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9 Sholom Zochors This Week!

Mordy and Sammy Greenstein
591 Montgomery St [between Brooklyn and Kingston Ave]

Yossi and Rivky (nee Holtzberg) Shain
817 Montgomery St [between Albany and Troy Ave]

Sholom and Avigayil Raskin
1355 President St [between Brooklyn and Kingston Ave]

Shaya and Raizy Schwartz
669 Crown St [between Troy and Schenectady Ave]

Mendy and Rikkel (nee Loebenstein) Gopin
444 Crown St [between Kingston and Brooklyn Ave]

Yissi and Esther (nee Neistein) Freeman
1340 Carroll St [between Kingston and Brooklyn Ave]

Yitzi and Chana Leba (nee Toron) Morris
IYH at 779 Montgomery Street [between Albany and Troy]

Yitzchok and Chana Rivka (nee Lewis) Wiener
705 Empire Avenue (corner Virginia Avenue) , Far Rockaway

Merrick and Shira Lackner (Los Angeles, CA)


Video: Mikvah Construction Gains Traction

Construction of the Mei Chaya Mushka Womans Mikvah, on Lefferts and Troy, started gaining traction with construction workers hard at work today, putting in the support beams, for what will become the foundation of the new Mikvah.

Shlichus: Was it the Vision of the Alter Rebbe?

Tonight we mark the yartzheit of the first Chabad Rebbe, the Alter Rebbe.

In this unique gathering of Ontario-based shluchim, the question is brought to the table as to what was revolutionary about the leadership of the Alter Rebbe? Is the shlichus that people engage in today really in line with the goals of the founder of Chabad?

4 Months Later: A Behind the Scenes Look at the Rosenberg Beis Din, and the Quest for a 3rd Rov

It has been four months since the election of Rabbi Shaya Braun, yet the situation seems to be as unresolved as ever. Many rumors are swirling around the neighborhood as to the cause for delay as the Rosenberg Beis Din continues its deliberations. The following article is an in depth insight into the inner workings of the Beis Din and is a result of weeks of investigative reporting, including interviews with some of the key players as well as a trove of documents which are being published here for the first time.

University of Chicago Jewish Center Relocates to Larger Quarters

by Reuvena Leah Grodnitzky – Chabad.edu

Rabbi Yossi Brackman, center, and students enjoy a meal at the Chabad-Lubavitch Jewish Center at the University of Chicago and Hyde Park.

For the students who frequent the Chabad-Lubavitch Jewish Center at the University of Chicago and Hyde Park, no longer will cramped Shabbat meals and Torah classes in close quarters be the norm. When they return to campus for the beginning of the spring semester next month, they’ll find that all of the center’s programming will take place from a new headquarters in the heart of the urban campus.