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The Lamplighter
Chabad of Washington Heights' Weekly Newsletter 
  
20 Tammuz 5774 | July 18, 2014 | Torah Portion: Matos | Pirkei Avos: Ch. 1 | Issue #316
PRAY FOR ISRAEL
Please take a few moments and pray for the success of the Israel Defense Forces in their current operation and that all the soldiers and citizens of Israel remain completely unharmed.  
Click here for Psalm 20.

Shabbat Candle Lighting

Shabbos Candles
Light Candles: 8:07 pm
Shabbat Ends: 9:12 pm 
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Living with the Times; The Weekly Torah Portion

What's the Story?

A Timely Gift for the Sultan
Adapted by Yerachmiel Tilles from "Tales of Tzaddikim" (ArtScroll) by G. MaTov. Taken from ascentofsafed.org

  

gift
If he had his way, the wicked vizier thought to himself countless number of times, there would be no Jews in Morocco. He hated the Jews, but, although he was very powerful, he could do nothing. For the sultan showed favor towards his Jewish subjects and would not let the vizier harm them.

 

The cruel viceroy bided his time, until finally a fitting opportunity arose. The sultan had decided to travel to the distant provinces of his land, leaving his viceroy in charge of affairs. The vizier prepared a trumped-up charge against the Jews of the capital and incited the Moslem populace to attack the Jewish quarter. The bloodthirsty Arabs did not need much of an excuse.

Continue

Levana Cooks
Fresh Seaweed Noodles in Miso Sauce. Gluten-Free Friendly
To read about Levana's books and recipes, please visit Levana
cooks.com
 

  

You will be as pleased as I am to see that fresh seaweed is getting increasingly more available, in many supermarkets and in sushi restaurants. It is true I haven't seen fresh seaweed in any  form other than salad, in other words, prepared, but the salad is natural and its components do not encroach on the preparation of a larger recipe, like the following dish. I know the seaweed bears a pesky resemblance to astroturf, but once you toss it into the other ingredients its garish greenness disperses and the color and flavor of the finished dish are deliciously funky. The miso imparts its fermented flavor, which works beautifully with all other flavors in the dish.

Continue for recipe
Shabbos Update
This Shabbos, Rabbi Kirschenbaum will be upstate. Rabbi Herschel and Raizy Hartz will be at the Shul in his place. The Torah reading will be done by Yitzchak Shamba.

Please come!
Shabbat Schedule
Kiddush-sponsor still needed 
shul - kleiman
Shabbos P. Matos
July 18-19

 

 FRIDAY  

Minchah, Kabbolas Shabbos: 8:10 pm

SHABBAT DAY   

Say shema before: 9:21 am

Shacharis: 10:00 am    

 

Davening followed by a Kiddush,
still un-sponsored
To sponsor this kiddush or any kiddush, click here
or call 212-203-3650.

 

Minchah: 8:10 pm 
Maariv/Shabbos ends: 9:12 pm
Anticipating the Redemption
Beginning the Messianic Conquest  
Adapted from the works of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, from "Living With Moshiach". Taken from Moshiach.net

 

Israel

This week's Torah portion, Matos, contains a seemingly unusual request by the tribes of Reuben and Gad. Citing their "great multitude of cattle," the sons of Reuben and Gad asked Moses to grant their portion of the land of Israel on the other side of the Jordan. "The country...is a land for cattle; and your servants have cattle," they said. "If we have found grace in your eyes, let this land be given to your servants as a possession; do not compel us to go over the Jordan."

 

Even more surprising is the fact that Moses acceded to their request. How many verses in the Torah speak of G-d's promise to Moses to bring the Children of Israel into the promised land? Yet these verses mention only "the land of Canaan," an area west of the Jordan river. If so, why would the tribes of Reuben and Gad have even considered settling in the cities of "Atarot, Divon, Ya'zer and Nimrah" on the eastern shore of the Jordan, part of the land of Sichon and Og? Did these tribes intentionally seek to distance themselves from their brethren?

The Jewish Joke
Religious Commitment
Thanks to Bernie Rappaport for this week's Jewish Joke   

A certain patient in a mental institution had argued long and hard
that he must be served only kosher food. Finally, unable to avoid
the extra work and expense, the director of the institution decided
to acquiesce to his demands.

A few days later, on the Sabbath, the director was strolling around
the grounds, when he came upon the same patient sitting in a chair
and smoking a cigar.

"Wait a minute, Schwartz," he said, "I thought you were so religious that we had to bring in special food for you. And now, here you are smoking a cigar on the Sabbath!"

"But, Doctor," Schwartz replied, "Did you forget? I'm meshugah!"


Good Shabbos and 
next week in Jerusalem!
   Rabbi Yakov and Elisheva Kirschenbaum

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"Everyone must regard himself and the world as evenly poised between good and guilt...If he performed a good deed, he has shifted the balance of his fate, and that of the entire world to good, and has brought deliverance and salvation upon himself and upon them all."
-Maimonides, Laws of Teshuvah Ch. 3, Law 4