After Teaneck: An Example For American Jewish Communities
The call from the Rabbinical Council of Bergen County intended to send a “strong message” ahead of a...
The call from the Rabbinical Council of Bergen County intended to send a “strong message” ahead of a...
A deeply moving virtual Yom HaShoah program for the faculty and students of the Stella K. Abraham High School for Girls was held on Zoom on Tuesday, April 21.
Right after the first day of Pesach, we enter a seven-week cycle known as S’firas HaOmer (the Counting of the Omer). The 49 days from Pesach to Shavuos really represent a journey of 49 steps to spiritual growth and emotional refinement that help us renew our acceptance of the Torah on an individual level.
Since the pandemic started, JEP/Nageela has still been providing original and fun interactive content to dozens of Jewish children each week. Some of the popular programming include the “WhoDa Thunk?!” bi-weekly game show with prizes; “Phoneg” Shabbat onegs, and online reunions that have brought kids together from all over the country.
Please recite Psalms 20, 30, 88, 121, and 130.
Rabbi Yaakov Eliyahu Menashe ben Rachel
At a time when the world is quiet, people are scared and confused, and personal lives have become isolated, remembering those who have perished in the Holocaust and those who survived and the strength they conjured to get by each minute takes on an even greater meaning. As time distances us from the Shoah, our connection to living survivors also becomes distant. On Tuesday, April 21, the Yeshiva of Central Queens presented two Yom HaShoah programs on Zoom to remind us of the importance it is to be Jews, to fight and stand up for what we know is right, and to take accountability for our obligation and our responsibility to really listen to their stories, to learn from those stories, to remember them, and to pass the stories of living testimony on to our children.
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