Weekly newsletter
Jewish Russian Community Centre-Chabad on Carlisle Newsletter (F.R.E.E.)
April 26th 2013
B"H
Message from the Rabbi

Three buddies sat around talking about what they hoped people would say at their funerals. The first man said, “I hope they will talk about my devotion to my family and the decent way I live my life.” The second fellow responded, “I hope that I will be remembered for the charity I gave and the many, many people I helped.” The third chap said, “I want to hear them say, ‘look, he is moving!’”

More than anything else, people want a second chance, a second crack at life. And sometimes we get it. This week we celebrate Pesach Sheni, the second Passover. There were a group of Jews in the desert who were unable to participate in the Passover celebration. They came to Moses, begging for a second chance. And G-d gave it to them. From then on, one month after Passover, anyone who missed the original celebration was able to bring a Passover sacrifice.

The lesson: It is never too late.

РУССКИЙ САЙТ

TOPA CBET 25 April 2013

THIS WEEK AT CHABAD

This week's Kiddush is sponsored by Kate Hinchcliffe to celebrate several occasions.

  • Her daughter Sarah's birthday
  • In memory of her dear mother Ana Hava Gajdoski Devecheseri and Kate's husband James
  • To welcome a guest from America
  • In appreciation of Chabad on Carlisle

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                  Sandor (Aron) Gajdoski and Kate Hinchcliffe                Sarah Hinchcliffe

Aleksenitser-Glad Barmitzvah

Last week's Kiddush was sponsored by families Aleksenitser and Glad in honour of Raphael Aleksenitser’s Bar Mitzvah. We wish a hearty Mazel Tov to the Bar Mitzvah boy Raphael, his parents Igor and Nona Aleksenitser and his grandparents Joseph and Nelly Glad, Valery and Izabella Aleksenitser.Congratulations to all extended family members.

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SHABBAT TIMES

Candlelighting: 5:21pm

Friday Mincha : 5:30pm

Shabbat morning: 9:30am

Kiddush after service

Shabbat Mincha: 5:10pm

Maariv/Shabbat ends: 6:18pm

SHAVUOT DINNER

 To book please go to www.chabadoncarlisle.com.au/shavuot

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LAG B'OMER PARADE

We are looking forward to the next upcoming Jewish Holiday Lag BaOmer, which celebrates the revelation of the deepest mystical aspects of the Torah, the Zohar, by the Talmudic sage, Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai.

On the day of his passing, Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai gathered his students and told them to mark this day as a day of joy and festivities. Thus we celebrate life and unity in the name of the first man to reveal the world of Kaballah.

This year Lag BaOmer will take place on Sunday 28 April 2013. A parade involving the entire Jewish Community is being organised by Chabad Youth & their associating synagogues. The parade will start at 11am at 92 Hotham St, East St Kilda continuing through closed streets ending with a street party & carnival on Alexandra St.

The parade is an expression of pride in one’s beliefs and values, and provides an opportunity to demonstrate them. Participating in this parade will be representatives of the entire community, including schools, Shules, youth movements and organisations marching together in unity to promote oneness and togetherness. The event is aimed at empowering our Youth, emphasizing the difference they can make.

The Jewish Russian Centre - Chabad on Carlisle will be marching together as a community in front of a vintage truck during the grand parade. The focus will be on children, and therefore we would like the kids to participate by marching or sitting in the back and joining us on Lag BaOmer.

Please let Rabbi Yisroel Sufrin know if you can partake in this important community parade and march with us.

You can purchase early bird tickets for the carnival for $15 a person online at www.chabadyouth.org/parade

Looking forward to seeing you march together in the grand parade!

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CHILDRENS PROGRAM

Join our fun and interactive Shabbat morning childrens program from 11am-12pm every Shabbat morning

 
Weekly Parshah

Parshat Emor

The Torah section of Emor (“Speak”) begins with the special laws pertaining to the kohanim (“priests”), the kohen gadol (“high priest”), and the Temple service: A kohen may not become ritually impure through contact with a dead body, save on the occasion of the death of a close relative. A kohen may not marry a divorcee, or a woman with a promiscuous past; a kohen gadol can marry only a virgin. A kohen with a physical deformity cannot serve in the Holy Temple, nor can a deformed animal be brought as an offering.

A newborn calf, lamb or kid must be left with its mother for seven days before being eligible for an offering; one may not slaughter an animal and its offspring on the same day.

The second part of Emor lists the annual Callings of Holiness—the festivals of the Jewish calendar: the weekly Shabbat; the bringing of the Passover offering on 14 Nissan; the seven-day Passover festival beginning on 15 Nissan; the bringing of the Omer offering from the first barley harvest on the second day of Passover, and the commencement, on that day, of the 49-day Counting of the Omer, culminating in the festival of Shavuot on the fiftieth day; a “remembrance of shofar blowing” on 1 Tishrei; a solemn fast day on 10 Tishrei; the Sukkot festival—during which we are to dwell in huts for seven days and take the “Four Kinds”—beginning on 15 Tishrei; and the immediately following holiday of the “eighth day” of Sukkot (Shemini Atzeret).

Next the Torah discusses the lighting of the menorah in the Temple, and the showbread (lechem hapanim) placed weekly on the table there.

Emor concludes with the incident of a man executed for blasphemy, and the penalties for murder (death) and for injuring one’s fellow or destroying his property (monetary compensation).

 
 
Weekly Magazine
This Week @ www.ChabadonCarlisle.com.au
  
Parshah
Faith as a Journey
What was truly remarkable about the wilderness years was not that the Israelites were surrounded by the clouds of glory, but that they were an entire nation without a home or houses; they were like nomads without a place of refuge.
  
Pesach Sheni
Pesach Sheni Minisite
Thirty days ago we cleaned our homes and souls of leaven, and matzahed our way through the week-long festival of Passover. And now, Pesach Sheni—a Second Passover!
  
Lag BaOmer
Lag BaOmer Minisite
The birthday of Jewish mysticism . . . The spiritual significance of the bow and arrow . . . Can love be true, and can truth be loving? . . . What is Kabbalah?
  
Women
To Beeswax or Not to Beeswax
Like many men and women of my generation, I was caught up in proving myself. One successful academic publication begot more. A teaching award necessitated that I earn the next higher honor . . .
 
F.R.E.E. Jewish Russian Community Centre Phone:www.ChabadonCarlisle.com.au



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