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OXFORD CHABAD OPENS MIKVEH

(22/06/2008) - Over 150 people attended the grand opening ceremony of the Oxford Mikvah, built by Chabad of Oxford on the site of the Oxford Chabad House. The state-of-the-art Mikvah, which cost over £250,000 to build from scratch, took over 6 years of planning and construction and was formally opened on June 12 by the Chief Rabbi of Israel, Rabbi Yona Metzger, who flew in especially for the event. The event was attended by many dignitaries and leading rabbis, including Dayan Menachem Gelly, Head of the London Beth Din, Rabbi Nachman Sudak, Head of Lubavitch UK, the Lord Mayor of Oxford Cllr. Susannah Pressel, city councillors, members of the Jewish community and students. As the Mikvah will be serving also regional communities, there were also present representatives from the Reading Hebrew Congregation. The Mikvah is called the “Slager Family Mikvah” after the name of its principle benefactor, Oxford alumnus David Slager. Continued...

LAG B’OMER PARADE

(04/06/2008) - This year Lag B’Omer fell on Friday 23rd May. There were Lubavitch Parades and events round the UK on Thursday night and Friday. At Lubavitch House, the head-office of Lubavitch UK, located in Stamford Hill, Hackney, there was a grand Lag B'Omer parade, despite the fact that it was the eve of the Sabbath.Continued...


SEDRA PINCHAS

Click for Parshah. WE THE JEWISH PEOPLE WANT PEACE, WE BELIEVE THAT PEACE IS THE ULTIMATE goal in life. The Sages tell us that the Torah was given in order to bring peace into the world. The concept peace means, of course, a pleasant and positive atmosphere, where there is nothing harsh. And yet the concept of the covenant of peace which we find in our Sedra is as the reward for Pinchas, the grandson of Aaron, following his forceful action at the end of the previous Sedra.

There we read that Moses and Aaron were weeping, they felt powerless, but Pinchas took action. He was a strong man, a zealot. But does that action express the virtue of Peace? Yet in our Sedra, G-d says that in reward for his action “I give him My covenant of Peace”.

The Sages tell us that Pinchas lived very long and was the same person whom we meet in the Book of Kings, named Elijah, who is the subject of the Haftorah. In the Haftorah he is also seen as a zealot. He sees the moral and spiritual weakness of the Jewish people of his time and is deeply upset about it. He travels through the desert back to Mount Sinai where the Torah was given, as if to meet more directly with the Divine, and he declares that the Jewish people are not keeping their Covenant with G-d.

On the one hand, Pinchas or Elijah was a critic, who could see the negative aspects of people’s behaviour and tried to take action against them, as in the case of Pinchas in last week’s Sedra or as in Elijah’s contest with the Priests of Baal on Mount Carmel.

On the other hand, G-d gives him the Covenant of Peace, which implies seeing people in a positive way. The Sedra also says that Pinchas is given the role of being a Cohen. The Cohen is described as a man of kindness, like Aaron, the first Cohen, who saw the good in everyone.

Similarly in the case of Elijah. The Sages tell us that because Elijah complained that the Jewish people are not keeping their Covenant, for all time he is present at every Brit Milah, when a Jewish boy enters the Covenant of Circumcision. He is able to see that indeed the Jewish people are keeping the Covenant. Hence at a Brit Milah a chair is set for Elijah the Prophet.

The Lubavitcher Rebbe comments that, like Pinchas and Elijah, we have to be able to combine two contrary aspects. On the one hand to be able to act firmly when necessary, to put right that which is wrong, or to protect from danger. On the other to be able to see the goodness in a person, his or her potential, their positive achievements. A further step is when these two approaches are combined: by seeing the goodness in a person, one helps them to put right that which needs correction. The two features of Pinchas and Elijah respectively, become one.

This is the road to genuine peace. Hence the Sages tell us that Elijah will usher in the Redemption, the time of ultimate peace, in which everything negative will be transformed to good. Then the enemy of every kind – in Hebrew, 'oyev' – will be transformed to 'ohev' friend. Then indeed there will be peace…

Click here to continue... and to read Young Friday Night


Anger
Why are you so surprised to find evil and corruption running amok everywhere you look? This world is the coarsest and harshest of all worlds, the ultimate concealment. Almost all of it is darkness and emptiness. Only a tiny spark of good is buried deep within to keep it alive.

You could spend your lifetime dwelling on the outrages and scandals and things that are not right—or you could take a moment to search for that spark. You could find it, grasp it, fan its flame. From within its aura, you will see the darkness shining brighter than the heavens. In that moment of light, the night will never have been.

Fueled by your love, the light will swallow all that surrounds it.

From the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe
rendered by Tzvi Freeman



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