Chabad of Northwest Corner Celebrates Decade of Growth

Litchfield County Times

Litchfield, CT – Eleven years ago, Rabbi Joseph Eisenbach and his wife, Mina, followed their religious faith and passion to Litchfield. Young and newly married, he was 23 and she was 19, they assumed their roles as emissaries of the centuries-old Chabad-Lubavitch movement in a town where being Jewish was rare and practicing Chabad Hasidism was more so.

Six children later-one more is on the way-the Rabbi and Mrs. Eisenbach are celebrating the Chabad Lubavitch of The Northwest Corner’s 10th anniversary and a move to a larger and more prominent facility on West Street in Litchfield.

“It is a tremendous milestone,” said Rabbi Eisenbach. “We have been blessed that the community has supported us.”

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A Remarkable Spirit is Laid to Rest

Chabad.org
Michael Levin cut short a vacation with family in
Philadelphia to rush to the Lebanese front.
Photo: Family photo

Ever since he was a teenager growing up in suburban Philadelphia, Staff Sgt. Michael Levin dreamt of moving to Israel and joining the Israel Defense Forces. He died on Aug. 1 fulfilling that dream, fighting in the service of the country he loved near the southern Lebanon village of Aita al-Shaab. He was 22.

In the days and weeks since his untimely passing, many have spoken and written about the American’s dedication to his elite paratrooper unit – he was vacationing with his family in Newtown, Pa., when the war with Hezbollah terrorists broke out in July, and he promptly boarded a plane to enter the fray. But those who knew Levin also attest to his passion for Judaism.

“Michael’s idealism was a total selflessness, a response from within to do the right thing,” said Rabbi Yehuda Shemtov, director of Chabad-Lubavitch of Bucks County, where Levin was part of the inaugural teens’ group. “That’s very rare for a teenager.

New Shluchim To Merick New York

Shmais.com

Rabbi & Mrs. Shimon Kramer of Kings Park, NY will IYH be moving on Shlichus to Merrick, NY where they will open a Chabad center to serve the Merrick, Bellmore and Wantagh communities and the southeast Nassau area.

They will also continue running the Gan Israel Day Camps of Suffolk County.

The Kramers were appointed by Rabbi Anschelle Perl.

HATZLOCHA RABBA!

If you are aware of any Jewish families in the area, please forward their contact info to: rabbik@gmail.com.

Israel File: Punctuated Grief

Baila Olidort – Lubavitch.com

Few Israelis, even those whose family and friends have been spared the ravages of this war, remain unaffected. Sooner or later, everyone begins to feel the stress: the constant death announcements, the funeral notices, the shiva calls…

Thousands at Livaya of Chaya Mushka Etia

col.org.il

A huge crowd participated in the livaya of Chaya Mushka Etiya, a’h, daughter of Rabbi Victor Etiya, shliach to Kiryat Arba. She passed away tragically in a fire earlier today. Aside from the family members and locals, the crowd included Lubavitchers from around the country, headed by representative of the Chabad Court in Israel, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Glucowsky, Chairman of Aguch, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Aharonov, representatives of Tzach and others.

More picture in the Extended Article.

Traffic ticket leads to altercation in Crown Heights

NEWS12

Click here for a newscast of this event

Crown Heights — A parking ticket given to a woman Saturday night in Crown Heights led to an altercation with police.

Witnesses on Franklin Avenue say they saw 27-year-old Nicole Edite receive a ticket for double parking in front of a store. But they say after the Brooklyn woman cursed at the officer and snatched her ticket away, the officer turned violent and threw the woman to the ground. Witnesses are calling the incident police brutality.

Police say that Edite was in the wrong. Police told News 12 Brooklyn snatching the summons was considered “physical contact.” Edite faces several charges including resisting arrest and harassment. Her family says they plan to file a formal complaint against the officer.

Jewish rite of passage clips hair, welcomes son into age of intellect

East Valley Tribune
MAKING THE CUT: Three-year-old Sholom
Deitsch watches as a stranger cuts a lock of
his hair during his upshernish celebration,
which signifies the introduction of the bo
into Jewish education and practice.

Three-year-old Sholom Deitsch nibbled on a cookie as strangers pressed dollar bills into the plastic box he held in his other hand. Then they took turns clasping small scissors and snipping one curly lock from his head, then dropping it into a clear bag held by his mother.

When the long line of amateur barbers had finished giving Sholom his first haircut, the left side of his shaggy mane looked ravaged, but plenty more hair awaited a professional barber to finish the job later in the day.

Through it all, Sholom sometimes squirmed on his high, white throne, but showed restraint through the whispered injunctions from his mom.

Police Find Woman, 69, Strangled in Crown Heights

The New York Times

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A 69-year-old woman was found strangled and stabbed early yesterday in the bedroom of her apartment in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, the police said.

The victim, Gloria Boney, an immigrant from Trinidad who moved to New York in 1990, was found a few minutes after midnight after two of her daughters, accompanied by the police, unlocked the door of her apartment on Union Street [between New York Ave. & Nostrand Ave.], the police said.

Couple attacked on Eastern Parkway

shmais.com

Crown Heights — On Motzei Shabbos a Lubavitcher couple walking on Eastern Parkway in Crown Heights was attacked by a group of Black teenagers yelling anti-semitic epithets.

At around 12:30 am, the couple was walking home from escorting a Shabbos guest to her homeless shelter on Ralph Avenue by Eastern Pkwy, and were attacked by a group of Black teenagers on the promenade of Eastern Parkway between Rochester and Utica Avenues.

Boy Beaten In Attempted Robbery of his Bike

Last week, Thursday, at 5:30 in the afternoon, two fourteen year old Bochurim were riding their bikes down Brooklyn Ave, when two Black youths approached one of the boys from behind and struck him in the head with a heavy tool knocking him off his bike. They then proceeded to take the bike and began running with it down Brooklyn towards St. Johns Pl.

Another Bochur who witnessed this incident saw the attackers fleeing with the bike, and were headed in his direction, when passing him he managed to get the perp off the bike, who then just left the bike and ran. Other bystanders attempted to chase the youths but lost them at the intersection of St. Johns Pl. During the pursuit the attackers the tool they used to assault the boy while they were fleeing.

The Face of a Hero

Chana Weisberg – Chabad.org
Roi Klein

Roi Klein.

It is a name that until a few days ago held no meaning to me. He was a complete stranger, about whom I had never heard and whom I had never met.

Yet an image of the last seconds of his life won’t leave my mind.

Roi was a son. He was a brother. He was a husband to Sara and a father to three-year-old Gilad and one-year-old Yoav.

LIC ceremony marks revival of traditional Jewish beliefs

Times Ledger

Nachum Wineburg stood on a chair inside the Congregation Sons of Israel synagogue in Astoria Sunday as relatives and friends, one by one, snipped off locks of his long, wavy hair. It was the first time 3-year-old Nachum had ever had his hair cut, in a rare Jewish tradition known as “upshernish,” that represents the beginning of a boy’s formal education.

It was also the first time anyone in the room could remember the rite being performed in Astoria, something Nachum’s father, Rabbi Zev Wineburg, hopes to change. Wineburg, a rabbi in the Chabad-Lubovitch Jewish movement, is trying to lead a revival in traditional Jewish practices in Astoria and Long Island City, where a once-thriving Jewish population has become older and more secular.

240 Shluchim Attend JLI’s 8th Annual Conference

This past Tuesday and Wednesday, over 240 shluchim from around the world attended JLI’s 8th annual conference. JLI affiliates gathered from the U.S., Australia, Belgium, Canada, Colombia, Denmark, Finland, Guatemala, Holland, South Africa, Sweden, United Kingdom and Venezuela. Two days of sessions prepared the affiliates to launch a series of new courses with plans to recruit record numbers of adult students to join JLI’s multiplex of learning opportunities.

The Jewish Learning Institute (JLI), the adult education arm of Chabad, welcomed over 40 new cities as affiliates for the upcoming academic year including the first new affiliate from Eretz Yisrael, Rabbi Chaim M. Lieberman from Caesarea.

City lawyer defends rules to Chabad

Miami Herald

Cooper City officials aren’t backing down from a synagogue that wants to challenge the city’s zoning rules, even if it means facing a religious discrimination lawsuit.

But they are at least willing to talk it out.

That’s what a letter from city attorneys to attorney Franklin Zemel said Thursday. Zemel is representing Rabbi Shmuel Posner, who has been trying to set up a Chabad outreach center in a Griffin Road shopping center for years.

Zemel recently won a zoning case in Hollywood, which awarded a Chabad synagogue $2 million and the right to operate a house of worship in a residential area.

Las Vegas Jewish Community Booms

Rivka Chaya Berman – Lubavitch.com
Inside the Sanctuary of the new Chabad Jewish community center

Jumping from 55,000 in 1997 to 75,000 in 2000, the boom in Las Vegas’s Jewish community is well on its way to reaching, perhaps surpassing, the American Jewish Committee’s projected 2010 census of 100,000 Jews. But where exactly do all these Jews live? On the strip, among the neon?

First-ever fair to offer Israeli art, Kosher food, Klezmer

Shore Line Times

Guilford, CT – Judaism is the ancient tradition of a relatively small community of people. It was the first documented religion to hold as its central belief the idea of monotheism: the conviction that there is only one God, an omniscient source of all power who bonded with God’s “chosen people” since the days of the biblical forbearers Abraham and Sarah. It is the parent religion for Christianity and even Islam.

Now, Rabbi Yossi Yaffe, director of Chabad of the Shoreline wants to extend elements of this ancient faith and culture to believers – and non-believers with curious minds – by sponsoring the very first Shoreline Jewish Festival on the Green Aug. 13.

Coast Guard now allows religious headgear

News Observer
New regulations allow Jack
Rosenberg, a Hasidic Jew, to
wear his skullcap and serve
in the Coast Guard.

The skullcap can stay on the Coast Guard auxiliarist’s head after all. Jack Rosenberg, a 35-year-old Hasidic Jew from Rockland County, N.Y., signed up for the Coast Guard Auxiliary last year and passed his training, only to be informed that regulations forbade him to wear his skullcap during some duties.

Much as he loves his country, Rosenberg was not about to doff his skullcap, which a Hasid normally sheds only to shower or to swim, so his uniform stayed in the closet.

Now he does not have to. The Coast Guard is issuing new regulations allowing members to wear religious headgear, a spokesman for the guard, Chief Petty Officer Daniel Tremper, said Tuesday. This brings the guard, a division of the Department of Homeland Security, into line with the armed forces under the Defense Department, which have permitted religious garb since 1987.