Happy Birthday Arele!
We'd like to wish Arele a great year filled with great things.
There willl be a Yeka Farbeque in honor of this occaasion by Benny Herchovich on Wednesday evening 9:00pm 1675 Union St Apt #1
See y'all there!
Posted by CGIforever 6 comments
One Yeka! One Bien hashmoshes!!!
One
Yeka
One
Bien
Hashmoshes
Can you imagine? Anyone that is part of the Yeka family saying L'chaim at a Bien Hashmoshes at The same time? All we have to do is have One man in charge of Setting a good time for evreyone. And then once the time is set KABOM!!! One Yeka One Bien Hashmoshes! Lchaim Yeka Land!
This message was paid for by the Wine Tasting Committee "Committed to taste wine" copyright 08
Posted by Abrash 3 comments
Lag '05
Lag Ba Omer 2004 '05
Lag BaOmer, the 33rd day of the Omer Count -- this year, May 23, 2008 -- is a festive day on the Jewish calendar, celebrated with outings (on which the children traditionally play with bow and arrows ), bonfires, and other joyous events. Many visit the resting place (in Miron in Northern Israel) of the great sage and mystic Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, whose yahrzeit (anniversary of his passing) the day marks.
Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, he was the first to publicly teach Kabbalah, and is the author of the basic work of Kabbalah, the Zohar. On the day of his passing, Rabbi Shimon instructed his disciples to mark the date as "the day of my joy."
The Chassidic masters explain that the final day of a righteous person's earthly life marks the point at which "all his deeds, teachings and work" achieve their culminating perfection and the zenith of their impact upon our lives. So each Lag BaOmer we celebrate Rabbi Shimon's life and the revelation of the esoteric soul of Torah.
Lag BaOmer also commemorates another joyous event. The Talmud relates that in the weeks between Passover and Shavuot a plague raged amongst the disciples of the great sage Rabbi Akiva "because they did not act respectfully towards each other"; these weeks are therefore observed as a period of mourning, with various joyous activities proscribed by law and custom. On Lag BaOmer the dying ceased. Thus Lag BaOmer also carries the theme of Ahavat Yisrael, the imperative to love and respect one's fellow.

Happy Lag BOmer!
Posted by Rabbi Harari 3 comments
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