Shabbos Parshas Toldos Rosh Chodesh Kislev, November 29 Shabbos, November 30 Sunday, Dec. 1 - Shacharis at 8:30 am Have a good Shabbos!
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Helicopter Gelt Drop - Community
Party Bus & After Party - YJP
Candle Lighting & Mincha at 5:04 pm
Torah Study
Kabbalat Shabbat Services at 6:30 pm
RSVP for Shabbat Dinner
Chassidus at 9 am
Services at 10 am
Followed by Shabbos Lunch Kiddush Kiddush sponsored by Oded and Maayan in honor of Ari’s birthday and Nissim ben Avraham’s yartzeit
Mincha at 5:00 pm
Torah Study
Maariv, Havdalla & Shabbos Ends at 6:00 pm
Living Torah Video Program (15 min.)
Monday, Dec. 2 - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Thursday, Dec. 5 - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Updates
Thoughts, notes and happenings...
black friday cyp shabbat and more
Don't believe this photo
Mazel tov Irit & Yoni Busany on the birth of a baby boy and to the entire Menlik family!
- Buy a raffle to for a chance to win a seat on the helicopter Helicopter Gelt Drop on the first night of Chanukah! www.chabaduptown.org/helicopter
This week's Shabbos schedule is at the bottom of this email.
Rabbi Chaim is currently in Brooklyn for the annual Kinus Hashluchim, the International Conference of Chabad Lubavitch Emissaries. The following letter from his Yeshivah classmate Rabbi Eli Friedman of Chabad of Calabasas sums up the picture of the annual picture in a 1145 words:
If there is ever a contest for "World's Most Misunderstood Photo" the annual class photo of the Shluchim (Chabad rabbis) will surely be a finalist.
You know the one I'm talking about? About six thousand Shluchim (G-d bless them) convene in New York every year for an annual conference and Shabbaton and on Sunday morning they pose in front of 770 (Chabad World Headquarters) for a massive group photo. (This year's conference is this weekend.)
When you look at the photo, you could be forgiven for thinking that someone had taken a picture of a Shliach (Chabad rabbi) wearing a black fedora and black suit and then hit copy and paste 6,000 times. Aside from the beard colors (black, white, gray and red) very little differentiates one rabbi from the next and on the surface it seems like a conformist convention.
And that is exactly what it isn't. It would be an injustice to the Shluchim to believe that they are all the same with identical stories, attitudes or personalities. The beauty in the deluge of black and white is the colorful diversity hidden everywhere in the picture.
You look at one face, you're looking at a prominent community leader, rabbi and spiritual leader to 2,000 people in a large American suburb. Grinning right next to him is the Shliach in a South American village, a man whose only struggle greater than making a living is the struggle to assemble a Minyan so a local can say Kaddish.
Pan over to the next Shliach and find the chief rabbi of a massive European country. He rubs shoulders with billionaires. And next to him - the Shliach to Nowhere, USA. He can't rub together two pennies.
In this one picture you have newlyweds, middle-aged parents, fresh grandparents, and patriarchs of massive families with legions of grandchildren and great-grandchildren, often in the hundreds, kinehora.
The guy with the red beard over there spends most of his time behind bars tending to the desperate needs of local Jewish prisoners. The short, salt-and-pepper beard behind him started off as a local youth director at the age of 23 and is still at it, devoted to his third generation of kids 30 years later. (And that short beard is rolled up; it's two feet long. I've seen it!)
Scroll down to that guy there with the black beard. Ten years ago, this guy didn't know what a Mezuzah was. He was the starting quarterback on his high school varsity team and his chances of ending up a Shliach were as good as his chances of ending up starting for the Cowboys. But here he is, flush with excitement, living the dream (the Shliach one, not the Cowboys one.) The very tall one next to him was a successful business attorney who yearned to do more, so he traded in his law practice for a campus Chabad post. He admits that his 401(k) is poorer but that his life is much richer.
And just above him, with the silky white beard, is the rabbi's rabbi, an expert in Jewish law, a genius of enormous proportions, a man with miles of Torah on the tip of his tongue and a heart of gold in his chest. Just one of the guys.
That one over there brought Tefillin to Sandy Koufax. That one put Tefillin on Sid Caesar. That one put Tefillin on the president of Ukraine. That one put on Tefillin with Bob Dylan. That one put on Tefillin in Auschwitz. That one sent Tefillin into space with Ilan Ramon. The serious-looking one there put on Tefillin with virtually every Jewish man in his city. (And don't let the look fool you - he's one of the funniest men in the group.)
This guy here grew up in a mansion in Missouri and he's a beloved spiritual mentor to Yeshiva students. The guy talking to him grew up in a matchbox in Michigan and he's growing a community in Colorado.
This Italian here runs Chabad in Utah; this other Italian runs Sweden. That Russian runs Texas. This Israeli runs Alabama. That Brazilian runs New Jersey. This Australian runs Georgia. And of course, these boys from Brooklyn are running Nevada, Montana, Louisiana, and Nebraska. And Germany. And Ghana.
This tall one saves lost backpackers in Thailand. That short one saves lost souls in Nepal. The gray-bearded one lives 5,500 miles away in Siberia and he's laughing with his old friend who lives three miles away in Flatbush.
Some of them have encountered astonishing success, like in Paris, where half the Shluchim were inspired to Jewish observance by the other half. And some of these men have encountered astonishing resistance, like the man who has loyally served an American Jewish community for twenty years and still needs to argue with the locals about the importance of Yom Kippur.
This shy scholar here? He is in the midst of a $20 million building campaign. The charismatic gentlemen listening to him is in the midst of a $300,000 foreclosure. The thin man next to him just opened a Glatt Kosher restaurant in Mexico, just like the guy behind him who just opened a Kosher eatery in China. But the rabbi behind them, serving the Russian hinterlands, hasn't seen a Kosher restaurant since last year's conference and has been slaughtering and koshering his own meat for fifteen years.
The rabbi in the corner is part of a family that has been Chabad since Chabad began 230 years ago. His classmate and colleague embracing him is the child of two ex-hippies who searched their way to Chabad in the 60's and reversed four generations of assimilation.
Most of these men speak Yiddish, Hebrew and some English. But if you listen closely you can hear the conversations accented by countless languages and dialects. Most of these men are of Ashkenazic background, but many are Sefardic, some are Yemenite, some are Persian. Many are fourth or fifth generation Americans.
Some are natural extroverts, some are painful introverts. Some are born optimists. Others struggle to maintain their optimism. Some are naturally exuberant; others, melancholy.
The differences never end. Each and every person in this photo is genuinely unique and each of them has a one-of-a-kind story that will yet be told.
But what they have in common is so powerful that it unites them together like a family. Their love for the Rebbe spills over into a love for each other. Their love for the Rebbe's mission and vision of a world conquered by goodness, kindness and Yiddishkeit unites them like brothers around a singular, unstoppable sense of purpose.
Drenched in that family vibe, all the colorful languages, backgrounds, upbringings, personalities and living conditions blend together brilliantly. They produce a spiritual harmony the likes of which has never been seen before.
Shabbat Shalom, good Shabbos.
PARSHA: The Half-Shekel of Marriage
What a seemingly negligible detail of the marriage of Isaac and Rebecca tells us about the nature of marriage between man and woman, and the nature of the marriage between man and G‑d we call “life.” more…
Shabbos Mevarchim Kislev, Parshas Chayei Sarah
Friday, November 22
Candle Lighting & Mincha at 5:06 pm
Torah Study
Kabbalat Shabbat Services at 6:30 pm
RSVP for Shabbat Dinner
Shabbos, November 23
Shabbos Mevarchim Teihillim 8:30 am
Services at 10 am
Followed by Shabbos Lunch Kiddush
Mincha at 5:05 pm
Torah Study
Maariv, Havdalla & Shabbos Ends at 6:01 pm
Living Torah Video Program (15 min.)
Sunday, Nov. 24 - Shacharis at 8:30 am
Monday, Nov. 25 - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Thursday, Nov. 28 - Rosh Chodesh Kislev I - Shacharis at 6:45 am followed by monthly breakfast
Friday, Nov. 29 - Rosh Chodesh Kislev II - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Have a good Shabbos!
To be winning on the winning team
And... In this week on our Parsha, Avrohom is part of the winning team receiving his royal angel guests and miraculously having his child, our forefather, Yitzchak! UPCOMING: Sun. Dec. 22 at 3 pm: Uptown Menorah " Helicopter Gelt Drop" PARSHA; The Contrast Between Isaac and Ishmael Why were Isaac and Ishmael circumcised at different ages? Abraham’s two sons represents two radically different modes of relating to G‑d. more… Shabbos Parshas Vayeira Friday, November 15 Shabbos, November 16 Sunday, Nov. 17 - Shacharis at 8:30 am Rabbi Chaim & Chanie
Torah Day School for the win! Levi's was a star player for TDS in the first basketball game of the season, winning at 64 to16!! Our very own Solomon Berezin is their awesome coach!
Candle Lighting & Mincha at 5:08 pm
Torah Study
Kabbalat Shabbat Services at 6:30 pm
RSVP for Shabbat Dinner
Chassidus at 9 am
Services at 10 am
Followed by Shabbos Lunch Kiddush sponsored by the Shamooelian family, in honor of Tzion Moshe's birthday and marking the yartzeit and in memory of Ben's grandmother, Shoshana bas Mordechai, a"h
Mincha at 5:05 pm
Torah Study
Maariv, Havdalla & Shabbos Ends at 6:03 pm
Living Torah Video Program (15 min.)
Monday, Nov.18 - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Thursday, Nov. 21 - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Have a good Shabbos!
time (chanukah) is flying
Mazel tov Joe & Neta Ruiloba on the birth of a baby girl, Michal Ruth! PARSHA: The History of Monotheism The respective roles of faith and intellect in Abraham’s discovery of the truth of the one G-d. more… Shabbos Parshas Lech Lecha Friday, November 8 Shabbos, November 9 Sunday, Nov. 10 - Shacharis at 8:30 am Rabbi Chaim & Chanie
Chanukah is before you know it and around the corner! We are planning for a jammed packed season for young and old! Meanwhile save the date on Sun. Dec. 22 at 3 pm for the Uptown Menorah "Helicopter Gelt Drop" and watch a miraculous drop of Chocolate Gelt from the sky!
Candle Lighting & Mincha at 5:12 pm
Torah Study
Kabbalat Shabbat Services at 6:30 pm
RSVP for Shabbat Dinner
Chassidus at 9 am
Services at 10 am
Followed by Shabbos Lunch Kiddush
Mincha at 5:10 pm
Torah Study
Maariv, Havdalla & Shabbos Ends at 6:06 pm
Living Torah Video Program (15 min.)
Monday, Nov.11 - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Thursday, Nov. 14 - Shacharis at 6:45 am
Have a good Shabbos!



