Kamhin/Shammah Family Dedicates Torah in Rostov

Rabbi Chaim and Kaila Danzinger, Shuchim to Rostov-on-don, Russia welcomed guests from all over their city and around the world to a historic Siyum and Hachnosas Sefer Torah on the Rebbe RaSHaB’s Yartzeit.

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10 Years to the Murder of Shalhevet Pass

Arutz 7

Today, Wednesday marks the tenth anniversary of the murder of Shalhevet Pass by Arab terrorists in Hevron, and in an interview with Hevron activist David Wilder, Shalhevet’s father, Yitzchak Pass, says that although continuing to live just meters from where his baby was killed, he chose to deal with the pain of the tragedy “by living where it happened, to show that it won’t break us; to the contrary; it heightens our determination and increases our strength.”

Rav Moshe Feinstein’s Yechidus with the Rebbe

Rav Moshe Feinstein (L) with Rabbi Avram Levine.

Recently the Jewish community commemorated the 25th yahrtzeit of Rav Moshe Feinstein, one of—if not the— most prominent poskim of halacha in the 20th century. He died on the day before Purim in 1986 and was buried on Har Hamenuchot in Jerusalem. His funeral was attended by an estimated 300,000 mourners, the largest in Israel in more than a millennium. Many of his students went on to become well-known rabbis in their own right. The following was shared by his grandson, Rabbi Mordechaim Tendler of Spring Valley:

A Wedding Planner for All, Including Those in Need

NY Times City Room Blog

Devorah Benjamin zips up her fatigues — a black hooded sweatshirt with “The Wedding Planner” embroidered in fluorescent pink across the back — and is ready for another day’s battle. Her army stands at the ready: musicians, photographers, florists, hair and makeup artists, and a team of middle-aged mothers who volunteer their nights to cook and donate food.

Did you say the ‘Nasi’ Today? (Yom Beis)

From the Safer Haminhagim: [Every day from Rosh Chodesh Nissan until the twelfth of the month, usually after Shacharis,] one reads the passage [from Bamidbar 7-8:4] that describes the offering brought on that day by a particular Nasi, or tribal prince, for the dedication of the altar of the Mishkan. [In common parlance, each day’s passage itself is often referred to as “the Nasi.”] This daily reading is followed by the prayer which opens with the words yehi ratzon (and which appears in Siddur Torah Or [as well as in Siddur Tehillat HaShem, p. 371]). This prayer is recited even by a Kohen or a Levi [despite its seeming relevance only to tribes other than the Tribe of Levi]. [284]

Gov. Proclaims Alabama’s First Education and Sharing Day

Gov. Robert Bentley hosts Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries in the Alabama state capitol.

For the first time since the United States began observing the day as a lasting testament to the moral and ethical code advanced by the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, Alabama added its name to the growing list of states officially marking Education and Sharing Day.