A Hanukkah contemplation: ‘To Another Year’ – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

| December 26, 2019

Photo Credit: unsplash {Originally posted to the JNS website} Some messages are simply too important to ignore. One such message, I believe, emerges from two words in the Talmuds short discussion of the Hanukkah festival.

Miketz: Great miracles in the offing – The Jewish Standard

| December 26, 2019

This week as we celebrate Chanukah, a post-Torah holiday, we also study Parashat Miketz. Of course, we remember the story from the Talmud (Shabbat 21b), when the Greeks entered the Temple, they defiled all the oils therein, and when the Hasmonean dynasty prevailed against and defeated them, they made search and found only one cruse of oil which lay with the seal of the High Priest, but which contained sufficient [fuel] for one days lighting only; yet a miracle was wrought therein and they lit [the lamp] therewith for eight days. The fear was that the oil would only sustain the flame for one day; miraculously, it burned for eight.

Gateshead’s Orthodox community bucks declining trend to double in decade – The Jerusalem Post

| December 26, 2019

The Orthodox Jewish community of Gateshead, England, is thriving in sharp contrast to many British communities, thanks to outstanding Jewish education, a dynamic New York rabbi and cheap housing. Like most northern English cities, Gateshead, located on the River Tyne, has struggled since the 1980s with the loss of the manufacturing industries that once made the region Britain's economic powerhouse. But whereas in most northern towns formerly vibrant Jewish communities drifted away along with the jobs and economic prospects, leaving a wasteland of deprivation, Gateshead is reversing that trend.

Father, son, and parsha – The Jewish Standard

| December 26, 2019

Alvin Reinstein of Teaneck and his son, Sam, made history several years ago as the first father-son pair ever to study simultaneously for rabbinic ordination in the history of Yeshiva Universitys Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. Now they have a new collaboration.

Top Ten Prophecies of 2019 – – Breaking Israel News

| December 26, 2019

After that, I will pour out My spirit on all flesh; Your sons and daughters shall prophesy; Your old men shall dream dreams, And your young men shall see visions. Joel 3:1 (The Israel Bible) (Photo: GraphicStock) The signs clearly say, as so many rabbis and experts have confirmed, that we are living in prophetic times preceding the messiah. Indeed, many extraordinary events signal the miraculous times in which we are living.Breaking Israel Newslooks back on these prophetic moments and suggests five further prophecies that could be fulfilled in 2020.

Why There Are So Many Ways to Spell Hanukkah – Mosaic

| December 26, 2019

Are we celebrating Hanukkah or Chanukah this week? Neither the English language nor American Jews would seem to have decided which way to spell the word.

Four Places Around the World to Nosh on Jewish-Latino Fare This Hanukkah – BELatina

| December 26, 2019

Many modern-day Jewish-Latinos are descended from families who fled Europe to evade persecution for their religious practices and beliefs, largely of Sephardic and Ashkenazi origin. While many of their traditions were lost or suppressed for fear of attracting danger in their new homelands across the sea, Jews thrive today in cities across Latin America

Mashadi Brides, The Lubavitcher Rebbe, And Shalom Bayis: An Interview with Author and Lecturer Mrs. Sarah Karmely – The Jewish Press – JewishPress.com

| December 26, 2019

Photo Credit: Mrs. Sarah Karmely Born in India, raised in England, and married in Italy, Mrs. Sarah Karmely currently lives in America where she teaches Persian Jews Torah

Man pleads not guilty in vandalism of Beverly Hills synagogue – Los Angeles Times

| December 26, 2019

A Pennsylvania man accused of ransacking a Beverly Hills synagogue and damaging several Jewish relics has been charged with felony vandalism and accused of a hate crime, prosecutors said Monday. Anton Nathaniel Redding, 24, pleaded not guilty to one count of felony vandalism, one count of second-degree burglary and denied his role in the alleged hate crime, officials said. If convicted on all charges, he faces a maximum of six years in state prison.



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