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🎤 Half off SNL ends & ✈️ Israel trip spots books this week - YJP Houston October Newsletter

Houston • October Events

Where young Jewish professionals connect in a sophisticated, welcoming, relaxed setting with a spirited vibe.

Quick Links

Yom KippurMoroccan First FridaysSukkot DinnersSNLSimchas TorahWednesdaysSpeeddatingAcademyTrips

Wed–Thu, Oct 1–2 • Yom Kippur Services and Break Fast

View Schedule »

Yom Kippur Services

Friday, Oct 3, 6:45 pm • Moroccan Shabbat • First Fridays

Services 6:45 pm • Candle lighting 6:46 pm • Dinner 8:00 pm. $20 in advance with code advance. $36 at the door.

Moroccan First Fridays

Reserve Seats »  |  More Info »

Mon, Tue & Fri • Oct 6, 7, 10 • Community Sukkot Dinners

Under the stars with great company and great food.

RSVP »

Sat, Oct 11, 9:30 pm • SNL: Sukkah Night Live

With live ComedySportz show. Laughs, endless food, pure joy for 20s & 30s.

Sukkah Night Live

Get Tickets »

Tue, Oct 14, 12:15 pm • Shemini Atzeret Yizkor

Special service to honor the memory of the Oct 7 massacre. Part of the morning service. Complete schedule here.

Tue, Oct 14, 6:35 pm • Simchat Torah Uptown

Dance like a star! Food, l’chaims, and joy for all.

Plan Your Night »

Simchas Torah

Wednesdays, Oct 22 & 29, 8:00 pm • Dinner, Class & Social

No classes Oct 1, 8, 15 due to holidays — join the holiday events above.

Contemporary Jewish topics with friends. Free dinner.

YJP Wednesdays

Met@Chabad Speeddating • Wed, Oct 27 • 8:00 pm CT

Meet great people in a fun format.

Register »

CYP Academy • Decoding the Talmud

4 Wednesdays, Nov 5–16. Inside the story, substance, and significance of the book that defines Judaism.

Complete the course and receive a $200 voucher (per course, up to $600) toward any CYP trip!

Save My Spot »

Feb 2026: How Success Thinks • Apr 2026: Judaism Decoded — More Academy Info

CYP Encounter Trips

Nov 7–9 • CYP Dallas Texas Encounter

A statewide Shabbat of inspiration, connection, and community.

Details »

Dec 22–31 • CYP Israel Volunteer Trip

Meaningful volunteering in Israel. Ages 18–50. Limited spots! Prices as low as $599.

CYP Israel Volunteer Trip

Apply »

MLK Weekend • Jan 15–18, 2026 • NYC Encounter

A life-changing weekend with speakers, music, and the biggest Jewish speeddating event.

Learn More »

June 10–14, 2026 • CYP Encounter Spain

Details coming soon.

— YJP Houston

This Year We Put the J in OY

Rosh Hashana at Chabad of Uptown was filled with meaning, warmth, and community. Chanie and Chanale’s kitchen served up 280 beautiful meals, while children enjoyed a vibrant program that brought the holiday to life for them. Both the Sephardi and main community services were filled with heartfelt prayer and song, and the Shofar was blown for the seniors at Brookdale and Jews found on the city streets, ensuring they too were part of the New Year’s awakening.

One of the most touching moments came around the Rosh Hashana dinner table when each person shared what makes them proud to be a Jew. The pride of walking together as a community to Tashlich added another layer of beauty and belonging, showing the strength we draw from one another as we cast away the past and step into the new year. This fit perfectly with the theme of the year, bringing the J into the OY to reveal the JOY of Judaism.

This Shabbos is Shabbos Shuva, Parshas Vayeilech, a time when we are called to return, to walk forward with renewed commitment and clarity. Just as Moshe tells the people he will not cross with them but Hashem Himself will go with them, we too are reminded that every step forward is taken with Divine strength and purpose.

We now look ahead with anticipation to Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year, and then to the days of joy that follow with Sukkos and Simchas Torah, when the JOY of Judaism fills our homes, our sukkahs, and our dancing circles.

Rabbi Chaim and Chanie Lazaroff

P.S. There are a few sets left for Lulav & Etrog! Be sure to put UPTOWN in the notes. Click here.

P.P.S. To accommodate the ever growing crowd, we are building a huge 1,080 sq foot sukkah this year (up from 750 sq ft) for a budget of approx. $3,000 for the sukkah, labor, schach and tables. Please consider being a sponsor? www.chabaduptown.org/donate. You can also use cashapp, venmo or paypal: @chabaduptown or zelle: [email protected].

 


THE COHEN CORNER
Efforts and courage are not enough without purpose and direction

In a Soviet labor camp, a Chassidic Jew named Reb Mendel Futerfas met an unlikely teacher: a tightrope-walking circus performer. Watching this man walk a thin rope high above the ground, Reb Mendel was amazed by his calm and balance. The performer explained that the key to success was never taking his eyes off the goal, the pole at the far end. Even when needing to turn mid-air, he warned, the danger was greatest in the moment between losing sight of one pole and finding the next. But with unwavering focus, the performer said, one can maintain balance and keep moving forward. This lesson struck Reb Mendel deeply, as a powerful metaphor for life.

This idea is echoed in Parshat Vayeilech, which describes Moshe’s final day. Even then, Moshe was still moving forward, teaching us that life’s purpose doesn’t stop with age or change; it’s about constant growth and movement. On the Shabbos between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, we are reminded that even when life forces us to shift direction, we can stay balanced if we remain focused on our true goals. Just like the tightrope walker, if we keep our spiritual and moral eyes fixed on the destination, our values and purpose, we will know where to step, even through uncertainty.

Have a fabulous Shabbos! 
Rabbi Yosef, Chanale & Mushka Cohen

 


UPCOMING EVENTS & HOLIDAYS:

  • Sunday, September 28, 10:30 am - Mommy & Me with a Jewish Twist - High Holidays - Yom Kippur & Sukkos Crafts & Holiday Themed Music & Movement. Join us for a nurturing and engaging program designed for mothers and babies (newborn to 2 years) to learn, play, and connect in a warm Jewish environment. www.chabaduptown.org/mommy
  • Wed.-Thurs., Oct. 1-2 - Yom Kippur Services and Break Fast
  • Friday, Oct. 3, 6:45 pm - Moroccan Shabbat October First Fridays - Join Young Jewish Professionals For a Morrocan Themed Shabbat Dinner at YJP Houston – where spirits run high! www.yjphouston.org/casablanca
  • Mon., Tues. & Fri. Oct. 6, 7, 10 -  Community Sukkot Dinners Under the Stars
  • Saturday, October 11, 9 pm - Sukkah Night Live w/ YJP, YAD & Olami - Join young professionals in their twenties and thirties inside the Sukkah for a Saturday night like no other, featuring ComedySportz live show, where the laughs are fresh the food is endless and the vibe is pure joy. www.yjphouston.org/snl
  • Tues. Oct. 14 12:15 pm -  Shemini Atzeret Yizkor  with special Service to Honor the Memory of the Oct. 7 massacre
  • Thurs Oct. 14, 6:30 pm -  Simchat Torah Uptown - Dance like a Star!
  • Nov. 7-9, Dallas CYP Texas Encounter - Young Jewish Professionals from across Texas unite for a Shabbat weekend of inspiration, connection, and community.
  • Mon.-Wed., Dec 22-31- CYP Israel Volunteer Trip - Meaningful, memorable and amazing volunteering trip to Israel this summer, eligible ages 18-50 —and the price is insane - as low at $599! www.yjphouston.org/israeltrip

Lulav and Etrog set: Don't wait until the last minute! Orders due by Sept. 26, 5 pm. Please order your set as soon as possible www.chabaduptown.org/lulav


LAWS & CUSTOMS OF YOM KIPPUR

Kaparot - In the morning hours of the day preceding Yom Kippur, the Kaparot ("Atonement") ceremony is performed. We take a live chicken (a rooster for a male and a hen for a female) and, circling it three times above our heads, we declare: "This is my replacement, this is my exchange, this is my atonement; this fowl shall go to its death, and I shall go to a long, good and peaceful life." The fowl is then slaughtered in accordance with halachic procedure, at which time we contemplate that this is a fate we ourselves would deserve, G-d forbid, for our failings and iniquities. The value of the fowl is given to the poor, and its meat eaten in the Yom Kippur meal; some give the fowl itself to the poor. (A alternate custom is to perform the rite only with money, reciting the prescribed verses and giving the money to charity. Kaparot can also be performed in the preceding days, during the "Ten Days of Repentance"). Links: All About Kaparot; a Chassidic storyWhat Give us the Right to Kill Animals?

Omit Tachnun- Tachnun and similar prayers are omitted on Erev Yom Kippur.

Festive Meals The day before Yom Kippur is a Yom Tov, a festive day; for although we stand prepared to be judged in the supernal courtroom for our deeds of the passed year, we are confident that G-d is a merciful judge, and will decree a year of life, health and prosperity for us. Two festive meals are eaten -- one at midday and the other before the fast, which begins at sunset. The Talmud states that "Whoever eats and drinks on the 9th [of Tishrei], it is regarded as if he had fasted on both the 9th and the 10th." In many communities it is customary to eat kreplach on the day before Yom Kippur. Kreplach are small squares of rolled pasta dough filled with ground meat and folded into triangles. They can be boiled and served in soup or fried and served as a side dish. The meat symbolizes severity, the dough is an allusion to kindness. In preparation for the Day of Judgment we "cover" the severity with kindness. (Click here for a recipe.) Links: Eating Before Yom KippurReverse BiologyFood: an Anthology

Mikveh - Men immerse in a mikveh on Erev Yom Kippur to attain an extra measure of sanctity before the holy day.

Lekach (honey cake) - It is customary to ask for and receive lekach (sweet cake -- signifying a sweet year) from someone (usually one's mentor or parent) on this day. One of the reasons given for this custom is that if it had been decreed, G-d forbid, that during the year we should need to resort to a handout from others, the decree should be satisfied with this asking for food. The Lubavitcher Rebbe adds a deeper insight: "asking for lekach" on the eve of Yom Kippur instills in us the recognition that all the sustenance we receive throughout the year, including that which we supposedly "earn" by our own powers and endeavors, is in truth a gift from Above, granted in response to our daily requests from "He who nourishes the entire world with in His goodness, with grace, with benevolence and with compassion." Link: Our Daily Bread

Additional Erev Yom Kippur customs - Additional eve of Yom Kippur customs include

  • receiving symbolic malkut ("lashings") as atonment for one's transgressions,
  • reciting the "Al Chet" confession of sins after minchah and at sunset, and
  • lighting a 26-hour candle that would burn for the duration of Yom Kippur.

Yom Kippur fast begins before sunset - Yom Kippur, the holiest day of the year, begins before sunset. Its most basic observance is the fast that begins this evening and ends tomorrow evening at nightfall (a total of approximately 26 hours), during which we abstain from food and drink in fulfillment of the biblical command (Leviticus 16:29). For twenty-six hours, from several minutes before sunset on Tishrei 9 to after nightfall on Tishrei 10, we "afflict our souls":

  • we abstain from food and drink,
  • do not wash
  • do not anoint our bodies,
  • do not wear leather shoes, and
  • abstain from marital relations.

Kol Nidrei The first of the five Yom Kippur prayer services, which begins with the solemn Kol Nidrei prayer, is recited in the synagogue tonight at sunset, at the onset of the holy day.

Don't Forget to Light a Candle - On Yom Kippur there is Yizkor. Those who have the custom to light a candle should do so before lighting holiday candles.

Kiddush Levana Motzei Yom Kippur  - Though Kiddush Levanah can be recited as early as three days after the moon's rebirth, the kabbalah tells us it is best to wait a full week, till the seventh of the month. When sanctifying the moon of the month of Tishrei, it is customary to wait till the night after Yom Kippur.

Start on Sukkah - It is customary to begin working on -- or at least planning -- the construction of the sukkah immediately after Yom Kippur. Indeed, The Midrash (Vayikra Rabbah 30:7) describes the four days between Yom Kippur and Sukkot as a time when the Jewish people are "preoccupied with mitzvot... this one is occupied with his sukkah, this one is occupied with his lulav..."

"G-d's Name" - According to an old Chassidic tradition -- mentioned in the writings of the Baal Shem Tov -- the day after Yom Kippur is referred to as "G-d's Name." (The Baal Shem Tov explains that each of the various divine names describe G-d's involvement in a specific "world" or realm of reality, but the designation "G-d's Name" -- without reference to any particular name -- connotes a divine effluence that transcends all realms and particulars. On Yom Kippur, we access and reveal the very essence of our soul, which is one with the very essence of G-d; thus the day after Yom Kippur carries the designation "G-d's Name.")


Mazel tov to Mathew and Rachel Minchen on the birth of a baby boy! 


SHABBOS SHUVA PARSHAS VAYELECH

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, TISHREI 4
6:55 pm Shabbos Candle Lighting & Mincha
7:30 Kabbalat Shabbat
RSVP for Shabbat Dinner www.chabaduptown.org/shabbatdinner

SHABBOS, SEPTEMBER 27, TISHREI 5
9:00 am Chassidus
10:00 am Services
Followed by Shabbos Kiddush & Farbrengen  sponsored by Nina Pfrenger in honor of moving to the neighborhood
6:55 pm Mincha
Torah Study Laws of Yom Kippur and Sukkot
7:47 pm Maariv, Havdalla and Shabbos ends
Living Torah

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, TISHREI 6
8:00 am Shacharis

MONDAY SEPTEMBER 29, TISHREI 7
6:45 am Shacharis

YOM KIPPUR 
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1
6:01 am approx. Ideal time for Kapparos (with money) 
-Ask for Lekach
-Men Receive Malkus
-Men's Mikvah (10900 Fondren Rd) 9 am - 6 pm. Non-members $5/adult, $2/child, $2 Towel
-Eat festive meal with Kreplach
6:49 pm Light Holiday Candles & Fast Begins

6:45 pm Kol Nidrei
Simultaneous Main and Sefardi Service
6:45-8:15 pm Children's Program

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2
7:00 am Sefardi Sunrise Minyan
9:30 am Community Morning Service
11:30 am-1:00 pm Children's Program
12:30 pm approx. Yizkor Memorial Service
4:00 pm Sefardi Mincha

5:30 pm Mincha Afternoon Service
6:45 pm Neilah Closing Service
7:41 pm Havdala & Fast Ends
Kiddush Levana
Break the Fast Buffet - RSVP Required

 

Who Rings a Doorbell at 4:45 am?

 

At Brookdale Galleria, Rabbi Yosef and Chanale Cohen led seniors in a Honey Cake Bake and New Year card making. It was a warm afternoon of tradition, friendship, and preparing together for a sweet year ahead.

 

It is not every week that Elul, technology, and a 4:45 am mystery line up to teach the same lesson.

This week we launched the new YJPHouston.org website for our YJP community. It is fresh, clean, and easy to navigate. More importantly, it is an open door into our community, a place to discover events, inspiration, and opportunities to connect. After months of building behind the scenes, it is exciting to finally see it come to life.

Then came another kind of door. At 4:45 in the morning our doorbell suddenly rang. The video intercom showed no one there. When we reviewed the footage, we saw a man walking listlessly down the street, hesitating in front of our house, debating with himself whether to ring the bell. He finally pressed it, then kept walking into the night. No words, no reason, only a small unsettling moment at the threshold.

Elul is the month when the shofar calls us awake with the cry of “עורו ישנים משינתכם ונרדמים מנרדמתכם” — awaken from your sleep and your slumber. Like that unexpected bell in the quiet of the night, the shofar pierces through spiritual drowsiness and stirs us to prepare for the new year. It is a reminder that the High Holidays are a doorway to renewal, to return, and to begin again.

A new website, a doorbell at dawn, and the call of the shofar all lead us to realize that each moment is a doorway that invites us to step through and begin anew.

As the new year approaches, we invite you to step through the doorway of the New Year with us. Come join, come connect, and let us enter this month of holidays together.

Good Shabbos,

Rabbi Chaim & Chanie

P.S. Chabad of Uptown looks forward to celebrating the holidays with you. Our doors are to the entire Jewish community to daven and to celebrate, regardless of background or affiliation. For the complete schedule of services, to RSVP for holiday dinners or lunches, visit www.chabaduptown.org/services.

P.P.S. Now is also the time to join or renew your voluntary membership to Chabad. Your partnership allows us to provide free, open and welcoming services to all, for the holidays and year round! www.chabaduptown.org/membership


THE COHEN CORNER
Joy is the simplest form of gratitude

At the end of this week’s Torah portion, we read that exile came “because you did not serve Hashem with happiness and gladness of heart.” The Torah isn’t saying we didn’t serve Hashem; it’s that we did so joylessly. Maimonides teaches that this lack of joy is the root of affliction. Why such a harsh consequence for something so subtle? Because joy isn't just a mood, it's the soul of our actions. Hashem, like a loving parent, cherishes sincere, joyful effort more than grand, joyless performance.

This applies far beyond religious life. Whether it’s building better habits, exercising, or learning something new, approaching it with resentment or pressure drains motivation. But when we find meaning or joy in the process, even in small steps, the effort becomes sustainable and fulfilling. This week, try improving your attitude toward self-discipline. Instead of gritting your teeth through a task, find a way to enjoy or appreciate it. Joy doesn’t make the work disappear; it makes it matter.

Have a marvelous Shabbos!
Rabbi Yosef, Chanale & Mushka Cohen


UPCOMING CLASSES:

  • Shabbos, Sept. 13, 9:00 am - Likkutei Torah - Kabbala of the Parsha 
  • Monday, Sept. 15, 8:00 pm - שיעור שבועי בספר התניא עם הרב מני לע"נ יונה דוד ע"ה בן יפה תחי' פרנגר
  • Wednesday, Sept. 17, 8:00 pm - YJP Dinner, Class & Social 
  • Thursday, Sept. 18, 8:00 pm - The Heart of Prayer

UPCOMING EVENTS & HOLIDAYS:

  • Sunday, September 14, 6:30 pm - Pre-Rosh Hashana Women's Honey Cake Bake - Join us for an evening of connection and inspiration as we learn the art of baking fresh honey cakes to welcome the new year. Prayers and Raffles in support of our brothers and sisters in the holy land. www.chabaduptown.org/honey
  • Sunday, September 28, 10:30 am - Mommy & Me with a Jewish Twist - High Holidays - Yom Kippur & Sukkos Crafts & Holiday Themed Music & Movement. Join us for a nurturing and engaging program designed for mothers and babies (newborn to 2 years) to learn, play, and connect in a warm Jewish environment. www.chabaduptown.org/mommy
  • Friday, Oct. 3, 6:45 pm - Moroccan Shabbat October First Fridays - Join Young Jewish Professionals For a Morrocan Themed Shabbat Dinner at YJP Houston – where spirits run high! www.yjphouston.org/casablanca
  • Mon.-Wed., Sept. 22-24 - FREE Rosh Hashana Services, RSVP for Dinner and Luncheons
  • Wed.-Thurs., Oct. 1-2 - Yom Kippur Services and Break Fast
  • Mon., Tues. & Fri. Oct. 6, 7, 10 -  Community Sukkot Dinners Under the Stars
  • Saturday, October 11, 9 pm - Sukkah Night Live w/ YJP, YAD & Olami - Join young professionals in their twenties and thirties inside the Sukkah for a Saturday night like no other where the laughs are fresh the food is endless and the vibe is pure joy. www.yjphouston.org/snl
  • Tues. Oct. 14 12:15 pm -  Shemini Atzeret Yizkor  with special Service to Honor the Memory of the Oct. 7 massacre
  • Thurs Oct. 14, 6:30 pm -  Simchat Torah Uptown - Dance like a Star!

This Shabbos is known as "Shabbos Selichos", when we kick off a series of  Selichos recited in preparation for the "Days of Awe" of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur beginning this Saturday night, after midnight (after the Ashkenazic custom; the Sephardic community began on the 1st of Elul). On the subsequent days, this year daily through Monday Sept. 22 (besides Shabbos), the custom is to recite the Selichos in the early morning hours, before the morning prayers, each morning up to and including Elul 29, the eve of Rosh Hashanah. 

Please let us know if we can count on you for the Selichos minyan this Saturday night at 1:15 am


Lulav and Etrog set: Don't wait until the last minute! Orders due by Sept. 26, 5 pm. Please order your set as soon as possible www.chabaduptown.org/lulav


Mazal tov Shmuel & Chava Rottman on the birth of a baby boy!


SHABBOS SELICHOS PARSHAS KI SAVO

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, ELUL 19
7:12 pm Shabbos Candle Lighting & Mincha
7:30 Kabbalat Shabbat
RSVP for Shabbat Dinner www.chabaduptown.org/shabbatdinner

SHABBOS, AUGUST 13, ELUL 20
9:00 am Chassidus
10:00 am Services
Followed by Shabbos Selichos Kiddush & Farbrengen sponsored by the Monthly Chai Club! Become a member here.
7:10 pm Mincha
Ethics of Our Fathers Chapter 3 & 4
8:05 pm Maariv, Havdalla and Shabbos ends
Living Torah

SELICHOS
Saturday night, August 13 / Sunday, August 14
Farbrengen at 11 pm
Selichos at 1:15 am

SUNDAY, AUGUST 14, ELUL 21
8:00 am Shacharis

MONDAY & THURSDAY, SEPT 15 & 18, ELUL 22 & 25
6:15 am Selichos
6:45 am Shacharis


 

You Won’t Believe What Happens When Friends Travel Together

This Shabbos, a group of us traveled together to the Ohel, the resting place of the Lubavitcher Rebbe. It was an uplifting experience to stand side by side, each of us carrying our own prayers, yet united in purpose. The atmosphere reminded us that Judaism isn’t just about the individual, it’s about helping each other reconnect to what truly matters.

In this week’s parsha, Ki Seitzei, the Torah teaches the mitzvah of returning lost objects. On the surface, it’s about finding something and giving it back. Perhaps it can be explained that it also means helping another Jew “return” to themselves, to their soul, to their faith, and to their deepest sense of belonging.

That’s exactly what the trip was about. By traveling to the Ohel together, we reminded ourselves and each other of who we really are. Each of us will return a little more focused, a little more uplifted, and a little closer to our truest self. And when we help each other in this way, we’re fulfilling the mitzvah of returning what is lost, not just an object, but the spark inside.

Good Shabbos,

Rabbi Chaim & Chanie Lazaroff


THE COHEN CORNER
Act as if what you do makes a difference. It does. 

In this week’s parsha, Ki Teitzei, we encounter the mitzvah of shikchah , the forgotten sheaf. If a farmer accidentally leaves behind a bundle while harvesting, the Torah commands him not to return for it. Instead, it must be left for the convert, the orphan, and the widow. What’s striking is the reward: “so that G-d your L-rd will bless you in everything you do.” But as Rashi asks, why is there a blessing for something done unintentionally? The Rebbe explains that even when a mitzvah isn’t consciously performed, it still expresses a deeper truth: the soul’s innate desire to do good. The mitzvah may not have been fulfilled with that intention, but the action reveals an alignment with Hashem’s will that can surface in the most ordinary, even accidental, moments. 

This idea reframes how we view Jewish expression and identity in daily life. Judaism often appears in the unnoticed corners of daily life. The mitzvah of shikchah reminds us that our actions, even small or unintentional ones, have spiritual weight. That moment of kindness, that pause before speaking harshly, the check-in with a neighbor. Whether we meant it or not, those moments build something holy, revealing a connection to something far greater.

Have an inspiring Shabbos!

Rabbi Yosef, Chanale & Mushka Cohen

 

 

 


 

 

 

UPCOMING CLASSES & EVENTS:

  • Thurs.-Sun. September 4-7 - Men’s NYC Shabbos Trip Prepare for Rosh Hashanah with an uplifting weekend at the Ohel! Reply to this email to secure your spot!
  • Friday, September 5, 7:30 pm - Chocolate Shabbat September First Fridays - Shabbat & Chocolate? Pass the challah please! Join Young Jewish Professionals For a Chocolate Themed Shabbat Dinner at YJP Houston – where spirits run high! www.yjphouston.org/chocoshabbat
  • Tuesday, September 9, 12 pm - Lunch and Learn: Prayer: Private or Performance? Explore the High Holiday paradox of intimate prayer in a communal setting www.chabaduptown.org/lunch
  • Monday, Sept. 8, 8:00 pm - שיעור שבועי בספר התניא עם הרב מני לע"נ יונה דוד ע"ה בן יפה תחי' פרנגר
  • Wednesday, Sept. 10, 8:00 pm - YJP Dinner, Class & Social - Weekly Contemporary Jewish Classes for Young Professionals Come discuss, agree, disagree, mingle and network with other young Jewish professionals, singles and couples at series of classes / discussions on contemporary themes! Class, discussion and FREE DINNER!
  • Sunday, September 14, 6:30 pm - Pre-Rosh Hashana Women's Honey Cake Bake - Join us for an evening of connection and inspiration as we learn the art of baking fresh honey cakes to welcome the new year. Prayers and Raffles in support of our brothers and sisters in the holy land. www.chabaduptown.org/honey

Mazel tov to Solomos Berezin on his engagement to Basya Segal!


SHABBOS PARSHAS KI SEITZEI

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, ELUL 12
7:21 pm Shabbos Candle Lighting & Mincha
7:30 Kabbalat Shabbat
RSVP for Chocolate Shabbat First Fridays Dinner www.yjphouston.org/chocoshabbat

SHABBOS, AUGUST 6, ELUL 13
9:00 am Chassidus
10:00 am Services
Followed by Shabbos Kiddush & Farbrengen
7:20 pm Mincha
Ethics of Our Fathers Chapter 1 & 2
8:13 pm Maariv, Havdalla and Shabbos ends
Living Torah

SUNDAY, AUGUST 7, ELUL 14
8:00 am Shacharis

MONDAY & THURSDAY, SEPT 8 & 11, ELUL 15 & 18
6:45 am Shacharis


Photos📸 + Chocolate Shabbat, Honey Cake Bake & High Holidays - YJP September Newsletter

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Where young Jewish professionals connect 
in a sophisticated, welcoming, and relaxed setting 
with a spirited vibe 

September Events
Wednesdays | Choco First Fridays | Honey Cake Bake | High Holidays | Photos


Wednesdays, 8:00 pm - Dinner, Class & Social
Weekly Contemporary Jewish Classes for Young Professionals Come discuss, agree, disagree, mingle and network with other young Jewish professionals, singles and couples at series of classes / discussions on contemporary themes! Class, discussion and FREE DINNER!


 Friday, September 5, 7:30 pm - Chocolate Shabbat - September First Fridays 
Shabbat & Chocolate? Pass the challah please! Join Young Jewish Professionals For a Chocolate Themed Shabbat Dinner at YJP Houston – where spirits run high! 7:21 pm Candle Lighting, 7:30pm Services, 8:45 pm Chocolate Themed Shabbat Dinner. $20 until Thursday, $36 after. Use promo code: advance. 
www.yjphouston.org/chocoshabbat


Sunday, September 14, 6:30 pm - Pre-Rosh Hashana Women's Honey Cake Bake
Join us for an evening of connection and inspiration as we learn the art of baking fresh honey cakes to welcome the new year. Prayers and Raffles in support of our brothers and sisters in the holy land. 
www.chabaduptown.org/honey


ROSH HASHANA IS SEPTEMBER 22-24
SAVE THE OCTOBER HOLIDAY DATES!

Tues.-Thurs., Sept 22-24 - FREE Rosh Hashana Services, RSVP for Dinner and Luncheons

Wed.-Thurs., Oct. 1-2 - Yom Kippur Services and Break Fast

Fri. Oct. 3 - October YJP First Fridays Shabbat Dinner

Mon., Tues. & Fri. Oct. 6, 7, 10 Community Sukkot Dinners Under the Stars

Sat. Oct. 11, 9:30 pm - YAD, JHYPE & YJP Houston - Sukkot Celebration

Tues. Oct. 14 12:15 pm Shemini Atzeret Yizkor  with special Service to Honor the Memory of the Oct. 7 massacre

Tues. Oct. 14, 6:35 pm Simchat Torah Uptown - Dance like a Star!


September Month In Photos!

Tu B'Av The White Party - Sunset at Sea
What a night! Young Jewish Professionals celebrated Tu B'Av in style — a boat party, sunset at sea. and business networking… all in elegant summer white cocktail attire. Laughter, great vibes, and meaningful connections made it an evening to remember. Photos by Nathan Colbert Photography

Read about it in Jewish Herald Voice, Aug 28 - Young Jewish professionals celebrate Tu B’Av with ‘White Party’ boat cruise The Young Jewish Professionals of Houston marked Tu B’Av, the Jewish holiday of love and unity, with a sold-out “White Party” boat cruise. The event brought together young adults from across the community for an evening of connection and celebration. Attendees dressed in white summer cocktail attire enjoyed a sunset-at-sea experience that blended social networking, festive spirit and Jewish pride. More


Community Women's Challah Bake
What a beautiful evening - thank you all for coming and making the night so special!

 

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