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April 2022

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Kabbalat Shabbat
04/01/2022 - 7:00 pm
 
 
Saturday Morning Torah Study
04/02/2022 - 8:30 am
 
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Monday Night Torah

Monday Night Torah

Event Date: 

Monday, April 4, 2022 - 6:00pm
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Event Type: 

Event Location: 

Online via Zoom

Event Description: 

בס״ד

Monday Night Torah
With Phil Lazzar
“Ivdu et Hashem b’Simcha”
 
6pm - 7pm
 
Open to all ages, backgrounds, and experiences. We take a close look at the Torah portions of the week, the holidays, as well as other topics. The Torah offers us a truly radical worldview. The premise that it and we start with and build upon is the idea that there is a G-d who is the Absolute Good and who is inti mately involved in everything that is happening. And, that G-d's goal in creation is to bestow infinite good upon us. This of course leads us to wonder, if that is G-d's goal, then why is the world in such a balagan? In addressing this question we look at a number of essential concepts: management vs. transformation, messengers vs. Sender, disease vs. symptoms, darkness vs. double-darkness, selfishness vs. self lessness, egotism vs. altruism, the relationship of arrogance to anger/frustration/ annoyance, and more.
04/04/2022 - 6:00 pm
 
 
 
 
 
Shabbat HaGadol/Kabbalat Shabbat
04/08/2022 - 6:00 pm
 
 
Saturday Morning Torah Study
04/09/2022 - 8:30 am
 
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Monday Night Torah

Monday Night Torah

Event Date: 

Monday, April 11, 2022 - 6:00pm
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Event Type: 

Event Location: 

Online via Zoom

Event Description: 

בס״ד

Monday Night Torah
With Phil Lazzar
“Ivdu et Hashem b’Simcha”
 
6pm - 7pm
 
Open to all ages, backgrounds, and experiences. We take a close look at the Torah portions of the week, the holidays, as well as other topics. The Torah offers us a truly radical worldview. The premise that it and we start with and build upon is the idea that there is a G-d who is the Absolute Good and who is inti mately involved in everything that is happening. And, that G-d's goal in creation is to bestow infinite good upon us. This of course leads us to wonder, if that is G-d's goal, then why is the world in such a balagan? In addressing this question we look at a number of essential concepts: management vs. transformation, messengers vs. Sender, disease vs. symptoms, darkness vs. double-darkness, selfishness vs. self lessness, egotism vs. altruism, the relationship of arrogance to anger/frustration/ annoyance, and more.
04/11/2022 - 6:00 pm
 
 
 
 
 
Kabbalat Shabbat
04/15/2022 - 7:00 pm
 
 
Saturday Morning Torah Study
04/16/2022 - 8:30 am
 
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Monday Night Torah

Monday Night Torah

Event Date: 

Monday, April 18, 2022 - 6:00pm
Add to Calendar

Event Type: 

Event Location: 

Online via Zoom

Event Description: 

בס״ד

Monday Night Torah
With Phil Lazzar
“Ivdu et Hashem b’Simcha”
 
6pm - 7pm
 
Open to all ages, backgrounds, and experiences. We take a close look at the Torah portions of the week, the holidays, as well as other topics. The Torah offers us a truly radical worldview. The premise that it and we start with and build upon is the idea that there is a G-d who is the Absolute Good and who is inti mately involved in everything that is happening. And, that G-d's goal in creation is to bestow infinite good upon us. This of course leads us to wonder, if that is G-d's goal, then why is the world in such a balagan? In addressing this question we look at a number of essential concepts: management vs. transformation, messengers vs. Sender, disease vs. symptoms, darkness vs. double-darkness, selfishness vs. self lessness, egotism vs. altruism, the relationship of arrogance to anger/frustration/ annoyance, and more.
04/18/2022 - 6:00 pm
 
 
 
 
 
Kabbalat Shabbat
04/22/2022 - 7:00 pm
 
 
Saturday Morning Torah Study
04/23/2022 - 8:30 am
 
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Monday Night Torah

Monday Night Torah

Event Date: 

Monday, April 25, 2022 - 6:00pm
Add to Calendar

Event Type: 

Event Location: 

Online via Zoom

Event Description: 

בס״ד

Monday Night Torah
With Phil Lazzar
“Ivdu et Hashem b’Simcha”
 
6pm - 7pm
 
Open to all ages, backgrounds, and experiences. We take a close look at the Torah portions of the week, the holidays, as well as other topics. The Torah offers us a truly radical worldview. The premise that it and we start with and build upon is the idea that there is a G-d who is the Absolute Good and who is inti mately involved in everything that is happening. And, that G-d's goal in creation is to bestow infinite good upon us. This of course leads us to wonder, if that is G-d's goal, then why is the world in such a balagan? In addressing this question we look at a number of essential concepts: management vs. transformation, messengers vs. Sender, disease vs. symptoms, darkness vs. double-darkness, selfishness vs. self lessness, egotism vs. altruism, the relationship of arrogance to anger/frustration/ annoyance, and more.
04/25/2022 - 6:00 pm
 
 
Yom HaShaoh Program

Yom HaShaoh Program

Event Date: 

Monday, April 25, 2022 - 7:00pm
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Event Type: 

Event Location: 

Online via Zoom

Event Description: 

Featuring Irving Lubliner, Professor Emeritus at Southern Oregon University Mr. Lubliner will share a captivating presentation titled “Only Hope: My Mother and the Holocaust Brought to Light.” The child of two Holocaust survivors, a mother who spoke and wrote about her experiences and a father who kept his own memories locked up tight and did not share them, Professor Lubliner gives us an opportunity to meet his mother, Felicia Bornstein Lubliner, through her powerful writing, published in 2019 as Only Hope: A Survivor’s Stories of the Holocaust. He also spoke of his own experiences growing up as a second-generation survivor.

Zoom link TBA.

From the Forward:

As I think about my parents’ experiences in the Nazi concentration camps, I wonder:  What kept them going? With too little food, death all around them, savage beatings doled out to those not doing their assigned slave labor quickly enough, and the loss of all that had once been dear to them, what could they do to summon the will to live another day? The only answer that comes to me is:  They could hope.

With shattered dreams, interrupted educations, no homes or family members to which they might someday return, and a horrifying day-to-day existence, they could not make plans for their futures. They could only hope.
Would each day’s meager food ration provide enough sustenance to stay alive until tomorrow? Would the doctor making the selections of who should live and who should die allow them another day’s salvation? If yesterday they were lucky to avoid being singled out by a capricious and malicious guard, would that luck last through another day? They could only hope.
—Irving Lubliner

04/25/2022 - 7:00 pm
 
 
TBE Board Meeting
04/26/2022 - 6:30 pm
 
 
 
 
Kabbalat Shabbat
04/29/2022 - 7:00 pm
 
 
Saturday orning Torah Study
04/30/2022 - 8:30 am
 
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