pic of week 12-11-20

Pic of Week: Some Young Bakers @ CWT's Pre-Chanukah Virtual Cookie Bake

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Candle Lighting Times for Brooklyn, NY

Friday, December 11 Light Candles at: 4:11 pm
Saturday, December 12 Shabbos Ends: 5:14 pm

Instructions and Blessings

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Rabbi Pic

6 Minute Rabbi

Listen to Rabbi Moshe's Shabbos message - click here

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Upcoming Chanukah Events

Saturday, December 12
Havdallah and Menorah Lighting With The Hecht Family

Celebrate the conclusion of Shabbos and third light of Chanukah, together, as a community, from the comfort of your home.

Prepare your Menorah with three candles and a shamash, (optional: cup of grape juice/wine, cloves, two wick candle) and then we will all recite the havdallah and light our menorahs, together, connecting via zoom.
See flyer below

Sunday, December 13th
Windsor Terrace Community Menorah Lighting and LED Robot Show

3:00 pm Masks and Social Distancing Required
Reserve Here
See flyer below

Tuesday, December 15
Virtual Chanukah Farbrengen at 8 pm

RSVP Here for zoom link and your latka kit.

See flyer below

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Bais Menachem Synagogue Services

In accordance with the latest health guidelines, we are currently only hosting a limited outdoor minyan Shabbos morning.

Times and location are subject to change.

Attendance at the minyan is by reservation only. If you would like to reserve a spot at the minyan, please respond to this email and we will provide you with the times and guidelines.

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Adult Education

Weekly Torah Classes

Classes take place in a virtual classroom using Zoom technology.

Wednesday
8:00 pm - Torah Studies: Weekly journey into the soul of Torah. Presented by Rabbi Moshe Hecht Click Here

Executive Study
Would you like your own private Torah lesson?
Our Executive Study Program offers you a personal trainer on the subject of your choice at a time of your convenience.
You choose the topic. You choose the time. We make the connection
For more information email:m.hecht@JewishWindsorTerrace.org

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Humor scene

One Shabbos, Rabbi Bloom told his congregation, "Next week, my sermon will be all about the sin of lying and to help you understand it better I would like you all to read Leviticus chapter 28 before next week."
The following Shabbos, at the start of his sermon, Rabbi Bloom asked his congregation, "How many of you have read Leviticus 28?"
Every hand went up.
Rabbi Bloom smiled and said, "Leviticus has only 27 chapters. I will now proceed with my sermon on the sin of lying."

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My Encounter

The Ten-Minute Miracle
Rabbi Yisroel Tzvi Glitsenstein

When I visited New York in 1975, I made it a habit to pray in the synagogue at 770, the Chabad Headquarters. One day during the evening prayers, the Rebbe looked over the crowd during Kaddish and his gaze fell on me. I immediately lowered my eyes, but a few moments later when I looked up, the Rebbe was still looking at me. And, until the end of Kaddish, the Rebbe didn’t take his eyes off of me for a moment.

This obviously got me thinking why the Rebbe was looking at me like that, and the very next day my question was answered when I was summoned to the Rebbe’s office.

Rabbi Mordechai Hodakov, the Rebbe’s secretary, told me that the Rebbe wanted to know whether I had done the three things that he had instructed me to do the year before. I was asked to submit my reply immediately in writing.

I cannot say what these three things were as they involved private matters, but I can say that they were connected to my subsequent assignment to establish a Chabad presence in
continue

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Parshah Vayeishev

In a Nutshell
Genesis 37:1 - 40:23

Jacob settles in Hebron with his twelve sons. His favorite is seventeen-year-old Joseph, whose brothers are jealous of the preferential treatment he receives from his father, such as a precious many-colored coat that Jacob makes for Joseph. Joseph relates to his brothers two of his dreams which foretell that he is destined to rule over them, increasing their envy and hatred towards him.

Simeon and Levi plot to kill him, but Reuben suggests that they throw him into a pit instead, intending to come back later and save him. While Joseph is in the pit, Judah has him sold to a band of passing Ishmaelites. The brothers dip Joseph’s special coat in the blood of a goat and show it to their father, leading him to believe that his most beloved son was devoured by a wild beast.

Judah marries and has three children. The eldest, Er, dies young and childless, and his wife, Tamar, is given in levirate marriage to the second son, Onan. Onan sins by spilling his seed, and he too meets an early death. Judah is reluctant to have his third son marry her. Determined to have a child from Judah’s family, Tamar disguises herself as a prostitute and seduces Judah himself. Judah hears that his daughter-in-law has become pregnant and orders her executed for harlotry, but when Tamar produces some personal effects he left with her as a pledge for payment, he publicly admits that he is the father. Tamar gives birth to twin sons, Peretz (an ancestor of King David) and Zerach.

Joseph is taken to Egypt and sold to Potiphar, the minister in charge of Pharaoh’s slaughterhouses. G‑d blesses everything he does, and soon he is made overseer of all his master’s property. Potiphar’s wife desires the handsome and charismatic lad; when Joseph rejects her advances, she tells her husband that the Hebrew slave tried to force himself on her, and has him thrown into prison. Joseph gains the trust and admiration of his jailers, who appoint him to a position of authority in the prison administration.

In prison, Joseph meets Pharaoh’s chief butler and chief baker, both incarcerated for offending their royal master. Both have disturbing dreams, which Joseph interprets; in three days, he tells them, the butler will be released and the baker hanged. Joseph asks the butler to intercede on his behalf with Pharaoh. Joseph’s predictions are fulfilled, but the butler forgets all about Joseph and does nothing for him.
To learn more about this week's Torah portion click here

Guest Columnist: Chaya Shuchat
In the Age of the Breach

Is privacy going extinct in the digital age? Not a week goes by that we don’t learn of another serious breach of Internet security. Passwords. Credit cards. Personal photos. Social Security numbers. None of our personal data can be considered safe anymore.

What’s more frightening is that the erosion of what we used to call privacy happened right under our very noses. We signed away our confidentiality willingly, if obliviously. We continue to download apps that can track our every move and action. We still query search engines and give them access to our innermost thoughts. We upload our most intimate photos to the cloud, where any determined hacker can access them.

We read in the Torah about the birth of twins to Judah, the fourth son of Jacob and Tamar. The hand of one baby emerged, and the midwife tied a shiny continue

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Please consider partnering with us in our endeavor to build a thriving Jewish Center in Windsor Terrace. Please remember us in your regular gift-giving and in your last will and testament.

Chabad of Windsor Terrace Inc. is a 501(c)3 tax-exempt organization.
CWT can accept Cash, Check, Credit Card, Stock Transfer, as well as donations of automobiles, boats or real estate.

Wishing you a Freilechen Chanukah and an uplifting, meaningful and healthy Shabbos,
Rabbi Moshe Hecht

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