650 Friends at Jewish Children’s Museum’s First Birthday Celebration

R. Yerachmiel Benjaminson addressing the crowd during the awards ceremony.

Friends and supporters of Brooklyn’s Jewish Children’s Museum joined together on Thursday, March 30 to mark a successful first year of operation at the Museum.

The dinner and award ceremony was chaired by Mr. John Kanas, Chairman, President and CEO of North Fork Bank. In his opening remarks, Kanas praised the Museum’s executive director, Rabbi Yerachmiel Benjaminson, calling him a “man with a vision” who stops at nothing to see that his dreams become realities.

The Museum is dedicated to the memory of Ari Halberstam, the 16 year old Yeshiva student gunned down by a terrorist on the Brooklyn Bridge in 1994. Ari’s mother, Devorah, was lauded by the many honorees and political leaders in attendance for turning her grief towards the creation of the Jewish Children’s Museum, a center that promotes tolerance and acceptance.

More pictures in the Extended Article!

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Children . . . Rolling in Dough

Rivka Chaya Berman – Lubavitch.com

In the weeks before Passover, there’s a Chabad representative firing up a 700-degree oven in nearly every time zone. One of the many innovative staple-programs of Chabad Houses, the Model Matzah Bakery has become a traditional pre-Passover event for thousands of children worldwide.

Matzah, Passover’s essential flatbread that commemorates the Jewish people’s flight from slavery in Egypt, is the holiday’s most recognizable symbol. With the wild popularity of Chabad’s Model Matzah Bakeries, Jewish children—and adults—of all backgrounds have a chance to participate in the meticulous and precise matzah-baking experience while learning about the history and traditions of the Festival of Freedom.

Kids learn how to make staple for the holiday

Miami Herald

Rabbis bring their matzoh factory to youngsters at Posnack Hebrew Day School, hoping to pass on the tradition by making it fun.

Just like the Jews who fled Egypt to escape the pharoah’s soldiers, students at the David Posnack Hebrew Day School recently made matzoh, unleavened bread, in a rush.

Chabad Lubavitch Rabbis Yossi Gansburg and Adi Goodman brought their portable matzoh bakery to the Plantation and Davie campuses of the school last week.

Gansburg, who grew up in Brooklyn, brings the matzoh-baking experience to thousands of Broward students in the two weeks leading up to Passover, which begins at sundown April 12.

Chabad Center to build own synagogue in Abacoa

TC Palm
Rabbi Berel Barash, founder of Chabad Jewish
Center of Jupiter, stands on 1.5 acres of land,
west of New Haven community in Jupiter and
south of University Boulevard. The orthodox
congregation recently closed on the land
bought from Abacoa Development Company
for $1 million.

Within the next two years, Chabad Jewish Center of Jupiter could have a permanent home.

The three-year-old orthodox synagogue has closed on 1.5 acres at University Boulevard, east of Military Trail, west of the New Haven community, for $1 million, said Rabbi Berel Barash, the synagogue’s founder/leader.

“The location couldn’t be better,” Barash said. “It’s the last available property the Abacoa developer had remaining,” said Barash. “Now that Scripps is coming, it only doubles and triples the need for our Jewish campus which will be located in the heart of Jupiter.”

“A place of worship will fit right into Abacoa,” said Nader Salour, Abacoa Development Company president. “The site is perfect for this kind of use.”

Another Mugging Mid Evening

The intersection where the mugging had taken place.

Yesterday [Thursday] Evening at around 9:45 a girl was mugged on the corner of Lefferts Ave. and Troy Ave. Two younger black males ran up to the girl and snatched her purse, then ran up Troy Ave. Police arrived on scene and took the girl to the police station where they filed a police report.

This come’s just two days after the vicious attack on a 14 year old boy on Schenectady and Carroll, where he was both mugged and severely beaten. In this case B”H they did not assault the girl.

A ritual route back in use after Wilma repairs

Sun Sentinel

With sunset tonight, like every Friday night, dozens of Orthodox Jews will walk to synagogue. But when Hurricane Wilma damaged the delicate boundaries of the eruv west of Boynton Beach, the walk became a bit challenging.

An eruv turns the public domain into the private, allowing those who strictly follow Jewish law to carry objects from their home to synagogue. Now, after hundreds of hours of painstaking labor, the eruv surrounding Chabad-Lubavitch of Greater Boynton Beach is back up.

“People had a real sense of freedom,” said Aaron Itzkowitz, who helped reconstruct the eruv, functional for the first time last week.

Passover Joy Begins Early in Nepal

B. Olidort – Lubavitch.com
A celebration of its own: unloading Passover goods as they arrive in Kathmandu

This tiny mountaintop kingdom has one of the largest Passover Seders in the world, with more than 2,000 guests. But getting the Passover goods onto the table is a hi-suspense drama that has, in past years, come to 11th hour resolution.

This year too, Chabad Rabbi Chezy and Chani Lifschitz waited with bated breath for the container carrying tons of matzah and seder food supplies to arrive. Enroute for a month, the container traveled from Israel to India by ship, and from India to Nepal by land. Last year, the 18-wheeler carrying the cargo overturned, with cases of the precious Passover goods spilling out only days before the holiday. It took several helicopters arranged by Rabbi Lifschitz, to retrieve the cases of food and deliver them in the nick of time. The year before, the container arrived 24 hours before the Seder.

Cooking for 50 every week? Chabad wives are up to the task

Jewish SF

Miriam Ferris’ groceries cost about $300 a week — not including the fish and chicken she buys from the kosher butcher. The list includes such items as “20 lbs. of potatoes,” “2 bags of string beans” and “3 cases of eggs.”

And believe it or not, this isn’t her Passover shopping. Though if you attend a normal Shabbat dinner at her house, you might think you are there for a Passover seder.

Three tables are set together end-to-end. Close to 30 people are crammed into a room. Plates and plates of hot food are served to grateful guests, some of whom who dropped in without even a moment’s notice.

Chabad Center opens in Sudbury

Sudbury Town Crier
Rabbi Yisroel Freeman and his
wife Shayna have established
the Chabad Jewish center of
Sudbury to serve local
Jewish communities. They
hold their children Chana,
left, and Levi. (Staff
photo by Ed Hopfmann)

Judaism and joy are synonymous for Rabbi Yisroel and Shayna Freeman, a young couple whose own lives are dedicated to serving the Jewish community by providing spiritual and educational enrichment.

In January the Freemans established the Chabad Jewish Center of Sudbury to serve the Jewish communities of Sudbury, Marlborough and Hudson. Their goal is to provide opportunities for local Jews to study and deepen their knowledge of Jewish law and philosophy through a variety of programs from one-on-one Torah study to lively holiday parties for children.

“It’s a very joyful way, the Hasidic style,” said Yisroel Freeman. “When we do Jewish events everyone should go away with happy feelings.”

Oholei Torah Breaks Ground For New Mikvah

As Oholei Torah celebrates its achievements of the past fifty years, they are looking forward and planning to the future.

Backed by the generosity of Oholei Torahs dear friends, R’ Shaya and Sarah Boymelgreen, Oholei Torah will break ground for a brand new community mikvah for men on Isru Chag Shavuos as they celebrate their annual dinner.

The mikvah, to be annexed to the eastern side of the Eastern Parkway campus, will feature more than 7,500 sq. feet of stunning amenities, and the utmost in comfort and dignity as such a project deserves. Building details include 26 showers, four boros each with separate entrances and exits, and a grand marble entrance.

The Boymelgreen’s are dedicating this project to the memory of Shaya’s grandfathers R’ Yeshaya Shlomo HaKohen Altman HY“D and R’ Levi Yitzchok Boymelgreen HY”D

THE DISPUTATION: One Love, One Chabad Heart

David Klinghoffer – Forward

Any group or movement with a strongly held viewpoint inevitably has to decide how to relate to outsiders who disagree or simply don’t care. It can judge and dismiss them, or it can condescend and seek to instruct them about the dangerous error of their ways. The really radical approach, however, is to serve and to love them.

This last approach has come to be associated with Chabad, the Hasidic sect that is currently scoring a public relations triumph in the person of Matisyahu, the born-again reggae star with legions of fans among non-Jewish Americans. The majority of mainstream America never heard of Chabad until the former Matthew Miller began crooning to them about faith in Hashem and paraphrasing the Zohar about how to fight the evil one’s impulse. He’s currently No. 7 on the Billboard 200 music chart, a flabbergasting achievement.

A Project of NCFJE: Open Doors

A few months ago, Rabbi Shea Hecht, of NCFJE, started a weekly Torah Study and Relationships Class for post-high school single girls at NCFJE headquarters in Crown Heights, Brooklyn. The classes were an opportunity for the girls to continue their Torah study though their formal study years were over. Over time Rabbi Hecht began to notice that a different need was not being met for these girls. Being that these girls live in the city, where people easily blend in, there was no way for them to meet other girls with similar needs within the community.

From its inception NCFJE has been filling a void when they see one and this time was no different. Rabbi Hecht launched a new project – Project Open Doors.

Now the staff of NCFJE/Open Doors not only offers Torah classes, but has also dedicated themselves to helping young ladies further their career, network for job opportunities and find suitable marriage partners.

A Letter From The Mother Of The Victim of Last Nights Attack

In from the Inbox

It’s my son who was beaten…. I spoke to the attacker on my son’s phone tonight…. and then to his aunt. She says he is 16 years old “and she is not turning him in” When I told him there are detectives working on the case…. and the mayor’s office involved, she just laughed. I asked the boy why he had to beat my son so severely for a stupid cell phone … he said “he wouldn’t give it up” Mendy never got a chance to “Give it up” he was jumped and then blacked out…. he remembers nothing about the attack.

He received about 6 stitches in his mouth and all tests came out ok so far B”H. He is in the hospital overnight for observation. I was told his injuries look scarier then they are.

Thanks to the person that went over and stopped the Shvartzeh from continuing to beat Mendy to a pulp. I’m not sure he wants his named mentioned. Representatives of the mayor’s office came to the hospital tonight and two detectives are on the case. Let’s pray that they catch the attacker. If these animals are never caught they have no fear and just keep attacking.

UPDATE ON MENDY’S CONDITION IN THE EXTENDED ARTICLE!

14 year old Severely Beaten and Robbed – Chaptzem?!

The blood stained Van and Sidewalk, notice the extent of the spatter.

At 8:40pm Tuesday evening, an 18 to 21 year old black male attacked a 14-year-old bochur. Eyewitness stated that the assailant grabbed the Bochur by the head and slammed him into the back of a parked mini-van with vicious force, knocking him out instantly.

The sheer force of the impact on the van, left a large splatter of blood on the back of the vehicle (see Pictures). The attacker then proceeded to take his Wallet, Cell Phone and iPod, after which he continued beating the unconscious bocher with blows to the head.

At which point a Jewish member of the community walked up to try to stop the beating and began calling the police. After noticing the approaching individual, the mugger stopped and said to him “You better put the phone down, or else you will be next”.

The Shomrim who arrived on scene immediately, began canvassing the area in attempt to apprehend this brutal criminal. Hatzalah was kept waiting at the scene before transporting the bochur to the hospital, because the police took more then 15 minutes to respond.

The bochur was taken to King County Hospital, where it was determined that he suffered a concussion, multiple cuts and abrasions to his face and severe trauma to his head.

This incident comes just a month after the murder of Efraim Klein, who was shot on the very same corner where this mugging took place (the police still seem to be completely clueless as to who murdered Efraim Klein). Blood was visible all over the sidewalk (see pictures) and the Bochur had no recollection of the actual assault.

More pictures and an extension to this report in the Extended Article.

From Quang Tri to Monsey: One Man’s Journey from Vietnam to Orthodox Judaism.

By Shlomo Abraham

Today he considers himself a soldier in Hashem’s army. Time was when Zvi Webb was “Hank” and his “army” was the US Armed Forces.

A just-released memoir tells the fascinating story of R’ Zvi’s journey from the social unrest of the 1960’s to a military tour in Vietnam and eventual encounter with Judaism. The book, “Loyal Soldier,” (Israel Book Shop 2006) follows his soul-searching adventures in the Amazon jungle, near-murder by a drunken anti-Semite in the army and forced Shabbos observance in Israel.

Volumes have been written in an effort to explain the painful phenomenon that was the Vietnam War. Never has the era been seen through the eyes of a religious Jew. This compelling read tells of the struggles of a young American serving his country on the one hand, facing the disgusted reaction of his countrymen on the other and balancing his newfound religious faith on top.

Proficiency and Excellence in Chidon Sefer Hamitzvos

Months of preparations, serious and diligent study was put to their final test at the huge Sefer Hamitzvos Chidon in Los Angeles, California. Feelings of anxiety intermingled with joy on the one hand and seriousness on the other hand. To assure the good spirits of all participants and not only the winners, performer Lippe Shmeltzer, provided entertainment wearing a Chabad hat. “We have never had so many participants”, exclaimed Rabbi Sholom Ber Baumgarten, of the Tzivos Hashem administration, who served as one of the judges at the contest.

The list of winners along with a beautiful gallery of pictures in the Extended Article!