RIVAL AMBULANCE CLASH

NY Post

A “hot-headed” volunteer ambulance driver was detained by cops last night after refusing to yield to a city ambulance crew that had arrived first at the Lower East Side home of an Alzheimer’s patient, police said.

The driver, from the Jewish volunteer corps Hatzolah, was hauled off by cops. But he was later sprung after about two dozen supporters, as well as Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, rushed to the Pitt Street station house.

“The outcome was totally in our favor,” a man who identified himself as the president of Hatzolah said as he jumped into his car.

Silver said he had rushed to the precinct simply to “help mediate the dispute.”

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Musician turns to a different kind of horn

Southfield man hopes to be among five finalists competing on the Jewish shofar in New York City.

Rick May practices blowing his shofar. The Jewish ceremonial horn was bought by his daughter Amanda Garnice during a visit to Israel.

SOUTHFIELD — As a longtime musician, Rick May knows he’s not the best trumpet player around, but he’s hoping to become the nation’s best blower of the shofar — a wind instrument that will be heard by Jews around the world in synagogues during their upcoming high holidays.

May, 61, recently entered a contest in search of the best shofar blower in America. Sponsored by the National Jewish Outreach Program in New York, the contest will bring five finalists to New York in September for the first “Great Shofar Blast Off” and send the winner to Israel.

An ancient tradition in Jewish history, the shofar is a ram’s horn that is blown 100 times in synagogues on Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year, which this year is Oct. 3. The shofar is also blown 10 days later at the end of Yom Kippur, the Jewish Day of Atonement.

Chabad Shluchim Remain In The Storm

Lubavitch.com

As Hurricane Katrina made landfall pounding New Orleans with dangerous 145 mph winds and blinding rains, not everyone managed to get out in time.

Chabad-Lubavitch representatives knew there’d be calls from those who were stuck, and for that reason, they stayed put. Lubavitch.com spoke with Rabbi Yosef Nemes, one of the Chabad representatives to New Orleans earlier today, who hunkered down in his home with people who had contacted him for assistance. “They were evacuated from local hotels and turned to us,” he said, observing that water was beginning to leak into his home as he was speaking.

While they wait for the hurricane to recede, locals can only guess at the damage they will find when the last winds die down and the rains stop. Forecasters predict between 15-20 feet of water flooding, and are calling this a “once-in-a-lifetime” hurricane for the Gulf Coast. “It’ll be a long time recovering” from the damage, said Rabbi Nemes.

Anti-Semitic Elements Out of Control: Statement by Rabbi Y. Krinsky

Lubavitch.com

In response to yesterday’s vicious attack on two yeshiva students, Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, Chairman of Lubavitch Educational and Social Services Divisions, issued a statement urging a swift and unequivocal response by the Ukrainian government.

Yesterday’s violent attack on two yeshiva students in Kiev, which leaves one fighting for his life, raises serious concerns about a climate that has allowed anti-Semitic elements to spiral out of control.

The vicious attack demands a swift and unequivocal response by Ukrainian authorities. I urge law enforcement agents to locate this evil at its root, and do everything in its power to eradicate it.

It is apparent that tolerance of any expression of anti-Semitism ultimately emboldens its proponents to act in criminal and insane ways such as was unleashed yesterday on innocent yeshiva students.

Chabad-Lubavitch has a significant number of representatives, women, men and children, who, with no small measure of sacrifice, have dedicated themselves to rebuilding Jewish life and Jewish communities in Ukraine. I am sanguine that the Ukrainian government will continue to extend its support and protection to help facilitate this remarkable revival.

Chabad-Lubavitch and the larger Jewish community anticipate that Ukrainian authorities will prosecute this crime under the full measure of the law, and take all action to ensure the safety of its Jewish population.

Now things get interesting

JPost

No one should be indifferent to human suffering, and we have certainly been exposed to an overdose of suffering and tragedy over the past two weeks. As this phase of the disengagement draws to a close, we need to go beyond empathizing with its victims.

The big question – for supporters and opponents alike – is what happens next? Will Gaza become a base for Islamic terrorism, as Binyamin Netanyahu would have us believe? Will disengagement be followed by further withdrawals, as the settlers fear? Will Labor bolt the coalition and trigger new elections, as both radical Right and Left hope?

Rabbi Meir Kahane, Vindicated

Israel Insider

No matter what you think of him, whether you hate him or love him, the name Meir Kahane is a name that will forever be engrained in the history of the Jewish people. But just this past week, fifteen years after his murder, he was vindicated on the world stage via American national television.

Rabbi Kahane, born in Brooklyn in 1932, was an author, political activist and a member of the Israeli Knesset. When concluding a speech in Manhattan, Rabbi Kahane was assassinated by El-Sayyid Nosair, an Egyptian and member of an Arab terrorist cell operating in New York in 1990. Nosair was one of Sheikh Omar Abd El-Rahman’s men, who would later be convicted for the 1993 World Trade Center bombing; today, he is serving life in prison. The gun that was used to kill Rabbi Kahane was supplied to Nosair by Wadih El-Hage, who is a member of Al-Qaeda convicted of conspiracy to kill American citizens in the 1998 US embassy bombings.

Cemetery moves Gaza graves to Jerusalem

San Jose Mercury News

A Gaza settler, his coffin draped in prayer shawls and an orange flag representing the settlers’ protest, was borne on shoulders along a winding path in Jerusalem’s ancient Mount of Olives cemetery, then buried Monday for a second time.

The ceremony was repeated five times in the hillside cemetery that overlooks Judaism’s holiest site, as graves from the Jewish cemetery in the Gaza Strip were relocated to Israel as part of the country’s pullout from the coastal territory.

Vandals burn swastikas into jewish family’s yard

AP

Vandals burned swastikas and obscenities into the lawn of a suburban Jewish family Sunday, splattering windows with eggs and defecating on the front porch of their two-story home.

Two swastikas were spray-painted in the road in front of Ginger Ragans’ two-story home and a third was etched onto her lawn, along with the word “Fascist” and an obscenity scrawled in the grass. Her trees were draped with toilet paper and someone had urinated and defecated on the family’s porch and discarded the soiled toilet paper in nearby bushes.

15 Jewish Families in Hebron Slated for Expulsion

Israel National News

Fifteen Jewish families living in the Hebron market in the town’s Jewish quarter are slated for expulsion by the IDF.

A source in the Defense Ministry said the planned expulsion is not connected to the recently completed expulsion of 10,000 Jews from their homes in 25 towns in Gaza and northern Samaria.

He said the plan to expel the families was the result of a “decision” made by Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz.

Bochur critically hurt in Ukraine skinhead attack

Haaretz

A group of ten skinheads attacked two yeshiva students in Kiev, Ukraine on Sunday, critically wounding one of them and lightly hurting the other, Israel Radio reported Monday.

Rabbi Yaakov Zilberman, head of Kiev’s Jewish community, said the skinheads approached the two in an underground tunnel in the city center and attacked them with bottles, rods and knives.

The critically wounded student, 28, underwent surgery late Sunday.

Zilberman said that Jewish residents of Kiev continuously encounter acts of anti-Semitism. He said that they have appealed to the municipality with a request to protect the city’s Jewish community.

Baruch Dayan Emes – R. Shmuel Shuchat OBM

With great sorrow we inform you of the very untimely passing of R. Shmuel Shuchat of Crown Heights after a long illness. R. Shmuel A”H who was only 46-years-old was known for his great warmth, friendliness, chazanus, good cheer and familiar face at Kehos.

The Levaya will take place on Monday afternoon, 1:00pm at Shomrei Hadas & passing by 770 at approx: 1:30pm.

R. Shmuel leaves behind his wife, Rachel, his children Mrs. Roni Cozacaru of Montreal, Mrs. Sari Faescher of Israel, Yitzy Shuchat of Montreal, Zvi, Rivka and Lifshy. He also leaves behind his father R. Moshe Shuchat, brothers R. Mendel Shuchat of Montreal, R. Leibel Shuchat of Caracas, Venezuela, R. Velvel of Flatbush, R. Zalmen Tzvi and R. Mordechai Yehudah of Crown Heights, and sisters Chaya Devorah Shuchat and Mrs. Yocheved Ben-Oni.

We wish the family Hamokom Yenachem eschem Besoch Shaar Avaylay Tzion VeYerushalayim. Vehukeetzu Veranenu Shochnay Ufur vehu besochom!

BEWARE OF CROWN HEIGHTS GAS STATION

A number of Crown Heights residents have contacted Shomrim with regard to the MOBIL gas station on Empire Blvd. & New York Ave. in Crown Heights.

The readers make the claim that within days of filling up and paying for the gas with their credit card, unauthorized charges, in the thousands of dollars began posting to their account.

One person a member of Shomrim’s wife called in today with another report.

We therefore urge you to pay with cash only, if you fill up at that station.

If you have been a victim make sure you call your credit card immediately.

if you hear of any such incidents don’t hesitate to call Shomrim at (718) 774-3333 who are there to help 24/7

The New York Times retreats

Richard Baehr – The American Thinker

The New York Times editorial page has been in retreat mode this week. It began with the serious savaging by many informed critics of Paul Krugman’s column from last Friday, and a partial but incomplete surrender by Krugman on Monday. Now add its Israel coverage.

Marty Peretz of the New Republic laced into (registration required) the Times for its churlish coverage of Israel’s disengagment from Gaza. The Times is a paper, which despite its wide Jewish readership, and base in New York, had little visible sympathy for and little coverage of the Jews massacred in the Holocaust, or for Israel at its formation. It has never been warm to Zionism or Israel throughout modern Israel’s history . The paper has been run by the Sulzberger family, which has been running from its roots for a century, never more so than under the reign of the current occupier of the Times’ throne, Pinch Sulzberger.

Remembering the Holocaust in Romania

By: Jewish Architectural Heritage Foundation

On Sunday, September 11, 2005, the Jewish Architectural Heritage Foundation (JAHF) and AMHN, its Romanian sister organization, will dedicate Romania’s first fully functional Holocaust memorial museum. A formal ceremony will be held on the grounds of the museum in Simleu Silvaniei, Romania, at 12:00 PM local time. Supporters include the Romanian government, the Honorable Warren L. Miller, Chairman, U.S. Commission for Preservation of America’s Heritage Abroad, prominent Holocaust survivors such as Elie Wiesel and Oliver Lustig, American Jewish leaders Rabbis Andrew Baker and Shea Hecht, and many others.

The Northern Transylvania Holocaust Memorial Museum will highlight the Jewish life of the region before the Holocaust and the sequence of events that led up to the darkest period in its history, focusing on regional Romanian and Hungarian history at the time. A fully functioning synagogue, which will be used during the upcoming dedication ceremony, is also included. Other features include video presentations, survivor testimonials and Jewish artifacts recently found at the site.

Fire Department Gets Jewish Chaplain

Forward

The Rockville Volunteer Fire Department is in the center of a heavily Jewish area of Maryland, but it was only last month that the 85-year-old fire department got its first Jewish chaplain.

At their monthly meeting in July, the 225 members voted to accept a young Chabad-Lubavitch rabbi, Chesky Tenenbaum, as a chaplain. Tenenbaum recently moved to Maryland from Brooklyn’s Crown Heights to become the assistant rabbi at the Chabad of Upper Montgomery County.

Jewish Boy dies after falling from tree in camp

Times Herald-Record

A 13-year-old Brooklyn boy tumbled 50 feet to his death at a Highland summer camp after the tree limb he had climbed broke, state police said yesterday.

Shalom Rabinowitz was climbing a pine tree behind his bunkhouse with a friend about 4 p.m. Monday when the branch he was on broke. Rabinowitz dropped 50 feet, striking several branches as he fell, police said.
Site of the camp.

Jewish values mesh with Scout ideals

JTA
Rabbi Shmuly Gutnick, left, of Brooklyn, drills a rams horn to make it into a Shofar as Noah Magen, of Anchorage, holds it still, at a Tzivos Hashem program during the Boy Scout Jamboree on July 31 in Bowling Green, Va.

When Boy Scout troop 711 from Alaska lost four of its leaders in a freak electrical accident on the first day of the recent National Scout Jamboree here, the one Jewish Scout in the Alaska contingent was left in a quandary.
On the Sunday morning of the gathering, when jamboree activities were suspended for a few hours, all of Noah Magen’s troop mates were headed to religious services for their respective faiths. But what does a Jewish Scout do on Sunday?