www.ncsyauction.com Watch what happens when NCSY surprisingly takes over the supermarket at 1 PM on a Monday. Win a year of free food, a trip for two to Israel, and 60 amazing prizes! Drawing December 5th at Kingsway Jewish Center in Brooklyn. wwww.NCSYauction.com 516.569.6279 NCSY New York Rabbi Aryeh Lightstone, Regional Director
Archive for April, 2010
NCSYauction.com – Supermarket Takeover – Drawing Dec. 5 @ Kingsway Jewish Center
Wednesday, April 28th, 2010Gateway to OZ
Friday, April 23rd, 2010
Image taken on 2008-04-07 18:04:05 by mudpig.
Austin Jewish Center
Monday, April 19th, 2010
Image taken on 2006-03-17 00:52:26 by Architecture & Food.
Jewish Education Scene in Los Angeles
Thursday, April 15th, 2010Although the Israelis and the Jewish people have essentially been a migratory race, education has played an important role in their contribution to the world. Prior to the World Wars, some of the foremost intellectuals and academicians in Europe were the Israelis and Jews.
Israeli scientists were much respected and sought after for their knowledge and acumen. In fact, it was these Israelis who gave academia in Europe global currency. The Israelis and the Jewish people had a fine education system, which sought out, honed and produced brilliant minds. The present day Israeli and Jewish populations the world over, continue to shine in this field.
As the home of nearly half a million people of Jewish origin, Los Angeles, California has a number of Jewish and Israeli educational institutions. While there are numerous kindergartens, elementary schools, secondary schools and even continuing education schools in LA; California is also home to some exclusive Jewish colleges and universities.
Of these, the Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion in Los Angeles, California is probably the most famous. The history of this unique institution is well documented.
After World War II ended, the Southern area of California became the adopted home of a number of Jewish and Israeli people. In order to meet the needs of this large community, the Hebrew Union College established a part-time College of Jewish studies in 1947. This college was meant to provide the Jewish and Israeli people with access to not only adult education, but also teacher training. As the needs of the Jewish and Israeli community expanded, the Hebrew Union College set up even more schools and programs to cater to them.
In the year 1970, some land was procured adjacent to the existing University of Southern California and the College finally had a permanent center for Israeli higher and Jewish religious education.
Not only does the Hebrew Union College have the best Rabbinical program in California, its Rhea Hirsch School of Education in Los Angeles is considered one of the finest in the Los Angeles area of California. Additionally, California is also home to other Jewish educational institutions like the School of Jewish Communal Service, the Los Angeles Magnin School of Graduate Studies and the Louchheim School of Judaic studies.
One of the renowned educators of the Southern California region was Samuel Dinin, who passed away recently at the age of 103. Dinin has been publicly lauded and recognized as an individual who did more to shape Jewish education in the Los Angeles and California regions than anyone else.
He was associated with leading educational institution in the California region like the University of Judaism and the Los Angeles Hebrew High School. He was also instrumental in launching and sustaining the California based Bureau of Education of Greater Los Angeles in his early years in Los Angeles and was its first full-time director. In addition, he was a respected authority on Jewish education and a long time editor of “Jewish Education”.
It was the contribution of people like him that has made the region a hot bed of Jewish academics and learning.
Jewish Synagogues in Oklahoma City
Saturday, April 10th, 2010Jewish synagogues in the city of Oklahoma is the ring that holds the Jewish communities in the city together and very well communicated. B’nai Israel Synagogue and Temple Emanuel synagogues are brothers and two of the largest in Oklahoma City. The congregation of Reform Jewish Temple B’nai Israel, located at 4901 North Pennsylvania Oklahoma City, is the oldest active Jewish congregation in the state of Oklahoma. Founded in May 1903, the congregation was led by Rabbi Joseph Blatt 1906-1946, Rabbi Joseph Levenson until 1976, and Rabbi David A. Packman until 2004, and is currently led by Rabbi Barry Cohen, who has taken on July 1, 2004. Sister to the Temple Emanuel Synagogue B’nai Israel Synagogue is an egalitarian society, a traditional synagogue, conservative. Home to some 200 individuals and family members, the congregation was founded June 17, 1904. This is a congregation in which women participate with men in religious activities. The synagogue emphasizes the preservation of their heritage, and the morning minyan only in Oklahoma City. Another important point of Emanuel Synagogue is the study of Torah and its relevance to the modern world. Some members of Emanuel Synagogue also belong to the Temple B’nai Israel. Chabad Community Center is another center for learning and the Jewish experience in Oklahoma City. The center offers a wide range of interesting programs for people of Jewish faith, including the Passover Seder, cooking shows, conferences and debates. It s a spiritual companion of every Jew, educating them about various aspects of faith and heritage that has a Jew. The Jewish synagogue in Oklahoma City are still active in the vibrant cultural scene in the city.
Jewish center bears scars
Tuesday, April 6th, 2010
Mumbai, India (CNN) — Countless bullet marks, a hole punched in a wall by a grenade and windows covered with plastic bear testimony to a carnage that left six people dead in Mumbai’s Chabad House last year when terrorists besieged several sites around the financial hub of India. Among those slain in the coordinated strikes, which left 160 people dead and lasted four days, were young Rabbi Gavriel Noach Holtzberg and his pregnant wife who ran the Mumbai headquarters of the Chabad community — an Hasidic Jewish movement. “This house was lively, full of happiness, full of friends,” said Rabbi Avraham Berkowitz, who came from Russia to oversee Chabad in India after the attacks. “That is what we have to bring back.” Once throbbing with Jewish visitors who were welcome to come to pray, eat kosher meals and celebrate religious holidays, the Jewish center, tucked away behind a causeway, is like a shrine. In keeping with Jewish tradition, the site has been in year-long mourning since the November 2008 attacks. Mumbai’s Jewish community is close knit. They get together every Friday, now in a secret location out of safety concerns. Though attendance is down, there are newcomers who join to show their support, Berkowitz said. They are struggling to find answers, said Yehuda Krinsky, head of the Lubavitch World Headquarters, who is in Mumbai to mark the first anniversary of the 2008 strike with a remembrance ceremony at the Jewish center. “The question why, like a lightning bolt …
Forces Assault Besieged Jewish Center in Mumbai
Thursday, April 1st, 2010
Security forces assaulted a Jewish center in Mumbai where Muslim militants were believed holed up with possible hostages Friday. (Nov. 27)