Sanhedrin, Dateline, the Rav on Kahane, and More
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Hamaspik Central Point
YATED CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENTS HELP WANTED Yungerman/Chavrusa To learn with 9th grade bochur during 1st and/or 2nd seder in Monsey Yeshiva. Unique opportunity. Call for details Amazing Opportunity! 845.558.8604 Emet Outreach, a dynamic Kiruv organization located in Help Wanted Queens, NY, Secretary F/T, quickbooks Seeking F/T Office Staff a plus, detail oriented, Administrative Office Clerk YBH OF PASSAIC SEEKS GENERAL STUDIES HEAD TEACHERS: Self-starter, highly organized, • FIRST GRADE GIRLS Coney Island Ave. office. excellent communication skills. • FIFTH GRADE GIRLS Email resume Computer proficient including [email protected] Microsoft Office with Excel, and G Suite. Graphics and website MIDDLE SCHOOL TEACHERS management knowledge is a plus. • 6th GRADE - LANGUAGE ARTS & HISTORY Hours M-Th 10-6, F 9-1. Hours have Teachers • 6th-8th GRADE - MATH some flexibility. Seeking 6th and 7th Grade English Logistics Coordinator Teachers, all subjects, experienced, Motivated, organized individual Yeshiva in Brooklyn Sept. ‘21. Great with positive energy, excellent EARLY CHILDHOOD HEAD TEACHERS: pay, supportive environment. communication and computer skills to • PRE1A (PM) Call 917.921.7280 coordinate and oversee program and • KINDERGARTEN (PM) Email Resume w/ references & experience event logistics. Excellent multitasking [email protected] skills required. 30-40 hrs a week. (some eve hrs required) OTHER POSITIONS AVAILABLE: Kriah/ Early Literacy Opportunity Please email resume & salary requirements • LEARNING CENTER TEACHER-MIDDLE SCHOOL, GENERAL STUDIES SMALL [email protected] GROUP INSTRUCTION (PM HOURS) Ramapo Cheder Preschool seeking Kriah & Literacy in-classroom support staff. • ECD SECRETARY (AM) and ASSISTANTS or text 718.938.0138 Gain Kriah & Literacy proficiency while assisting experienced Moros. -
Cincinnati Torah הרות
בס"ד • A PROJECT OF THE CINCINNATI COMMUNITY KOLLEL • CINCYKOLLEL.ORG תורה מסינסי Cincinnati Torah Vol. VI, No. XXXVIII Eikev A LESSON FROM A TIMELY HALACHA THE PARASHA RABBI YITZCHOK PREIS RABBI CHAIM HEINEMANN OUR PARASHA INCLUDES THE BIBLICAL MITZVAH human nature and how each of these mitzvahs A common question that comes up during to thank Hashem after eating a satisfying is designed to protect us from a potential hu- bein hazmanim and summer break is meal—the blessings we typically refer to as man failing. whether it is appropriate to remove one’s bentching or Birkat Hamazon. A spiritual hazard looms immediately fol- tallis katan (or tzitzis) while playing sports or The Talmud suggests that, logically, if we lowing a satisfying meal. Prior to eating, while engaging in strenuous activities that make are obligated to bless Hashem after eating, hungry, it easy to sense our dependency on one hot and sweaty. kal vachomer (all the more so), we should be our Provider. But once satisfying that hunger, While it is true that neither Biblical nor expected to recite a bracha before eating. After our attitude can shift. We run the risk of Rabbinic law obligates one to wear a all, someone who is famished is more acutely becoming self-assured, confident in our own tallis katan at all times, it has become the aware of the need for food and more appre- sustenance, and potentially dismissive of the accepted custom that every male wears a ciative that Hashem has made it available to True Source of satiation. Bentching protects tallis katan all day long. -
Epoch of the Messiah by Rabbi Elchonon Wasserman
Epoch of the Messiah As Distributed By S. GOLDMAN - OTZAR HASEFARIM Inc. 33 Canal Street, New York, N.Y.1OOO2 Importers and Publishers of Hebrew Books Copyright 1985 by Rabbi E.S. Wasserman 851 North Kings Rd. Los Angeles, Calif. 90069 Rabbi Elchonon Bunim Wasserman, zt'l A Brief Biographical Sketch Reb Elchonon, zt'l, was born in 1874 in Birz, Lithuania. Circa 1889 his parents moved to Boisk, Latvia, at that time the Rabbinical Seat of Rabbi Cook, olov hasholom. From there he went to Telz where he studied under the illustrious gaonim, Rabbi Eliezer Gordon, zt'l and Rabbi Shimon Shkop, zt'l. In Telz, he was noted for his unusual diligence and profound mind. After many years of intensive study in Telz, he went to Volozin to become a disciple of the great Reb Chaim Brisker who was Rosh yeshivah of Volozin at that time. In 1898, he married the daughter of one of the leading sages of the day, Rabbi Meir Atlas, zt'l, who was then the Rabbi of Salant. Then came a period which impressed itself indelibly on the rest of his life. It began in 1906 when he went to Radin, the home of his master, the world-renowned Chofetz Chaim, zt'l where he studied until 1908 in the Kollel Kodshim. The Chofetz Chaim had founded this select institution for the future leaders of Israel. During the year 1908-1909, Rav Elchonon, together with the gaon Rabbi Yoel Baranchick zt'l started a yeshivah in Amsislav, Russia. In 1910, he accepted a call to become a rosh yeshivah in Brisk, the home of his teacher, Rabbi Chaim, zt'l. -
Mattos Chassidus on the Massei ~ Mattos Chassidus on the Parsha +
LIGHTS OF OUR RIGHTEOUS TZADDIKIM בעזרת ה ' יתבר A Tzaddik, or righteous person , makes everyone else appear righteous before Hashem by advocating for them and finding their merits. Kedushas Levi, Parshas Noach (Bereishis 7:1) MATTOS ~ MASSEI _ CHASSIDUS ON THE PARSHA + Dvar Torah – Mattos Keep Your Word The Torah states (30:3), “If a man takes a vow or swears an oath to G -d to establish a prohibition upon himself, he shall not violate his word; he shall fulfill whatever comes out of his mouth.” In relation to this passuk , the Midrash quotes from Tehillim (144:4), “Our days are like a fleeting shadow.” What is the connection? This can be explained, says Rav Levi Yitzchok, according to a Gemara ( Nedarim 10b), which states, “It is forbidden to say, ‘ Lashem korban , for G-d − an offering.’ Instead a person must say, ‘ Korban Lashem , an offering for G -d.’ Why? Because he may die before he says the word korban , and then he will have said the holy Name in vain.” In this light, we can understand the Midrash. The Torah states that a person makes “a vow to G-d.” This i s the exact language that must be used, mentioning the vow first. Why? Because “our days are like a fleeting shadow,” and there is always the possibility that he may die before he finishes his vow and he will have uttered the Name in vain. n Story The wood chopper had come to Ryczywohl from the nearby village in which he lived, hoping to find some kind of employment. -
Yeshiva Ohr Reuven
REUVEN YOUR WINDOW INTO THE WORLD OF YESHIVA KETANA OHR REUVEN REVIEWVol. 7 Issue #3 September 27, 2019 6:26 pm h"ryz lel` f‘k miavp zyxt UPCOMING EVENTS !dwezne daeh dpy Sunday, September 29, 2019 Erev Rosh Hashana- K-8 No Sessions Monday, September 30, 2019 Rosh Hashana- No Sessions Tuesday, October 1, 2019 Rosh Hashana- No Sessions Wednesday, October 2, 2019 Tzom Gedalia- Dismissal- Grades K- 12:00 pm, P-8 1:00pm Tuesday, October 8, 2019 4th Grade Elya Adler blowing his shofar. Erev Yom Kippur- No Sessions Erev Rosh Mechiras Lulav & Esrog Wednesday, October 9, 2019 Hashana Selichos Dear Yeshivas Ohr Reuven Staff & Parents, Yom Kippur- No Sessions As in past years, the Rosh HaYeshiva Shlita, Friday October 11, 2019 All Parents are has graciously agreed to make himself No Sessions invited Erev Rosh available to help those interested in selecting Sunday October 13, 2019 Hashana to join the their Lulav and Esrog. Erev Sukkos- No Sessions Mesivta’s Father Where: Yeshiva Ketana Ohr Reuven Dining & Son Selichos Room - 257 Grandview Avenue (6:30am), followed Date: Monday, October 7 from 6:30 PM - by Shacharis and 9:30 PM sharp! SPECIAL SHIUR special Erev Rosh Please Note: This will be the only time that the Rosh HaYeshiva is available to help. Please Please see attached Hashanah shmuess in the Main Mesivta respect the Rosh HaYeshiva’s time and come flyer for information on during the specified hours only. the upcoming shiur for Beis Medrash. woman, from Rabbi Bezalel Thank you! Rudinsky, Rosh Hayeshiva Shlita. 259 Grandview Avenue Suffern, NY 10901 From Kindergarten to Kollel and Beyond! 845.362.8362 www.ohrreuven.com Yeshiva Ketana | Mesivta | Beis Medrash | Kollel | Alumni Pre-1A apple picking trip. -
The Lithuanian Jewish Community of Telšiai
The Lithuanian Jewish Community of Telšiai By Philip S. Shapiro1 Introduction This work had its genesis in an initiative of the “Alka” Samogitian Museum, which has undertaken projects to recover for Lithuanians the true history of the Jews who lived side-by-side with their ancestors. Several years ago, the Museum received a copy of the 500-plus-page “yizkor” (memorial) book for the Jewish community of Telšiai,2 which was printed in 1984.3 The yizkor book is a collection of facts and personal memories of those who had lived in Telšiai before or at the beginning of the Second World War. Most of the articles are written in Hebrew or Yiddish, but the Museum was determined to unlock the information that the book contained. Without any external prompting, the Museum embarked upon an ambitious project to create a Lithuanian version of The Telshe Book. As part of that project, the Museum organized this conference to discuss The Telshe Book and the Jewish community of Telšiai. This project is of great importance to Lithuania. Since Jews constituted about half of the population of most towns in provincial Lithuania in the 19th Century, a Lithuanian translation of the book will not only give Lithuanian readers a view of Jewish life in Telšiai but also a better knowledge of the town’s history, which is our common heritage. The first part of this article discusses my grandfather, Dov Ber Shapiro, who was born in 1883 in Kamajai, in the Rokiškis region, and attended the Telshe Yeshiva before emigrating in 1903 to the United States, where he was known as “Benjamin” Shapiro. -
Chassidus on the Chassidus on the Parsha +
LIGHTS OF OUR RIGHTEOUS TZADDIKIM בעזרת ה ' יתבר A Tzaddik, or righteous person , makes everyone else appear righteous before Hashem by advocating for them and finding their merits. Kedushas Levi, Parshas Noach (Bereishis 7:1) BO _ CHASSIDUS ON THE PARSHA + Dvar Torah As the Jewish people were preparing to leave Egypt, Moshe pointed out to them, “This day you are leaving in the month of springtime ( aviv ).” His intention was to show them the kindness of Hashem in that He chose for them a time of temperate weather to set out on their journey. These words, Rav Levi Yitzchok comments, also have a deeper meaning. The Zohar explains that the different ways words are arranged according to the aleph -bais symbolize the different aspects of divine providence. A series of words sometimes appears in alphabetical order, the first starting with an aleph , the second with a bais , and so forth. This arrangement symbolizes divine mercy. Sometimes, a series will appear in reverse alphabetical order, called tashrak , the first starting with a tav , the second with a shin , and so forth. This symbolizes strict justice. There is a dispute in the Gemora (Rosh HaShana 10b) regarding when the future Redemption will take place. One opinion is that it will take place in Nissan . The other is that it will take place in Tishrei . According to the Zohar , we can say that the question is whether the Jewish people will be redeemed because they will have earned it or whether the Redemption will be une arned, an act of divine mercy. -
Rabbi Yosef Dov Soloveichik Rabbi Yechezkel Freundlich
Great Jewish Books Course Rabbi Yosef Dov Soloveichik Rabbi Yechezkel Freundlich “Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik (1903-1993) was not only one of the outstanding Talmudists of the twentieth century but also one of its most creative and seminal Jewish thinkers. His stature was such that he was widely known simply as “the Rav” – The Rabbi par excellence. Drawing from a vast reservoir of Jewish and general knowledge, Rabbi Soloveitchik brought Jewish thought and law to bear on the interpretation and assessment of the modern experience. On the one hand, he built bridges between Judaism and the modern world; yet, at the same time, he vigorously upheld the integrity and autonomy of the Jew’s faith commitment.” Dr. David Shatz, Professor of Philosophy, Yeshiva University, Introduction to Lonely Man of Faith Biographical sketch A. Royal Torah Heritage a. born 1903, in Pruzhany (then Russia, next Poland, now Belarus). b. He came from a Rabbinic dynasty dating back some 200 years: His paternal grandfather was Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik, and his great-grandfather and namesake was Rabbi Yosef Dov Soloveitchik, the Beis HaLevi. His great-great- grandfather was Rabbi Naftali Zvi Yehuda Berlin (The Netziv), and his great- great-great-great grandfather was Rabbi Chaim Volozhin. On his maternal line, he was a grandson of Rabbi Eliyahu Feinstein and his wife Guta Feinstein, née Davidovitch, who, in turn, was a descendant of a long line of Kapulyan rabbis, and of the Tosafot Yom Tov, the Shelah, the Maharshal, and Rashi. c. His father, Rabbi Moshe Soloveichik preceded him as head of the RIETS rabbinical school at Yeshiva University. -
Contemporary Gender Thought in Islam and Judaism: the Position of Women According to Ayatollah Morteza Mutahhari and Rabbi Joseph Dov Soloveitchik
Contemporary Gender Thought in Islam and Judaism: The Position of Women According to Ayatollah Morteza Mutahhari and Rabbi Joseph Dov Soloveitchik Khadijeh Zolghadr A Thesis Presented to the Department of Religion Concordia University Montreal, Quebec, Canada In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy (Religion) June 2013 Zolghadr ii Zolghadr iii Abstract In a basic outlook shared by Islam and Judaism, addressed in this study, man is born as man and woman as woman, so that manhood and womanhood are natural states entailing different personalities, rights, and responsibilities. In other words, in both the Islamic and Jewish worldviews, man and woman are created differently in order to accomplish different tasks, which are finally aimed together at the single objective of obeying and encountering God. This basic conception is faithfully reflected in the numerous detailed regulations of these two law-centered traditions. A study of gender issues in Islam and Judaism is thus bound to take into account how the status of the genders is defined in the tradition; how the different positions prescribed for men and women are thought to serve humanity in its journey to God; and whether those positions entail superiority and inferiority. In light of this outlook the present study offers a critical appreciation of the views on gender of two prominent clerical authorities, one each from the Muslim and Jewish traditions: Ayatollah Morteza Mutahhari (1920-1979 CE) and Rabbi Joseph Dov Soloveitchik (1903-1993 CE). This thesis constitutes the first attempt to draw a comparison of gender thought at the heart of Judaism and Islam in modern times, through two influential scholars devoted and loyal to the original principles of their religions. -
Moetzes Gedolei Hatorah Kol Korei: Ki Am Kadosh Atah
Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah Kol Korei: Ki Am Kadosh Atah February 9, 2021 Download (PDF, 491KB) Agudath Israel of America, today, shared a Kol Korei from the Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah of America, as the Covid-19 pandemic continues. At the time of Agudas Yisroel’s founding in Katowitz in 1912, it established a body known as the Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah, consisting of gedolim from across Europe to stand at the helm of the movement. It has always been the hallmark of the Agudah, whether in pre-war Europe or post-war America, that its policies have been guided by the words of the Moetzes. The Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah of America has steered, advised, and guided American Orthodox Jewry through the challenges of Galus America for some three- quarters of a century, and continues to do so today. 27 Shevat, 5781 “Spring has passed and summer is over – we have not yet been saved.” (Yirmiyah 8:20) Thousands of our fellow Jews, among them Torah giants and tzaddikim, have been afflicted with the terrible COVID-19 disease, and – may Hashem help us! – many of those have passed away. The pandemic has greatly diminished the Torah learning in our yeshivos, Bais Yaakovs, and shuls; it has curtailed our Yomim Tovim and celebrations. It is clear that there is upon our nation an appeal from Heaven to correct our ways. Every person must examine his behavior and strengthen whatever may be lacking. But, in addition to that, the public – as a tzibbur – must examine its collective actions and lifestyle. We therefore feel it important to bring up a fundamental and broad point on which the public should now focus. -
Winter2011d Layout 1
Tribute By Nachama Soloveichik A tribute to Rav Ahron Soloveichik marking his tenth yahrtzeit (18 Tishrei 5762) Rav Ahron Soloveichik, zt”l, 1917-2001 Photo: Yeshiva University Archives 54 I JEWISH ACTION Winter 5772/2011 y grandfather was civil rights, but as a physically fragile man who personified strength, perseverance and love. famous. At some My most salient memory of my grandfather is utterly point in my life, I mundane: I remember him walking up and down the stair- figured that out. way in his home. If this sounds strange, you have to imagine the grand U-shaped staircase leading from the ground floor Rabbi Ahron to my grandparents’ master bedroom. What made for a Soloveichik was the youngest son of Rabbi beautiful architectural design was a very long walk for a Moshe Soloveichik, an esteemed rabbi in a man crippled by a stroke and dependent on a cane. Every morning my grandfather walked down from his long dynasty of Jewish scholars. But I bedroom to the dining room where he ate, learned, wrote, never saw him that way. and met with visitors. Every evening he made his way back As a child wiling away my summers at my grandparents’ up. Each step was accompanied by an intense cry of pain home on Ardmore Avenue in Chicago, our family lineage barely made an impact on my conscious- ness. There were signs I probably should have picked up on. For starters, there were always impor- tant-looking people who wanted to talk to my grandfather, and there was always a crowd filling my grandparents’ dining room on Shabbos mornings. -
Wein Online Shabbat Shalom
Ki Tisa 5771 Volume XVIII Number 23 Toras Aish Thoughts From Across the Torah Spectrum the Talmud warned King Herod not to destroy the old RABBI BEREL WEIN until the new has already been erected. Wein Online The world oftentimes believes that the destruction of the old is somehow a necessary he Torah reading of this week is naturally prerequisite to construct the new. The Torah comes to dominated by the description of the tragedy of the teach us that the old Shabat already observed by the TGolden Calf and its consequences. But the story of People of Israel even before the granting of the Torah to the Golden Calf in the parsha is preceded by teachings Israel at Mount Sinai will definitely outlive and regarding the sanctity of the Shabat. The rabbis outperform the shiny new Golden Calf that is now being attributed the presence of this Shabat subject in the worshipped so avidly. parsha as a further indication that even the construction Golden Calves come and go but the eternity of of the Mishkan cannot take precedence over the Shabat and Torah remain valid for all times and sanctity of Shabat. circumstances. This reflection is buttressed in the Torah But there is another insight that is available by its repetition of the sanctity of Shabat many times in here as well. The dangers of Golden Calves, false gods, these parshiyot that mark the conclusion of the book of apparently shining and enticing ideals that only lead to Shemot. Our Mishkan is built only with Shabat and eventual disaster, is something that is always present in never in contravention of Shabat.