Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Action Alert | Your Protest is Needed Right Now : 'Palestine' Voted Full Membership in UNESCO!

From the Simon Wiesenthal Center:



Yesterday in Paris, 'Palestine' was voted in as a member of UNESCO (the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) - the first UN agency to bestow full membership upon the not-yet defined 'Palestine'.

 
As a result of the vote, the United States, as required by law passed during the Clinton Administration, will cut off some $70 million in funding to UNESCO, or more than 20% of its annual budget.

Tens of thousands of concerned Simon Wiesenthal Center supporters have already joined the protest to UNESCO's Director-General Irina Bokova. If you have not signed the petition, we urge you to do so immediately and to forward to your family and friends.

As a full member of UNESCO, we expect the Palestinian leadership to step up their campaign to erase the history of the Jewish people in the Land of Israel by seeking to have historic and religious sites held sacred by Jews, as well as Christians, and Muslims, to be declared by UNESCO as wholly Palestinian Heritage sites. Last year, UNESCO adopted proposals by Arab states classifying Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem as a mosque and stating that the Cave of the Patriarchs was "an integral part of the occupied Palestinian Territories".

Clearly, UNESCO's admittance of 'Palestine' is also a serious blow to the United States and others who have urged face-to-face negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Emergency Action Needed | Please help Chabad of Beverlywood, prevent closing down of a an important center in our community!!

Please read the Message from Rabbi Dov Newman, the Rabbi of Chabad of Beverlywood, appearing below.  PLEASE HELP HOWEVER YOU ARE ABLE TO.

From: Rabbi Dov Newman
Subject: Urgent
Date: Thursday, October 27, 2011, 4:18 PM

Dear friends,

I am sad to announce that this week our Shul property was foreclosed on by the bank we had tried to intervene but it was beyond our control.

We began Chabad of Beverlywood approximately 10 years ago with a small minyan and a comfortable facility. Chabad of California was a generous landlord and provided our facility for most Untitled-1of the last 10 years virtually rent-free as we continued to grow into the stronger community that we are today.

We are now in a very dire situation. However together with this difficult situation there is also a unique opportunity.

We are currently in negotiations with the bank to purchase the Shul to continue ours and our children’s community center, but we need everyone’s help.

There are two critical ways you can help now!

clip_image001 Capital Campaign: We will need to raise the necessary funds to provide for a down payment for our Shul. We need to raise at least $250,000. This will allow us to maintain a reasonable mortgage and get a reasonable loan.

clip_image001[1] Operating Expense Campaign: We need to increase our current monthly support. We need to raise a minimum of $8,000 a month which will include the mortgage and this comes out to a $150 per family. We understand that not every family will be able to contribute $150 but please give what you can and if you afford more please give more to help offset for these families.

Our books are open and we are glad to show anyone where the money is being spent. We are a community Shul and we need to be supported by the community.

Our Shul functions as a community center and there are costs involved. Please see us not as additional luxury but as a necessary requirement to uphold the pillar of Yiddishkeit in our neighborhood.

Before I close this e-mail, I would like to invite each one of you to please stop for a moment, close your eyes and reflect on the times that we have spent together at our Shul; The High Holidays, Simchas Torah, Chanukah, Purim and Shavuos Celebrations, our weekly Shabbos program, Shabbos Dinners, Bat Mitzvah Club and Tzivos Hashem Club Meetings, Mommy and Me, the Bris's, Upshernish's and baby naming's - in short the beautiful community atmosphere at our Shul.

Please answer when the Shul calls you and be ready to give so we can keep our Shul. I am confident that with the support of each member of our community, we will not have to even think about what would be if we didn't have the necessary funds...

If you would like more information or would like to discuss this further please call me (310) 836-6770 or email me rabbidov@chabad.com.

Sincerely,

Rabbi Dov Newman

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

The Holy Land….Judenfrei!!! | Posted by Barkochva Hamakabi

Click here to read the original article on haaretz.com.

PLO official: Palestinians, Israelis must be totally separated

Commenting on the subject of minority rights in the potential Palestinian state, PLO envoy to the U.S. says past experience shows the two people should be 'totally separated.'PalestinianNaziSalute01-312x230

The future independent Palestinian state will not include a Jewish minority, a top Palestinian  official told USA Today on Wednesday, adding that it was in the best interest of both peoples to "be separated."

Maen Areikat, PLO Ambassador to the United States, made the comment just as the Palestinian Authority, led by President Mahmoud Abbas, was preparing to offer up Palestinian statehood to a vote in the United Nations General Assembly later this month.

Answering a question about the legal status of a Jewish minority in the future state, Areikat apprently rejected the issue, saying: "I believe, I still believe that as a first step we need to be totally separated," adding "I think we can contemplate these issues in the future."

free-of-jews "After the experience of the last 44 years, of military occupation and all the conflict and friction, I think it will be in the best interest that the two peoples should be separated," Areikat added.

Former U.S. National Security Council official Elliot Abrams responded to the Palestinian official's comment, saying to USA Today that the Palestinian demand was "a despicable form of anti-Semitism," adding: "No civilized country would act this way."

The administration of U.S. President Barack Obama had been openly opposing the planned Palestinian statehood bid at the United Nations, arguing that a unilateral recognition of Palestinian independence would severely injure attempts at a comprehensive peace deal between Israel and the Palestinians.

Speaking in an interview on Tuesday, Obama indicated that Washington did not feel "think that it would actually lead to the outcome that we want, which is a two-state solution."

Last week, the State Department said the U.S. would veto a resolution for Palestinian statehood in the council, but Obama had yet to comment directly on the matter.

"What we've said is that going to the UN is a distraction, does not solve the problem," he said. "This issue is only going to be resolved by Israelis and Palestinians agreeing to something."

S.T.A.R. Rosh Hashanah Live | for ages 7 to 12

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Wednesday, August 24, 2011

A Free Webinar by The American Islamic Forum for Democracy

a Free Webinar: Dealing with Radical Islam in the U.S.

A solutions driven approach to Muslim radicalization in the U.S. and the upheavals in the Arab world.

Thursday, August 25th, 2011
1:00 PM – 2:00 PM EDT

Featured Guest from the film 'THE THIRD JIHAD':

M. ZUHDI JASSER, MD
President and Founder, American Islamic Forum for Democracy

WebinarZudhiEmail

Thursday, July 28, 2011

ACTION ALERT | New Congressional District Lines

  • Once Every Ten Years
image001Once every ten years, new district lines are drawn for our representatives in Sacramento and Washington. For decades, Orthodox Jewish voting power has been diluted because our two largest neighborhoods - Hancock Park/Beverly-LaBrea/Fairfax and Pico-Robertson/Beverlywood/Beverly Hills - have been placed in separate Assembly Districts.

 
  • The Opportunity . . .
A new Commission has been created to draw fair district lines without backroom deals. We finally have an opportunity to unite our community into a single Assembly District - and to increase our influence with our representatives in Sacramento. That would mean more respect and assistance for our unique community. In the first few draft maps, our two largest neighborhoods were placed in separate districts. After receiving testimony and documentation by Agudath Israel, and letters from organizations such as the Orthodox Union, the Simon Wiesenthal Center and Hatzalah, the Commission adjusted the lines to unify parts of our community.
 
But the current draft map chops Pico-Robertson/Beverlywood in half, with Beverlywood and South-of-Pico placed in a District with Culver City, Baldwin Hills and the Crenshaw area. We want to unite our community in a single district, BUT WE NEED YOUR HELP!
 
The Commission resumes work soon, so please act quickly!


  • What to say . . .
1. Tell them where you live - Pico-Robertson, Beverlywood, Hancock Park, Beverly-Fairfax, Beverly Hills, Century City, Westwood, Santa Monica, the Valley. Emails from Beverlywood and South-of-Pico are especially important. (We are blessed to have significant communities in the Valley and the far Westside. Geography prevents placing all in a single district. But even those areas will benefit if our two large City neighborhoods are in a single district.)
2. Tell them: The Fairfax/Hancock Park neighborhood and Pico-Robertson/Beverlywood neighborhood constitute a single, integrated community-of-interest (COI) with many shared institutions. The only way that the Orthodox community will have a voice in the Assembly is if Fairfax/Hancock Park and Pico-Robertson/Beverlywood are all in the "LAMWS" district.
3. Tell them your personal connections between these communities. Do you live in one neighborhood and send your children to school in the other? Shop in the other? Use a hospital in the other? Community activities? Tomchei Shabbos? Hatzolah? Classes? Be specific. We need to show that the neighborhoods interact and form a single community!
4. Tell them: Uniting our community in a single district will not weaken the representation of any other minority group or community of interest.
5. Thank them for putting some of Pico-Robertson into the "LAMWS" district, but ask that they not divide Pico-Robertson/Beverlywood in half. All of Pico-Robertson/Beverlywood should be in the "LAMWS" district, along with Beverly-Fairfax, Hancock Park and Beverly Hills
6. Be respectful and appreciative. The 14 Commissioners must divide the whole state, and none of them live in our neighborhoods. They do not know us, so we need to educate them.
Supported by concerned Orthodox Jewish organizations in the Los Angeles Area.

Friday, July 22, 2011

I am Thankful

I am thankful that I don't already have everything I desire ... if I did, what would there be to look forward to?

Be thankful when I don't know something ... for it gives me the opportunity to learn.

I am thankful for the difficult times ... because during those times I grow.

I am thankful for my limitations ... they give me opportunities for improvement.

I am thankful for each new challenge ... which will build my strength and character.

I am thankful for my mistakes ... they will teach me valuable lessons.

I am thankful when I am tired and weary ... because it means I have given my all.

It's easy to be thankful for the 'good' things ... yet, a life of rich fulfillment comes to those who are thankful for the setbacks.

Gratitude will turn a negative into a positive ... find a way to be thankful for your troubles and they can become your blessings.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Let My Nation...Breathe | By Yitzkhok Sakhai

Shalom,
I would like to introduce myself before writing the next blog. My name is Yitzkhok Sakhai and no I’m not Chinese, I was born in Iran and raised in the United States. My Parents and I moved here when I was about 11 years old to join the rest of the Persian refugees in the land of opportunities. After elementary school I attended the Mirrer Yeshiva in New York from which I received my diploma. A while after I pursued the business life and realized it was not for me. My passion rested at a completely different corner of the word. So I went to Ohr Somayach Yeshiva in Israel and received my Rabbinical Semicha and a degree in leadership and outreach. I am currently employed by S.T.A.R. (Sephardic Tradition and Recreation) and Nessah synagogue. My life, my work and passion is to reach out to the Jewish community especially the younger generation and, Go-d willing, reignite that Jewish spark in their souls and through that build a brighter future for Jews wherever we may be. If you would like to know more about what our organization does please visit us at www.lastar.org
I thank the founders of the PiRo club and all that help it run and I am truly honored to have been asked to contribute to the Blog. Tizke Lemitzvot and Chazzak Ubaruch!!!
The Torah commands us "Betezedek Tishpot Et Amitecha," meaning"you shall judge your fellow man righteously." There is a discussion among the Jewish sages as to what and to whom this passage is referring to. Some rabbis point out that this is directed towards Jewish judges as a warning to prevent bribery. But most Rabbis agree that it is a commandment and a warning to every single Jew. Each Jew is presented daily with the opportunity to judge another Jew, but we tend not to see it that way.
As a Rabbi in the PiRo community, working in the outreach field, I see this happening every day, especially targeting the younger generation.
I often find myself in the same situation, when I ask a seemingly routine question from teens like, “why don't you come to synagogue on Shabbat or the holidays,” or “why don't you come to the recent lecture that was held locally?” The answer is always the same: "PEOPLE JUDGE ME." And when I ask them to clarify, that is when they pour their heart out.
And i quote: The other day I came to the synagogue for Shabbat services and someone, (usually one of the "moreorthodox") came over to me and asked why I have come to Shul with a mohawk or why I even have such a haircut". Another example: "why would you come to Shul wearing jeans? don't you own a suit?
To me this is one of the greatest problems that our community is facing today. For the past 35 years, the thirst for Jewish knowledge has been growing rapidly. The only thing that is holding more people from getting more involved in their heritage is the judgmental attitude that some people hold, because of exhasted ideas such as that there needs to be a dress code and without it everything else is meaningless. Don't get me wrong. There is definitely a need for a certain decorum when going in to a holy sanctuary, but it should not be on the top 5 things a person is approached about when they are taking a step towards growth. Instead, why not reach out with a simple invitation to coffee, or a Shabbat meal, or just a friendly talk just to let the other person feel and KNOW that he belongs! One of my rabbis, the world famous author and Jewish historian, Rabbi Berrel Wein once told us “if you want to look Jewish, wear a turban and a long coat, because that is what Jews wore for thousands of years.”
Before we judge anyone negatively, let us take a moment and think about what it means to be one nation. When we received the Torah at mount Sinai the Rabbis tell us that we gathered there "KeIsh Echad Belev Echad," "like One Man with One Heart." No one criticized, no one judged!
May we merit the patience and the vigilance it takes to be simply good people, and more importantly, good Jews.
--By: Rabbi Yitzkhok Sakhai

Monday, June 6, 2011

I LOVE YOU! | Posted by Minde

My Dearest,

I just had to sit down and write to remind you of something very important to me.

I LOVE YOU.

I saw you talking with your friends yesterday, and I so wanted you to talk to me also. I waited all day, but you never called. I hoped we could find the time to talk in the evening, but I know you had a lot of other things on your mind.

As your day drew to a close, I sent a cool breeze to make you feel refreshed after a long hard day. I put a special scent in the air from the flowers near the driveway, but I guess you didn't notice as you hurried ·by. I'm sad to see you rush so.

I saw you fall asleep last night and I so wanted to touch your face or stroke your hair, so I spilled a little moonlight on your face and Pillow.i-miss-you-1

When you awoke this morning, I hoped we could have a little time together. I so wanted to rush down and talk with you, but you had to hurry off to work; my tears were in the rain.

I have so many gifts for you, so much to tell you, so many wonderful things for you to experience because I love you so much. My nature is like that, you know.

Please call me, talk with me-- ask me for help.

I know the deepest desires of your heart and I so want to be close to you. My love for you is deeper than the oceans, greater than you can imagine. I long for us to share some time together; JUST THE TWO OF US.

It hurts me to see you look so sad today. I really understand what it's like for friends to let you down. I know your heart aches.

I'll Close for now because I know you are very busy, and I certainly don't want to bother you. You know you are always free to choose me, my way…… or not. It’s really your decision, because I have already chosen you.

So please, don't be too long.

And remember: I LOVE YOU!

Your friend,

 

HASHEM

No, I didn’t write this.  My daughter came home from school with this and I just had to share it with you all.

HASHEM calls out to us, “Open up for Me the size of the head of a pin, and I will open for you the size of a great hall!”

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Focus on the carrot not the Stick | Posted by: Rabbi Y. Sakhai

Shalom to all,
I thought I should start my first post on this blog by speaking about the most recent news that seems to have everyone in tangles. Yes i am talking about everything that has happened in the Middle East in the course of the past two years and ending with the death of our worst enemy known since Hitler: Bin L. Some people are excited others simply on a high and a small fraction of people are just too busy to care. Which of these groups should we, as Jews, identify ourselves with?
I, personally, believe in the “none of the above” category. We, as Jews, have way too much responsibility towards the world to just sit around and think to ourselves "well what happens in the Middle East has nothing to do with me. why worry about something so out of our comfort zone?" the prophet Daniel saw this day coming thousands of years ago, and his advice about the matter is just golden. The prophet says that there will be a day when the eastern nations of the world will start to implode, and just when all the Jews feel "safe," all eyes will turn on them! And then there will be no refuge but from the G-d above.
So, I have this to say, to all those sitting and thinking that the Jews are finally out of the spotlight and that we are finally being understood: The only thing that we should NOT be doing is sitting idle and letting things run their course. We need prayer more than ever. We need a unified Jewish Nation, with a unified voice and that voice is prayer. It is one weapon that can never be taken from a Jew.
So, NO, I am not excited and happy about what the Middle East is going through. Don't be mistaken, I thank Go-d every single day that murderers like Bin L. have been brought to justice, but to sit back and laugh it off and think that the ultimate goal was reached, THAT I won't do. There is a much bigger goal here at hand and that is ultimate world peace and we the Jews are smack in the middle of it all. Hashem calls the Jews "a nation of priests and a holly people." Have we ever asked ourselves if we are the priests, then who are the laymen?? Who are the regular folk that we are sent to lead??? Rabbi Asher Wade says it beautifully, "The nations of the world are the Laymen."
We have been given a tremendous responsibility and to sit back and not use the only weapon that has worked for us for thousands of years is nothing more than pure selfish.
PRAYER

I pray that all of Am Yisrael's prayers should be answered so that we may merit the coming of Moshiyach, Amen.

 

Dinner Event for Israel - Honoring Daryl Temkin and Pat Boone | Posted by Daryl Temkin PhD

Bnai Zion 1-4v (2)Dear Friends,

A week from this Wednesday, at Sinai Temple in Westwood, there will be the fundraising dinner event to help build the needed bomb proof underground emergency room in Haifa at the Bnai Zion Hospital, located on Mount Carmel.  6:00 P.M. is the opening reception followed by a 7:00 P.M. dinner.

As you may know, over 40,000 missiles have been brought into Southern Lebanon and are in the hands of the Hizbollah. Israel needs to be prepared to withstand the potential damage to their civilians and soldiers from these missiles. This hospital emergency room will be essential and it is our opportunity to assist in the building effort.

Pat Boone, myself and two other Los Angeles leaders are featured to help make this effort to save future lives a success.

I will be speaking and Pat Boone will make a unique presentation. There will also be an innovative and fast paced auction to help buy the hospital's needed emergency medicine equipment. 

If there is a chance for you to be available to attend this event, please set the date in your calendar.

For reservations, please call the Bnai Zion office at: 818.716.2722.

The dinner donation is $200 per person. Contributions to the cause is also a welcomed option.

Looking forward to seeing you on Wednesday, May 18th.

__________________________________________________________________
Daryl Temkin, Ph.D. is the founder of the Israel Institute for the Advancement of Alternative Energy, which is devoted to teaching the world about the “clean energy” innovations that have come forth from Israel to free humankind from global oil dependency. The Israel Institute is a not for profit, 501c3 organization. Tax deductible contributions can be given through the website: Israel-Institute.org, or call: 310.508.0950.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY ISRAEL!!!!! :) Always Always in Our Hearts.

Thanks to Aish.com for the video.  Israel, Wave Your Flag.

Thursday, April 28, 2011

“Listen World Listen Jew” Introduction | Posted by Barkochva Hamakabi

I sit here, in the Land of Israel: Jerusalem; Home. It is night and the stars twinkle with fierceness and a multitude of heavenly lights such as I have not remembered for many years. Across the valley sleep the hills of Benjamin and the lights of Ramalla shine directly across from me as to the left I strain to see Nebi Samuel, the grave of the Prophet Samuel. The night is totally quiet, carrying with it a stillness not born of the fear of other urban areas where people cling to their dwellings in the concrete jungle, but rather the gentle, peaceful quiet that affords tranquility to the soul and pause for thought to the mind.

I am home in Jerusalem and inside sleep my children who have returned with me. Tomorrow they will go to school, climbing the hills that forever bear the footprints of those who preceded them here so many years ago–their ancestors. They will walk the hills of Jerusalem, tread its streets, mingle with their brothers and sisters from Riga and Casablanca, pray at the wall and shyly–and then not so timidly–touch its craggy surface, add their lip prints to those who preceded them for twenty centuries and then joke in Hebrew with the bus drivers, drink their Jewish grapefruit juice as they read their Jewish newspaper and exult in their Jewish city.

“Our feet are standing within thy gates O Jerusalem,” and they will never leave. This is Zionism, and the United Gentiles call it “Racist” and debate how to take my city away from me. Foolish world; sooner will the sun fail to rise tomorrow. The Jews have come home to their Zion and have welded their city together with a fierce tightness that none-least of all the humor that is the United Nations-can sunder. A people which patiently bides its time for millennia will not easily-ever-give up its state and capital. A nation stubborn enough to awaken for centuries at midnight to weep for Zion and so obstinate as to pray in the North, the South, East and West, three times daily, four times on Sabbaths and holidays and five times on Atonement for the day when the Divine Presence will return to the Holy City, will surely do little more than yawn when the haters thunder about “Zionist hooligans.”

4_The_16For two thousand years we wept for the Zion they tore from us with blood and fire; today it is returned to us and never again will it leave our possession. For centuries we were forced to visit as strangers at the sufferance of those who mocked and reviled us; today we sit as balel-batim, possessors and holders of title to our possession and never again will that title be effectively challenged. For a score of years no Jew could tread on the doorstep to the Holy Mount and place his slips of pleadings in the crevices of the Wall because Jordan was busy keeping the area Judenrein even as it was using the Jewish tombstones on the Mount of Olives to line latrines. Today a thousand Jews and more will pray at the Wall even as all others can pursue their own faiths with no one to prevent them. Never again will all the haters with all their lackeys and running dogs of Jew-hating imperialism, return us to the horrors that once were.

My first Sabbath in Jerusalem was the occasion for the reading in the Law of the words of the Prophet Isaiah: “For the sake of Zion I will not be quiet and for the sake of Jerusalem I will not hold my peace.” Let the world hear and the politicians remember. A people whose G-d keeps His word is not to be trifled with; a L-rd whose people is so determined is not to be taken lightly. “Pray for the peace of Jerusalem,” for if an alien hand attempts to seize it again it will surely be cut off. Pray for the peace of Zion because if there will be war over it, the whole world will be plunged into a holocaust-and in the end it will remain Jewish. In blood and fire did Zion rise again-never again to sink to its knees. This is surely the promise we give the world, and the guarantors whom we bring as surety are the same ones our ancestors once brought before the Almighty at Sinai-our children. They walk the streets of Zion and their Jerusalem and with the strength of their young and mighty arms will they assure that those streets and stones and hills and homes will continue to be Jewish ever more.

A certain resolution on Zionism has been passed at the United Nations. In reality, it is a resolution on Judaism. It is important that a reply be given. It is important that the world know precisely what Zionism is and what the Jewish people are.

It is important that the nations hear our proclamation: “Listen world; I am a Zionist, I am a Jew!”

And listen, too, Jew. Listen so that you will understand yourself who you are and what and why. For there is no escape from it even if one should be so foolish as to desire to flee, the greatness and majesty of the Jewish destiny. Listen so that you will be able to stand proud and tall and know what to reply-with dignity and not hesitant defensiveness. So that you will know from where you came and to where you go, since without the former it is impossible to know the latter.

And so, listen Jew as we speak to a world that understands as little as you about the eternity of the Jewish people. Listen, as the Jewish Idea is proclaimed. Listen, and learn. Listen and return.

Listen world, listen Jews.

Monday, April 11, 2011

From the New York Times: Rabbis Sound an Alarm Over Eating Disorders | Posted by PiRo SCC

The following article appeared in the health section of the New York Times on April 11, 2011.  While it is not necessarily written from a Jewish point of view, it raises issues that some consider worth discussing and bringing to fore.  We welcome your participation and comments.

___________________________________________________________________

By RONI CARYN RABIN

In the large and growing Orthodox Jewish communities around New York and elsewhere, rabbinic leaders are sounding an alarm about an unexpected problem: a wave of anorexia and other eating disorders among teenage girls.

While no one knows whether such disorders are more prevalent among Orthodox Jews than in society at large, they may be more baffling to outsiders. Orthodox women are famously expected to dress modestly, yet matchmakers feel no qualms in asking about a prospective bride’s dress size — and her mother’s — and the preferred answer is 0 to 4, extra small.

Rabbis say the problem is especially hard to treat because of the shame that has long surrounded mental illness among Orthodox Jews.

“There is an amazing stigma attached to eating disorders — this is the real problem,” said Rabbi Saul Zucker, educational director for the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, or O.U., the organization that issues the all-important kashrut stamp for food. “But hiding it is not going to make it go away. If we don’t confront it, it’s going to get worse.”

Referring to the high risk of death from heart problems and suicide in patients with anorexia, he said: “This isn’t a luxury type of disease, where, O.K., someone is a little underweight. People die.”

As a teenager, Naomi Feigenbaum developed bizarre eating habits that had nothing to do with Jewish dietary laws: Cocoa Puffs and milk in the morning, when she figured she had all day to burn off the calories, and nothing but Crystal Light and chewing gum the rest of the day.

At the kosher dinner table in her home near Cleveland, she said she would start arguments with her parents so she could stomp off and avoid eating. She lost weight so rapidly in high school that she used safety pins to cinch her long skirts around her waist.

By the time her rabbi came to visit her, she was emaciated. He told her that she must attend a treatment program that met on Saturday, the Jewish day of rest, even if she had to violate religious rules by riding in a car to get there. She could even eat food that wasn’t kosher.

“That’s when I realized it was a matter of life and death,” Ms. Feigenbaum said in an interview. “My rabbi does not take Jewish law lightly. But he told me the Jewish laws are things God wanted us to live by, not die by, and that saving a life takes precedence over all of them.”

Now 24, she has written a memoir, “One Life” (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2009), about her recovery from anorexia after treatment at the Florida branch of the Renfrew Center, the nationwide eating-disorders clinic.

There is little research to indicate how many women are in a similar position. Israeli studies consistently find high rates of disordered eating among Jewish adolescents but not Arab ones, and Israel’s rate of dieting is among the highest in the world — more than one woman in four — though obesity rates are relatively low.

Data about American Jews is limited, but two small studies have reported high rates of disordered eating in certain communities. One of those, a 1996 study of an Orthodox high school in Brooklyn, found 1 in 19 girls had an eating disorder — about 50 percent higher than in the general population at the time. The 1996 study was done with the agreement that it would not be published. The other study, done in 2008, looked at 868 Jewish and non-Jewish high school students in Toronto and found that 25 percent of the Jewish girls suffered from eating disorders that merited treatment, compared with 18 percent of the non-Jewish girls.

Demand for treatment programs that accommodate Orthodox teenagers prompted the Renfrew Center to start offering kosher food at its clinics in Philadelphia, New York, Dallas and Florida, while a new residential facility catering to young women from the United States opened last year in Jerusalem. It is not affiliated with Renfrew.

Relief Resources, a mental health referral agency that serves Orthodox communities, runs an eating disorders hot line, and last year the O.U. teamed with a social worker to make “Hungry to be Heard,” a documentary about eating disorders among the Orthodox.

Most of the young women interviewed for this article said they did not blame the culture for their health problems and said they derived support from their religious faith. But they spoke openly about the enormous pressure they feel to marry young and immediately start families , and the challenges of balancing professional careers with the imperative to be consummate homemakers who prepare elaborate Sabbath meals.

Experts say that eating disorders usually emerge during adolescence and other times of transition. And in large Orthodox families, the girls are often expected to help care for their younger siblings, leaving them little time to pursue their own interests. Experts suspect that anorexia may provide a way to stall adult responsibilities by literally stopping the biological clock: the drastic weight loss can halt menstruation.

Young Orthodox women are also expected to conform to a rigorous code of conduct, with few outlets for rebellion. They are expected to be chaste until marriage and do not date until they start looking for a husband. Even gossip is considered a sin.

Once matchmaking starts, they may be expected to choose a life partner after only a brief courtship. Known mental illness in a family can affect the chances of a successful match, not just for the individual but for siblings as well, so young women may well avoid psychiatric treatment.

In addition to fulfilling the traditional roles of caregiver and homemaker, many Orthodox women also assume the role of primary breadwinner so their husbands can pursue religious studies full time.

“It’s too much,” said a 23-year-old woman from the New York area who is recovering from an eating disorder and asked not to be identified by name to protect her privacy. She is married and a full-time student, but has postponed having a baby.

“A lot of my friends are going to work and support their husbands,” she continued, “but part of my recovery is to say that I can’t do everything — I’m not superwoman.”

Food plays a central role in Jewish family and religious life, and both the Friday night dinner and the midday Sabbath meal, as well as holiday meals, can be multicourse affairs. But fast days — when no food or water is consumed for 25 hours — are also sprinkled throughout the year, often preceded or followed by a large meal.

Next week’s Passover Seders, which traditionally include matzo and four cups of wine, along with soup, gefilte fish, brisket and potato kugel, are a particular challenge, experts say. For women who struggle with eating disorders, they can be an invitation to purging.

“There are a lot of mixed messages,” said a 27-year-old woman from a strict Orthodox community in Brooklyn, who once carried less than 100 pounds on her 5-foot-6 frame. “My grandmother would see me and say, ‘You look so good, you’re so skinny — come eat, eat.’ ”

Many rabbis find themselves being asked to resolve conflicts between religious obligations — like the requirement to fast on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement — and doctors’ orders that patients not restrict food intake under any circumstances.

“A patient will call and tell me their weight is down to 82 pounds, and they have weaknesses in their body, and I’ll tell them there is no question they must eat during a fast — not that they can eat, but that they must eat,” said Rabbi Dovid Goldwasser of the Bais Yitzchak Synagogue in Flatbush, Brooklyn, who has become known in the Orthodox world as an expert on eating disorders and counsels women from all over the world.

“They have great difficulty with that,” Rabbi Goldwasser went on, “and they say to me, ‘But isn’t it true that by fasting you get atonement for your sins?’

“I try to answer the spiritual conflict and say that no, God wants you to eat. Your eating on that day is considered as if you fasted.”

Itbach al Yahood….Kill the Jews | by PiRo SCC

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Friday, April 1, 2011

Racism towards Muslims in Israel

Jews, practitioners of love and kindness.

The answer, as is expressed in Tehillim (Psalms of David  89:3): "Olam chesed yibaneha world will be built upon kindness."

Sunday, March 27, 2011

ACTION ALERT | Report the “Third Palestinian Intifada” page on Facebook

A Facebook page has been created that calls for a violent Third Intifada against all Jews on May 15th.  The page has received a lot of attention in the media.  As of this writing, the page has over 332,000 followers. So far Facebook has refused to remove this page!!!

Here is how you can help:

  1. Please visit the Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/Palestinian.Intifada, and report the page.  There is a link for this purpose at the bottom left of the page.
  2. You can call Facebook demanding the page be taken down.  The phone number to call and to leave a message is 650.548.4800.
  3. Please forward this message to as many people as you can, mention it in your status update, or write a post or blog about it.

Thursday, March 3, 2011

A Very Important Event | ISRAEL UNITY COMMUNITY SOLIDARITY RALLY

Untitled-1We would like to point your attention to a very important event!

With the present violence and volatility in the Middle East and North Africa, it is now more important than ever for us to UNIFY in expressing our support of and solidarity with the state of Israel.

This is why we urge you to click here to be directed to the event page on Facebook for the ISRAEL UNITY COMMUNITY SOLIDARITY EVENT.  Please RSVP as attending, and do whatever you can to promote the event.

For the first time in 25 years all the Sephardic synagogues of greater Los Angeles have joined together to sponsor one of the largest events of the Los Angeles Jewish community.

The Sephardic rabbis of Los Angeles invite every member of the entire Jewish community of Los Angeles to join together with one heart in solidarity and support of Israel and Jews worldwide, in an uplifting event of unity, Torah, inspiration, and prayer in this time of great turmoil in the Middle East.

Honored guest: Israeli consul general Jacob Dayan

This event has been sponsored by:

Adat Yeshurun - Baba Sale - Beit Mitzvah - Em Habanim -Heichal Moshe - Jem - Jun - Kahal Joseph - Kahal Levy - Maimonides Academy – Magen David - Beit Medrash Mishkan Israel - Mogen David - Nessah Israel - Natan Eli Hebrew Academy - Ohr Haemet- Ohel Moshe - Tiferet Yisrael - S.T.A.R. - Shaarey Yerushalayim - Torat Hayim - West Coast Torah Center

***Let us join hands for the future of Israel***

The Abomination that is J Street

J Street styles itself as “The Political Home for Pro-Israel, Pro-Peace Americans!”

How does this video make you feel?  Remember, these are Jews!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Gilgul and Judging Favorably | By Rabbi Aaron Parry


In our ever-evolving experiences as homo sapiens aspiring to become homo spiritus, we wonder, “Why Me?” Why have I been given this unique challenge and tikkun to affect in this gilgul? Most of us are oblivious, and for good reason, who we were in an earlier incarnation. Dr, Brian Weiss in Many Lives, Many Masters suggests that groups of people tend to reincarnate together and chances are the people you encounter are familiar souls from a previous gilgul. If this is true, how do we deal with and process these encounters?

In-depth study of today’s reading of Sefer Tanya aroused a glimpse of an answer for me. Citing a famous dictum of Ethics of our Fathers, the Alter Rebbe writes “And be humble of spirit before all men.” (4:10) "This you must be in true sincerity, in the presence of any individual, even in the presence of the most worthless of worthless men." This accords, he continues, with the instruction of the Sages, “Judge not thy fellow until thou art come to his place.” (ibid 2:4) In a brilliant and incredibly perceptive insight from this passage, the Rebbe makes this novel thought:

“For it is his “place” that causes him to sin, because his livelihood requires him to go to the market place for the whole day and to be one of those who are “Yoshev Kranos,” (lit. “Sit by the corners”), where his eyes behold all the temptations; the eye sees and the heart desires, and his evil inclination is kindled like a baker’s red-hot oven, as it is written in the Prophet Hoshea, “It (yetzer hara) burns as flaming fire…” (7:6)

He continues to discuss the topic by making a distinction between others who are fortunate enough not to have to frequent “The Market Place,” perhaps they stay in the Beis Medrash all day, at home, or the like. What fascinates me by these words, in the parlance of contemporary street-lexicon, is that the Alter Rebbe is telling everyone, “Cut that person some slack!” as you have no idea what he/she is going through or must endure to eek out a living, contend with personal issues, and just make it through the day!

In attempting to parlay this amazing Torah into a resolution of the questions I posed above, I was thinking that fulfillment of “not judging someone until you’ve come to their place,” implies a tremendous intensity of the middat Tiferes, who’s best translation into English is “Compassion.” Such Tiferes leads to empathy which in truly evolved individuals, allows them to instinctively skirt reactionary judgmentalism, which is the bane of our society.

Embellishing a bit on the Rebbe’s interpretation of “his place,” I’d like to suggest that it may also connote the place of one’s incarnation. Meaning, that each person is so complex that not only are their personalities and proclivities, unique and pertinent, but so are their past-lives! We have absolutely no clue, literally, from which “place,” they’re coming! Conclusion? Unless we’re prophets, clairvoyants, or skilled in past-life regression techniques, let’s stop judging each other. Didn’t that British prime minister Disraeli once quip “It’s much easier to be critical than correct?”



Tuesday, January 25, 2011

A Great Event, Please RSVP Now | Chinese Auction!! to benefit Tashbar Torat Hayim

174580_181620385192932_5641305_nAs we usually do, we would like to point your attention to a great event for a very worthy cause!  This is indeed a cause that we all can and should support.  We invite and encourage all our readers to attend and invite all their friends.  Please RSVP now on the Facebook event page by CLICKING HERE.
Chinese Auction
To benefit
Tashbar Torat Hayim Hebrew Academy
Tuesday February 8, 2011;
7 to 11 PM;
Nessah Cultural Center

142 South Rexford Drive
Beverly Hills, CA 90212
Your participation will support our community's children, and their education and development, by helping to build a safer and more stimulating play area to enhance and enrich the children's school experience, as well as facing other financial challenges in one of our local neighborhood Jewish schools, Tashbar Torat Hayim Hebrew Academy.  To learn more about Torat Hayim please click here.
To view and download the catalog of items up for auction please click on THIS LINK!
$18 admission will include light buffet and refreshments.

ONLY $5.00 per ticket!!!
We encourage you to invite all your friends to this event.
WE WILL SEE YOU THERE!

Monday, January 24, 2011

Guest Blogger: Expanding upon “Why is it so hard to get marry married these days?” | By Bethie Kohanchi M.A. LMFT

My intention was not to further expand on my previous posting on this blog, regarding the subject of marriage, yet, due to the many excellent comments received, I felt a need to explore the subject with the readers some more. I would like to note that I don’t necessarily write this from a Judaic/Torah point of view, since my limited knowledge in that area makes me unqualified to do so.

I have counseled many couples and singles on the challenges of marriage and generally I see the couples who seek help, are ones who for the most part, lack the necessary communication skills for a solid relationship. Individuals who come in for consultation are seeking a partner in life, and are usually trying to find themselves at the same time.

There are many phenomenon and or circumstances that play a major role in dating and marriage, for example: one’s culture, perception about life, expectation of marriage and of course age, and many more.

Every culture deals with dating issue differently; some cultures promote dating at an early age, while others hint at dating in later years. Some cultures only date through known acquaintances or recommended person, while still others may only do blind dates. Some cultures may not even give the person the option of choosing a date. It is important here to please keep in mind that within every family exists a DIFFERENT CULTURE. That means no matter how close a family you and I have, what my family’s expectations of “dating” is, may not be acceptable to your family’s “dating” expectations. Therefore, family expectations of how dating should be or when to start dating may delay or encourage earlier marriages.

A person’s individual perception about dating or marriage can hinder marriage. For instance, unrealistic expectations can be a big setback for some people. Unrealistic expectations can be different for each individual, what may be unrealistic for one, may not be for another. A good example to illustrate this point: the culture and language barrier.

Then we have another question: How do you know when your expectations are unrealistic? Talk to your friends, get advice, talk to married couples you know. Married people can shed light on what you need to focus on or not.

Another important issue to be aware of is your expectation of what a marriage should be about. If you are looking for someone to be just like you, or a marriage that has no arguments, you are setting yourself up for disappointment. You may have a long wait before Prince Charming arrives! Instead, look for someone who has empathy, who can understand your struggle in life, who can provide support and who offers help to guide you. Look for someone who you are not afraid of telling the truth to about the real you! Look for a person who is flexible in life and situations, who adopts to change easily without resorting to blaming others. As I mentioned earlier, marriage is about being committed to a relationship, about working through the many various issues that can arise.

As we age our expectations about dating also changes, some to our advantage and some to our disadvantage. For instance the person who you would want to marry when you are 20 years old, most likely would not be your choice when you are 35. Young people usually (and I emphasize usually) do not know what they really want from life, marriage or their spouse, and once married they just adapt to the life they have made for themselves. As one ages and looks for a spouse, different issues present themselves. She thinks she knows exactly what she wants in a partner, and because she is so exact in her list of requirements, she may never find that one person. Getting married in later years has the advantage knowing what kind of a person you want, however, if you limit yourself to a too specific population, you are closing yourself off from many other potential opportunities.

I once had a client who was only looking for certain type of a girl. He had finished medical school and was working. He eventually met his dream girl, but even when he found her, he had doubts and continued to contemplate about whether or not this was the “perfect girl.”

The point is: You may find the perfect person—but are YOU going to be ready to accept who that person is?

You have to know yourself, your needs and wants before you are able to know who you are looking for, but beware of being too rigid in your choices, we are all human and therefore all different.

Hope that helped !

Bethie Kohanchi M.A. is a  Licensed Marriage, Child and Family Therapist (LMFT).  She may be reached at bkohanchi@hotmail.com, at 310.968.6648 for appointments.

Monday, January 17, 2011

Guest Blogger: On Jews and Israel | By the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr…..We Wish!

mlk_illustration-300
Adapted from an article by John Lewis, U.S. Rep., a Democrat, representing the 5th Congressional District of Georgia and worked closely with Martin Luther King Jr. during the civil rights movement.
San Francisco Chronicle, January 21, 2002
The Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. understood the meaning of discrimination and oppression. He sought ways to achieve liberation and peace, and he thus understood that a special relationship exists between African Americans and American Jews.
 
This message was true in his time and is true today.
He knew that both peoples were uprooted involuntarily from their homelands. He knew that both peoples were shaped by the tragic experience of slavery. He knew that both peoples were forced to live in ghettoes, victims of segregation. He knew that both peoples were subject to laws passed with the particular intent of oppressing them simply because they were Jewish or black. He knew that both peoples have been subjected to oppression and genocide on a level unprecedented in history.
 
King understood how important it is not to stand by in the face of injustice. He understood the cry, "Let my people go."
 
Long before the plight of the Jews in the Soviet Union was on the front pages, he raised his voice.
"I cannot stand idly by, even though I happen to live in the United States and even though I happen to be an American Negro and not be concerned about what happens to the Jews in Soviet Russia. For what happens to them happens to me and you, and we must be concerned."


During his lifetime King witnessed the birth of Israel and the continuing struggle to build a nation. He consistently reiterated his stand on the Israeli-Arab conflict, stating "Israel's right to exist as a state in security is uncontestable." It was no accident that King emphasized "security" in his statements on the Middle East.
 
On March 25, 1968, less than two weeks before his tragic death, he spoke out with clarity and directness stating,
"peace for Israel means security, and we must stand with all our might to protect its right to exist, its territorial integrity. I see Israel as one of the great outposts of democracy in the world, and a marvelous example of what can be done, how desert land can be transformed into an oasis of brotherhood and democracy. Peace for Israel means security and that security must be a reality."

The words of King run through my memory, "I solemnly pledge to do my utmost to uphold the fair name of the Jews-because bigotry in any form is an affront to us all."

During an appearance at Harvard University shortly before his death, a student stood up and asked King to address himself to the issue of Zionism. The question was clearly hostile. King responded, "When people criticize Zionists they mean Jews, you are talking anti-Semitism."

From M.L. King Jr., "Letter to an Anti-Zionist Friend," Saturday Review_XLVII (Aug. 1967), p. 76. Also reprinted in M.L. King Jr., "This I Believe: Selections from the Writings of  Dr. Martin Luther King Jr."
". . . You declare, my friend, that you do not hate the Jews, you are merely 'anti-Zionist.' And I say, let the truth ring forth from the high mountain tops, let it echo through the valleys of God's green earth: When people criticize Zionism, they mean Jews--this is God's own truth.
"Anti-Semitism, the hatred of the Jewish people, has been and remains a blot on the soul of mankind. In this we are in full agreement. So know also this: anti-Zionist is inherently anti-Semitic, and ever will be so.
"Why is this? You know that Zionism is nothing less than the dream and ideal of the Jewish people returning to live in their own land. The Jewish people, the Scriptures tell us, once enjoyed a flourishing Commonwealth in the Holy Land. From this they were expelled by the Roman tyrant, the same Romans who cruelly murdered Our Lord. Driven from their homeland, their nation in ashes, forced to wander the globe, the Jewish people time and again suffered the lash of whichever tyrant happened to rule over them.
"The Negro people, my friend, know what it is to suffer the torment of tyranny under rulers not of our choosing. Our brothers in Africa have begged, pleaded, requested--DEMANDED the recognition and realization of our inborn right to live in peace under our own sovereignty in our own country.
"How easy it should be, for anyone who holds dear this inalienable right of all mankind, to understand and support the right of the Jewish People to live in their ancient Land of Israel. All men of good will exult in the fulfillment of God's promise, that his People should return in joy to rebuild their plundered land.
This is Zionism, nothing more, nothing less.
"And what is anti-Zionist? It is the denial to the Jewish people of a fundamental right that we justly claim for the people of Africa and freely accord all other nations of the Globe. It is discrimination against Jews, my friend, because they are Jews. In short, it is anti-Semitism.
"The anti-Semite rejoices at any opportunity to vent his malice. The times have made it unpopular, in the West, to proclaim openly a hatred of the Jews. This being the case, the anti-Semite must constantly seek new forms and forums for his poison. How he must revel in the new masquerade! He does not hate the Jews, he is just 'anti-Zionist'!
"My friend, I do not accuse you of deliberate anti-Semitism. I know you feel, as I do, a deep love of truth and justice and a revulsion for racism, prejudice, and discrimination. But I know you have been misled--as others have been--into thinking you can be 'anti-Zionist' and yet remain true to these heartfelt principles that you and I share.
Let my words echo in the depths of your soul: When people criticize Zionism, they mean Jews--make no mistake about it."