Shabbat 23rd May

Transcription

Shabbat 23rd May
‫במדבר שבועות‬
‫בס”ד‬
BEMIDBAR & SHAVUOT
23rd/24th/25th May ‫ ה׳ םיון תשע׳׳ה‬Volume 19/Number 28
Shabbat commences at 8:42pm and terminates at 9:58pm.
Mincha/Kabbalat Shabbat at 7:30pm.
Today’s Kiddush is
sponsored by
Nona Ozerianskaya
on the Shloshim of
her father,
Chaim Ben Yosef Z”l
WWW.KINLOSS.ORG.UK
SHABBAT AT KINLOSS
HASHKAMA 7:45am
in the Liora Graham Beit
Hamidrash, followed by
Kiddush and a short shiur.
MAIN SYNAGOGUE 9:15am
SHABBAT LEARNING AT KINLOSS led by Eli Sufrin. Kriat Hatorah
by Gideon Aminoff and Eli Sufrin.
Shabbat Morning
8:30am: (Sephardi Synagogue) Rabbi Lawrence will speak
Mishnah Masechet Shabbat
before Kriat Hatorah.
by Rabbi Heller.
Rabbi Dr Raphael Zarum’s shiur
will not be taking place today.
It will resume after Shavuot,
on Shabbat 30th May.
Shabbat Afternoon
7:45pm: Daf Yomi shiur by Jeffrey Sagal.
8:00pm Pre-Mincha shiur
RABBI DORON PODLASHUK
Mizrachi scholar-in-residence
for Shavuot 5775
will speak on
The forgotten mitzvah – that precedes
Matan Torah.
Mincha at 8:45pm.
Followed by Ma’ariv and Yom Tov
at 9:58pm.
THE MINYAN 9:15am
in the Nissan and Rifca Deal Hall.
Kriat Hatorah by Carl White.
Devar Torah by Elana Chesler.
SEPHARDI SERVICE 9:00am
in the Sephardi Synagogue led by
Rabbi Heller and Reuben Gorji.
‫חג שמח‬
YOUTH SERVICE 9:45am
in the Liora Graham Beit Hamidrash,
led by our Youth Directors,
Barry and Chaya Colman.
All the staff of Kinloss
wish members
Shabbat Shalom and Chag Sameach
SHAVUOT AT KINLOSS
2015/5775
We are looking forward, with much anticipation,
to the forthcoming two day Festival, over which we will
be delighted to present the following
wide-ranging and exciting programme.
SHABBAT 23RD MAY
Shabbat Minchah followed by Shiur - 8:45pm
Maariv & Shabbat Ends - 9:58pm
10:20 - 11:30pm Pre-booked Dinner
Hosted by Rabbi and Mandy Lawrence
Tikkun Leil (see back page)
Youth Tikkun Leil
12:15 - 3:00am, in Liora Graham Beit Midrash.
1ST DAY SHAVUOT - SUNDAY 24TH MAY
3:11am:
9:15am:
First Shacharit
Second Shacharit (Combined Service)
For all Children:
Reading of the Ten Commandments during
Children’s Services and an ICE CREAM Kiddush
The entire community is invited to Kiddush
in the Kinloss Suite following the service.
Women’s Tikkun 5:00 - 7:00pm
kindly hosted by Sally and Scott Saunders at their home,
1 Chalgrove Gardens, N3 3PL
with cheesecake and other refreshments.
Speakers: Yael Unterman, Rabbi Lawrence &
Elana Chesler
Mincha and Maariv 7:30pm
2ND DAY SHAVUOT - MONDAY 25TH MAY
7:45am: Hashkama Minyan, in the Liora Graham Beit Hamidrash
9:00am: Combined Service with Yizkor
Women’s Megillat Ruth Reading,
immediately after Yizkor, in the Large Deal Hall.
9:45am: Youth Minyan in the Liora Graham
Beit Hamidrash, led by Barry and Chaya Colman
The Honorary Officers and Board of Management of our
Synagogue invite the entire community to attend a
special celebratory YOM TOV KIDDUSH to honour this
year’s recipients of our community’s
EISHET CHAYIL AWARDS:
CLARE LESSER
SIMA ROSEN
JENNY SOSNOW
Presentations will be made to the recipients in the
Synagogue immediately after the conclusion of our
morning service.
1:00 - 3:00pm: Barbecue Lunch in the Youth Flat,
for Years 11, 12 and 13.
8:00pm: Mincha
8:20pm: CHEESECAKE TEA
in the Deal Hall followed by
DESERT ISLAND DRASH
with
CHAYA COLMAN
JO GREENAWAY
MATTHEW WEINIGER
YAEL UNTERMAN
RABBI JEREMY LAWRENCE IS IN THE CHAIR
10:01pm: Ma’ariv and Yom Tov ends
KINLOSS
EISHET CHAYIL
Our Eishet Chayil Awards are
being presented to three
truly wonderful ladies, who have
given outstanding selfless service
to our congregation over many
years. Whether in the public eye
or behind the scenes, they have
always been there for others and
have been a great inspiration to the
entire community.
Each one is a true and genuine
Eishet Chayil.
JENNY SOSNOW
I am very grateful for being honoured as an Eishet Chayil.
I have been involved in Kinloss since Jehuda and I together with
our children Emma and Marc joined the Community over 36
years ago. During this time we have celebrated many smachot
and have made life long friends.
I was privileged to serve on the Board of Management as the
Minyan’s representative as well as being an active member of
Kadimah Kinloss for over 20 years.
I was appointed as the first administrator for KLC and I continue to participate in a
number of Shul activities including volunteering at the Yom Haatzmaut Breakfasts,
Mitzvah Day and being involved in the kiddush rota.
I really appreciate receiving this award and feel proud to be associated with Kinloss.
Chag Samaech.
SIMA ROSEN
I was born in Tehran and spent my formative years in Iran. My parents
and I moved to London in 1970 and settled in Hendon. We were members
of Hendon synagogue.
I married my husband Eric in 1976, and we moved to Iran with his
job. We lived through the Revolution in Iran and left after Ayatollah
Khomeini came in. We were posted to Papua New Guinea for 9 years
and to Hong Kong for 1 year. Whilst in Papua New Guinea, we found as
many Jews as we could to hold Seder nights at our home, where they
could enjoy our Pesach food which we imported from Sydney, each year.
We came back to London late in 1988. Eventually I followed in my father’s footsteps and started
my own Persian carpets business. For the past 21 years I have been dealing in carpets from my
warehouse in north London. I travel to Iran periodically to source my carpets.
Kinloss has been our Shul since our return to the UK. We have three children, Kimberley, Sarah
and Marc, who had his Barmitzvah in Kinloss, under the supervision of Rabbi Mirvis. Had my
daughters married in England, their weddings would have been at Kinloss too, but one married
in Los Angeles, and the other in Israel. We have 4 grandchildren and the 5th is due in July.
I have been a member of the Persian shul at Kinloss since its inception. I was a member of
the Persian Ladies Guild, under the leadership of Parry Ebrahimoff/Carol Yacobi, and when
they retired I was honoured to be asked to be a member of the new Ladies Guild, under the
leadership of Dalia Hakimian and Michelle Azizollahoff. I am proud to have been able to help
raise funds for various charities over the years through our Ladies Guilds.
I have been involved in our Persian Friendship Club since its inception. It runs twice a month,
and we are very proud to see how very successful it has become..
I am honoured to be chosen to be an Eishet Chayil for 2015, and would like to thank the Persian
community for giving me this honour, and hope to be able to help in any way I can for as long
as I can.
CLARE LESSER
I am thrilled to be honoured by Kinloss in this way. It is a pleasure to
attend a Synagogue with so many varied activities being offered on
a weekly basis.
I grew up at Norrice Lea where my family were regular attenders.
David and I married in 1983 and we joined Kinloss. Having four
children, Howard, Sonia, Yvette and Stuart over a period of seven
years and with the absence of an eruv, I basically stayed at home for
eight years.
Once able to be an active member, I began to become involved.
I have been a volunteer for the ladies security, a member of the Kadimah Kinloss committee,
a member of a kiddush team, welcoming and the Shabbat luncheon club.
Greater responsibility came when weekly kiddushim were introduced. For countless years, I
organised both the food and kiddush teams. Also, Tuesday, Friendship Club day, has been a
huge part of my life for so many years now. I am a regular driver, a hands-on helper during
the Tuesday meetings, and an organiser for the extra activities for our more able members.
As a family we have had the pleasure to celebrate two bar mitzvahs, 2 aufrufs and a wedding
at Kinloss, as well as David being honoured as Chatan Torah.
Working in the Shul office gave me the opportunity to see at first-hand how important it is
for a community to support all its members. One highlight was organising and leading a day
trip to Liverpool which included visits to the magnificent Princes Road Synagogue and the
Tate for a Chagall exhibition. I still have the pleasure of being one of the marriage registrars.
I would encourage every member of our community to become more involved. The rewards
from volunteering far outweigh the time invested.
SHAVUOT MESSAGE 5775
by Rabbi Jeremy Lawrence
Amongst the many Midrashim which discuss God creating the world and the
Torah for Israel, there are those which see Hashem locked in debate with the
Angels.
They contend that humankind is destructive and irresponsible; not to
be entrusted with God’s most perfect gift. What would be the honour in
entrusting a code of good conduct to people who would ignore it and defile
themselves? Surely the Torah belongs in Heaven with the higher, spiritual and
celestial forces.
Moshe argues for Israel. What point could there be in leaving the Torah with
the Angels? Do beings which don’t eat need laws of Kashrut? Do those who
don’t travail need Shabbat? Shmitta and Yovel belong with those who work
the land. Do those who are never tempted need to be warned off dishonesty,
jealousy and all manner of vice?
Clearly the Torah belongs with human beings. It is precisely our imperfection
and our potential to overcome temptation that qualify us. If everything in
the Torah seemed easy or came naturally, we would not have been made its
guardians.
We, particularly, are entrusted with the Torah through the merits of our
ancestors and Shavuot is the anniversary of that God/Israel relationship being
consecrated.
On Seder night we celebrate the Exodus by eating and acting in the spirit of
freedom. We share the narrative with our families.
On Erev Shavuot we should conduct ourselves in the spirit of those beholden to
God. We should take special care with our brachot over food (and depending
on the style of cheesecake it might be mezonot or might be shehkol!) And we
should act the part of those who receive and pass on the Torah – by being both
students and teachers.
Over the Tikkun Leil on Saturday night (and in several other occasions over
the Chag) there will be plenty of opportunity to indulge in blessing, eating,
learning and teaching.
Na’aseh – let us do as Hashem commands – observing, learning and passing
on the mitzvoth. Ve-Nishma – let us come over time to understand why it
is that what God wants of our lives isn’t always straightforward. For in that
challenge is born faith. And in faith do we come to reach out to God, inviting
Hashem’s support and blessings over our lives.
Wishing all members, friends, family and Klal Yisrael a Chag Sameach.
R’ Jeremy Lawrence
Flowers in Shul - by Rabbi Michael Laitner
............................ by Rabbi Michael Laitner
One of the most striking customs of Shavuot is placing flowers in shul, a custom
which some communities perhaps this year see as a chance to continue the
Chelsea Flower Show, closer to home!
The codification of this practice appears relatively recent and predominantly,
at least initially, of Ashkenazi origin. Rabbi Moshe Iserlis (known as ‘Rema’, d.
1572) in Orach Chayim (494:2) proposed the well-known suggestion that the
flowers in shul represent the joy of the giving of the Torah, as flowers adorned
Mount Sinai at the time (see Mishnah Berurah ibid, 10). Since we try in shul on
Shavuot, as best we can, to recreate the atmosphere at Mount Sinai through
reading the relevant passages for the keriat HaTorah, the flowers are a worthy
decoration to amplify this message.
Rabbi Avraham Gombiner (d. 1683) made a different suggestion. The Mishnah
(Rosh Hashanah 1:2), notes that Shavuot is the time when trees are ‘judged’
for whether they will produce a good crop of fruits in the year ahead. This led
to a custom of placing trees in shul to focus us on praying for a bountiful year
ahead.
Trees are not the same as flowers and may have led to opposition by Rabbi
Eliyahu Kramer, the renowned ‘Vilna Gaon’ (d. 1797) to placing trees in shul,
to avoid violating the prohibition of not copying non-Jewish practices, (chukat
hagoy), given the significance of trees for Christians. Perhaps flowers are a
neat way of covering all bases. Chag Sameach!
“Till death us do part” - Kate and Wills both said it, but who were they
quoting? - by Rabbi Leibish Heller
Three reasons are given for why we read the book of Ruth on Shavuot:
.......................... by Rabbi Daniel Roselaar
1. Shavuot occurs in the barley season in which the story of Ruth unfolds.
2. The book of Ruth recounts the ancestry of King David whose birthday and
Yahrzeit are on Shavuot.
3. Ruth’s conversion is reminiscent of the Jewish people accepting the Torah
and entering the Covenant. Here’s a possible fourth reason:
Shavuot is a holiday of nostalgia; nostalgia for that singular moment when a
People stood at the foot of a mountain and, with soaring hearts, made a pledge of
allegiance to the G-d of Israel.
I know of no other quote in all of our literature which captures this sentiment as
powerfully as those timeless words of Ruth: “Wherever you go, I will go; wherever you lodge, I will lodge. Your people are my
people and your G-d is my G-d. Where you die, I will die and that is where I will be
buried. May the L-rd come upon me evermore if anything but death us do part!
If only we would uncover within ourselves a fraction of Ruth’s faithfulness.
The Ten Commandments - By Rabbi Daniel Roselaar
If you look at the Ten Commandments as they appear in a printed Chumash you
will notice that the musical notation (“trope”) is very crowded. This is because
two sets of notes are superimposed one on top of the other. One set follows the
regular division of the verses, with the pausal etnachta in the middle and the sof
pasuk at the conclusion of each verse. The other, more elaborate, set divides the
entire passage into ten separate commandments and thus, for example, the four
verses which make up the commandment of Shabbat are combined to make one
long sentence.
Different traditions exist about which set of notes should be used when the Ten
Commandments are read in shul. Most communities always utilize the more
elaborate notation, whereas the Vilna Gaon maintained that on the Shabbatot of
Yitro and Va’etchanan the regular notation should be used. The reason why for
this distinction is because on a regular Shabbat the Torah is read as an exercise in
Torah Study and each verse must be read individually. But on Shavuot we are reenacting the experiences of the Jewish People as they stood at the foot of Mt Sinai
and on that occasion the Ten Commandments were communicated as ten distinct
utterances, rather than as a collection of sentences. When we stand in shul this
Yomtov and listen to the reading of the Ten Commandments we should try to feel
as if we are standing at Sinai and we should commit ourselves to the mitzvot of the
Torah just as our ancestors did more than three-thousand years ago.
The Legacy of an Ambitious Thunderstorm - by Lauren Levin
In many ways the Mount Sinai experience defines us as a nation, and thus in its
narrative, the Torah is extremely precise about its description.
After the tenth command we are told,
“And all the people saw the voices and the torches, the sound of the shofar, and the
smoking mountain, and the people saw and trembled; so they stood from afar.” (20:14)
It says that the people saw the voices: how is this possible?
There are those commentators who try to solve the difficulties by suggesting what
the people actually saw. Rashbam (1085-1158) says that the voices refer to the noises
of the thunderstorm, and it was the hail etc. of the storm that they saw! The Rasag
(882-942) also views the description quite literally. He says they saw the actual letters
of the words being uttered inside a flame, rendering the whole experience as quite
spectacular indeed.
Rashi (1040-1105) offers a more abstract explanation. The revelation was so great that
at this time the Jewish people heard what could normally only be seen. The Mt. Sinai
experience was an ‘out of your senses’ experience. At this climax of their religious
journey, they were freed from their normal physical limitations.
We are all too aware of our limitations: those that are inherent within us and those that
society imposes upon us. On Shavuot we aspire to ‘see the voices’ – to reach beyond
the limitations we thought we had, and to become individuals and a community that
we never believed we were capable of becoming.
WE HAVE AN
INCREDIBLE SPACE
ON YOUR DOORSTEP –
MAKE IT YOUR OWN. CALL DEBORAH ON 0208 349 5268
EAST END
RADICALS
17th June, 11.00am
With Rachel Kolsky
Whitechapel still evokes memories
of the radicals and revolutionaries
who worked tirelessly to improve the
working and living conditions of the
predominately Jewish community.
The Sidney Street Siege, Rudolph
Rocker, anarchists, the doss-house
that was home temporarily to Stalin
and Jack London and the tailors’s
strike of 1912 all feature on Rachel’s
tour.
Cost:
£15 Kinloss members
£18 non-members
For more information or to book,
please email [email protected] or
call us on 020 8349 5269.
To book online, please visit
www.kinloss.org.uk/events
0 - 4 year olds with Sara Keen in the foyer of the Kinloss Suite.
Reception up to School Year 2 with Natalie Sommer in the Avram
Nemetnejad Room (2nd Floor).
School Years 3 - 6 with Yehonatan Malachi on Shabbat and First
Day Shavuot, and Jason Marantz, on Second Day Shavuot, in the 1st
Floor Classrooms.
Children’s Services from 0-School Year 4 will start at 10:45am.
School Years 3 - 6 will start at 10:30am.
All Services to be followed by a kiddush.
Mazaltov to the
children in our
community
Zachery Book (2)
Lianna Goldman (7)
Chloe Hamilton (5)
Gabriel Hannuna (8)
Arieh Joseph (3)
Katie Lappin (1)
Lilia Rose (2)
Yoni Rosenthal (6)
Nathan Southern (6)
Please note that the shul
office will be closed on Sunday
24th May and Monday 25th May.
It will reopen on Tuesday 26th May
at 9:00am. In an emergency,
please contact the Burial Society
SECURITY NOTICE
Urgent Request for Male and Female Security Volunteers (aged 18-65)
Shul members, PLEASE join our security rotas. You would only be required for one
hour every eight weeks. For more information, please email [email protected]
or speak to Martin Shiers on 07831 836 031.
‫בס”ד‬
RAV ASHER WEISS AT KINLOSS
ON SUNDAY 7TH JUNE,
FROM 11:00AM - 1:00PM, IN THE DEAL HALLS
Rav Weiss is a
world leading
Posek heavily
involved in
answering some
of the most
complex halachic
sheilot. His
opinion is sought
after by Doctors
and Rabbanim
throughout the
world.
Dilemmas in Modern Medicine: Past and Present
followed by a Q and A Session by HaRav HaGaon Asher Weiss
Entrance free, all welcome.
If you would like to submit a question in advance,
please email [email protected]
THE KEHILLA WISHES ‫“ חיים ארוכים‬LONG LIFE”
TO THE FOLLOWING WHO HAVE YAHRZEIT
Saturday 23 May
Wednesday 27 May
Irene Aharoni
Brother
Farzaneh Amini
Husband
Darren Cooper
Mother
Jack FisherFather
Louise Mendlesohn
Father
Madeleine Rubins
Father
Rodney Geminder
Father
Robert Gradel
Father
Gloria Greenman
Father
Gwendoline Greenwood Father
Gloria Howard
Mother
Eleanor Mansfield
Father
Stuart NashFather
Sunday 24 May
Gilda BraffHusband
Harry CassBrother
Monday 25 May
Anthony Gross
Sylvia Schryber
Alexa Tapper
Regina Woolman
Mother
Brother
Husband
Father
Thursday 28 May
Amir Bassalian
Mother
Alick GlassMother
Hooshang Hakimi-SefatMother
David Isaacs
Brother
Brian LeeMother
Derek LewisMother
Michael Wacks
Mother
Tuesday 26 May
Friday 29 May
June Brookes
Father
Philip Caplan
Father
Jack FisherWife
Jeffrey Fisher
Mother
Michael Fisher
Mother
Susan Goldberg
Mother
Cheryl Spelman
Father
Jacqueline Weisbard Father
Ronald Dvorkin
Jacob Golchewski
Mandy Staszewski
BRING AND BUY
COFFEE MORNING
in aid of Kadimah Kinloss
TUESDAY 2ND JUNE,
FROM 10:00AM - 1:00PM
at the home of
Irene and Mordechai Aharoni,
38 North Crescent, N3
Brand new goods only.
Donation £2.
Father
Mother
Father
SAVE THE DATE:
Sacks Morasha School Annual
Dinner - A night of music and art on Tuesday 16th June in the Kinloss
Suite. Cost: £100 per person.
Featuring ‘Jerusalem Hassadna
Conservatory Jazz Quartet’:
http://www.jerusalemconservatory.
org/
Further details from Sacks Morasha
School: 020 3115 1900,
or email [email protected]
THANK YOU TO:
* Security Team 6.
Sunday 24th May (1st Day Shavuot) Team 7.
Monday 25th May, (2nd Day Shavuot) Team 8.
If you have any queries, please email [email protected]
or speak to Martin Shiers on 07831 836 031.
* May Sinclair’s Kiddush Team on Shabbat.
The Minyan’s Kiddush Team for Shavuot Day 1
Adrienne Sussman’s Kiddush Team for Shavuot Day 2.
Looking for Shammas volunteers for a Shabbat rota.
Contact Clive Onnie - [email protected]
BOARD MEMBERS
2015-2016
Deborah Clements
Susan Conroy
Darren Cooper
Barry Frankfurt
David Garbacz
Dalia Hajioff
Michael Hakimian
Stephen Harrison
Mark Hurst
Jonathan Joseph
Sara Levene
Fleurise Lewis
Darren Lewis
Jeremy Mindell
Clive Onnie
Elaine Renshaw
Scott Saunders
Suzanne Weiniger
Carl White
Board of Deputies
Representatives:
Darren Lewis
Linda Sharpe
KINLOSS NOTICE BOARD
MAZALTOV TO
* Fay Yare on the engagement of her granddaughter, Sarah Herskine to
Dovi Greenman. Mazaltov to Frances and David Herskine and to Susan
and Stephen Greenman.
* Charlene and Edward Lewin on the birth of a son, Brody Alf Jack Lewin.
A brother for Archie and Kiva. Mazaltov to grandparents, Rolanda and
Tony Hyams, Susan and Stephen Fenton, Josephine and Bruce Lewin and
to great-grandmothers, Ann Apfel and Julia Jackson.
* Angela and Mike Abrahams on the birth of a grandson, a son for Estie
and Gaby Bergin and family, and to Gwen and Simon Bergin and the
whole family.
* Angela and Mike Abrahams on the birth of a granddaughter, a daughter
for Adam and Daphne Abrahams and family, and to Ellen and Mordechai
Saks and the whole family
* Angela and Mike Abrahams on the birth of a granddaughter, a daughter
for Jonathan and Andi Abrahams, and to Miriam and Moshe Siderson and
the whole family.
SEPHARDI SERVICE TIMES OVER SHAVUOT
Friday 22nd May:
Sunday 24th May:
Mincha/Kabbalat Shabbat: 7:00pm
Shabbat 23rd May:
Shabbat Mincha: 9:00pm
Mincha/Arvit: 8:15pm
Tikkun Leil Shavuot: 12:00am
First Shacharit: 4:10am
Shacharit: 9:00am
Mincha/Arvit: 8:00pm
Monday 25th May:
Shacharit: 9:00am
Mincha: 8:00pm
Arvit: 10:00pm
TOMBSTONE CONSECRATIONS
SUN 31 MAY
SUN 7 JUNE
TUES 9 JUNE
SUN 14 JUNE
SUN 21 JUNE
1:00pm at Bushey in memory of Eileen Shoolman ‫ע׳׳ה‬
5:00pm at Bushey in memory of Elaine Stone ‫ע׳׳ה‬
11:00am at Bushey in memory of Sally Ann Doffman ‫ע׳׳ה‬
12 noon at Bushey in memory of Gladys Keidan ‫ע׳׳ה‬
3:30pm at Bushey in memory of Frida Faith ‫ע׳׳ה‬
SERVICES
(‫ שבת‬see front page)
Shacharit 1
Shacharit 2
Sephardi Shacharit
Mincha
followed by Ma’ariv
Tues - Thurs
Fri
7:00am
8:00am
6:45am
7:00am
8:00am
6:45am
7:30pm
Next Shabbat
Mincha/
Kabbalat Shabbat 7:30pm
TIKKUN LEIL SHAVUOT
11:30pm-12:15am: OPENING SHIUR
Yael Unterman (Deal Hall)
What No-One Told You About Na’aseh V’Nishma
12:15-1:00am:
Rabbi Michael Laitner
(Deal Hall)
Chava Wulwick
(Deal Hall)
The ‘Shabbos Switch’:
How can Shabbat relate
to an electronic world?
Decoding the Decalogue
Youth
(Liora Graham
Beit Hamidrash)
Barry Colman
Rafi Joseph
1:15-2:00am
Dayan Gelley
(Deal Hall)
Elana Chesler
(Main Synagogue)
Matan Torah,
Ruth &
Conversions
Not the Ten
Commandments
Rafi Joseph
(Deal Hall)
Youth
(Liora Graham
Beit Hamidrash)
Why did the Avot Rabbi Laitner
not receive the Rabbi Lawrence
Torah?
2:15-3:00am
Rabbi Jeremy Lawrence
(Deal Hall)
Ruth, Moshiach and a
Measure of Chutzpah
Yael Unterman
(Deal Hall)
Fleeing Famine to
Foreign Lands: A
“Modern Midrash”
(Bibliodrama)
Session on Ruth I
3:11am: SHACHARIT
Youth
(Liora Graham
Beit Hamidrash)
Panel Debate
Barry Colman
Rafi Joseph
Shimon Gillis
Youth Members