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The BAN – Beth Aharon Newsletter

Riverdale’s Sephardic-Yerushalmi Congregation @ The Riverdale Bayit

3700 Henry Hudson Parkway, Bronx NY 10463 * www.bethaharon.org * bethaharon@gmail.com

PARASHA * ZEMANIM * TEFILOT

Šabat Parašat Pineḣas

27 July 2024 * 21 Ḣodeṡ Tamuz 5784
כ”א תמוז
התשפ”ד
Earliest Candles Lighting - 6:46pm

Official Hadlaqat Nerot abat Time - 7:59pm

ir Haṡirim - 6:45pm

Minḣa/Qabalat abat/Ȯrvit - 7:00pm
aḣarit - 8:45am * Latest emaȯ - 9:24am
Devar Torah - 10:45am
Qiduṡ - 11:45am
Table Conversations
- 12:30pm

Minḣa Gedola - 1:38pm * Minḣa - 7:45pm

Ṡiȯur & Seȯudonet Ṡeliit - 8:20pm

Ṡeqiȯa - 8:16pm * Ȯrvit - 8:51pm

Żet Hakok̇avim / Havdala - 9:01pm
Ṡabat ṡel Ṡalom!

Rəfuaa Shəlema

Our prayers for full and quick recovery to ‘Am Yisrael wounded bodies & souls and the kidnapped brothers  & sisters, and to those who are sick, among them: * Reuven ben Aliza * Yig’al ben Sulika * Gavriel ben Yocheved * Shoshana bat Yocheved * Yehuda Baruch Noam ben Tova Batya * Eliyorah Ruth bat Naomi Rivka * Gavriel Lev ben Yechielah * Yosef David ben Haya Golda * Zvi Hershel ben Miriam * Dalia bat Rahel * Hadassa bat Shoshana * Masha bat Miriam * Tehila bat Rachel * Tanya bat Hoda Margalit * Yehuda Efraim ben Shifra * Yehuda ben Susi * Aliza bat Hassibah * Orly bat Annet * Rachel bat Hassibah * Shulla bat hassibah * Simon bat Hassibah * Yaniv ben Sarah * Michael ben Sonia * Shachar Shalom ben Sason * Menachem Hillel ben Malka Sandra * Liraz bat Tziporah * Shaked Ben Aliza * Ilana bat Victoria * Etka Ruth bat Devorah * Ezra ben Evlin * Beeri Mikhael ben Reut Ester * Shoshana bat Chaya * Arielle bat Merav, Nahum ben Yehudit * Maor ben Liran & David * Hafsa Yaffa bat Alia * Sarah Yehudit bat Yona.* Rahel bat Hamama; and to all the ḣolim and the ḣolot.

This Shabbat & Beyond

This Shabbat we Read Parashat Pineḣas.

● The Bayit Sarah & Avraham’s Tent welcomes all community members and visitors for communal erev Shabbat dinner, in memory of Henry & Goldie Guttman z"l.
 Kids Are welcome to participate in tefilot Beth Aharon and recite Tefila portions loved by kids; and also join the Bayit Groups available from 9:30am to 11:30am, on the 3rd floor.

Special Tefila: We say prayers for Medinat Israel, its People, the Perished, the Kidnaped, the Wounded, the Safety of all IDF Ḣayalim and Ḣayalot, and for a Victory of the IDF.
Azkara: Eyal ben Varda z”l, Benyahou Mahgerefteh z”l, Leah Nagar bat Miriam, z”l.
Dvar Torah on the Parasha.
Qidush is sponsored by the Berebi family in memory of Ohad's grandmother, Leah Nagar bat Miriam, zikhra livrakha.
Table Conversations after qidush, on things that matter or matter more.
 Mila baParasha - understanding a word in the parasha. This week: “Tamid-תָמִיד.” The daily offering, the tamid, is described Pineḣas, Bemidbar 28:2, and this past Tuesday, on the 17th of Tamuz, we commemorate the discontinuation of the tamid offering. What does the word tamid mean? Basic (and love of :) Hebrew is sufficient.

 Shiur after Mincha at the MSN w/Racheli Barris: Sefer Yirmiyahu on Being Responsible Consumers of Media .
***

 Sunday Shaḣarit @ 8:15am - Hodu. Qorbanot @ 8:00am.

Blessings & Thanks

Condolences to the families of IDF soldiers and Israeli civilians who lost their lives this week in the Gaza War and prayers for Refuaa Shelema to all Am Yisrael’s injured bodies & wounded souls, soldiers and civilians alike.

 Happy Birthday to James & Ann Lapin, all Tamuz’s birthday boys and girls.
 Many Thanks to the Rimini and Zalicha families for sponsoring Kiddush last Shabbat; to Daphna Palka for Divre Torah and Berakha.

Matters @ Beth Aharon @ The Bayit & Beyond

Community Matters

Beth Aharon is Riverdale’s Sephardic orthodox congregation, located at the Riverdale Bayit (HIR) Bronx, NY, since its establishment on parashat Ḣaye Sara 5768/1998. We mark this year 25 years, in gematria ḢIBA-חִיבָּה standing for love and affection. Beth Aharon tefilot follow the Sephardi-Yerushalmi nusa, based on the teachings of Rav Ovadia Yosef, z”l. Our community embraces Jewish worshipers of all ethnic communities (‘edot) and of any level of observance, and welcomes all individuals who are in search of the Jewish faith. We encourage our congregants to take an active-leading role in Tefila and Qriat haTorah.
 Ahavat Yisrael and Ahavat Haberiyot - love for the Jewish people and love for all humanity - are part of the Bayit’s and Beth Aharon’s values. It manifests by being a warm and welcoming and inclusive community to everyone who loves Medinat Yisrael and the Jewish People.
Join Beth Aharon’s WhatsApp Groups

BA Information Notifications: BethAharonNews

BA Tefilot Information: BethAharonTefila

BA Community Chat BethAharonCommunity

BA Women Group BethAharonWomen

BA Refuaa Shelema BethAharonTehilim
BA Politics Polite
BethAharonPoliticsPolite
BA Website-Blog BethAharonBlog 

BA Facebook Page BethAharonFB 
Contact Us at bethaharon@gmail.com for general inquiries and to join our email listing and our weekly BANewsletter.
Supporting Beth Aharon tefilot and events is much needed & welcomed! Donate online here: SUPPORT ONLINE for more information go to www.bethaharon.org. Tizku leShanim Rabot veTovot.

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Upcoming Happenings & Other News  

Talk with Parents of Fallen Soldier Maoz Morell's Hy"d. Sunday, July 28 • 22 Tammuz, between 7:00pm-8:00pm. At the Bayit LBM
Tisha B’Av will be on Monday evening and Tuesday Day, August 12-13.
In Person Film Screening: "Serving on All Fronts,” Tuesday, August 13, at 12:50pm-1:35pm.

Legend of Destruction, film screening: Tuesday, August 13, Av 9, 5:30pm-6:40pm, RSH. The story of the Jewish revolt against Rome, which ended with the destruction of the Second Temple. The in-person film screening will be followed by a discussion.

Clothing Swap: Saturday, September 14, Elul 11, bet. 8:15pm-10:15pm, at the LSH. Now that our kids have outgrown some of last year's clothes, and that fall is coming with some new clothes, come and SWAP the outfit for clothes that fit.

Clothing Drive: Sunday, September 15, Elul 12, bet.  

9:30am-12:30pm. Bring to the shul. Please sort and separately bag men's, women's and children's clothing as well as linens, blankets, and towels.

***

~~ Summer Times ~~

Cyril Zooms In

“The legacy of heroes is the memory of a great name and the inheritance of a great example.” - Benjamin Disraeli

This week’s parasha, Pinchas, contains several examples of inheritance. First, God gives Pinchas and his descendants the priesthood that he earned in the incident described in parasha Balak. Then, after answering the question posed by the daughters of Tzelafchad as to whether they can inherit from their father who died without having had a son (the answer is yes), God adds this rule to the laws of inheritance. Then, the various clans comprising the 12 tribes (with the exception of Levi) are given their plots of land, which they will take possession of after the military conquest of Canaan. In addition, God tells Moses that he will soon die. So Moses asks God to name his successor as leader of the Jewish people. And Joshua will take over. Finally, the laws on sacrifices are detailed in this parasha, and also constitute a divine heritage. Thus, an inheritance can be material (it is always useful!) but it is above all spiritual and composed of inalienable moral values.

I wish you and your family a m(inh)erited, restful and joyful Shabbat. Shabbat Shalom! C.B.

Parashat Pinchas 5784

Leadership Through Violence Destroys Society

21 Tammuz 5784 / July 27, 2024

Parashat Pinchas presents two models of leadership. One is Pinchas the zealot. The other is Moshe Rabbenu. These two models represent polarities of a deeper tension about leadership. Pinchas acted in a moment of crisis. A leader of the tribe of Shimon, Zimri, had sexual relations publically with a Moabite pagan princess. Imagine, for example, a leader in the free world today consummating political relations with a racist dictator who perpetrated violent atrocities against minorities. Such relations would be tantamount to prostituting the values of human dignity that the democracy in America was designed to protect. A good example of such a political travesty in the 20th century was the Munich Pact, signed by Neville Chamberlain of England and Edourad Daladier of France with the dictator of Nazi Germany. Signing that pact turned a naive, blind eye to the explicitly stated vision of Nazi domination, and resulted immediately in the occupation of Czechoslovakia, the Sudetenland.  

On the other hand, it is critical to note that rabbinic opinions include a strong opposition to Pinchas. The Jerusalem Talmud records the debate surrounding vigilante actions taken by zealots, even in moments of crisis that require immediate action:

מַתְּנִי' הַגּוֹנֵב אֶת הַקָּסַוְא וְהַמְּקַלֵּל בְּקֶסֶם וְהַבּוֹעֵל אֲרָמִית קַנְּאִין פּוֹגְעִין בָּהֶן .....גמ' הַבּוֹעֵל אֲרָמִית. תַּנֵּי רַבִּי יִשְׁמָעֵאל זֶה שֶׁהוּא נוֹשֵׂא נָכְרִית וּמוֹלִיד בָּנִים מַעֲמִיד אוֹיְבִים מִמֶּנָּה לַמָּקוֹם. כְּתִיב וַיַּרְא פִּינְחָס בֶּן אֶלְעָזָר בֶּן אַהֲרֹן הַכֹּהֵן מָה רָאָה רָאָה אֶת הַמַּעֲשֶׂה וְנִזְכַּר לַהֲלָכָה הַבּוֹעֵל אֲרָמִית הַקַּנָּאִים פּוֹגְעִין בָּהֶן. תַּנֵּי שֶׁלֹּא בִּרְצוֹן חֲכָמִים. וּפִינְחָס שֶׁלֹּא בִּרְצוֹן חֲכָמִים א"ר יוּדָה בַּר פַּזִּי בִּקְּשׁוּ לְנַדּוֹתוֹ אִלּוּלֵי שֶׁקָּפְצָה עָלָיו רוּחַ הַקֹּדֶשׁ וְאָמְרָה וְהָיְתָה לּוֹ וּלְזַרְעוֹ אַחֲרָיו בְּרִית כְּהֻנַּת עוֹלָם וְגוֹמֵר….(תלמוד ירושלמי (וילנא) מסכת סנהדרין פרק ט הלכה ז)

Mishnah: If someone steals a libation vessel or curses someone through divination or who has intercourse with a pagan woman, zealous vigilantes can kill him…. Gemara: ...The Torah says, Pinchas ben Elazar ben Aharon haKohen saw….What did he “see?” He saw Zimri having intercourse with Cozbi and he remembered this halacha [of the Mishnah]. In response, it was taught that the rabbis disagreed with his action. Rabbi Yuda bar Pazi said, “The rabbis would have excommunicated Pinchas! were it not for the fact that God’s holy spirit intervened and  >>>

declared, Behold! I grant you My covenant of priesthood for all time! (Bemidbar 25:13).

The rabbis opposed Pinchas’ zealous action because he assumed the position of witness, judge, Beit Din, and executioner all in one. By doing so, Pinchas subverted the rule of law and the critical position and authority of the judiciary to protect the stability and integrity of a society’s foundation. Even when there is a crisis, a vigilante response is to be avoided at all costs. Zimri and Cozbi were not the problem. The problem lay deeper. They were symptomatic of a spiritual pathology embedded in the consciousness and founding of the Jewish people: the allure of idolatry. Our ancestors never quite confronted their predisposition to be attracted to the seductive power of paganism and then to move away from the spiritual principles of a God-centered world.

The Torah teaches us those principles throughout Sefer Bereshit and Shemot. All human beings are created in God’s image. The experiences of our ancestors teach us to protect immigrants, minorities, and disenfranchised communities and to guard against the abuse of power when we ourselves are a sovereign power. These principles include guarding and protecting the earth, and to celebrate and protect life in a state of tahora as much as possible. They include living with humility by realizing that just because we have the power and capacity to do whatever we want, eat whatever we want, and abuse whomever we want, we may not, because we all serve the Creator of the universe. Idolatry is not just worshiping an idol. It is serving an ossified vision of reality. Pagans worship a static view of the world in which everyone and everything must fit their singular image of a god. The world, then, does not celebrate the beauty of diversity, of change, or of mystery. The world is singular, narrow, small, and intolerant. It feels nostalgic, familiar, and safe, with no room for anything or anyone who is “different.”

God rewarded Pinchas, just as God placed a mantle of leadership on Eliyahu haNavi, the other famous zealot of the Tanakh. Yet, although God recognizes that passionate zealotry has its moment of importance, zealots cannot rule. Eliyahu is sent into the wilderness after killing 450 priests of ba’al, and must be instructed that God’s presence and power is found, ultimately, in the sounds of silence. (I Kings 19) Pinchas is rewarded with a position and responsibility for kahuna, where he will have to follow strict rules of conduct. God sometimes tolerates zealots, but does not easily abide by them.

Moshe is very different. He does not tolerate zealotry, and teaches against impassioned, impetuous response. After all, the young Moshe acted in a similar fashion when he murdered the Egyptian and then fled to Midian, the same country now seducing the Israelite nation. Moshe learned from that earlier episode. On the phrase, “...and Pinchas saw and took a spear in his hand,” Rashi commented:

And Pinchas saw — He saw what was being done and he was thereby reminded of the law
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>(continued on next page)

on this subject (The Mishnah quoted above, Sanhedrin 82a). He said to Moshe, “I have received a tradition from you: he who has intercourse with an pagan woman, zealous people may attack him!” Moshe replied to Pinchas: “Let he who reads the letter be the agent for executing it!” Straightway, “...he took a spear in his hand…..” (Sanhedrin 82a).

Moshe essentially  said to Pinchas: “Yes, I know what the law is on the books. However, I have no intention of acting on it. That will do much more damage than good. You will attack the symptom, but leave the underlying disease to fester. You will stay the plague, which will bring immediate relief. Your radical response will save the moment, but make it more difficult to get people to see the real problem. If you want to act on that law, I cannot stop you, but that is not the Jewish way. That act will not become part of my legacy…..”

Moshe had already opposed zealotry in an earlier episode. In Beha’alotecha, Yehoshua tried to silence the voices of Eldad and Medad:

Now two men remained in the camp; the name of one was Eldad and the name of the second was Medad, and Hashem’s spirit rested upon them. They...prophesied in the camp.

A lad ran and told Moshe, ‘Eldad and Medad are prophesying in the camp!’ Yehoshua bin Nun, Moshe’s servant from his youth, answered and said, “Moshe, my master, imprison them!’ Moshe said to him, "Are you zealous for my sake? I wished that all of God’s people were prophets, so that God would bestow an inspired spirit upon them! (Bemidbar 11)

Yehoshua acted with zeal, and Moshe stayed the impetuous passion of the zealot. Moshe understood that Eldad and Medad’s voices must not be silenced. Already then Moshe learned from his own life experience after he murdered the Egyptian and fled to Midian. In parashat Pinchas, Moshe transfers the authority of his leadership to an older, more tutored Yehoshua. He places his hands on Yehoshua to confer the authority of leadership before the entire nation. Perhaps he does this now because he realized that he no longer had the strength to stop Pinchas as he had stopped Yehoshua.  In a beautiful moment of self-understanding, Moshe turns to God and significantly calls God by the most humanistic, universalistic name in the entire Tanakh:

Moshe spoke to Hashem, saying, “Let God, the Source of the breath of all flesh, appoint someone over the community who shall go out before them

and come in before them, and who shall take them out and bring them in, so that God’s people may not be like sheep that have no shepherd.”  (Bemidbar 27:15-17)

Rashi quotes the midrashic explanation of why Moshe calls upon Hashem as the Creator of all humanity, just when he is seeking a person to replace him as the leader of the Jewish people only:

the Source of the breath of all flesh— Why is this expression used? Moshe said to God: “Lord of the Universe! the personality of each person is revealed to you, and no two are alike. Appoint over them a leader who will tolerate each person according to his individual character (Midrash Tanchuma, Pinchas 10; cf. Yalkut Shimoni on Torah 776).

Moshe is teaching us that true leadership celebrates, appreciates, supports and understands human diversity. Such a leader recognizes differences within the people, and beyond them. A zealot cannot tolerate diversity. Despite the fact that the zealot might halt an immediate crisis, society pays a steep price for such extremism. The fanatic, the zealot, sees only one way: his way. The underlying false beliefs about the past remain deeply ingrained in the collective consciousness of the people. Zealots, ultimately, must be contained, like Pinchas and Eliyahu were. What society needs is leadership courageous and honest enough to live with the tensions implicit in diversity, see the beauty in such diversity, and appreciate God’s humanity with humility and self-effacement. Moshe was such a leader, and tried to tutor Yehoshua in these same values.

This message applies not only to this moment in the contemporary world. It also emerges from the fast of the 17th of Tammuz that passed on Tuesday. The fast was established by the rabbis to recall the breaching of the walls of Jerusalem by the Babylonians that culminated in the destruction of Jerusalem and the exile of the Jewish people on the 9th of Av three weeks later. Days of memory provide us with the opportunity to re-think our past and project a vision for a better future. The process of re-thinking past events and taking responsibility for decisions made by others in order to correct past errors is a deep feature of Jewish  spirituality. We were not directly involved in the corruptions that resulted in God’s decision to have Jerusalem destroyed and our people exiled, but the rabbis teach us to reflect on those events, learn from the errors of the past, and do teshuvah as a way to work towards the redemption of the world.

Zealots cannot lead our people in a way that inspires and enables us to rethink our past. Today here, in Israel, and around the world, this moment in time, requires leadership that will enable us to think, to see the bigger picture, and to recognize that mistaken, pagan, idolatrous attitudes and actions of the past must be rejected and corrected. We dare not create idols and worship them as if they are divine.

Shabbat Shalom, Rabbi Dov

 The Shabulletin - Your shabbat-table newsletter, on the parasha and beyond... 5784:44

Parasha & Times

Šabat Parašat Pineḣas

27 July 2024 * 21 Ḣodeṡ Tamuz 5784
כ”א תמוז
התשפ”ד
Today 295 Days BaGaza
Jerusalem - 7:00pm Candles; 8:19pm Havdala

Modiin - 7:11pm Candles; 8:20pm Havdala

Miami - 7:52pm Candles; 8:47pm Havdala
Austin - 8:10pm Candles; 9:07pm Havdala

Manhattan - 7:59pm Candles; 9:03pm Havdala

Moscow - 8:29pm Candles; 10:02pm Havdala

London - 8:39pm Candles; 9:59pm Havdala
Paris - 9:19pm Candles; 10:34pm Havdala

Picture of the Week


“Our Victory is Your Victory!”
- PM Binyamin Netanyahu addressing the US Congress and the American Nation 

Weekly Moment

“Love those who are close to you”

- Ms. Young, 22 July 2024

The Weekly Riddle

Which foreign leader addressed a joint session of the US Congress 3 times during his/her political career, and was it the largest number of addresses given by a foreign leader in a US Congress joint session?

(Guess before you take a peek, the answer is on the back page)

‘Am Yisrael Ḣazaq Ḣai VeQayam עם ישראל חזק חי וקיים

The Gaza War enters its 43rd week. We strengthen the hands of Am Yisrael and Medinat Yisrael, of Israel’s army, its security forces, its citizens, and its residents, and remember the 1588 perished Israelis, civilians, rescuers, defenders, and soldiers. We pray for the fast return of the remaining 115 kidnapped, the return of the 120,000 displaced Israelies to their homes, for the full recovery in body and soul of over 13,000 injured, and for strength for the bereaved families.

With prayers for absolute victory and lasting peace.

In the Beginning

A standing ovation is a form of applause where members of a seated audience stand up while applauding, often after extraordinary performances of particularly high acclaim. The word “ovation” is from the Latin ovationem meaning "a triumph, rejoicing." Its use in English to refer to sustained applause dates from at least 1831.
In Ancient Rome returning military commanders whose victories did not quite meet the requirements of triumph or did not merit receiving a title of triumph, but were still successful and praiseworthy, were celebrated with an ovation instead. That includes caes such as a defeat of an inconsiderable enemy, accomplished with little bloodshed. Also, when general Marcus Licinius Crassus defeated Spartacus and his rebelling slaves army he refused to be acknowledged with Triumph: “Crassus, for all his self-approval, did not venture to ask for the major triumph, and it was thought ignoble and mean in him to celebrate even the minor triumph on foot, called the ovation," nor did he wish to be honored for subduing slaves.
(wikipedia and etymology online)

Rav Question - שאלת רב

Did Pineḣas receive a standing ovation from Bene Yisrael after he assuaged G-d’s impassioned rage?
Pineḣas’s jealousy to Hash-em was accepted, while Eliyahu’s jealousy to Hash-em was rejected. Why?
And how would you translate:

   בְּקַנְאוֹ אֶת־קִנְאָ-תִי בְּתוֹכָם and קַנֹּא קִנֵּאתִי לַה-שם

In the Good News

- Paraguay announced it will move its embassy to Israel’s and the Jewish People’s eternal capital, Yerushalayim.

- After 30 years a new yishuv, a settlement, will be built in the Lower Galilee. The new place, called Shibolet, will include 350 households of which 70 for people with special needs.

On the Parasha & Beyond…

Biblical Quiz: Pinḣas

Kids: How many daughters did Tselofḣad have? Teenagers: What are their names? Adults: Were the Levites counted the same as the other tribes? Experts: How many more women are mentioned in our parasha? What are their names? Rabbis: What did Moshe ask when G-d told him that he would only get to see the Land?

Parasha: Pinḣas - Bemidbar (Numbers) 25:10-30:1

Historical Context: Creation Time: 2487 (1407 bce or 1272 bce according to Seder Olam). Bene Yisrael are encamped in the Plains of Moav, by the Jordan River across from the city Yeriḣo, and getting ready to enter the Promised Land. Parashort: Aharon's grandson, Pinḣas, is rewarded for his act of zealotry in killing the Shimonite prince Zimri and the Midianite princess: G-d grants him a covenant of peace and the priesthood. A census of the people counts 601,730 men between the ages of 20 and 60. Moshe is instructed on how the Land is to be divided by lottery among the tribes and families of Israel. The five daughters of Tslofḣad petition Moshe that they be granted the portion of the land belonging to their father, who died without sons; G-d accepts their claim and incorporates it into the Torah's laws of inheritance. Moshe empowers Yehoshu’a to succeed him and lead Bene Yisrael into the Promised Land. A detailed list is given of the daily offerings and of the additional offerings brought on shabbat, rosh ḣodesh and all the holidays.

Haftara: 3 Weeks (1) - Yirmiyahu (Jeremiah) 1:1-2:3

Haftit: We are introduced to the prophet Yirmiyahu the son of Ḥilkiyahu, a Kohen who lived in the priestly city of ‘Anatot, in the region of Binyamin (north of Jerusalem), who prophesied during the reigns of the Judah kings, Yoshiyahu ben Amon and Yehoyakim ben Yoshiyahu. Yirmiyahu is approached by G-d who told him that he was destined to be a prophet. Yirmiyahu refuses and G-d tells Yirmiyahu that He would let the necessary words flow from his mouth. G-d speaks to Yirmiyahu in visions. Yirmiyahu’s first message to the Yehudim of Judea is to do teshuva, repentance. Connection to the Parasha: The Haftara is the first of three Haftarot that we read before Tish’a B'Av. They are about the First Temple's destruction and the exile of the Judean people.

A Parasha Bite - Pinḣas

This shabbat’s parasha, Pinḣas, accounts for 4 types of leadership. First is Zimri ben Salu, a president in the tribe of Shim’on who publicly participates in a promiscuous activity with the daughters of Moav. Second is Pinḣas ben Elazar Hakohen who acts jealousy and zealously and takes the law into his hands in killing Zimri. On him the sages said that this is according to halakha “but we don’t instruct as such.” Third is Moshe ben ‘Amram who shows responsibility nominating Joshua as his successor and does not leave a leadership void. Last are the 5 Daughters of Tselofḣad who had no brother to carry on their father’s land and name, and therefore take the initiative and raise the voice of women in a patriarchal society, ask for and achieve justice and the continuation of the name of their father’s household on his allocated land between the River to the Sea. Hazaq U’varukh! tbs.

Riddle Solved

Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, Winston Churchill, addressed joint meetings of Congress on three occasions 1941, 1943, 1952; Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi and Prime Minister of Israel Yitzhak Rabin and Nelson Mandela of South Africa each addressed joint meetings of Congress on two occasions; Prime Minister of Israel Benjamin Netanyahu made four joint addresses to Congress, more than any other foreign dignitary, in 1996, 2011, 2015, and 2024; The first foreign dignitary to address a joint meeting of Congress was David Kalakaua, King of the Hawaiian Islands, on December 18, 1874.

Biblical Quiz - Answers: Pinḣas

Kids: Tselofḣad had five daughters. Teenagers: Maḣla, Noah, Ḥogla, Milka, and Tirtsa. Adults: The tribes were counted from twenty years old and upwards, all that are fit to go out to war. The Levites counted every male from a month old and upward. Experts: Three more: Seraḣ, Yokheved, Myriam. Rabbis: Moshe asked G-d to choose the next leader of Bene Yisrael.

Speechless in the Parasha: Pinḣas

How many daughters did Tsəlofḣad have? Look at their names: Can you find a common thread? What is it?