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4 Cheshvan Parshat Noach October 16-17,...

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Dearest Members and Friends, Last November, my friend Menachem Butler sent me a recently published article written by a young scholar from Israel named Eitam Henkin. The subject of the article was Rabbi Joseph Shapotshnick, the protagonist of a book that I have been working on for many years. I reached out to Eitam, and we engaged in a brief exchange of emails. I sent him some of the material I had written about Shapotshnick, and we commented on each other’s research. In his final email – written on December 4 – Eitam informed me of the recent birth of his fourth child. Two weeks ago, Eitam and his wife Naama were brutally murdered by Arab terrorists while driving with their four children towards their home in Neria. Their murder was utterly senseless, and most likely random – part of a new wave of terrorism being perpetrated against Jews in Israel by Palestinian terrorists. Tragically, the Henkins’ cold-blooded killing has receded into the background as news of so many other similar killings and attempted killings has emerged, dominating our attention, and clogging up our social media. But the face of the man I corresponded with but whom I never met still haunts me. I can’t get it out of my head. He and I shared a common interest in the eclectic side of Jewish religious history, and I felt an automatic affinity with him. He was younger than me, and now he will never reach my age. He won’t be there to celebrate the bar mitzvahs or weddings of his children. He will never write another article, nor research another topic. He and his wife, both flowers in full bloom, have been ripped from the midst of their families, and prevented from making their full, lifelong contribution to the Jewish people. Their violent death sickens me to my stomach. But what sickens me more is the reaction of the world, and particularly the left-leaning Jewish world. There is a quote often misattributed to Albert Einstein: “the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” In this situation, it is not even “doing” the same thing, it is “saying” the same thing – again and again, like some sort of tantric mantra, almost as if by saying these things they become true. “Israel’s occupation of the West Bank is to blame.” “Those crazy fanatical Jews who insist on Temple Mount rights are provoking these attacks.” “We need a two-state solution so that the root of the hostility against Israel is addressed.” Nonsense! Has it not dawned on these people that there is no “solution” short of Messianic redemption? There is not a two-state solution, not a one-state solution, not an expulsion solution, not a theocracy solution, not a democracy solution. The uncomfortable status-quo, in spite of its horrible downside, is preferable to every other “solution.” You cannot make peace with people who see or at least present Jews as the illegitimate invaders and occupiers of “their” territory, unjustly kept in place by the United States. This, of course, is a lie – but that doesn’t matter anymore. The Palestinian Arabs have slowly but surely convinced the world to believe it. No wonder no one protests as Jews are randomly stabbed as they go about their daily lives in Israel. Instead Israel is enjoined to act with restraint against these murderers. How about encouraging Arabs not to leave their homes with kitchen knives to stab Jews for the ‘crime’ of being Jewish? How about encouraging Arab leaders to insist publicly and convincingly that their people should immediately desist from trying to kill Jews? Of course nobody does that. Because if the narrative is that Jews are guilty of illegal occupation, and guilty of incitement by wanting to visit the Temple Mount, then Jews have it coming to them – and are lucky that only a few of them are getting killed. It is sickening, just utterly sickening. It is also extremely dangerous, although not for Jews. This week’s Torah portion begins with a strange pasuk explaining the cause of the devastating flood: ס מ ץ חֶ ר א הֵ ל מ תַ ים ו הֱ א י הֵ נְ פ ץ לֶ ר ת הֵ ח ש תַ ו- ‘the world was corrupted before God; the world was filled with thievery.’ The following two pesukim present thievery as the cause for the flood, not the corruption before God. Defying God by worshiping pagan effigies and engaging in sexual immorality was somehow more tolerable than the fact that the world was full of cheats and thieves. The Talmudic sages depict a society where even those who were appointed to secure justice fostered corruption, robbery, and fraud by legalizing it. Western civilization has evolved into a society that celebrates God denial and sexual immorality. But until recently, all of that could be excused by the free world’s overall sense of justice and fair play, both domestically and internationally. Wrong was wrong, and right was right, and right was always worth defending against wrong. So, despite the great odds, the West did everything to oppose Soviet Russia, and refused to tolerate any evil wherever it reared its ugly head. Sadly, in recent years this fundamental structure has been undermined. The free world’s attitude towards Israel is just a symptom of that change, as is the tolerance for Iran’s nuclear program or Russia’s invasion of Crimea. Democracies that pride themselves as bastions of justice and rectitude inexplicably support and defend lies and corruption. The world needs to turn a corner, and head back to where it once was. If not, the direction we are heading in spells devastation and disaster. Wishing you Shabbat Shalom and a wonderful week ahead, Rabbi Pini Dunner 4 Cheshvan ● Parshat Noach October 16-17, 2015 SHABBAT SCHEDULE FRIDAY, October 16 6:00pm CANDLELIGHTING 6:05pm MINCHA/KABBALAT SHABBAT SATURDAY, October 17 8:30 am RABBI’S GEMARA SHIUR 9:15 am SHACHARIT 6:00pm MINCHA 6:20pm SEUDAH SHLISHIT 7:00pm MAARIV 7:02pm SHABBAT ENDS SERVICES THIS WEEK Sun. Oct. 18 8:00 am & 6:00 pm Mon. Oct. 19 6:20 am & 6:00 pm Tues. Oct 20 6:30 am & 6:00 pm Wed. Oct 21 6:30 am & 6:00 pm Thurs. Oct. 22 6:20 am & 6:00 pm Fri. Oct 23 6:30 am & 5:55 pm SHABBAT SCHEDULE FOR KIDS 10:00 Free play, games & books. 10:50 Parsha story & questions 11:10 Into shul to kiss the Torah 11:15 Circle time - davening, singing, Shabbat songs & games. 12:00 Kids service ends Senior Advisor to JINSA will be our guest speaker at lunch Alan Liker for sponsoring Kiddush Luncheon in memory of his dear wife Linda a”h YINBH WELCOMES Joel Mowbray Our guest at Friday Night Dinner. Founding editor of The Times of Israel. YINBH WELCOMES David Horovitz
Transcript
Page 1: 4 Cheshvan Parshat Noach October 16-17, 2015beverlyhillssynagogue.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Tefilla...But what sickens me more is the reaction of the world, and particularly the

Dearest Members and Friends, Last November, my friend Menachem Butler sent me a recently published article written by a young scholar from Israel named Eitam Henkin. The subject of the article was Rabbi Joseph Shapotshnick, the protagonist of a book that I have been working on for many years. I reached out to Eitam, and we engaged in a brief exchange of emails. I sent him some of the material I had written about Shapotshnick, and we commented on each other’s research. In his final email – written on December 4 – Eitam informed me of the recent birth of his fourth child. Two weeks ago, Eitam and his wife Naama were brutally murdered by Arab terrorists while driving with their four children towards their home in Neria. Their murder was utterly senseless, and most likely random – part of a new wave of terrorism being perpetrated against Jews in Israel by Palestinian terrorists. Tragically, the Henkins’ cold-blooded killing has receded into the background as news of so many other similar killings and attempted killings has emerged, dominating our attention, and clogging up our social media. But the face of the man I corresponded with but whom I never met still haunts me. I can’t get it out of my head. He and I shared a common interest in the eclectic side of Jewish religious history, and I felt an automatic affinity with him. He was younger than me, and now he will never reach my age. He won’t be there to celebrate the bar mitzvahs or weddings of his children. He will never write another article, nor research another topic. He and his wife, both flowers in full bloom, have been ripped from the midst of their families, and prevented from making their full, lifelong contribution to the Jewish people. Their violent death sickens me to my stomach. But what sickens me more is the reaction of the world, and particularly the left-leaning Jewish world. There is a quote often misattributed to Albert Einstein: “the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” In this situation, it is not even “doing” the same thing, it is “saying” the same thing – again and again, like some sort of tantric mantra, almost as if by saying these things they become true. “Israel’s occupation of the West Bank is to blame.” “Those crazy fanatical Jews who insist on Temple Mount rights are provoking these attacks.” “We need a two-state solution so that the root of the hostility against Israel is addressed.” Nonsense! Has it not dawned on these people that there is no “solution” short of Messianic redemption? There is not a two-state solution, not a one-state solution, not an expulsion solution, not a theocracy solution, not a democracy solution. The uncomfortable status-quo, in spite of its horrible downside, is preferable to every other “solution.” You cannot make peace with people who see or at least present Jews as the illegitimate invaders and occupiers of “their” territory, unjustly kept in place by the United States. This, of course, is a lie – but that doesn’t matter anymore. The Palestinian Arabs have slowly but surely convinced the world to believe it. No wonder no one protests as Jews are randomly stabbed as they go about their daily lives in Israel. Instead Israel is enjoined to act with restraint against these murderers. How about encouraging Arabs not to leave their homes with kitchen knives to stab Jews for the ‘crime’ of being Jewish? How about encouraging Arab leaders to insist publicly and convincingly that their people should immediately desist from trying to kill Jews? Of course nobody does that. Because if the narrative is that Jews are guilty of illegal occupation, and guilty of incitement by wanting to visit the Temple Mount, then Jews have it coming to them – and are lucky that only a few of them are getting killed. It is sickening, just utterly sickening. It is also extremely dangerous, although not for Jews. This week’s Torah portion begins with a strange pasuk explaining the cause of the devastating flood: ‘ס מ לא הארץ ח מ ים ות אלה פני ה חת הארץ ל ש the world was‘ - ’ותcorrupted before God; the world was filled with thievery.’ The following two pesukim present thievery as the cause for the flood, not the corruption before God. Defying God by worshiping pagan effigies and engaging in sexual immorality was somehow more tolerable than the fact that the world was full of cheats and thieves. The Talmudic sages depict a society where even those who were appointed to secure justice fostered corruption, robbery, and fraud by legalizing it. Western civilization has evolved into a society that celebrates God denial and sexual immorality. But until recently, all of that could be excused by the free world’s overall sense of justice and fair play, both domestically and internationally. Wrong was wrong, and right was right, and right was always worth defending against wrong. So, despite the great odds, the West did everything to oppose Soviet Russia, and refused to tolerate any evil wherever it reared its ugly head. Sadly, in recent years this fundamental structure has been undermined. The free world’s attitude towards Israel is just a symptom of that change, as is the tolerance for Iran’s nuclear program or Russia’s invasion of Crimea. Democracies that pride themselves as bastions of justice and rectitude inexplicably support and defend lies and corruption. The world needs to turn a corner, and head back to where it once was. If not, the direction we are heading in spells devastation and disaster. Wishing you Shabbat Shalom and a wonderful week ahead,

Rabbi Pini Dunner

4 Cheshvan ● Parshat Noach October 16-17, 2015

SHABBAT SCHEDULE

FRIDAY, October 16

6:00pm CANDLELIGHTING

6:05pm MINCHA/KABBALAT SHABBAT

SATURDAY, October 17

8:30 am RABBI’S GEMARA SHIUR

9:15 am SHACHARIT

6:00pm MINCHA

6:20pm SEUDAH SHLISHIT

7:00pm MAARIV

7:02pm SHABBAT ENDS

SERVICES THIS WEEK

Sun. Oct. 18 8:00 am & 6:00 pm

Mon. Oct. 19 6:20 am & 6:00 pm

Tues. Oct 20 6:30 am & 6:00 pm

Wed. Oct 21 6:30 am & 6:00 pm

Thurs. Oct. 22 6:20 am & 6:00 pm

Fri. Oct 23 6:30 am & 5:55 pm

SHABBAT SCHEDULE FOR KIDS

10:00 Free play, games & books.

10:50 Parsha story & questions

11:10 Into shul to kiss the Torah

11:15 Circle time - davening,

singing, Shabbat songs &

games.

12:00 Kids service ends

Senior Advisor to JINSA

will be our guest speaker at lunch

Alan Liker for sponsoring

Kiddush Luncheon

in memory of his dear wife Linda a”h

YINBH WELCOMES

Joel Mowbray

Our guest at Friday Night Dinner.

Founding editor of The Times of Israel.

YINBH WELCOMES

David Horovitz

Page 2: 4 Cheshvan Parshat Noach October 16-17, 2015beverlyhillssynagogue.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Tefilla...But what sickens me more is the reaction of the world, and particularly the

Please join Rabbi Dunner Wednesday, Oct 21st

at 8:30 am, as he explores the weekly Torah portion through the

eyes of the classic commentators

Shiur for Ladies

Rabbi Dunner together with June, Noa, Evan, Ravit, Luca & Mika Brenner at

Noa’s Bat Mitzvah last week.

Luca Brenner Mika Brenner

Sydney Fogelman Elizabeth Rifkin

Lee Samson Sheri Schlesinger

Liana Weston

Join Rabbi Dunner

for his Gemara shiur

at 8:30 every

Shabbat morning.

Challenge your mind,

and familiarize

yourself with the

Talmudic

underpinnings of

Jewish knowledge.

Yosef ben Yitzchak Nechemia z”l

10th Yahrtzeit

Yitzchak Nechemia ben Naftali z”l

70th Yahrtzeit

Father & Grandfather

of Steve Rothman

David Horovitz

Saturday, October 17, 2015 8:00 p.m.

“Battling With Our Extremism: A Journalist’s View”

Home of Ruth & Seth Berkowitz

9116 Larke Ellen Circle

Los Angeles, CA 90035

To register for the evening lecture,

please RSVP to Elana at AIPAC

by Oct. 16 at [email protected] or (323) 937-1184

Sun. October 18, 8:30 am

Rabbi Meir Fachler

“The Flood and the Sin of

the Golden Calf”

Official opening of The Schaeffer Cultural Center and Gardens in

Maale Adumim, Israel, with President of Israel Reuven Rivlin.

NEXT WEEK!! October 24th

Shabbat lunch for YINBH members

Hakamat Matzeva

Linda Komorsky-Liker a”h Sunday, October 18, 10 am

Hillside Memorial Park 600 W. Centinela Ave

YINBH welcomes Etta Israel for their annual Shabbaton, November 14th.

Host housing needed for Etta members and staff.

Please contact [email protected] [email protected]


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