Jewish donors: it is time for a summer game of dominos.
Dominos? You, WE, and NYC need more dominos to fall so we can have the one on one vote we want in...
Dominos? You, WE, and NYC need more dominos to fall so we can have the one on one vote we want in...
Recap: Bubby sent a telegram telling Sender to come home. When he came home, she informed him that he would be staying home now and working for Mr. Corman the iceman. He works for him the first day and it’s grueling and he misses working with the Wright brothers. Someone comes to the door, and he realizes that it’s the stranger who had leaned over him on the train.
Thanks to the efforts of Rabbi Pesach Lerner, chairman of Eretz Hakodesh, the Orthodox Charedei party in Israel’s National institutions, the status quo at the Kosel Hamaarovi did not become the subject of a resolution by the board of governors of the JAFI-Jewish Agency for Israel, a powerful and influential international organization.
Rabbi Lerner, who is a member of the JAFI board of governors representing the Eretz Hakodesh party, was in Israel for the JAFI’s three days of board of governors meetings.
He attended a meeting, Tuesday, July 12, of 250 members of the executive board and the board of JAFI. The meeting was originally scheduled to express their indignation and anger after an incident that took place on June 30 at the Ezras Yisroel area at the Kosel set aside for mixed prayer. A small group of religious Jewish teens disturbed three “bnei mitzvot” ceremonies being held there.
The response from the Reform, Conservative and other liberal movements was fast and fierce, painting the Orthodox community with a broad brush and calling for wide-ranging changes to be made to the prayer setup at the Kosel, asking for the Israeli government to implement the Kotel Compromise Agreement that is currently on hold.
At the gathering, the Jewish Agency board members expressed their desire, in response to the June 30 incident, to pass a resolution implementing those changes.
Rabbi Lerner, speaking on behalf of Eretz Hakodesh, standing as an individual against a group of many, was adamant that the Kosel’s status quo must remain, and that, while he condemned any and all violent confrontations, no changes can be made to compromise the kedusha of the Kosel.
Thanks to Rabbi Lerner’s strong position, the resolution to implement the Kosel Agreement was shelved. The Jewish Agency resolution that remained condemned the June 30 incident and called for a completely halt to all violence.
“The presence of Eretz Hakodesh enables us to have a voice,” Rabbi Lerner observed after the meeting. “It is so vital that we be able to have a seat at the table, so to speak, to ensure that the chareidi viewpoint is heard and that the arrangements currently in place at mekomos hakedoshim remain”
Rabbi Lerner, who took the lead, was aided by others who assisted in making sure that the original anti-kedushas haKosel resolution never made it to the full board of governors. The Kosel agreement would give non-Orthodox streams official representation in the management of the Kosel and grant official status to the mixed section.
“This was historic,” said one of the Orthodox members of the board of governors. “The Orthodox voice had never been heard before at the JAFI. Kudos to Rabbi Lerner and EretzHakodesh for taking the lead.”
Night and Morning Online Events Scheduled for Tu B’Av, Thursday 8/11 and Friday 8/12
One day. Two live online events. Half a million Jews united in tefillah for all of klal Yisrael’s singles. It’s called Tu B’Av Together, and it is an opportunity not to be missed.
As elder law attorneys, we often meet with clients who are aging or are related to those who are aging. Elder law covers a broad range of areas, including helping the elderly and disabled attain the governmental benefits they need while simultaneously preserving their assets. Another component of elder law is basic estate planning. We typically prepare wills, trusts and advance directives for our clients and their family members.
In our previous article, we began exploring the question of why Hashem created the world. The Maharal, Ramchal, and other key Jewish thinkers explain as follows: Hashem is absolute and ultimate goodness. However, there are two aspects of goodness. Hashem is good, but He also has the ability to do good unto others. Before Hashem created the world, there was only Hashem Himself. Therefore, Hashem was internally good, but He was not actively expressing this goodness by giving or doing good unto others. Hashem chose to express His capacity for doing good unto others by creating man, upon whom Hashem would bestow the ultimate goodness.
Recap: Ezra is suspended for something he didn’t do. His father tries to ask what happened, but Ezra isn’t sure about tattling, even though Kalman was a bully. Mickey comes to Ezra’s room and asks to hear the stories from the journal.