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M A Weekly - Bulletin August 24th 2024 - Eikev - 20 AV 5784

08/23/2024 10:58:33 AM

Aug23

M.A. WEEKLY

                      

 

CLIQUEZ ICI Pour voir ce communiqué en Français (Traduction automatique par Google)

 

 

SCHEDULE

SHABBAT TIMES

Friday Night, @Maghen Abraham

 

Mincha 6:30pm followed by Shir Hashirim -Kabbalat Shabbat - Arvit

 

Shabbat Candle lighting  7:29 pm

 

Saturday, - @Maghen Abraham  

 

Shahrit 9am

 

Perasha -  Eikev

Haftara - Yeshayahu (Isaiah) Chapter 49:14-59:3

 

Kiddush Sponsored by

Henry Romano in honor of the Hazkara of his father Elie Romano z'L

 

Mincha 7:10PM followed by Arvit 

 

Havdalah: 8:33pm

 

 

 

 

UPCOMING THIS WEEK

CELEBRATIONS

MABROOK!!!

Solly Arazi & Silia Arazi
On their Wedding Anniversary!

 

MABROOK!!!

Maurice Hazan - Totah
On his Birthday!

 

MABROOK!!!

Albert Sayegh

On his Birthday!

 

MABROOK!!!

Ilan Shahin

On his Birthday!

 

 

 

HAZKAROT

HAZKARAH

Elie Romano z'L 
Husband of Stella Romano z'L
Father of Joe, Ben, Henry

 

 

 

NOTICES

___________________________________________________
Our cOndolences to the Elia Family on the 
Passing of Maurice ELia z'L
___________________________________________________
REFUA SHELEMA TO MoUSSA SAAD
___________________________________________________
refua shelema to AHOUVA BAT MAZAL
___________________________________________________

REFUA SHELEMA TO Shlomo Ben Linda

NEWSLETTER

Bonjour / Hello [nickname_else_first_name],

Table of contents

 

1) Perashat Hashavoua - Rabbi Eli Mansour

2) Halakhat Hashavoua (Halakhot related to day to day life) By Hazzan David Azerad  -

 

3) Holy Jokes!

4) For KIDS

 

 

 This Week's Parasha Insight with Rabbi Eli Mansour

Parashat Ekeb- Defending Am Yisrael

In Parashat Ekeb, Moshe Rabbenu recalls how after he spent forty days in the heavens receiving the Torah, he came down and saw the people worshipping the golden calf. He then later returned to the heavens to plead that G-d forgive Am Yisrael for their sin.

The work Amudeha Shiba brings an obscure Midrashic passage that connects Moshe’s pleas to G-d after the sin of the golden with the story of Eliyahu Ha’nabi. As we read in the Book of Melachim I (chapter 19), Eliyahu was forced to flee from Izebel, the queen of Israel who sought to kill him, and he came to Sinai. There he was provided with some food, which, the verse states, sustained him for forty days and forty nights. G-d then appeared to Eliyahu, and he reported to G-d that Am Yisrael had abandoned His covenant and worshipped idols. The Midrash interprets these verses to mean that after Eliyahu ate, he was shown a vision of Moshe Rabbenu spending forty days and forty nights atop Mount Sinai pleading with G-d for forgiveness on behalf of the Jewish People. G-d sharply chastised Eliyahu for reporting negatively to G-d about Am Yisrael, instead of advocating on their behalf, as Moshe had done.

To explain this Midrash, the Amudeha Shiba cites a famous passage in a different Midrashic source which teaches that when G-d wanted to create Adam, various groups of angels protested. One such group was the group which represented "Emet" (truth), and who argued that human beings should not be created, because they are dishonest. To silence their protest, the Midrash relates, G-d took hold of "Emet" and "threw them to the ground." One commentator (the "Zera Berech") explains this to mean that he sent the angels of this group down to earth, where they would derive benefit from human beings and thus come to appreciate the greatness of people, instead of objecting to their having been created. One of these angels was Eliyahu Ha’nabi. He was originally an angel, part of the "Emet" group, and he was sent to earth for the purpose of being shown the positive qualities of human beings.

This group of angels also consisted of the three angels who visited Abraham Abinu, who served them a lavish meal. They, too, had argued against the creation of man, and so they were sent to earth where they would benefit from the hospitality of a human being, and thus appreciate them. The effects of these angels’ visit to Abraham were felt years later, when Moshe went to the heavens to receive the Torah. The Midrash relates that the angels initially protested, arguing that the Torah belongs in the sublime, pure domain of the heavens, and should not be entrusted to frail human beings. G-d responded by making Moshe Rabbenu appear like Abraham Abinu, and then reminding the angels of how they were once fed and cared for by a human being. They were sent to the world to see the greatness of human beings, and acknowledge the value of their being created and that they deserved G-d’s Torah. And because of this experience, they were compelled to stop protesting the decision to give Beneh Yisrael the Torah.

With this background, the Amudeha Shiba proceeds to suggest a novel reading of the Midrash’s interpretation of the story of Eliyahu. He explained that Eliyahu did not actually survive for forty days from the nourishment provided by the small morsel of food he was given. This description actually refers to Moshe Rabbenu. G-d showed Eliyahu a vision of Moshe’s forty-day stay in the heavens which was "sustained" by the eating of the three angels who visited Abraham. Moshe was able to receive the Torah because years earlier, G-d had sent three angels to Abraham’s tent, where they were fed, proving to them the greatness of the human being, and why the Jewish People deserved to receive the Torah. Eliyahu, too, was sent to this world to receive benefit from people and recognize their greatness – but he did not learn the lesson. Instead of defending and advocating for the Jewish Nation, he instead complained about them to the Almighty.

The role of a Jewish leader – and, in a sense, of each one of us – is to advocate for the people, not to complain about them. Of course, at the appropriate time and in the appropriate manner, a leader is required to point out to the people their mistakes so they will improve. But in speaking to G-d, the leader’s obligation is to pray on the people’s behalf, to emphasize only their virtues, their merits, their good deeds and their good qualities. There are enough "prosecuting" angels in the heavens who argue against the Jewish Nation before the Heavenly Tribunal. They don’t need our help. Our focus must instead be directed towards all that is beautiful about the Jewish People, and pleading to G-d to bless His beloved nation and shower them all with joy, success and prosperity.

 

 

Halachot this week are selected and Translated by Hazzan David Azerad

 

no Halacha this week 

 

Bevirkat Shabbat Shalom Umevorach 

David Azerad 

 

 

 3) HOLY JoKeS!!

 

Selection of funny snippets, loosely related to this weeks parashah or current events, to brighten your day 

 

 

4) FOR KIDS

Click on the image to open the youtube video

 

 

 

LIFECYCLE EVENTS

Celebrate a lifecycle event with us by sponsoring a Kiddouch

 

CONGREGATION MAGHEN ABRAHAM

 

Contact Us

Maghen Abraham
POB 111, Succ Snowdon, Montreal,

H3X 3T3

 

Synagogue:
4894 St-Kévin 
Montréal, Québec, Canada 
macommunaute@maghenabraham.com

 

Update kiddush sponsorship M A Weekly - Bulletin August 17th 2024 - Vaetchanan - SHABBAT NACHAMU 13 AV 5784

08/15/2024 09:46:23 PM

Aug15

M.A. WEEKLY

                      

 

CLIQUEZ ICI Pour voir ce communiqué en Français (Traduction automatique par Google)

 

 

SCHEDULE

SHABBAT TIMES

Friday Night, @Maghen Abraham

 

Mincha 6:30pm followed by Shir Hashirim -Kabbalat Shabbat - Arvit

 

Shabbat Candle lighting  7:41 pm

 

Saturday, - SHABBAT NACHAMU @Maghen Abraham  

 

Shahrit 9am

 

Perasha -  Vaetchanan

Haftara - Yeshayahu (Isaiah) Chapter 40:1-26

 

Kiddush Sponsored by

Vicky Moghrabi in honor of her husband Selim Moghrabi z'L

 

Mincha 7:20PM followed by Arvit 

 

Havdalah: 8:46pm

 

UPCOMING HOLY-DAYS

 

Tu B'Av - Aug 18th evening to August 19th Afternoon - No Tachanun

 

Tu B'Av (Hebrew: ט״ו באב, lit.'fifteenth of Av') is a minor Jewish holiday.[1] In modern-day Israel, it is celebrated as a holiday of love (חג האהבה Ḥag HaAhava).[2] It has been said to be an auspicious day for weddings.

-Wikipedia

 

 

UPCOMING THIS WEEK

CELEBRATIONS

MABROOK!!!

Candice Hasson
on her hebrew Birthday!

 

 

 

HAZKAROT

HAZKARAH

Selim Moghrabi z'L 
Husband of Vicky Moghrabi
Father of Moise, Albert, Rebecca,

Shirley & Mike 

 

 

 

NOTICES

___________________________________________________
Our cOndolences to the Elia Family on the 
Passing of Maurice ELia z'L
___________________________________________________
REFUA SHELEMA TO MoUSSA SAAD
___________________________________________________
refua shelema to AHOUVA BAT MAZAL
___________________________________________________

REFUA SHELEMA TO Shlomo Ben Linda

NEWSLETTER

Bonjour / Hello [nickname_else_first_name],

Table of contents

 

1) Perashat Hashavoua - Rabbi Eli Mansour

2) Halakhat Hashavoua (Halakhot related to day to day life) By Hazzan David Azerad  -

Rebuilding is a Process

3) Holy Jokes!

4) For KIDS

 

 

 This Week's Parasha Insight with Rabbi Eli Mansour

Parashat VaEtchanan- We are Always G-d’s Special Nation

Parashat Vaet’hanan recounts the event of Matan Torah, when G-d revealed Himself to our ancestors and gave Moshe the Torah to bring to us.

The Talmud famously tells of Moshe’s experiences when he ascended Mount Sinai to receive the Torah. The heavenly angels protested G-d’s decision to give Beneh Yisrael the Torah, arguing that it should not be given to a "Yelud Isha" – people "born from a woman." The Torah, they argued, preceded the world’s creation by thousands of years. And so its rightful place is in the heavens, and not on earth, among human beings.

What exactly was the angels’ claim? And why did they refer to human beings as "Yelud Isha"?

The explanation might be that the angels referred to the Yeser Ha’ra, to the base desires and temptations to which all human beings are subjected, and which make it all but impossible for people to avoid wrongdoing. Human beings are created as a result of lust, the union between a man and a woman. Desire and passion are part of their essence. And so the angels wondered, should the Torah be given to such creatures? The Torah is pure and pristine; should it not remain with the angels in the heaven, who are pure and free of physical desires?

The Talmud continues that G-d turned to Moshe and said, "Aneh Lahem Teshuba," which is commonly understood to mean, "Give them an answer." However, this can also be read as, "Answer them – repentance!"

The response to the angels’ claim is the institution of Teshuba. The verses in Tehillim (90) teach that already "before the mountains were born and earth came into being…You said: Return, O humans!" Meaning, repentance – like the Torah – was created well before the earth’s creation. Even before the world was brought into existence, G-d had written the Torah, the blueprint for life on earth, but He also established repentance – the opportunity we are given to correct our mistakes and return to Hashem. This is the answer given to the angels. Even though we human beings are frail and prone to making mistakes, we deserve the Torah because of the institution of Teshuba, which allows us to keep trying, to keep working to make ourselves better, to always learn from our mistakes and move forward.

The famous verse later in the Book of Debarim says, "Torah Siva Lanu Moshe, Morasha Li’kehilat Yaakob" – "Moshe commanded us the Torah, an everlasting inheritance for the congregation of Yaakob." The Name "Yaakob," which is derived from the word "Akeb" ("heel"), refers to the Jewish Nation when we have sunken to low spiritual levels. This is in contrast to "Yisrael," the name given to Yaakob after he defeated Esav’s angel – the Satan – and thus signifies triumph and success, the times when we reach great spiritual heights. The Torah was given to us as an everlasting possession which remains with us even when we are "Kehilat Yaakob" – even when we fall to the level of "Yaakob." G-d does not give up on us when we fail. Instead, He patiently waits for us to work our way back. We are always His special nation, despite our sins, and is always eagerly anticipating our heartfelt repentance.

Not coincidentally, we always read Parashat Vaet’hanan immediately after Tisha B’Ab, on "Shabbat Nahamu," when we are to experience comfort and consolation after our period of mourning for the destruction of the Bet Ha’mikdash. There is no greater source of comfort and consolation than knowing that the Torah has been given to us as a "Morasha Kehilat Yaakob," eternally and unconditionally; that we are always G-d’s beloved nation, even after we sin and even after He needs to punish us. We can be comforted by knowing that G-d specifically gave the Torah to us, to frail human beings with a Yeser Ha’ra, knowing that we will need to struggle and that we will at times fail, and that together with the Torah we were given the opportunity of Teshuba. Let us take comfort in this realization, and let us take full advantage of this opportunity, never despairing, never giving up, and never thinking for a moment that G-d no longer wants us back – because He always does, under all circumstances.

 

 

Halachot this week are selected and Translated by Hazzan David Azerad

 

Rebuilding is a Process

Parshat Vaetchanan, Shabbat Nachamu--Rabbi Berel Wein

The Shabbat immediately after the sad fast day of 9 Av is called Shabbat Nachamu – the Shabbat of comfort and consolation. This Shabbat draws its name from the first two words of the prophet Yeshayahu, and this series of prophetic readings continues for seven weeks with a message of hope and contentment.

 

The prophetic readings leading up to the ninth of Av were only three in number, but the message of consolation is more than twice that in number. The prophet notes that the comforting message will be granted in a double manner (Nachamu Nachamu), and we receive seven weeks of comfort to counterbalance the three-week messages of doom and destruction.

 

We know that there are many varied and valid reasons and motives for Jewish customs and traditions. All of these customs regarding the readings of these specific Haftorot and the reasons for them should not be treated lightly, and one should not dismiss them in a cavalier fashion simply because it may no longer seem to be appropriate to the situation.

Human life and behavior are too complex to attribute to one motive and reason. This is true regarding all details and aspects of Jewish tradition as well. There are ample examples in past and present Jewish society, of how the abandonment of certain customs that modernists felt to be anachronistic eventually led to violations of explicit Torah commandments and values themselves. Judaism should never be observed and viewed in a simplistic, superficial manner. It is too grand for such treatment.

 

There is a profound and important lesson to be derived from the fact that the prophecies of destruction required only three weeks of public reading while the prophecies of hope and consolation mandated seven weeks on the Jewish calendar. Destruction requires far less time and effort to achieve its sad and nefarious goal. When the end comes, it does so with inevitably and swiftness. Great empires and powerful countries can exist for centuries but are consigned to the dustbin of history in only a few decades or even a few years. It is so much faster and easier to slide down than to attempt to rise and rebuild and struggle forward.

 

 Rebuilding is a process, and it is never accomplished instantaneously and easily. There are many ups and downs that rebuilding will engender, disappointments, frustrations, and even reversals.  It will take much more time for the effort to comfort the Jewish people in its continuing effort to rebuild itself anew in its ancient homeland currently. The Jewish world was almost destroyed in a few years in the past century. It will take time to rebuild it. It is a continuing process along a very bumpy road.

 

We should be comforted in realizing that the process has begun and is underway. There are many weeks and years ahead of us, as we continue our quest to be comforted. But we are already blessed with the knowledge that we have reached the season of comfort and consolation.

 

Bevirkat Shabbat Shalom Umevorach 

David Azerad 

 

 

 3) HOLY JoKeS!!

 

Selection of funny snippets, loosely related to this weeks parashah or current events, to brighten your day 

 

 

4) FOR KIDS

Click on the image to open the youtube video

 

 

 

LIFECYCLE EVENTS

Celebrate a lifecycle event with us by sponsoring a Kiddouch

 

CONGREGATION MAGHEN ABRAHAM

 

Contact Us

Maghen Abraham
POB 111, Succ Snowdon, Montreal,

H3X 3T3

 

Synagogue:
4894 St-Kévin 
Montréal, Québec, Canada 
macommunaute@maghenabraham.com

 
Thu, June 26 2025 30 Sivan 5785