Wednesday 30 September 2020

The Sukkah Boys Second Hand Sukkah Sale!

The Sukkah Boys - Second Hand Sukkah Sale!
Offering second hand Sukkahs and Bamboo mats in great condition ready for use.
FREE delivery included within Melbourne City.

Old Version Pop Up Sukkah:
- 2x3 = $250
- 3x3 = $300
New Version Pop Up Sukkah:
- 2x3 = $400
- 3x3 = $500
- 3x4 = $650
Bamboo Mats & Bamboo Poles:
- 1.1x3.1 = $50
- 2.1x2.1 = $70
- 1.6x3.1 = $90
- 2.1x2.6 = $100
- 2.1x3.1 = $120
- 2.6x3.1 = $140
- 2.1m Bamboo Pole = $10 (minimum 5 for free delivery).
- 3.2m Bamboo Pole = $15 (minimum 5 for free delivery).

Get in touch quick while stock lasts on 0426839587.
Check out are website & book your Sukkah to be built on, www.sukkahboys.com.
Shana Tova
The Sukkah Boys


Pearls Manchester, yom tov click and collect

Brighton Shule Sukkot Dinner in the Hut

Brighton Shule Sukkot Dinner in the Hut
Join us for a fun Chinese dinner
 Tuesday 6 October at 7pm
$22 per adult and $16 per child
Join us for Chinese Food.
 Please book by 4 October. Food can be collected on the day of the event.
Catering is by To Catch a Chef:

Menu  
Adults - Corn & Egg drop soup, Large cigar spring rolls, Stir fried chicken, Fried rice, Pancakes with strawberries
 Kids Menu - Chicken schnitzel, Potato wedges, Pancakes with a raspberry sauce  

Banner Paper Products

WTB used Volvo XC90 2007 & later.

Looking to buy a used Volvo XC90 from 2007 and later. Neither black nor navy blue. Thank you.

SCHC - Online concert with Jonathan Birin!

South Caulfield Hebrew Congregation-Online concert with Jonathan Birin
Join the awesome Jonathan Birin for a virtual concert as he bring joy, African vibes and simcha into our lives! All welcome!
Thursday, October 1, 2020 at 8 PM – 9 PM

PROPERTY: 4 bed house for lease

FOR LEASE: 4 BED house with large living and dining room. Recently renovated kitchen. Central spa bathroom with double vanity and a second bathroom/laundry at the rear. Generous garden. Available now for 9-12month lease. Call 0482028754 for more details.  

General reminder for submissions

Dear subscribers
Just a friendly reminder for submissions to this email service, links are below. Keep these links handy for when you need it, plus most importantly it helps to avoid errors!

General adverts: www.bit.ly/eadvert

PROPERTY: Ground floor apartment available for lease

Ground floor apartment available for lease.
Right near park, Ripponlea train-station & Glen-Eira shopping centre

*2 large bedrooms with built in Robes
*Renovated kosher kitchen.
*Renovated bathroom & 2 toilets.
*Separate living and dining (can easily be turned into another bedroom).
*2 entrances.
*Porch.
*Storage shed.
*Car spot.
*Garden.
*Bike shed.
For more info
Contact: 0425493814

Sukkot advert, Sarah J

Make this Yomtov special for a loved one, yourself or a special friend & choose a gift from a large range of:
*Challa Covers 10% Off
*Exclusive Israeli Jewellery selected items 20% Off 
*Mezuzah Case
*Kippot/Tzizit for boys 
*Bows/Headbands for girls
*Women's hair coverings, cotton & silk pretieds, berets, snoods, scarves 10% off fall bands, slip bands, wraps, bobos & more......
Please call for Covid safe shopping. 
Small selection of headcoverings sold at 
G & A Krausz, 12 William St Balaclava
Wishing all a Shana Tova🍎

G & A Krausz Advert for Sukkot

G & A KRAUSZ & ALVISO SHIRTS
For Yomtov shopping call & collect available 
Call with table measurements for plastics to be cut to size. Note, there is no returns on any cut plastics.
For shirts please advise size required & choose carefully. Strictly no returns on open packages.
All printed plastics $7 per metre.
Clear 1.6 wide $8p.m.
Clear 1.4 wide $7p.m.
Also sold in rolls of 50m
Table protector white/brown $13 p.m.

Extended hours for Succot
Tues 10 Sept-Thurs 1st Oct  10am-3pm
12 William St Balaclava
95272427
שנה טובה ומתוקה

Update to tomorrow's Thu Lunch Club

St Kilda Shule's weekly Thursday Lunch Club
Thu 1 Oct
11:00am-11:30am
https://zoom.us/j/85476627503 or Zoom ID 85476627503
"Saving Jews in the hottest part of Australia"
Special Guests: Rabbi Ari & Rebbetsin Mushkie Rubin
The Rubins have made Northern Queensland their home creating the only Jewish centre in the top of Australia. The strangers they meet and the  inspirational stories they share will fascinate viewers in their live interview with Rabbi Ronnie Figdor.

BDE: Mrs Sima Paltiel ע"ה

בס'ד

It is with great sadness that we inform you of the passing of our dear mother, wife and sister, 

Mrs Sima Paltiel

Wife of Dr Eliezer Paltiel, mother of Risha Feiglin, Minna Paltiel, Leah Gedalyovich and Yisroel Paltiel and sister of Mrs Assia New and Rabbi Sholom Mendel Kluwgant.
Shiva via zoom will be on Wednesday and Thursday:
between 11:00 am – 12:00 pm

Join Zoom Meeting https://us04web.zoom.us/j/74229714968?pwd=ZWVmbWc3UG1OcXBNY3lMTmlhNThwZz09 Meeting ID: 742 2971 4968 Passcode: 2xDM5n

between 3:30 – 4:30 pm

Join Zoom Meeting https://us04web.zoom.us/j/75427514414?pwd=bWl0bGdTa0FRb28vSmREaTNWUFZaUT09 Meeting ID: 754 2751 4414 Passcode: 3D85Fg

If you have any special memories of our mother, please share them with us at Sima.memories@gmail.com 





Hamakom Yenachem Etchem Betoch She'ar Aveilei Tzion ViYerushalayim

‎המקום ינחם אתכם בתוך שאר אבלי ציון וירושלים

Webinar: Exclusive Interview with Chief Rabbi of Poland, Michael Schudrich.

Don't miss this special webinar

Decades after the Holocaust and the purges of 1968, the epic story of Poland's Jews is still being written.
Join the Chief Rabbi of Poland, Michael Schudrich, for an exclusive conversation about the struggles and triumphs of Polish Jewry today. Presented by the Australian Society of Polish Jews and their Descendants.
Wednesday 30 September 2020 at 8.00pm - 9.00pm
Please note the new link below
Free Facebook Live event
Join Zoom Meeting

Tishrei Art Bundle- to keep your kids busy!

Tishrei Art Bundle- to keep your kids busy!
Keep your kids busy by creating their own Sukkot decorations. Access three awesome art projects for kids perfect for Tishrei! Get step-by-step video tutorials to create beautiful artwork that will give your child confidence as an artist and keep them busy for hours, Improvise with whatever supplies you have at home and enjoy watching your kids learn how to draw and paint, whilst creating beautiful artwork! 

Brighton Shule invites you to bake Pignoli Cookies

Bake Pignolli Cookies with the Rabbi
Wednesday 30 September  at 5:30 pm
Meeting ID - 843 3854 5637

Sukkahmart advert

Wednesday Morning Parsha Shiur

"Following in the Footsteps of our Forefathers"
the weekly Parsha Shiur in memory of 
Shuli Mehlman, Liba Gutnick & Yael Bloch A"H
will iy'H resume after Sukkot, Wednesday, October 14
for Parshat Bereisheet.

G'mar Tov and Chag Same'ach.  

Tuesday 29 September 2020

SCHC - Making it a Meaningful Sukkot

South Caulfield Hebrew Congregation- Making it a Meaningful Sukkot

One of the most exciting holidays in the year is around the corner. We sit in the Sukkah, shake the Lulav, sing and dance, while enjoying seven days of wonderful parties and delicious meals. But what is Sukkos all about, why are we so joyful, and what are we celebrating? Join Rabbi Daniel for a comprehensive lesson on the multiple themes of this fascinating holiday and the deep spiritual meanings that underline them
Wednesday  October 30  at 8 PM – 9 PM

The Sukkah Boys Second Hand Sukkah Sale!

The Sukkah Boys - Second Hand Sukkah Sale!
Offering second hand Sukkahs and Bamboo mats in great condition ready for use.
FREE delivery included within Melbourne City.

Old Version Pop Up Sukkah:
- 2x3 = $250
- 3x3 = $300
New Version Pop Up Sukkah:
- 2x3 = $400
- 3x3 = $500
- 3x4 = $650
Bamboo Mats & Bamboo Poles:
- 1.1x3.1 = $50
- 2.1x2.1 = $70
- 1.6x3.1 = $90
- 2.1x2.6 = $100
- 2.1x3.1 = $120
- 2.6x3.1 = $140
- 2.1m Bamboo Pole = $10 (minimum 5 for free delivery).
- 3.2m Bamboo Pole = $15 (minimum 5 for free delivery).

Get in touch quick while stock lasts on 0426839587.
Check out are website & book your Sukkah to be built on, www.sukkahboys.com.
Shana Tova
The Sukkah Boys

NEW INKERMAN DRYCLEANERS IS RE-OPENING

Opening at 8am on Tuesday 29th September 2020
We Specialise in 
    TALLISIM, TZITZIT, SHIRTS & CAPOTE  
Trading hours:
MONDAY - FRIDAY: 8am - 4pm;
Closed on SHABBAT & Sunday.   
Located at:
266 Inkerman Street, St Kilda East
(just around the corner from the Yeshiva & opposite The Ink Hotel)
Phone: 03 9527 6227

Dor L'Dor September 2020

The online magazine Dor l'Dor has published its spring/Rosh Hashanah edition ready for your enjoyment.

Sukkahmart

Transfer videotapes to digital

PRESERVE YOUR FAMILY'S VISUAL HISTORY!
Transfer videotapes to digital:
VHS, S-VHS, VHS-C, Video 8, Hi-8, DV formats.
Transfer DVDs
High-Definition transfers of 8mm, 16mm (sound or silent) films
High-res transfers of photos (any size), 35mm slides and negatives.
Colour correction, photo restoration available.

SOUND
Transfer 1/4-inch reel-to-reel and audiocassette recordings to .mp3 files.
Noise reduction available. Super clarity!

Call Chaim Mehlman
0419 313 133, chaim@highkey.com.au


 

Mazal tov - Birth, Kennard 👶🏻

BS'D

MAZAL TOV 

to

Gabi and Yedidya Kennard (Givat Shmuel)
on the birth of a daughter, on Yom Kippur


Mazal tov to grandparents:
James and Vicky Kennard (Melbourne)
Michael and Dara Unterberg (Efrat)

Saturday 26 September 2020

Succos Flower Arrangements

Yom Kippur Tzetl

CANDLE LIGHTING 
6:03pm - Candle Lighting & Fast Begins, Sunday
7:01pm - Holiday & Fast Ends, Monday
These times are for Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Eruv Status: KOSHER
Gmar Chatima Tova!


Details on Yom Kippur below...



PARSHAH IN A NUTSHELL
The Torah reading for Yom Kippur morning describes the service performed on this day by the Kohen Gadol (high priest) in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem.

A special feature of the Yom Kippur service was the casting of lots over two he-goats — equal in age, size and appearance — to determine which shall be offered to G‑d in the Holy Temple, and which shall be dispatched to carry off the sins of Israel to the wilderness.

The climax of the service was when the Kohen Gadol entered the innermost chamber in the Temple, the "Holy of Holies." Wearing special garments of pure white linen, the Kohen Gadol would enter the sacred place with a pan of burning coals in his right hand, and a ladle containing an exact handful of ketoret in his left. Inside the Holy of Holies, he would place the ketoret over the coals, wait for the room to fill with its aromatic smoke, and hastily retreat from the holy place.

"This shall be an everlasting statute for you," the Torah reading concludes. "...For on this day He will forgive you, to purify you, that you be cleansed from all your sins before G‑d... once a year."


During the afternoon Minchah service, we read chapter 18 of Leviticus, which details the prohibitions against incest and other deviant sexual behaviors. The Torah reading is followed by a haftorah (reading from the Prophets) which tells the story of Jonah — the prophet who was sent to prophesy the destruction of the sinful city of Ninveh, ran away from G‑d, was swallowed by a fish, and learned the power of prayer and repentance to evoke G‑d's mercy and annul the harshest decrees.



HAFTORAH IN A NUTSHELL
Yom Kippur Morning:
Isaiah 57:14-58:14

Today's haftorah discusses the concepts of repentance and fasting, the theme du jour of Yom Kippur.

The prophecy begins with the words "Pave, pave, clear the way; remove the obstacles from the way of My people." A reference to the Yetzer Hara ("evil inclination") which must be removed to pave the way for sincere repentance. G‑d assures that He will not be forever angry at those who repent, and that instead He will heal them and lead them. The wicked, on the other hand, are compared to a turbulent sea: "there is no peace for the wicked."

G‑d exhorts the prophet Isaiah to admonish the people regarding their fasting ways which G‑d finds reprehensible — a message which resonated to this very day:

"Daily they pretend to seek Me, desiring knowledge of My ways . . . 'Why have we fasted and You did not see?' they ask. 'We have afflicted our soul and You do not know?' Behold, on the day of your fast you pursue your affairs, and from all your debtors you forcibly exact payment. Behold, for quarrel and strife you fast, and to strike with a fist of wickedness. You do not fast in keeping with the spirit of the day, to make your voice heard on high. Is this a fast that I will choose? . . . Is it to bow down his head like a bulrush and spread out sackcloth and ashes beneath him?"

Instead, Isaiah teaches the Jews the proper way to fast:

"Loosen the fetters of wickedness, untie the bands of perverseness, send the oppressed free, and break every oppressive yoke. Offer your bread to the hungry, bring the wandering poor into your home. When you see someone naked, clothe him . . . Then you shall call and the L-rd shall answer, you shall cry and He shall say, 'Here I am.' . . . G‑d will always guide you and satiate your soul with radiance; He will strengthen your bones and you will be like a well-watered garden, like a spring whose waters never cease..."

The haftorah concludes with the promise of great rewards for those who honor and take delight in the Shabbat.

Yom Kippur Afternoon:
Book of Jonah; Micha 7:18-20.

The entire Book of Jonah is read today as it contains an important and timely message on prayer and repentance. Click here for more on the connection between the Book of Jonah and Yom Kippur.

G‑d ordered the prophet Jonah to travel to Nineveh and present its wicked inhabitants with an ultimatum: repent or be destroyed. Jonah refused to comply with this directive, and fled on a boat. Strong winds threatened to destroy the ship, lots were cast among the crew and passengers and the lottery indicated that Jonah was the cause of the turbulent storm. He admitted his guilt and requested to be cast into the sea. Jonah was thrown into the raging sea and the storm abated.

Jonah was swallowed by a big fish, and while in its belly, was moved to repent. The fish regurgitated Jonah.

Jonah proceeded to Nineveh and broadcasted G‑d's word that Nineveh would be overturned in forty days. The people fasted and repented and the divine decree was annulled. When Jonah expressed his displeasure with this result, G‑d taught him a lesson. As Jonah sat on the outskirts of the city, the kikayon plant which was providing him with shade was destroyed by a worm, and Jonah was very upset. "And G‑d said: You took pity on the kikayon, for which you did not toil nor did you make it grow, which one night came into being and the next night perished. Now should I not take pity on Nineveh, the great city, in which there are many more than one hundred twenty thousand people?..."

The haftorah concludes with a  brief portion from the Book of Micah, which describes G‑d's kindness in forgiving the sins of His people. "He does not maintain His anger forever, for He is a lover of kindness. He will have mercy on us, He will grasp our iniquities and cast all our sins into the depths of the sea." Micah concludes with an enjoinder to G‑d to remember the pacts He made with the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.



SAGES ON THE PARSHAH

After the death of the two sons of Aaron who came close to G‑d and died (Leviticus 16:1)

They approached the supernal light out of their great love of the Holy, and thereby died. Thus they died by a "divine kiss" such as experienced by the perfectly righteous; it is only that the righteous die when the divine kiss approaches them, while they died by their approaching it. . . . Although they sensed their own demise, this did not prevent them from drawing near to G‑d in attachment, delight, delectability, fellowship, love, kissing and sweetness, to the point that their souls ceased from them.

(Ohr HaChaim)

https://w2.chabad.org/media/pdf/133843.pdf








Submission to Emmanuel's? See here



Kaparot
In the early morning hours of the day preceding Yom Kippur, the Kaparot ("Atonement") ceremony is performed. We take a live chicken (a rooster for a male and a hen for a female) and, circling it three times above our heads, we declare: "This is my replacement, this is my exchange, this is my atonement; this fowl shall go to its death, and I shall go to a long, good and peaceful life." The fowl is then slaughtered in accordance with halachic procedure, at which time we contemplate that this is a fate we ourselves would deserve, G-d forbid, for our failings and iniquities. The value of the fowl is given to the poor, and its meat eaten in the Yom Kippur meal; some give the fowl itself to the poor. (A alternate custom is to perform the rite only with money, reciting the prescribed verses and giving the money to charity. Kaparot can also be performed in the preceding days, during the "Ten Days of Repentance").

Links: All About Kaparot; a Chassidic story; What Give us the Right to Kill Animals?

Omit Tachnun
Tachnun (confession of sins) and similar prayers are omitted.

Festive Meals
The day before Yom Kippur is a Yom Tov, a festive day; for although we stand prepared to be judged in the supernal courtroom for our deeds of the passed year, we are confident that G-d is a merciful judge, and will decree a year of life, health and prosperity for us. Two festive meals are eaten -- one at midday and the other before the fast, which begins at sunset. The Talmud states that "Whoever eats and drinks on the 9th [of Tishrei], it is regarded as if he had fasted on both the 9th and the 10th."

In many communities it is customary to eat kreplach on the day before Yom Kippur. Kreplach are small squares of rolled pasta dough filled with ground meat and folded into triangles. They can be boiled and served in soup or fried and served as a side dish. The meat symbolizes severity, the dough is an allusion to kindness. In preparation for the Day of Judgment we "cover" the severity with kindness. (Click here for a recipe.)

Links: Eating Before Yom Kippur; Reverse Biology; Food: an Anthology

Mikveh
Both men and women immerse in a mikveh (ritual pool) to attain an extra measure of sanctity before the holy day.

Lekach (honey cake)
It is customary to ask for and receive lekach (sweet cake -- signifying a sweet year) from someone (usually one's mentor or parent) on this day. One of the reasons given for this custom is that if it had been decreed, G-d forbid, that during the year we should need to resort to a handout from others, the decree should be satisfied with this asking for food. The Lubavitcher Rebbe adds a deeper insight: "asking for lekach" on the eve of Yom Kippur instills in us the recognition that all the sustenance we receive throughout the year, including that which we supposedly "earn" by our own powers and endeavors, is in truth a gift from Above, granted in response to our daily requests from "He who nourishes the entire world with in His goodness, with grace, with benevolence and with compassion."

Link: Our Daily Bread

Additional customs
Additional eve of Yom Kippur customs include receiving symbolic malkut ("lashings") as atonment for one's transgressions, reciting the "Al Chet" confession of sins after minchah and at sunset, and lighting a 26-hour candle that would burn for the duration of Yom Kippur.

Yom Kippur fast begins before sunset
Yom Kippur ("Day of Atonement"), the holiest day of the year, begins this evening before sunset. Its most basic observance is the fast that begins this evening and ends tomorrow evening at nightfall (a total of approximately 26 hours), during which we abstain from food and drink in fulfillment of the biblical command (Leviticus 16:29; see also "Festive Meals" above).

For more on the Yom Kippur observances see Laws & Customs for tomorrow, Tishrei 10.

Kol Nidrei
The first of the five Yom Kippur prayer services, which begins with the solemn Kol Nidrei prayer, is recited in the synogogue tonight at sunset, at the onset of the holy day.

For more on the Yom Kippur observances see Laws & Customs for tomorrow, Tishrei 10.


Yom Kippur is the holiest day of the year -- the day on which we are closest to G-d and to the quintessential core of our own souls. It is the "Day of Atonement" -- "For on this day He will forgive you, to purify you, that you be cleansed from all your sins before G-d" (Leviticus 16:30).

For twenty-six hours, from several minutes before sunset on Tishrei 9 to after nightfall on Tishrei 10, we "afflict our souls": we abstain from food and drink, do not wash or anoint our bodies, do not wear leather shoes, and abstain from marital relations.

When the Holy Temple stood in Jerusalem, the Yom Kippur service included the High Priest's entry into the "Holy of Holies" to offer the ketoret -- the only time that anyone entered the Temple's innermost chamber -- and the "casting of lots" over two goats, one to be offered to G-d and the other to carry off the sins of Israel to the wilderness. Today, we spend the day in the synagogue garbed in a white garment called a kittel to resemble the sin-free angels and to waken thoughts of repentance by reminding us of the day of our death. In the course of the day we hold five prayer services: Maariv, with its solemn Kol Nidrei service, on the eve of Yom Kippur; ShacharitMusaf, which includes a detailed account of the Temple service; Minchah, which includes the reading of the Book of Jonah; and Ne'illah, the "closing of the gates" service at sunset. We say the Al Chet confession of sins ten times, and recite Psalms every available moment.

The day is the most solemn of the year, yet an undertone of joy suffuses it: a joy that revels in the spirituality of the day and expresses the confidence that G-d will accept our repentance, forgive our sins, and seal our verdict for a year of life, health and happiness. When the closing Ne'illah service climaxes in the resounding cries of "Hear O Israel... G-d is one" and a single blast of the shofar, the joy erupts in song and dance (a Chabad custom is to sing the lively niggun known as "Napoleon's March"), followed by the festive after-fast meal, making the evening following Yom Kippur a Yom Tov (festival) in its own right.

See also: More Yom Kippur laws & customs; an overview of the Yom Kippur services

Yom Kippur anthology

About Yom Kippur (from JewishNewYear.com)

Yizkor, the remembrance prayer for departed parents, is recited today after the morning reading of the Torah.

Links:
The Yizkor Prayer
Honor Due to Parents
On Breavement and Mourning


SCHC - Making it a Meaningful Sukkot

South Caulfield Hebrew Congregation- Making it a Meaningful Sukkot
One of the most exciting holidays in the year is around the corner. We sit in the Sukkah, shake the Lulav, sing and dance, while enjoying seven days of wonderful parties and delicious meals. But what is Sukkos all about, why are we so joyful, and what are we celebrating? Join Rabbi Daniel for a comprehensive lesson on the multiple themes of this fascinating holiday and the deep spiritual meanings that underline them. 
Wednesday, September 30, 2020 
at 8 PM – 9 PM
Zoom Link:

FB: Chesed Sparks

Need a hand with anything, anything at all? This is your safe haven online
Ask for help, offer to support.
I'm creating something very new and different in Facebook groups
The group's goal is to give and receive help and support. This is a global group which aims to do chesed all over the world. May this be the beginning of something grand. It is a wonderful mitzvah. Chesed/Kindness kindles the spark that we have inside all our souls. Chesed does indeed spark and encourages more chesed and chesed sparks do wonderful and joyous good!
The Talmud says that the world stands on three spiritual pillars: Torah study, prayer and acts of kindness.

LAST ORDERS For Sukkot Palm Schach

ORDER For Sukkot Now! Bulk Orders (50+pieces) Will Receive Free Delivery! ~All Orders through Melbourne Schach ~ ph/mssg: 0407-125-114 gary.travitz@optusnet.com.au Schach Prices: Last Chance For $5.60 pieces + $15 Delivery Bulk Orders (50+pieces): $0 Delivery Last Orders 29th September! **Note: Minimum Order = 10 pieces All Prices Include Delivery within the Melbourne Local Eruv Areas or Near. Any Deliveries outside these areas will incur a further delivery charge
0407-125-114

Sukkahmart

NEW INKERMAN DRYCLEANERS IS RE-OPENING

Opening at 8am on Tuesday 29th September 2020
We Specialise in 
    TALLISIM, TZITZIT, SHIRTS & CAPOTE  
Trading hours:
MONDAY - FRIDAY: 8am - 4pm;
Closed on SHABBAT & Sunday.   
Located at:
266 Inkerman Street, St Kilda East
(just around the corner from the Yeshiva & opposite The Ink Hotel)
Phone: 03 9527 6227

EMPLOYMENT: Looking for a demi au pair

Demi Pair (Part Time Au Pair)
Location: McKinnon, Melbourne VIC
Looking for a fun and energetic girl to help a part time working mum with 1 kid (2 year old girl) with activities in and out of the home, and to act as a second pair of hands. The role is varied including hanging out with our daughter, light housework and some cooking.
We are looking for someone who loves kids and has previous experience with young children.
15 hours a week.
Minimum 6 months.
Accommodation: A spacious bedroom with WIR with a TV and own bathroom. Wi-Fi. Close to public transport, parks, cafes and shopping centres.
Native English Speaker.
Contact: Tammy 0402 369 190

The Sukkah Boys Second Hand Sukkah Sale!

The Sukkah Boys - Second Hand Sukkah Sale!
Offering second hand Sukkahs and Bamboo mats in great condition ready for use.
FREE delivery included within Melbourne City.

Old Version Pop Up Sukkah:
- 2x3 = $250
- 3x3 = $300
New Version Pop Up Sukkah:
- 2x3 = $400
- 3x3 = $500
- 3x4 = $650
Bamboo Mats & Bamboo Poles:
- 1.1x3.1 = $50
- 2.1x2.1 = $70
- 1.6x3.1 = $90
- 2.1x2.6 = $100
- 2.1x3.1 = $120
- 2.6x3.1 = $140
- 2.1m Bamboo Pole = $10 (minimum 5 for free delivery).
- 3.2m Bamboo Pole = $15 (minimum 5 for free delivery).

Get in touch quick while stock lasts on 0426839587.
Check out are website & book your Sukkah to be built on, www.sukkahboys.com.
Shana Tova
The Sukkah Boys

Brighton Shule Sukkot Shiur

Brighon Shule Shiur
The Secret of Sukkot - A harvest festival for the non-farmer
Wednesday 30 September at 8:30 pm
Meeting ID - 872 7199 6055

Friday 25 September 2020

Shabbos Tzetl: Haazinu & Shuva

Woops, missed these...



Lamplighter






---------- Forwarded message ---------



CANDLE LIGHTING 
6:01pm - Candle Lighting, Friday.
6:59pm - Havdalah, Saturday.
These times are for Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Eruv Status: KOSHER
Shabbat Shalom! 

The Shabbat between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is called Shabbat Shuvah, "Shabbat of Return." The name derives from the Haftarah (reading from the prophets) for this Shabbat, which opens with the words (Hosea 14:2), "Return O Israel unto the L-rd your G-d..." Occurring in the "Ten Days of Repentance" (see "Laws & Customs" for Tishrei 3), it is a most auspicious time to rectify the failings and missed opportunities of the past and positively influence the coming year.



YESHIVA SHULE TIMES

Please click here to view the Yeshivah Shule Tzetel for Parshas Ha'azinu.

Please click here to view the PDFs of the Weekly Publications previously distributed in Shule each Shabbos.

Halacha Guides for your reference:
Tishrei 5781 and Lockdown: http://bit.ly/TishreiVic

Yom Kippur Guide: http://bit.ly/YomKipp
Including for Erev and Motzei Yom Kippur.

Sukkos Guide: http://bit.ly/LCSukkos
Including the leadup to Sukkos, first days of Sukkos and Chol Hamoed.




PARSHAH IN A NUTSHELL
Deuteronomy 32:1–52
The greater part of the Torah reading of Haazinu ("Listen In") consists of a 70-line "song" delivered by Moses to the people of Israel on the last day of his earthly life.

Calling heaven and earth as witnesses, Moses exhorts the people, "Remember the days of old / Consider the years of many generations / Ask your father, and he will recount it to you / Your elders, and they will tell you" how G‑d "found them in a desert land," made them a people, chose them as His own, and bequeathed them a bountiful land. The song also warns against the pitfalls of plenty—"Yeshurun grew fat and kicked / You have grown fat, thick and rotund / He forsook G‑d who made him / And spurned the Rock of his salvation"—and the terrible calamities that would result, which Moses describes as G‑d "hiding His face." Yet in the end, he promises, G‑d will avenge the blood of His servants, and be reconciled with His people and land.

The Parshah concludes with G‑d's instruction to Moses to ascend the summit of Mount Nebo, from which he will behold the Promised Land before dying on the mountain. "For you shall see the land opposite you; but you shall not go there, into the land which I give to the children of Israel."



HAFTORAH IN A NUTSHELL
Hosea 14:2-10; Micah 7:18-20.

The Shabbat between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is known as Shabbat Shuva or "Shabbat of Return (Repentance)." The name is a reference to the opening words of the week's haftorah, "Shuva Israel — Return O Israel." This haftorah is read in honor of the Ten Days of Repentance, the days between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur.

The prophet Hosea exhorts the Jewish people to "Return, O Israel, to the L-rd your G‑d," encouraging them to repent sincerely and ask for G‑d's forgiveness. Hosea urges the Jews to put their trust in G‑d, not in Assyria, powerful horses or idols. At that point, G‑d promises to remove His anger from Israel, "I will be like dew to Israel, they shall blossom like a rose." The prophet then goes on to foretell the return of the exiles and the cessation of idol-worship amongst the people.

The haftorah concludes with a  brief portion from the Book of Micah, which describes G‑d's kindness in forgiving the sins of His people. "He does not maintain His anger forever, for He is a lover of kindness. He will have mercy on us, He will grasp our iniquities and cast all our sins into the depths of the sea." Micah concludes with an enjoinder to G‑d to remember the pacts He made with the Patriarchs, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.



SAGES ON THE PARSHAH
Listen, O heavens: that I am warning Israel, and you shall be witnesses in this matter, for I have already told Israel that you will be witnesses. And so is [the clause] "And let the earth hear" [to be similarly understood]. Now why did [Moses] call upon heaven and earth to be witnesses [for warning Israel]? Moses said: "I am [just] flesh and blood. Tomorrow I will die. If Israel says, 'We never accepted the covenant,' who will come and refute them?" Therefore, he called upon heaven and earth as witnesses for Israel-witnesses that endure forever. Furthermore, if they [Israel] act meritoriously, the witnesses will come and reward them: "The vine will give its fruit, the earth will yield its produce, and the heavens will give their dew" (Zech. 8:12). And if [Israel] acts sinfully, the hand of the witnesses will be upon them first [to inflict punishment upon them]: "And He will close off the heaven that there will be no rain, and the soil will not give its produce" (Deut. 11:17), and then [the verse continues]: "and you will perish quickly"-through [the attacks of] the nations. — [Sifrei 32:1]
Rashi



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