as well as rockin' trips and a mid-winter Shabbaton. I'll be passing out the calendar this Sunday, but you can see a not-so-updated version of it on the Chabad website.

I look forward to seeing you on Sunday. Feel free to drop an email or a call anytime to talk about CTC, Life, Judaism, G‑d, the Knicks, favorite foods, trigonometry...

-Rabbi Ilan Weinberg

PS – I just can't resist telling you that on Saturday night, December 16 (the first night of Chanukah) the CTC will be going to see Matisyahu at the Hammerstein Ballroom in Manhattan and we will be going backstage after the show to meet and hang out with Matisyahu himself. Sign up now – space is limited.

If you know anyone who would be interested in CTC please contact [email protected]


 

 

 

 
B"H
Candle Lighting Times for
Port Washington, NY
[Based on Zip Code 11050]
Shabbat Begins:
Nov. 03 2006
4:31 PM
Shabbat Ends:
Nov. 04 2006
5:31 PM
Parshah Lech-Lecha
 
Shul Family News

This Shabbat we celebrate the birthday of Paul Buczyk (aka Shaul Boychik) Cheshvan 13. There will be a Farbrengen after Lunch in honor of this occasion.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO:
11/8 Randye Hubsher
11/9 Stacey Satovsky

MAZAL TOV TO:
Mazel Tov to Sheryl & Larry Pinner on becoming grandparents! A baby girl – Talia Sivan - was born this week to their daughter Sara and her husband Yaron Landau. Sheryl and Larry are absolutely in heaven with joy, and we all share their happiness on this great occasion. An official baby naming will take place at the shul next month. We'll keep you posted.

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

YARTZEITS:
11/3 Mary Sandman
mother of Alan Sandman

 
New on our Site

Tribute to Rabbi Dubinsky


Kiddush Calendar

The Kiddush at Chabad is sponsored by Mr. & Mrs. Elyohu Malekan in honor of the yahrzeit of his mother.

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 6:30 p.m.
Shabbat Morning at 9:30 a.m. followed by Kiddush Luncheon at noon

 
Daily Quote
There was once a person who was traveling from place to place and he saw a palace in flames. Said he: "Can it be that there is no master to this palace?" So the owner of the palace looked out to him and said to him: "I am the master of the Palace." By the same token, because Abraham would go around saying, "Can it be that the world has no master?" G‑d looked out and said: "I am the owner, the master of the world"
 
This Week on www.ChabadPW.org
Comment
Intercultural Adoption & You
Plucking a child out of his or her native environment is very traumatizing for the child. But sometimes the child's very life depends on it. Here's what you can do to ease the transition...
 
Question
Do Jews Celebrate Halloween?
I know its origins aren't very "Jewish," but I'm worried that my kids will feel left out if they can't go trick-n-treating in the neighborhood...
 
Essay
The Abraham Principle
On closer inspection, it seems more akin to ecology than to ethical monotheism... yet this one elegant idea developed by a child some 3,800 years ago, has transformed the world forever
 
Story
A Coin
Chassidic master Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Rymanov did not have money and he didn't care for money either. He was actually so poor that he often could not feed his children...
     
The Jewish Calendar
Friday
Shabbat
Sunday
Monday
Today in Jewish HistoryPassing of Mattityahu (139 BCE)
Tuesday
Wednesday
Today in Jewish HistoryGreat Flood Begins (2105 BCE)
Thursday
Friday
Shabbat
Today in Jewish HistoryBirth of Rabbi Sholom DovBer of Lubavitch (1860)
 
Daily Thought
Trickle of Delight

After 70, 80, maybe 120 years, the soul ascends to a place above called Gan Eden, a place of ecstasy as great as the soul can receive without dissolving altogether.

And what is that delight that is so overwhelming? No more than a trickle of light from the pleasure G‑d received from the struggle of this soul as it was below.

 

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 Lech-Lecha

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."

 

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