Sanzer Rebbe Visits Sholom Rubashkin in Prison

The Sanzer Rebbe exits his vehicle at the entrance to the penitentiary.

The Sanzer Rebbe is in the midst of a two-week visit to the United States. On Tuesday, he visited with Sholom Rubashkin in prison, along with other Jewish prisoners in the facility. He was there for four hours.

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Gaboim’s New Lawsuit Challenges Rebbe’s Directives

In 1990, the Rebbe instructed that the corporate documents for all three central Lubavitch institutions: Aguch, Merkos and Machne Yisroel be reviewed. The Rebbe also instructed that among some fundamental changes to be implemented, the membership of Aguch be limited to its 20 directors. Yet, as the Gabo’im file another lawsuit to delay their pending eviction from 770, they reject the Rebbe’s wishes by listing several members of Anash as members of Aguch. Further adding insult to injury, a few of these people are not even aware that they are plaintiffs to this lawsuit!

Auction Honors Jewish Community of Upper East Side

Chanie Krasnianski, second from left, co-directs Chabad of the Upper East Side, which held its annual auction and fundraiser earlier this month.

Almost 20 years ago, Rabbi Ben-Tzion and Chanie Krasnianski moved to New York City’s Upper East Side to embark on a major undertaking: the establishment of a Chabad-Lubavitch center to reinvigorate one of the most historically-Jewish neighborhoods of Manhattan. They started out small, but today, seven years into its current 17,000-square-foot educational complex, the Schneerson Center for Jewish Life continues to grow, enhancing the lives of many in the process.

Chabad Opposes Stamp Commemorating Rebbe

Jerusalem Post

Israeli stamp released in 2006 depicting Lubavitch World Headquarters.

The international Chabad-Lubavitch movement opposed the issue of an Israeli postage stamp to memorialize the last Lubavitcher rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, out of concern that licking the back of it would be “disrespectful.”

Seclusive Community of Neo-Nazis in Brooklyn

Daily Mail

Photographer Adam Krause captured a rare view of neo-Nazis in the Greenpoint neighbourhood of Brooklyn

It is at once a deeply-rooted Polish neighbourhood with industrial roots where immigrants still speak in their native tongue on the streets. At the same time, Brooklyn’s Greenpoint neighbourhood is a fast-gentrifying area of New York full of young families and working professionals who wish to live close to Manhattan.

Sukkah to Be Constructed from Mega Blocks in Miami

A miniature model of what the big sukkah will look like.

Two South Florida women are hoping to create unity between the many diverse cultures inhabiting their local area by having community organizations partner in the construction of a succah that will be classified by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s largest succah made entirely out of Mega Bloks.

Info to Be Menachem Avel Rabbi Shmuel Lew

Rabbi Shmuel Lew is sitting Shiva after the passing of his brother, R’ Yitzchock Yosef, OBM at 1566 Carroll St. [between Troy and Schenectady Ave.] from Friday until Monday morning. Please refrain from coming between 1:00pm and 4:00pm and no later than 10:00pm.

Shachris: 8:00
Mincha: Friday – 1:00, Sunday – 5:30
Maariv: Bizmanoh

Please send memories and condolences to: nichumforlew@gmail.com

Hamakom Yenachem Eschem Besoch She’ar Aveilei Tzion VeYerushalayim

Jewish Film Festival Engages Female-Only Audiences

Miriam Bogen, left, played by Rivka Siegel, adjusts to life in a Catskills summer camp in Robin Garbose’s “The Heart That Sings.”

One of the most-widely attended Jewish film festivals in the United States shined a spotlight on the lives of religious women this week, treating all-female audiences to screenings of a uniquely feminine work of art and a chance to get to know the film’s director.

From Crown Heights to the Rocky Mountains of Utah

City Weekly

Rabbi Mendel Wilmovsky checks the greens for non-kosher insects.

When Rabbi Mendel Wilmovsky was growing up in Crown Heights, Brooklyn—worldwide home of Chabad Lubavitch, a Chasidic movement of Orthodox Judaism—he never imagined working in Utah, the state that’s the worldwide home of another religious movement, and at a ski resort, no less. Nevertheless, since December, Wilmovsky and Rabbi Yosef Kirszenberg have been overseeing Bistro at Canyons in Park City, the first kosher restaurant in America housed at a ski resort.