Today is Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Happy Shavuot!

New Sefer Torah writing

 

Chanucka party 2011

YI

 

 

YOUNG ISRAEL

OF BRIGHTON BEACH

TO COMMENCE WRITING A COMMUNITY

SEFER TORAH ON

DECEMBER 18, 2011

 

On Sunday afternoon, December 18, 2011 at 4:00 pm the Young Israel of Brighton Beach will begin to write a Sefer Torah with the participation of the members and friends in the Brighton Beach community at their building located at 293 Neptune Avenue in Brooklyn, NY.

 

The last mitzvah in the Torah directs every Jew to write the verses of the Torah once in his lifetime. Through the fulfillment of the mitzvah, the Torah and Judaism have been kept alive and will continue to endure.

 

We learn from our sages: “One who writes a Sefer Torah is considered as if he had received it at Mount Sinai… One who corrects even one letter is considered as if he had written it in its entirely.”

 

Every word, every sentence, every chapter of the Torah instructs us how to live meaningful Jewish lives. These are the words we teach our children in our effort to perpetuate our mitzvoth, traditions, heritage, and values.

 

The 613th mitzvah, as enumerated by the Rabbis, is the religious duty of each individual Jew to write a Torah scroll. Based on the verse in Deuteronomy 31:19 “Now therefore write for yourselves this song, and teach it to the Israelites,” there lies the root of the precept the idea that each individual Jew should have a Torah scroll accessible for one’s reading and study to understand the mitzvoth and to come to learn to fear and respect G-d. (Deuteronomy 17:19)

 

If it is not possible to write it with one’s own hand, one may then fulfill the mitzvah by hiring someone to write it for one. One then, who has the opportunity to do so but refrains, disobeys a positive precept as writing a Sefer Torah is a causative factor to learn its precept.

 

For all those who have had ties with the shul  since it was founded in 1938 or even those who would like to perform the mitzvah you are welcome to join. You can participate in memory of a loved one or in honor of a simcha. All are welcome to join us..

 

The shul follows in the tradition of the Young Israel movement of being a welcome home to all those who want to partake in an orthodox Jewish environment.

 

For those who can’t make it, there is a Torah Fund Hotline set up that will take your calls regarding participation in the torah writing. The Torah Fund hotline number is 718 – 804 – 3602.

 

A wonderful program has been setup that will enlighten us and enrich our lives.

 

For more information on this event please contact either Rabbi Efraim Zaltzman or Steven Frohlich at 718 – 648 – 0843.

Reception

 
Welcome to the Young Israel of Brighton Beach      
 293 Neptune Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11235
  718-648-0843    

Divrei Torah from Young Israel

 Zeev doing Torah Hakba on Monday

  Parshat HashavuaDivrei Torah:

 

C

 
 

Gala Dinner of 67th Anniversary of Young Israel of Brighton Beach

President of borough Brooklyn Marty Markowitz congradulated 
 Young Israel of Brighton Beach with Proclamation
 
 
 
President Steven Frohlich and Rabbi Efraim Zaltzman recieving Proclamation from Markowitz's Representative at the Gala Dinner Reception
 

Lag Ba Omer Photos

SUKKOT Photo albom

CAN THE SUKKAH BE TOO BIG ?
 
 
 
Jewish life is a calendar of objects: the shofar sounded on Rosh Hashanah, the sukkah constructed for Sukkot, the oil or candles lit on Chanukah evenings, the matzah eaten on Passover, and so on.
Objects need to be a certain size. A 3-inch chair is not a chair (you can't sit on it), nor is a 30-foot chair. That's why Halachah (the code of law that defines the Jewish way of life) is full of specifications -- the minimum quantity of matzah to be eaten on Passover, the maximum height of the Chanukah menorah. For a thing to be the thing it is, it cannot be too small, and it cannot be too big.
The sukkah is defined as a "temporary dwelling" which, for the duration of the seven-day festival of Sukkot, becomes the home of the Jew. The sukkah therefore has a minimum height -- under ten tefachim (about 40 inches) it's not a "dwelling" but a crawl space. It cannot be too high either -- if its ceiling is more than 20 amot (about 30 feet) above its floor, the sukkah is too massive to be considered a temporary dwelling. Torah law also specifies the sukkah's minimum length and width, its minimum number of walls, the maximum of space allowed for gaps in the walls, under the walls and above the walls. And on it goes -- certain portions of the Talmudic tractate of Sukkah and the corresponding chapters of the Code of Jewish Law read more like a builder's manual than a religious text.
All these specifications have one exception: there is no limit to a sukkah's length and breadth. You can build a sukkah the size of a city, or the size of a continent -- it'll still be a kosher sukkah.
This law flies in the face of everything we've said about objects and dwellings. But the Talmud derives it from a verse in the Torah, and the holy books explain its centrality to the theme of the festival of Sukkot which the sukkah serves.
The verse (Leviticus 23:42) reads as follows: "In sukkot (huts) you shall dwell for seven days; all citizens of Israel shall dwell in sukkot." In this verse, the Hebrew word sukkot, which is the plural of sukkah, is spelled without the letter vav, meaning that the word can also be read as sukkat, "the sukkah [of]." Thus the verse is also saying (under the Torah's system of multi-meaning in the same word) that "all citizens of Israel shall dwell in the sukkah." Explains the Talmud: the Torah wishes to imply that "it is fitting that the entire people of Israel dwell in a single sukkah."
Each of the festivals imparts its particular quality to the Jewish life cycle: freedom on Passover, Torah wisdom on Shavuot, and so on. One of the qualities imparted by Sukkot is unity. Our interdependence and oneness as a people is expressed by the four kinds taken on Sukkot, and by the sukkah's embrace of every Jew -- every type of Jew, and every individual Jew -- within its walls.
Thus it is indeed most "fitting that the entire people of Israel dwell in a single sukkah." The big sukkah -- the sukkah large enough to house all Jews together -- cannot be a violation of the definition of "sukkah", since it is actually its most fitting expression.
This concept hits home to our Sukkah this year in the Young Israel of Brighton Beach. Baruch Hashem every year, more and more people come to our Sukkah. Many times there was only enough space for the men, and sometimes not enough space even for the men. So B”H this year we are expanding our Sukkah to accommodate our growing community, to all sit in one Sukkah as one family Yaasher Koach to all those involved.
May Hashem grant us and our families a good and sweet year. And may we be redeemed through Moshiach speedily in our days.
 

 

Ceremony award Young Israel Dinner 100 (1)

Torah Fund Donations

Rivka Teytelman $3500.00in memory of Simon ben Baruch - grandfather , Anonymous $1500.00for Honor of Rabbi of Young Israel Brighton Beach Shul, Chaim Davidoff $18.00, Shunya $1200.00, Anonymous $2,500.00 in Memory of granmother Lyuba bas Sarah Leya

LIVE BROADCASTS CAMERA 1

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******Rabbi of the shul******

 
 
Rabbi Efraim Zaltzman Shlit"a
Our Spiritual Leader
 
 

Weekday Davening Times

 
Day Shacharis Mincha  
Sun 8:15 am 7:30 pm
Mon & Thurs
6:55 am 7:30 pm
Tues, Wed 7:00 am 7:30 pm
Friday 7:00 am  7:30 pm
Shabbos 9:00 am  zman
 *Except Holidays

MAZL TOV !

 Mazl Tov to MITCH with newborn grandson!

 

Mazl Tov!

TO HOIWIE AND LINDA KRAWATSKY

WITH 2 NEW BORN GRANDDAUGHTERS
PENINA RINA BAS MORDEHAI LEIB

and AHUVA CHAYA bas SHMUEL

Beautiful kiddush was given this Saturday March 5, 2011 by Krawatsky family!

NCYI Events

Today is the 212th day of freedom after 1941 days of captivity for Gilad Schalit.

Starting 4:00 pm Dec. 18, 2011

Tsdaka on-line