New Engagement!

New Engagement!

Shmuel Pinson (Brunoy, France) and Shterna Cohen (Montreal, Canada)

L’Chaim tonight, Thursday at Empire Shteibel
489 Empire Blvd [between Brooklyn and New York Ave]

Mazal Tov's View More

Rubashkin Aquittal: Behind The Smoke And Mirrors

By Debbie Maimon – Published in the Yated Ne’eman

Former Agriprocessors executive Sholom Rubashkin, right, hugs defense attorney Mark Weinhardt after being acquitted of all 67 counts of child labor violations at the Postville slaughterhouse at the Black Hawk County Courthouse Monday, June 7, 2010, in Waterloo, Iowa.

The dramatic vindication of Sholom Rubashkin in the state child-labor trial last week has wreaked havoc with the public’s view of him. Given his media-battered reputation, no one expected him to be acquitted of the state charges. Bias against him, especially in Iowa, was rampant. Many described their shocked reaction to the verdict.

The government had promised they had a solid case and there was no reason to doubt it.

The public had long been convinced that Sholom Mordechai presided over a crime-ridden plant where, in addition to minors being forced to work with dangerous chemicals and machinery, workers were subjected to forced labor and other outrages.

Tanya Printed in Tysons Corner, VA

This Monday Night Chabad Tysons Jewish Center celebrated Gimmel Tammuz with a first time printing of the Tanya in Tysons corner VA. Rabbi Levi Deitsch addressed the crowd explaining the meaning of the Tanya and the significance and importance of its being printed in Tysons Corner for the first time.

Op-Ed: Friedman and Paltiel: Chassidishe Openness or the Thought Police?

By Anonymous

A great person once told me that whenever she enters a room, the first thing she notices is the racial makeup of the people in the room. As an observer at last night’s question and answer session with Rabbis Manis Friedman and Yossi Paltiel, I was struck by how un-diverse the audience was. The room was brimming with an almost entirely young moderate- to very-chassidish crowd or those with the hergesh to wear white shirts on Gimmel Tammuz, if you will. Mostly older 770 bochurim and yungerleit.

What was more glaring was who were not there – the so-called single working class and the young Lubavitch college students. It is ironic that a program put on by the newly founded Besht Center did not attract an audience from their target group at one of its largest events of the year. But it is unsurprising considering how predictably unfulfilling these events tend to be. I only came down there because I felt I must do something on Gimmel Tammuz and because my friend paid my five-dollar admission fee.

New Couple to Direct Mumbai Chabad House

By Tamar Runyan for Chabad.org

Rabbi Chanoch Gechman (L) and Rabbi Nachman Holtzberg (R) at Kinus Hashluchim this past year.

Rabbi Chanoch and Leiky Gechman, an Israeli couple with connections to the Jewish community of Mumbai, India, will soon be heading to the South Asian business capital as its first permanent Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries since the terrorist attacks of November 2008.

Paltiel, Friedman Discuss Contemporary Issues for Singles

CROWN HEIGHTS — Over 250 Bochurim got together last night for a unique ‘no holds barred’ style forum. Various topics were discussed with two prolific Mashpiim and public speakers, Rabbi Yossi Paltiel and Rabbi Manis Friedman. Among the array of topics discussed, were dating to university and business. The event was organized by the new Besht center.

Snack Sabbath Flap at Citi Field

NY Post

That’s so not kosher.

A kosher-food company is suing the Mets, claiming that it has lost a half-million dollars in profits because the team has forbidden its stands to sell snacks at Citi Field on Friday nights and Saturday afternoons.

Kosher Grill does brisk business peddling hot dogs, sausages, knishes, hamburgers, beer and other food from three portable stands around the stadium.

The owner, Kosher Sports Inc., got approval from kosher-certifying authorities to sling wieners on the Sabbath and even customized its stands so it could sell its pastrami hot dogs and other wares on Friday nights and Saturdays, the vendor said.

Op-Ed: The Never-Ending Lynching of Sholom Rubashkin

by Rabbi Shmuley Boteach

So much for Christian charity.

Sister Mary McCauley, the former pastoral administrator at St. Bridget’s Catholic Church in Postville, Iowa, who provided support for families affected by the Agriprocessors raid, publicly condemned the complete acquittal of Sholom Mordechai Rubashkin on charges of child labor violations as a tragedy. “I was heartsick,” she declared. “I had to just sit and deal with the heartbreak I was feeling.”

Never mind that a jury deliberated only 12 hours to reach a verdict exonerating Rubashkin on all 67 counts. Never mind that Rubashkin, a father of ten with a long of history of charitable acts feeding the hungry and the poor, has been so demonized in the press that it was practically impossible for him to receive a fair trial, and still he was found innocent. The good sister is convinced that the man should have gone down. Her heart tells her so. The jury be damned.