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

The summer is a great time for decluttering, and with Chabad's new CLUTTERFREE program, it's never been easier! We're excited to share with you that Chabad of Port Washington has joined forces with CLUTTERFREE to turn your “once cherished” items into cash! If you have items of value that are no longer wanted in your home or office, you may want to consider donating them to be sold on ebay for CHABAD'S benefit.

This is an ongoing effort to raise funds for Chabad of Port Washington. There is no time limit to receiving items for sale. CLUTTERFREE: Donna Benabou, 516-551-5785 or email [email protected] . Visit our website for more information on this new, exciting initiative!

On another note, I'd like to thank everyone for the overwhelming response we got to our calendar campaign! Thanks to your support, we're going to be printing a beautiful new calendar this year featuring an updated design and a great new addition - birthdays of our community members! If you haven't yet participated in our calendar campaign or if you'd still like to include your family's birthays, click here so that we can include you before this goes to print!

Sabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Shalom M. Paltiel



News @ Chabad

Got Junk? We'll Take It!!

The ClutterFree Process is Simple! All you need to do is:
1. Send an email or call with a few details about the items you are considering donating: [email protected].
2. We will determine the salability of your items on ebay.
3. Pick up or drop off arrangements will be made.
4. Pertinent information will be gathered about these items.
5. A donation receipt will be provided for your tax records.
6. Payment will be made to Chabad of Port Washington for items sold.

Unsold items will be donated to an appropriate charity. Chabad of Port Washington will receive a donation receipt. So no matter what, Chabad benefits from your donation.

 
B"H
Candle Lighting Times for
Port Washington, NY
[Based on Zip Code 11050]
Shabbat Begins:
Jul. 20, 2007
8:04 PM
Shabbat Ends:
Jul. 21, 2007
9:10 PM
Torah Portion: Devarim
 
Kiddush Calendar


We need a Kiddush sponsor for August 11 & 18

Consider sponsoring a future Kiddush at Chabad. Please email [email protected] to book your date. This is a beautiful, meaningful way to celebrate a special occasion or commemorate a date on your family calendar.


Shul Family News


HAPPY BIRTHDAY TO:
Manny Shurka 7/20
Jacquelyn Moriya Salzbank 7/21
Lena Emma Salzbank 7/21
Cheryl Podolsky 7/22
Julia Satovsky 7/22
Lea Beatus 7/23
Eve Harari 7/24
Mr. Zelik Sander 7/24

YARTZEITS
Lydia Karp 7/22/2007, observed by Ronald & Lea Beauts

Fay Haussmann 7/23/2007 observed by Claude & Perahia Haussman


Schedule of Services


Friday night services: 6:30 pm.

Sunday morning Tefillin Club:
11:30 am - 12 noon in the Chabad Library

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


Schedule of Classes


Tanya Class
Saturdays, 8:45-9:30 a.m.
with Rabbi Paltiel


Camp Update

BERKOWITZ GAN ISRAEL
Click here for more photos

We posted new photos online this week showing our Berkowitz Gan Israel campers in action! It's been another great week at our camp and we extend many thanks to Rabbi Weinberg and his enthusiastic team for their tireless devotion!
www.imaginesummer.org.

 

 
This Week @ www.ChabadPW.org
Living
Fireworks!
This year, the fireworks lasted. In fact they're still there, bright and colorful, turning summersaults in the sky. Let me explain how that happened...
 
Spirituality
The Act of Knowing
Imagine if everyone saw you as you really are, as you see yourself. And you looked at everyone else and saw them as they see themselves. Our world would be a very different place, wouldn't it?
 
Women
The Plunge
For the first time in my life, there is no visible record of my accomplishments. In fact, when done well, it is impossible to perceive parenting being done at all...
 
Parshah
Ten Measures of Speech
The second level emerges when Torah becomes not just an acquisition of knowledge and a subject-object encounter—an "I" facing "it"--but a personal meeting place, an "I" facing "you," or better yet, a "we" relationship...
     
The Jewish Calendar
Friday
Today in Jewish HistoryPassing of "Ari" (1572)
Shabbat
Laws and CustomsShabbat of Vision
Laws and CustomsEthics: Chapter 3
Sunday
Today in Jewish HistoryFirst Temple Invaded (423 BCE)
Monday
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
Tuesday
Tishah 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)
Laws and CustomsThe Fast of Tishah B'Av
Wednesday
Today in Jewish HistoryHoly Temple Burns (69)
Today in Jewish HistoryAMIA Bombing (1994)
Today in Jewish HistoryExpulsion from Gaza (2005)
Laws and CustomsEnd of "Nine Days"
Thursday
Friday
Today in Jewish HistoryNachmanides' Disputation (1263)
Today in Jewish History770 Acquired (1940)
Shabbat
Today in Jewish HistorySir Moses Montefiore (1885)
Laws and CustomsShabbat of Consolation
Laws and CustomsEthics: Chapter 4
 
Daily Thought
Lofty Living

Realize that for you to make a living there must occur constant miracles. The fact that you don't notice these miracles doesn't make them any less miracles. On the contrary, their loftiness transcends your perception.

 

From the wisdom of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Schneerson; 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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