
Photos: Lag Ba’omer Celebrated in The Five Towns
Over 3,500 Jewish children and their parents from all over The Five Towns, NY gathered at a local park to celebrate Lag Ba’omer with Chabad.
Over 3,500 Jewish children and their parents from all over The Five Towns, NY gathered at a local park to celebrate Lag Ba’omer with Chabad.
Amid much celebration, the Ohr Hatorah Library in Stamford Hill, London has re-opened its doors on Thursday, 15 Iyar, with brand-new, spacious and state-of-the-art premises in the center of the community.
A stylish new stroller is steadily replacing the Bugaboo as the baby carriage of choice among Brooklyn’s trendy moms.
Santa Fe is renowned for its architecture, art galleries and numerous museums. But soon, the 400-year-old city and capital of the state of New Mexico will also boast another place of interest: a brand-new Chabad center.
On Sunday, Lag Ba’omer, Pico Blvd., a main artery in the city of Los Angeles, was closed for ‘the event of the year’; thousands of chairs, hundreds of feet of barricades and a grand ‘cat-walk’ styled stage was set up in anticipation of the 15th Lag Ba’omer Parade in Los Angeles.
The Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel, Rabbi Yitzchak Yosef Shlita, visited and addressed the 25 students of the Chaya Aydel Seminary on Monday morning, May 19 (19 Iyar). It was the 5th visit of an Israeli Chief Rabbi to the Chaya Aydel Seminary, currently in its 12th (Bas Mitzvah) year.
Gabriel Felder, a graduating student of George Washington University in Washington, DC, graced his address to the tens of thousands gathered at the graduation ceremony with a quote from the Lubavitcher Rebbe.
Have you ever wondered, what is the one message that could get us beyond all of our differences? Here is a sneak peek at what’s coming up from 11213.org that will help you prepare for Shavuos in whole new way.
At the Iconic Bondi Beach on a beautiful Sunday morning in Sydney, Australia, thousands gathered for the Great Lag Ba’omer Parade, one of Sydney’s greatest Jewish parades in recent times!
Following the major success and popularity of the first broadcasts of MyLife: Chassidus Applied, Rabbi Simon Jacobson will air Episode 17 tonight, Sunday, Lag Ba’omer (May 18) here on CrownHeights.info, beginning at 8:00pm. This week’s class is titled “Guilty Parents, Relevant Prayer, Betrayal.”
It was a parade to see. Floats, thousands of little children, music, charity and words of Torah. Rabbi Jacob J. Hecht, had been down the days before the parade, worried what its success would be. Would people come? Will the program be entertaining? Will the kids enjoy the event? For Rabbi Hecht there was no question when it was done of how wrong he was.
Join the Great Lag Ba’omer Parade from anywhere in the world! Here on CrownHeights.info, a live broadcast of the parade will air beginning at 10:00am, courtesy of Jewish.tv. Thousands of Jewish children are expected to gather at Chabad-Lubavitch world headquarters in New York for the monumental event.
With the release of a captivating new promotional video, Camp Gan Israel of Parksville, NY has revealed which capable young men will be leading their junior and B.M.D. Divisions this summer.
Signs and banners are put up on the 770-like facade of the Bais Chaya Mushka Girls’ School in Los Angeles, CA, in preparation for the Lag Ba’omer Parade that will take place there Sunday.
As wildfires raged around their neighborhoods this week—causing evacuations, widespread damage and more than a few scares for many—Chabad rabbis in the northern San Diego area sprang into action to do what they could to assist those fighting the flames, as well as those in the path of the fires.
Despite the forecasts, the rain kept its distance during Cheder at the Ohel’s pre Lag B’Omer Parade. In the spirit of Ahavas Yisrael, Cheder at the Ohel students marched from their building through Valley Stream State Park and into the neighborhood.
This Shabbos at the Besht, Rabbi Mendy Wolf will lead a discussion on the topic – the lesson from Rabbi Akiva’s students: How to be truthful and not come across as naive.