Hachnosas Safer Torah to Chabad of Georgetown

R. Avrohom Holtzberg carrying the Safer Torah

Yesterday [Sunday] there was a “Hachnosas Safer Torah” to the Chabad House of Georgetown which is run by R. Avrohom Holtzberg. The Torah was donated in memory of Rivka bas Reuven & Shoshana by Miriam bas Robert & Medelin Berkowitz, the Torah was then escorted to the Chabad House with the participation of a large crowd, the police even blocked off Ave. M, the block where the Chabad House resides due to the large crowd.

After the Hachnosas Safer Torah a large Seudas Mitzavah took place in the Chabad House, with the participation of R. Aryeh Gamliel, former Keneset Member who is a good friend of the family and flew in especially for the event, and the Rav of the Shul R. Yirmiya Levi, at the end of the event the last candle was lit on the large Menorah outside the Chabad House.

More pictures in the Extended Article.

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NYC Mayor Bloomberg Sworn in for 2nd Term

New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg delivers a speech after taking the oath of office for another four years during a ceremony at City Hall, Sunday, Jan. 1, 2006. Bloomberg launched his second term with an inaugural address portraying the city at a critical crossroads — with the promise of ‘finishing our unfinished work.’ (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

Mayor Michael Bloomberg pledged to continue the city’s progress, including lower crime and a healthier economy, as he was sworn in for another four years on Sunday.

“Now we have a choice to make,” Bloomberg said at a City Hall ceremony. “We could be content with what we have accomplished — and preserve our gains — or we can take our beloved city even further.”

The former CEO took his first oath of office on New Year’s Day in 2002, as rescue workers still searched for victims’ remains amid the World Trade Center rubble. The economy was in tatters, and he warned of tough times ahead.

More pictures and a complete transcript of the Inaugural Address in the Extended Article!

Well Over 100 Vehicles In A Massive Parade Through Manhattan

The parade coming down 59th Street from 6th Avenue past the Menorah and back down 5th Avenue

With 25 Mitzvah Tanks and around 130 Menorah Toped Cars, they made their way on Motzoai Shabbos from 770 over the Manhatten Bridge and into Manhattan right across 6th Ave. all the way to 59th St. were the Menorah stands, and then back around and down 5th Ave, while spreading the message of Chanukah to all the thousands of people in Manhattan there to celebrate the new year. A parade of light.

After the parade the Tanks, loaded with Menorah’s and Chanukah guides, fanned out across the midtown area around Grand Central Terminal and nearby Times Square where the message of Chanukah had reached thousands upon thousands of people, Menorahs and Guides were flying out “Un A Shiur”.

A special thanks goes to the people at the Mitzvah Tank Office who arranged the Police [Highway Division] escort as well as parking for the tanks, and to the Lubavitch Youth Organization.

More Pictures in the Extended Article!

Guinness World Records Recognizes Menorah As Largest

The now official “Worlds Largest Menorah” was recognized this year by the Guinness World Records as the official Worlds Largest Menorah standing at 32 feet tall and 26 feet wide. The Menorah which is lit every night of Chanukah at Grand Army Plaza on 59th and 5th in Manhattan since the late 1970’s, had the people from the book of records come to the Menorah and measure it and present the certificate to the son of the Menorah’s designer Yaakov Agam and to the Lubavitch Youth Organization.

This Menorah sat in model size on the Rebbes desk before being approved of by the Rebbe and only then was it built to its present dimensions.

More pictures in the Extended Article.

Over 1000 Boys and Girls at 770 Rally

Over 1000 Boys and Girls showed up the Chanukah Rally in 770. Rabbi Shimon Hecht MC’ed the event that was arranged by R. Shimi Weinbaum of the international Tzivos Hashem. The children recited the 12 Pesukim, Davened Mincha, enjoyed donuts and drinks, watched a play about the Chashmonaim and a video of the Rebbe speaking about Chanukah. The rally concluded with R. Moshe Teleshevsky lit the candles and sang ‘Haneiros Halalu’ with the children.

More Pictures in the Extended Article!

Senator Schumer at Chabad Of Park Slopes Menorah

40 minutes before Shabbos started the Menorah Lighting that takes place in Grand Army Plaza right in front of the Brooklyn Public Library and is arranged by Chabad of Park Slope’s R. Shimon Hecht, was graced with the sudden arrival of Senator Charles [Chuck] Schumer (D-NY). Although the crowd was small the senator came out and made the Blessings of the Menorah then blessed the crowed. The senator, who lives in park slope and his house overlooks Grand Army Plaza, had his daughter come down to be with him at the Menorah Lighting.

More pictures in the Extended Article!

Avraham Fried unites crowd with Yiddishkeit

Kansas City Jewish Chronicle

Some dancing, most clapping, the crowd enjoyed a two-hour cross-section of hits from Fried’s 23 albums, plus a number of surprises tailored to the Kansas City audience.

Fried’s legendary, 25-year career has taken him from Crown Heights to Australia, and from the Kremlin to Carnegie Hall. The Kansas appearance of a man whose concerts have drawn over 100,000 at a time in Jerusalem may have been facilitated by his local ties – Rabbis Ben Zion and Chonie Friedman are his brother and nephew, respectively. But then, there is hardly a place in the Jewish world where this peripatetic songbird has not flown.

Fried’s popularity was built on the quality of his voice – a high, clear, ringing tenor. But his longevity as a top performer reflects his ability to entertain multi-age audiences with dancing and stories, with prayer and shtick, and with a warm awareness of his audience as fellow Jews.

St. Augustine lights public menorah in Plaza

St Augustine Record
Rabbi Nachum Kurinski addresses the crowd Thursday during the lighting of the menorah at the Plaza de la Constitucion.

About 200 people came to the Plaza de la Constitucion on Thursday night to observe the fifth night of Hanukkah by watching the lighting of menorah candles.

Rabbi Nochum Kurinski, a leader of the Chabad @ the Beaches in Ponte Vedra Beach, said, “This is the newest menorah for the oldest city in America.”

The large aluminum menorah was made by Raymond Zrihen of Jacksonville.

“I commissioned it, but he wouldn’t take any money,” Kurinski said.

Kalman Rothman, of Brooklyn, N.Y., who is Rabbi Kurinski’s father-in-law, said a menorah candle is being lit every night in different Florida cities.

Ceremony shows unity against menorah vandals

Poughkeepsie Journal

A new menorah was raised and dedicated Wednesday by local religious leaders, four days after a menorah was vandalized and destroyed at the same site.

Rabbi Yacov Borenstein, who erected the original menorah in New Windsor, said it was important to replace the damaged religious symbol to make a statement.

“We want to show it doesn’t break our spirits,” said Borenstein, of Chabad Lubavitch of the Mid-Hudson Valley.

He was joined by fellow religious leaders and community activists who said they wanted to show solidarity with the local Jewish community.

New Chabad center is finally completed

Cleveland Jewish News

The Waxman Chabad Center in Beachwood finally opened last Wednesday, Dec. 21, completing construction project four years in the making.

Workers demolished the old Chabad House fronting Green Road on Thursday, revealing the gabled façade of the new $3.4 million structure that is the final piece of the Green Road Jewish campus.

The front entry of the concrete block building is meant to resemble 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn, worldwide headquarters of Chabad-Lubavitch. Inside, the 18,000- square-foot center has a sanctuary for worship as well as programming and office space.

Juveniles charged with hate crimes

The Jewish Advocate

Three juveniles were arrested last week by Swampscott police, ending a two-month search for the perpetrators behind two anti-Semitic incidents at the Lubavitch synagogue of the North Shore. The youths were arraigned at the Lynn Juvenile Court on Dec. 19 and 20 for allegedly committing a series of hate crimes against the synagogue.

The first incident occurred a few days before Rosh Hashanah, when vandals entered the building through an unlocked door and scrawled nti-Semitic graffiti on the walls of the synagogue. Two weeks later, a van belonging to synagogue was torched in its parking lot.he 14-year-olds were charged with hate crimes and will be tried for the destruction of property in excess of $5,000. The youths were not part of ny official anti-Semitic or neo-Nazi group, according to the Office for the District Attorney for the Essex County District.

More fighting to do

NY Daily News Ideas & Opinions – Errol Louis

Even as Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and the NYPD take a well-deserved bow for driving crime in New York City to record lows this year, upward spikes of shootings and violent crime in some inner-city neighborhoods show there’s more work to be done.

In Brooklyn’s 71st Precinct, which covers Crown Heights, murders jumped to 21, up from nine last year, the largest increase in the city. Murders also went up in Bedford-Stuyvesant and in Fordham/University Heights, the Bronx.

A Hanukkah hope: Defeat the darkness Aboard the USS Ford

The Seattle Times
Navy operations Spc. Eric Sanders, left, watches Rabbis Elazar Bogomilsky, right, and Eli Estrin give a blessing after lighting an electric menorah aboard the USS Ford on Thursday at Naval Station Everett on the fifth night of Hanukkah. Sanders was instrumental in getting the menorah on board ship.

The USS Ford, a guided-missile frigate, may be a high-tech “total warfare system,” but for the past few days, it has been host to a symbol more than 2,000 years old: a menorah.

The 9-foot electric menorah stands on the deck of the ship at Naval Station Everett, being lit each night during the Hanukkah holiday, from Dec. 25 through Jan. 1.

Large, public menorah lightings are nothing new to Chabad Lubavitch of the Pacific Northwest. The Jewish outreach organization sponsors humanitarian, educational and social activities and is part of Chabad centers worldwide.

Compromise reached over Ft. Collins menorah

Denver Post

A down-to-the-wire compromise has prevented a legal battle between the city of Fort Collins and an Orthodox Jewish congregation over the public display of a Hanukkah menorah.

The Chabad Jewish Center of Northern Colorado wanted to display the menorah on city property in Old Town Square, but city administrators denied the request, despite a precedent set by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1989 that likely would allow the display.

The compromise highlights the work of a newcomer rabbi and a mayor wishing to promote Fort Collins as a city that embraces diversity. But it also means that the menorah will not be allowed to remain on city property throughout the eight-day Hanukkah celebration, which began Sunday.

Chabad center lights up Hanukkah

Sentinel
Rabbi Eliezer Zaklikovsky (l) and Monroe Councilman Irwin Nalitt light a lamp during the Hanukkah celebration and menorah lighting Monday night at the Chabad Jewish Center of Monroe. At left, former Monroe police officer John Schiavione plays taps in honor of the soldiers killed in Iraq. The ceremony was part of the celebration at the center.

This year’s community Hanukkah event connected, honored and celebrated 2,000 years of history.

The traditional menorah lighting at the Chabad Jewish Center of Monroe followed a memorial service for the soldiers from New Jersey that were killed in combat in Iraq.

Rabbi Eliezer Zaklikovsky, who runs the Chabad center, said the men and women of the U.S. Armed Forces are fighting for the triumph of freedom over oppression, just as the Maccabean soldiers did in their victorious battle, which the holiday commemorates.

First Rockland Hanukkah parade

The Journal News

CLICK HERE for a Newscast of this event!

More than 55 cars bedecked with large, handmade menorahs departed from Langeris Drive last night for the first-ever Hanukkah parade in Rockland County.

The procession was beginning a trip through Monsey, Viola and New Hempstead before heading south on the Palisades Interstate Parkway, and continuing on Route 303 in Orangeburg and Tappan. It ended at Closter Borough Hall in Closter, N.J., with a public menorah lighting.

“We’re going out to celebrate the idea of good prevailing over evil — of Hanukkah,” Levi Fuss, outreach coordinator at Yeshiva Menachem Mendel Lubavitch in Monsey, said. “We want to be able to invite everybody together in this happy celebration.”