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Zionism most malignant form of terrorism in history: Larijani – Mehr … – Mehr News Agency – English Version

Posted By on June 25, 2017

Once again you answered the call of late Imam Khomeini on the Quds Day and boasted a glorious scene of religious honor to the world, said Ali Larijani to the people attending the Quds Day rallies in Tehran.

There is no event as sinister as the creation of Zionist regime in the course of history, asserted the Parliament speakerin his speech at the end ofralliesmarking the annual Quds Day. There is no analogy in the history the way they dislocated a nation and committed crimes to make and form Israel.

The establishment of this regime pinpoints the start of adventurism in the region and has got all Islamic countries involved, underlined the Iranian legislator,

Saying that Muslim nations are facing a plot, Larijani highlighted that the Jews live in Iran but they hate Zionism.

He quoted Hillary Clinton saying that the US created the ISIL and added that the Americans who committed countless crimes in Afghanistan are now supporting al-Nusra front because they are the offspring of Zionism.

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Zionism most malignant form of terrorism in history: Larijani - Mehr ... - Mehr News Agency - English Version

What Is fair? – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on June 25, 2017

The name Korach naturally conjures up images of holes in the ground and consuming fires. His name is synonymous with a failed rebellion, challenging the Divine authority. His story is well known, laid out in immense detail in the Torah section bearing his name. The Talmud, though, uses Korachs name, and his overall genealogy, to demonstrate the true nature of his sin and its terrible effects on the Jewish people. The first verses of the Torah portion lay out the primary participants in the rebellion (Bamidbar 16:1):

Korah the son of Izhar, the son of Kohath, the son of Levi took [himself to one side] along with Dathan and Abiram, the sons of Eliab, and On the son of Peleth, descendants of Reuben.

The specific pedigree grabs the attention of the Sages (Sanhedrin 109b):

Now Korah took . . . Resh Lakish said: He took a bad bargain for himself, He made a bald patch among Israel. The son of Izhar: a son who incensed the whole world with himself as the [heat of] noon. The son of Kohath, a son who set the teeth of his progenitors on edge. The son of Levi: a son who became an inmate of Gehenna. Then why not state too the son of Jacob, [implying] a son who marched himself into Gehenna? R. Samuel b. R. Isaac answered: Jacob supplicated for himself [not to be enumerated amongst Korah's ancestors]

As we can see, the Talmud derives various seemingly scattered interpretations based on each name in Korachs family line. It even suggests one for son of Jacob, only to reject it due to an interpretation concerning Yaakovs wishes. When it comes to the other instigators, the Talmud continues (ibid):

Dathan [denotes] that he violated God's law; Abiram that he stoutly refused to repent; On that he sat in lamentations; Peleth that wonders were wrought for him; the son of Reuben a son who saw and understood

Once again, we see similar types of derivations from the above listed names. In organizing these interpretations, there is a distinct difference between Korach and his followers. With Korach, whatever the Talmud is attempting to teach us, the ideas are unique to the particular sin committed. With Datan and Aviram, more general language is used, such as he violated Gods law. There is also the mystery of On, who has a brief cameo at the onset of the rebellion. The Maharsha explains that the Talmud is teaching us that On was sucked into Korachs plan.

However, after thinking about it, he decided the entire enterprise was a mistake, and he proceeded to repent.

What ideas are the Talmud trying to present to us? The descriptions ascribed to Korach are cryptic at best; yet, as with all Aggadic statements, there is a deeper idea we can access. It would appear that the Talmud, as mentioned above, is focused on the precise sin committed by Korach. As we see clearly from the beginning of the Torah portion, Korach sought to reform Judaism, transforming it into a more egalitarian version of religion.

The idea of a religion preaching equality has a tremendous amount of emotional appeal. We are all the nation of God, and as Korach says quite eloquently, the entire congregation are all holy, and the Lord is in their midst. The idea of religious hierarchy, especially in modern Western culture, implies superiority and supremacy.

Judaism, though, never makes a claim of equality. True, every Jew is obligated in the Torah equally. And without question, every Jew has access to the infinite wisdom of the Torah. At the same time, there are clearly delineated strata, whether it be the Kohanim and Leviin, or the talmid chacham (sage). Does this mean an intrinsic superiority? No, we are all human beings, each possessing our own ability to access God.

However, God designated certain individuals with specific roles that others do not have. While this may run counter to our subjective, albeit juvenile sense of fairness, the Torah is Divine, and we must focus on the wisdom behind such a decision rather than fall prey to our misguided fantasy of equality.

The emotion of egalitarianism is a very strong one, and as we see from the Korach rebellion, it captured the hearts and minds of much of the Jewish populace. In many ways, Korach awakened this emotion, and its effect was profound. Thus, Korach is described as a bald patch, due to the mark he left on the ground (with the subsequent swallowing by the earth). In a broader sense, Korachs actions left a permanent imprint on the nation as a whole.

The idea of an egalitarian revolt would always be associated with Korach. He incensed the whole world, referring to the deep and everlasting impact of bringing forth this dangerous concept. Korach set the teeth of his progenitors on edge. He was from the line of Levi, which meant he had a responsibility to bring the Jewish people to a higher level of perfection. Instead, Korach rejected that role and led them to potential destruction.

The references to Gehenom add another dimension to Korachs sin. The idea of him being an inmate might be the Talmuds emphasis on how evil this sin was. We tend to associate seriousness of sin with degrees of morality. Murder and adultery personify immorality, evil in the purest sense. An appeal to religious equality would not appear to share the same degree of gravity. As we see from Gods reaction, the sin of Korach was as terrible as any other. The second idea (although not included) of Gehenom might refer to Korachs complete belief in his approach. There are times when a person commits a sin, but he is conflicted. His desires pull him one way while his mind tries to stop him. In this instance, Korach bought into his philosophy, free of conflict. The path to Gehenom was then wide open to him.

Korachs particular sin stands in contrast to the other names listed in the verse. The turn to a more generic description of violating Gods command implies they were really riding Korachs coattails. Datan and Aviram used the rebellion as a pretext to express their frustrations. As we see a few verses later, they attack Moshes leadership (Bamidbar 16:13):

Is it not enough that you have brought us out of a land flowing with milk and honey to kill us in the desert, that you should also exercise authority over us?

Note their reference to Egypt as being the land of abundance. Datan and Aviram could not accept Moshes leadership, even though God had clearly designated him with that unique role. Therefore, they piggybacked off Korachs rebellion to air their grievances. Their challenge to Moshes leadership was a rejection of Gods will, but it was much different than Korachs ideology. Their argument was, for lack of a better term, silly. To refer to Egypt, where the Jewish people suffered for so long, as a land flowing with milk and honey was absurd. The entire line of reasoning reflected a plan that lacked any wisdom.

Datan and Aviram were too caught up in their frustration, and therefore could not engage in repentance. On, though, was able to overcome the emotional trappings of challenging Moshes leadership, thinking into the entire argument, and exposing it as a fallacy. He was therefore able to repent. As is clear from the Talmud, the overall approach of these three individuals was in stark contrast to Korachs philosophy. One of the main concepts we can derive from this analysis of Korach is the danger in subjecting the ideology of Torah to our sense of what we think is fair and just.

The Torah, being a Divine system, lays out the path to perfection for man. Each command given by God contains the deepest wisdom. When we come across an idea that does not fit into our subjective view of correct, we must be very careful in how we proceed. Adapting the Torah to what is accepted as fair by the surrounding world is a direct rejection of its Divine objectivity. We cannot give in to those emotions, as they will always lead us down Korachs path of destruction.

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What Is fair? - Arutz Sheva

Southport Hebrew Congregation | Jewish Small Communities …

Posted By on June 25, 2017

Synagogue, Arnside Road, Southport Independent Orthodox

Services are held in the synagogue and are followed by a Kiddush every Shabbat, with a special Kiddush for Rosh Chodesh. On weekdays and Sundays services are held in the Beth Hamidrash (ask in advance if you wish to attend).

Shabbat Service: Commences 9.45am; Sermon 11.15; Kiddush 12 noon (Summer Friday night services commence 7.30 pm; Winter 6.30pm or as dictated by the calendar)

The Amelan Hall, immediately behind the Synagogue, offers a substantial function suite with bar and kosher catering facilities.

Visitors are always made welcome. Information about times and facilities is easily available from the Shool office Tel: 01704-532964 (office times Tuesdays & Fridays only 9.00 12.00) Email: office AT southportsynagogueDOT co DOT uk

Kosher food: Fresh Chickens under Beth Din Supervision are available to personal callers at Orchard Lea Farm, which is just outside Southport itself (01772-812396)

Vidals butcher and Titanic Deli will make van deliveries from Manchester.

Locally Morrisons carry a limited range of dry goods. Kiddush wine is available from Sainsburys.

[above: detail of windows above the Ark]

The stained glass triptych windows above the Ark are an impressive site. The centre one is called The Guardian. In its base is shown the Menorah, the Pillar of Cloud by Day and the Pillar of Fire by Night. In the circle, at the head of the window, is the Ark of the Covenant, just suggesting the Cherabim and Sechinon above the Palm leaves. At the base is the inscription Behold the Guardian of Israel will not slumber nor sleep. The border is panelled with various scripture plants Olive, Vine, Fig, Almond, Hyssop etc. The left hand window is called the Abraham window. The panel at the base shows the traditional Oak of Abraham of Hebron, the Alter of Sacrifice prepared for Isaac at the head, enclosed with a Pomegranate border. The inscription reads Thou shall love the Lord thy G-d with all thy soul, with all thy heart and with all thy might. The window on the right depicts in the base Jacobs Stone at Bethel. The two side panels with the basket among the rushes on the banks of the Nile with Pyramids in the distance. In the top circle of the window water flows from the Rock.

Greetings Cards: a set of 3 cards each depicting one of the windows is available from the Synagogue office. Click here to view

Mikvah: The synagogue has a fully working Mikvah at Arnside Road.

Community organisations: Arnside Social Committee, Ladies Guild, Ajex, Wizo and League of Jewish Women.

The Orthodox community in Southport has a long history which began in the 1890s. By 1926 the Synagogue, which stands today in Arnside Road, had been established.

The first Jewish family in Southport was that of Henschel Samuelson (previously Metzenberg, from Breslau, Prussia) who settled in the town around 1873. He established a high class tobacconist shop on Neville Street and later one of his children created the towns first cinema in the Victoria Hall.

In 1892 an Orthodox Jewish Boarding House was opened by Mrs Joseph Lambert. Situated in Knowsley Road it was called Sorrento.

[above: Chief Rabbi addresses the congregation 2003] see more photos click

The first Synagogue was consecrated on 8th May 1893 and was on the corner of Windsor Road and Sussex Road, previously being a chapel for the Plymouth Bretheren. The community was served for its first 35 years by the Reverend Noah Blaser, who was also Shochet, teacher and general factotum. Around 30 Jewish families then lived in the town.

It was 1896 when Hebrew classes started to be held on Sundays and Thursdays, and building was completed of a new Mortuary Hall. The Chief Rabbi Rev Dr H Adler visited Southport for the benefit of his health and stayed at the Shool Presidents house in Knowsley Road. Even in those early years the Shool boasted its own Choir.

The Chief Rabbi visited again in 1901 and in light of this religious classes were established on every day except Wednesdays and Fridays. By then the number of families had grown to 40, approx. 100 people.

The Sussex Road Synagogue was reconstructed in 1913. The front of the building was faced with Accrington brick and an upper level gallery was created to accomodate the ladies of the congregation. The house abutting the Shool was made into a vestry and Cheder. Of the 80 Jewish families in the town at the time, fifty were members of the Shool.

[above: Israeli Ambassador visits in 2008] see more photos click

By 1922 the Jewish population had increased to upward of 500. By the early 1950s the population had reached its zenith of 3,000. And in 1954 the new communal building, the Amelan Hall, was constructed at the rear of the Arnside Road Synagogue.

[right: Arnside Road Synagogue the Hebrew inscription over the portico reads This is none other but the House of G-d and this is the Gate of Heaven]

Jewish figures have played a leading part in Southports life, with many becoming councillors and sometimes major of the town. At one time the community boasted three Kosher butchers and two delicatessen. These days migration to Manchester, London and beyond has reduced the size of the community somewhat. However, an active social life still provides keen audiences for a variety of events throughout the year, and a capacity turn out for the annual Hanukka dinner Gala.

see more community photos click

Arnside Road Social Committee Hanukka 2006

Southport Jewish Aged Home Tel: (01704) 531975 81 Albert Rd, Southport, PR9 9LN The Home, as it is locally referred to, is a residential care home. It offers rooms and self-contained apartments. Communal facilities include dinning room, lounge and conservatory. There is also a synagogue within the building which holds daily services.

Story of Harris House Refugees

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Southport Hebrew Congregation | Jewish Small Communities ...

Margate demos former Temple Shirat Hayam synagogue for condos … – Press of Atlantic City

Posted By on June 25, 2017

Progress is being made on the demolition of the former Temple Emeth Shalom Reform Congregation at 8501 Ventnor Ave. in Margate.

Demolition contractor Earthtech tore down the addition on the Lancaster Avenue side on Wednesday and is removing concrete. Demolition of the main building on the Kenyon Avenue side, which has served as a synagogue for decades, has been delayed until some asbestos flooring and a few pipes can be removed.

Temple Emeth Shalom vacated the building when it merged with Shirat Hayam Synagogue, which is formerly known as Beth Judah, 700 Swathmore Ave. in Ventnor, last year. The Planning Board on March 30 granted the synagogue a three-lot residential subdivision with one 6,000-square-foot lot facing Ventnor Avenue and two 5,500-square-foot lots facing Kenyon Avenue.

Troy Rosenzweig and Phyllis Scherr at Soleil Sothebys International Realty are developing the properties, called Parkway North, which are adjacent to the Parkway section of Margate. The houses will be two stories with wrap-around porches and second-story decks. Prices range from $1.2 million to $1.4 million.

Margate building inspector Jim Galantino said the demolition and removal of debris must be completed by June 28 or the project will be shut down until after the summer, he told commissioners at their meeting Thursday, June 15.

"They wanted the crew to pick out and recycle the metal, but we told them no, get it out of there. We don't want it to go to the 4th of July holiday," Galantino said.

Margate has a demolition moratorium in place during the summer tourist season, when summer residents flock to their homes away from home. The moratorium deadline was June 15, but Galantino gave them an extension to June 28.

"We'd rather see a vacant lot than construction debris," he said.

A contractor on his way home at the end of Thursday said demolition of the main building should be completed Monday and Tuesday, June 19-20.

Contact: 609-601-5196

nanette.galloway@shorenewstoday.com

Twitter @DBCurrent

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Margate demos former Temple Shirat Hayam synagogue for condos ... - Press of Atlantic City

WATCH: Indian Jews bring Bollywood flair to Jerusalem – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on June 25, 2017

Leora Ruben, Mayan Sanlar, Avishai Mazgaonkar and Oved Gadkar bring a little Bollywood to Jerusalem as part of their Birthright trip from India.. (photo credit:BIRTHRIGHT ISRAEL)

Bollywood flash mobs are not a feature of your average Birthright group, but the annual Indian group that traveled to Israel this month made sure to share part of their culture with the locals, as well as soaking up Israeli culture and having meaningful first-time experiences of the Holy Land.

Several members of this years group will be heading home this week having stayed on after the 10-day heritage trip ended two weeks ago, to spend time with relatives who live in Israel.

The groups 19 participants hail from various areas of India and were led by Leora Joseph, from Mumbai, who has worked for many years in the Indian-Jewish community and has watched most of the participants grow up. It was like leading my kids to Israel, Joseph told The Jerusalem Post on Thursday.

While the group visited the usual touristic hot-spots which feature on every Birthright schedule, they had a few additions of particular interest to their community.

During a preparatory meeting ahead of the trip in Mumbai, Joseph had revealed to the group that she is related to the famous Indian-Israeli Singer Liora Itzhak, who fuses Bollywood and Israeli culture in her music.

The group, which included many singers and dancers, was keen to meet the celebrity.

Joseph made a phone call to her cousin, who obligingly came to meet the participants during their visit to Israel, where she spoke with them, danced and sang a Hebrew-Hindi duet with one of the participants.

The group also put on performances of their own. They arranged a Bollywood-inspired flash mob in Jerusalems bustling Ben-Yehuda Street as well as appearing on Channel 10s morning show and performed a dance on air.

India is home to an estimated 5,000 Jews, while 4,000 Indian Jews reside in Israel. Members of the latter, living in Ramle, hosted the group for lunch during their visit.

Sisters Margalit, 22, and Sigalit Samuel, 23, of Ahmedabad, Gujarat, stayed on for over a week in Israel to visit their relatives across the country, from Haifa in the North to Ashdod in the South.

They were particularly moved by their visit to Yad Vashem.

Every Jewish person should visit there at least once, Margalit remarked, describing her visit to the museum as very emotional.

Joseph told the Post that the participants had complained that they didnt have enough time at Yad Vashem and had wanted to learn more. I found that interesting because its a difficult subject to deal with and they were absorbing so much, she said. There is no history of antisemitism in India and we dont know much about the Holocaust, she explained, saying that Holocaust education is limited there.

We learn about it at school as part of WWII history but they (the students) dont know the extent to which people suffered, she added, though she noted than in recent years a Holocaust program has been launched, particularly in the Jewish community.

The highlight of the trip for the majority of the group was visiting the Western Wall, finding the experience of Kabbalat Shabbat there extremely spiritual.

I got goosebumps, Hebron Bamnolkar, 22, from Mumbai, told the Post.

Bamnolkar said his experiences of Israel exceeded his expectations.

He will remain in the country until the Maccabiah Games, in which he is competing in cricket.

Afterward he will return home to complete his studies, but he hopes to the return to Israel for good with his mother.

Joseph said the group became very tight-knit over the 10 days and felt like an intimate family.

I told them that it will be life changing and an experience of a lifetime and thats what it has been for them, she said.

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WATCH: Indian Jews bring Bollywood flair to Jerusalem - The Jerusalem Post

The ‘reward’ of every Temple Mount rioter: 4,500 shekels a month … – Arutz Sheva

Posted By on June 25, 2017

Jewish visitors on Temple Mount

Zac Wajsgras/Flash90

A Turkish organization funded partially by the Turkish government invested in a project intended to bring 500 thousand Israeli Arabs to the Al-Aqsa Mosque to protect it against Israeli invasion and the threat of its destruction, according to an investigation by Israel Hayom.

The journalist Nadav Shragai reported that an organization called Mirasimiz (Our Heritage, - ed.) organized mass transportation to the Old City of Jerusalem, allotting 11.5 million shekels for this purpose. The transportation project was to have continued for many months, and the organization obtained 11 buses and hired dozens of additional buses every week to execute the project.

Among those transported by the organization were the agressive men's group Mourabitoun and women's group "Murabitat, under the auspices of the northern branch of the Islamic Movement in Israel, who later became illegal after they created riots on the Temple Mount, cursing and attempting to threaten and disrupt Jewish visits to the site.

The program included many schools from the Arab sector in Israel, and the organization also made sure to distribute water and food costing 7.5 million shekels to those it was transporting to the Temple Mount.

The Shin Bet discovered that, in exchange for their presence on the Temple Mount and their harassment of Jewish visitors to the site, each one of the Mourabitoun and Murabitat received a monthly salary of 4,500 shekels a month.

Mirasimiz, according to Israel Hayom, also deals with the buying, fixing, and maintaining buildings in the Old City of Jerusalem near the Temple Mount.

The leader of the organization speaks in the style of Turkish President Erdogan, and envisions a future revival of Jerusalem in the spirit of the Ottoman heritage. He said that international law in Jerusalem is Ottoman law, and Turkey has a right to get involved in Jerusalem because the city is the inheritance of the Ottomans.

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The 'reward' of every Temple Mount rioter: 4,500 shekels a month ... - Arutz Sheva

Higher health risks for Israeli Ethiopian immigrants – The Jerusalem Post

Posted By on June 25, 2017

A memorial ceremony for Jewish immigrants who died on the way to Israel from Ethiopia, June 5, 2016. (photo credit:MARC ISRAEL SELLEM)

Immigrants of Ethiopian origin have a 2.4-fold risk of developing type-2 diabetes and a 1.5 higher risk of contracting schizophrenia than other Israelis, according to a recent discussion in the Knesset Labor, Social Welfare and Health Committee.

Dr. Yonatan Reuven, who conducts research on Ethiopian Jewish health, said that due to lifestyle and nutrition changes, the diabetes risk is significantly higher even than Jews of Ethiopian origin who were born in Israel. The condition is often accompanied by hypertension, obesity and tooth decay.

The schizophrenia risk of the immigrants is twice as high as those of Israeli-born Ethiopian Jews. Although no explanation for this was given, 28% of the immigrants suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder, and the men were significantly more likely to commit suicide.

A month ago, changes in regulations instituted by the Health Ministry went into effect, allowing some Ethiopian immigrants, homosexuals and elderly people to donate blood. The change resulted from new Israeli and foreign epidemiological data and the improvement in medical technologies and risk assessment.

For many years, Jews of Ethiopian heritage who were born in Israel have been able to donate blood without limitation.

However, those who were born in Ethiopia or if they spent over a year, since 1977, in a country where HIV was endemic, had been banned. It was also forbidden for people of any origin over the age of 65 to give a first blood donation.

Thanks to the new changes, restrictions on Ethiopian immigrants who were born there were dropped, except those who spent more than a year in an HIV-endemic country and less than a year has passed since they arrived in Israel.

The questionnaire filled out by all would-be donors about possible behaviors that could increase the risk of HIV infection such as homosexuality or intravenous drug use has been updated and is identical to those adopted by the US Food and Drug Administration and health authorities in Europe. The tests used here for HIV, hepatitis B and hepatitis C virus are significantly more sensitive than the old ones, thus the window of infection is being narrowed to a few days between infection by a carrier and testing for these viruses. YALURONIC ACID IN CREAM, NOT INJECTION

A Bar-Ilan University research team has developed a unique technology that produces small molecules of anti-aging hyaluronic acid polymers that can be applied as a cream instead of injections. The team, headed by Prof. Rachel Lubart and Prof. Aharon Gedanken from the chemistry and physics departments and BIUs Institute for Nanotechnology and Advanced Materials, have been involved in the past few years in the development of a technology for micronization and characterization of hyaluronic acid.

The skin, which plays an important role in protecting the bodys organs, is impenetrable.

Finding means to penetrate the skin barrier has challenged the medical field for years. Huge efforts have been made in developing ways to introduce hyaluronic acid into the skin, as it cannot penetrate it naturally.

Now, based on this development, para-medical cosmetics pioneer Hava Zingboim has produced the first formula that allows the hyaluronic acid to penetrate into the deeper skin layers by means of cream application and without injection.

A key property of hyaluronic acid, which is naturally present in the body, is its ability to adsorb large quantities of water. Hyaluronic acid is also an effective antioxidant, which means it can trap the free radicals formed in the skin during inflammatory processes or as a result of exposure to UV rays. These properties make it an important anti-aging agent.

The look of young skin can be measured by the amount of hyaluronic acid between the cells. As people age, the body gradually loses its ability to produce hyaluronic acid.

The decreasing availability of hyaluronic acid directly results in sagging skin, wrinkles and fine lines.

CAN OMEGA-3 HELP PREVENT ALZHEIMERS DISEASE?

Neuroimaging shows increased blood flow in regions of the brain associated with memory and learning for people with higher omega-3 levels.

According to a new study headed by Dr. Daniel Amen of Costa Mesa, California, published in the Journal of Alzheimers Disease, blood flow in specific areas of the brain rises in patients with high omega-3 levels. The incidence of Alzheimers disease (AD) is expected to triple in the coming decades, and no cure has been found.

Recently, interest in dietary approaches for prevention of cognitive decline has increased. In particular, the omega-3 fatty acids have shown anti-amyloid, anti-tau and anti-inflammatory actions in the brains of animals.

This study is a major advance in demonstrating the value of nutritional intervention for brain health by using the latest brain imaging, commented biology Prof. George Perry of the University of Texas at San Antonio and editor-in-chief of the journal.

When single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) is used to measure blood perfusion in the brain, images acquired from subjects performing various cognitive tasks show higher blood flow in specific brain regions. When these images were compared to the Omega-3 Index a measure of the blood concentration of two omega-3 fatty acids called eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) investigators found a statistically significant correlation between higher blood flow and higher Omega-3 Index.

Co-author Dr. William Harris of the University of South Dakota School of Medicine said, Although we have considerable evidence that omega-3 levels are associated with better cardiovascular health, the role of the fish oil fatty acids in mental health and brain physiology is just beginning to be explored. This study opens the door to the possibility that relatively simple dietary changes could favorably impact cognitive function.

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Higher health risks for Israeli Ethiopian immigrants - The Jerusalem Post

YIVO | Hasidism: Teachings and Literature

Posted By on June 25, 2017

The term Hasidic theology should refer to a body of ideas that have characterized Hasidic thought from its beginnings in the mid-eighteenth century to the present, and may be distinguished in a meaningful way from the thought of non-Hasidic teachers, both before and during this period and since. Every attempt by modern scholars to present such a body of ideas, however, has failed. The conceptions and ideas that dominate Hasidic literature can be found in kabbalistic and ethical literature before the eighteenth century, and play a prominent role in modern non-Hasidic and anti-Hasidic writings as well. It is very easy to distinguish between a Hasid and a non-Hasid by their dress, customs, manner of prayer, loyalty to a rebbe, and many other obvious aspects of daily life and worship; it is nearly impossible, however, to distinguish between them according to their conceptions of God and of the relationship between God and Israel, their theoretical and practical religious norms, and their notions of ethics.

Some of the most significant attempts to designate a theological concept central to Hasidism have emphasized the following features: devekut (communion with God); transformation and elevation of evil to goodness; the concept of let atar panui mineh (no place is empty of God); and enthusiastic worship versus Torah study.

Most of the evidence supporting this hypothesis was derived from the writings of Dov Ber, the Magid of Mezritsh. It is similar to Martin Bubers description of Hasidism as sanctifying Jewish daily life and endowing with religious significance the neutral and secular aspects of life (avodah be-gashmiyut). This is a valid theory, relevant to the understanding of the school of the Magid, but it has minimal significance with respect to other and later Hasidic schools. In most Hasidic sects, for example, communion with God was replaced as a guiding principle by adhesion to the tsadik. Moreover, the very concept of devekut has been defined in various ways by different Hasidic teachers, some of whom have regarded it more generally as refined and lofty religious enthusiasm.

Another frequently proposed distinction was that the Hasidim were kabbalists, whereas the Misnagdim were thought to be the more rational. That is incorrect, however. The teachings of the Kabbalah, especially Lurianic Kabbalah and the Zohar, were the theological basis of both worldviews. When the leader of the Misnagdim, Eliyahu, the Gaon of Vilna, refused to open his door to Shneur Zalman of Liady (the leader of abad), kabbalists stood on both sides of the closed door.

Quotations from the Baal Shem Tovs teachings in early Hasidic writings hold that a spiritual leader should be responsible for the religious welfare of his generation, assist them in bringing their requests before the Throne of Glory, and help mobilize divine assistance to protect them from enemies in the world. These ideas, however, did not coalesce into a systematic theology in the first two generations of Hasidism. Only among the disciples of the Magid of Mezritsh and other Hasidic thinkers in the last third of the eighteenth century were they combined into a coherent theology as well asembodied in a social institution. The novel, revolutionary conception of religious leadership that resulted came to dominateand distinguishHasidism.

Elimelekh of Lizhensk was one of the first Hasidic leaders to formulate the theory of the tsadik, along with Yaakov Yitsak Horowitz, the Seer of Lublin. Anothergroup of Hasidim, surrounding the Magid of Zlotshev (Pol., Zoczw), developed similar concepts in a more messianic manner, as did the Baal Shem Tovs grandson, Rabbi Naman of Bratslav.

The core of the theory of the tsadik maintains that there is a pact between the leader and his community, which exists on two levels, spiritual and physical. On each level, the duties of the leader and those of the community are clearly specified. On the spiritual level, the community owes the tsadik complete faith and loyalty. It has to perceive him as the intermediary between themselves and Godas the divine representative in their midstand their worship of God is to be directed through him. Complete loyalty to the tsadik and his dynasty on the part of the Hasidim and their families is demanded, and a Hasid identifies himself according to this dynasty. There is no universal Hasid; one is a Sadagora Hasid or a Lubavitch Hasid or a Belz Hasid. Without adherence to a leader and his dynasty, there is no Hasidism.

For his part, the tsadik uses the faith that the community puts in him in order to focus the spiritual power of all of them together; he aims to employ it, on earth and in the divine world, to protect and advance the spiritual needs of the community. The tsadik uses this power in order to uplift his followers prayers to the divine world, pleading that their sins be forgiven and their repentance accepted, and that divine providence be perpetually extended to them. By putting their faith in their tsadik, Hasidim are assured of constant contact with God as mediated by the tsadik; the closer they are to himvisiting him frequently on holidays, living close to the town of his residencethe closer they are to divine providence and protection.

On the physical or material level, Hasidim are obligated to supply the tsadik and his family with all their worldly needs. Some tsadikim were extremely modest and frugal, while others adopted royal mannerisms and imitated the ways of Polish nobility. Hasidim were responsible for maintaining, by their contributions, the court of the tsadik, along with the communitys educational institutions and social welfare activities. The tsadik, in turn, had three primary material obligations relevant to each of his adherents. First, it was his responsibility to endow every one of his believers with sons, health, and livelihood. Throughout the history of Hasidism, extending to today, the tsadik has used all of his powers to ensure that each adherent will have at least one male offspring. Second, the tsadik prays, and sometimes intervenes with regard to medical treatments, for the health of his Hasidim and their families. Finally, he gives detailed advice, direction, and assistance concerning choices of employment and business, so as to make possible at least a modest standard of living.

The tsadiks role as an intermediary requires him to move, spiritually, from the divine realm to earth and vice versa, in a constant rhythm. Hasidim describe the various states of the tsadik, reflected in hismoods, by means of kabbalistic terms (katnut and gadlut, nefilat apayim). He brings from above the shefa (divine flow), which sustains life and existence, and heelevates the spiritual faith and devotion of the righteous from earth to the divine powers, sustaining and strengthening them.

The theory of the tsadik is the spiritualbasis of the Hasidic community, and thefamily is its physical expression. The Hasidim are loyal to the dynastic family of the tsadik not as individuals but as a family, and the affiliation is continued from generation to generation; it becomes the definitive marker of identity for Hasidic families. Thus, in the Hasidic community the meaning of the term asid is not the historical onea pious personbut rather an adherent of this or that dynasty of tsadikim. In a similar way, the term tsadik is no longer the traditional righteous person; this meaning becomes unsustainable once the norm There is no tsadik but the son of a tsadik (first announced in the early nineteenth century) is adopted. The term tsadik in this context means a divine representative: a reflection of the ninth divine power in the kabbalistic system, yesod or tsadik, following the verse in Proverbs 10:25 (The righteous [person] is an eternal foundation.).

The early tsadikim were charismatic leaders who established their communities by the power of their personality and their ideas. Yet by the end of the eighteenth century the norm became to nominate a son to succeed his father, and early in the next century this was the accepted rule. In many Hasidic dynasties, this form of succession has proceeded now for seven or eight generations (the most famous is the Lubavitch line, in which the last leader, Rabbi Menaem Mendel Shneerson, was the seventh and last, having died without an heir). Some Hasidic lines integrated by marriage with others; more often, several sons split the community and established their own distinct lines. When there is no male offspring, sometimes the new tsadik is the son-in-law or another close relative of the previous one. But the principle of heredity has always been dominant.

Hasidic theory limits the messianic role of the tsadik to his own community, and only during his lifetime. These limitations are in force so long as the various tsadikim admit that there are other such leaders employing similar powers. These disappear when a tsadik claims to be theonly tsadik, or the true tsadik (tsadik ha-emet). This situation occurred with Naman of Bratslav, who viewed himself as the only true tsadik; he therefore did not establish a dynasty, and his adherentshave believed in his messianic role and that he will return as a redeemer afterhis death in 1811. A similar phenomenon has been happening now in abad Lubavitch since the last leader, Menaem Mendel Shneerson, died in Brooklyn in 1995 without leaving an heir. Those abad adherents who believed in his messianic mission before his death expect now that he will return to the world as a redeemer.

The issue of the messianic element in Hasidism has not been resolved. Most scholars assert that Hasidism neutralized the messianic drive in Lurianism and Sabbatianism, emphasizing individual worship and devotion instead. There is no doubt, however, that Hasidism rejected more radically than any other segment ofJudaism all the proposed modern solutions to Jewish problems, including Zionism, emancipation, emigration to new lands across the ocean, and socialism. The court of the tsadik was regarded as the safest, most protected place on earth; Hasidim held this belief even when the Holocaust was imminent, in Warsaw and Budapest and other places. No major Hasidic communities were established in America or Palestine before the Holocaust. The belief in the redeeming powers of the tsadik was paramount.

Throughout its 250-year history, the Hasidic movement elected to express itself mainly by means of one literary genre: the traditional Jewish collection of sermons, or derashot. This genre, which became dominant in Jewish culture after the sixteenth century, is a conservative mode of religious discourse that relies, in every paragraph, on biblical verses, Talmudic sayings, medieval commentaries, and quotations from kabbalistic works. Ina derash, a preacher is essentially saying to his audience: Im not presenting you with anything new; everything is intimated in our traditional sources. At the same time, this was the most popular genre of religious expression, as it spoke to all those who attended synagogue, both scholars and the uneducated. Since the beginning of the publication of Hasidic worksby Yaakov Yosef of Polnoye and Dov Ber, the Magid of Mezritsh, in 1780 and the following yearsHasidic teachers have addressed their public in this way, based on oral teaching and then edited to produce a written, printed form.

Scores of books and hundreds of studies dealing with all aspects of Hasidic historyand thought have been published by scholars. Most relate to the beginnings ofHasidism and its development in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The history of the two full centuries of Hasidic development up to and including the present, however, has received very little attention. Few monographs and no comprehensive study of Hasidism as a whole for the nineteenth and twentieth centuries exist. There are no detailed historical studies of the development of Hasidism during the nineteenth century, its rapid spread throughout Eastern and Central Europe, and its survival of the horrors of World War I and the civil wars in Russia and Ukraine after the Russian Revolutionor of the reestablishment of Hasidic courts after the destruction of their communities by the Bolsheviks. Only one monograph (by Mendel Piekarz) is dedicated to Polish Hasidism between the world wars and during the Holocaust. The miraculous recovery of Hasidic communities after the Holocaust in Israel and the United States and their confrontation with their new surroundings have likewise not been the subject of analysis and discussion. All these traumatic developments were accompanied by ideological creativity that has not been studied systematically.

Since 1863, the image of Hasidism has been defined, in the eyes of non-Hasidim, by a literary phenomenon that was started by Mikhael ha-Levi Frumkin in a series ofcollections of Hasidic stories. (Kehal asidim [1863] was the first.) Frumkin had left the abad community and published these anthologies for purely commercial purposes. Many others followed him, and by 1914 more than 100 such collections had been published in Hebrew and Yiddish, using some authentic Hasidic material (mainly Shive ha-Besht [1815]), and the biographies of Rabbi Naman of Bratslav, to which other material was added, both traditional and invented.

The anthologies inspired some modernJewish writers to describe Hasidism as a humanistic, philosophical movement, seeking social justice and benefiting the simple and ignorant as they told folktalesand rejoiced in their worship of God. Y.L. Peretz and Yehudah Steinberg expressed this attitude in Hebrew literature, and Martin Buber presented it in his numerous works (especially Tales of the Hasidim) in a more profound and systematic manner. This image, developed by non-Hasidim, acquired a nostalgic dimension especially after the Holocaust, and gained the patina of being an authoritative description of Hasidism. The phenomenon lost much of its power in the last decades of the twentieth century, however, when the presence and impact of historical Hasidism became more forceful in contemporary Judaism, and the distance between the nostalgic image and reality became obvious.

David Assaf, Joseph Dan, and Immanuel Etkes, eds., Mekere asidut (Jerusalem, 1999); Joseph Dan, Jewish Mysticism, vol. 4 (Northvale, N.J., 1999), pp.67130; Rachel Elior, Between Yesh and Ayin: The Doctrine of the Zaddik in the Works of Jacob Isaac, the Seer of Lublin, in Jewish History: Essays in Honour of Chimen Abramsky, ed. Ada Rapoport-Albert and Steven J. Zipperstein, pp.393456 (London, 1988); Rachel Elior, erut al ha-luot: Ha-Maashavah ha-asidit, mekoroteha ha-mistiyim vi-yesodoteha ha-kabaliyim (Tel Aviv, 1999); Immanuel Etkes, The Besht: Magician, Mystic, and Leader, trans. Saadya Sternberg (Waltham, Mass., and Hanover, N.H., 2005); Arthur Green, ed., Jewish Spirituality, vol. 2, pp.127280 (New York, 1987); Gershon David Hundert, ed., Essential Papers on Hasidism (New York and London, 1991); Moshe Idel, Hasidism: Between Ecstasy and Magic (Albany, N.Y., 1995); Raphael Mahler, Hasidism and the Jewish Enlightenment (Philadelphia, 1985); Mendel Piekarz, asidut Polin: Megamot raayoniyot ben shete ha-milamot uvi-gezerot 19401945 (ha-shoah) (Jerusalem, 1990); Ada Rapoport-Albert, ed., Hasidism Reappraised (London, 1996), includes detailed bibliography; Rivkah Schatz-Uffenheimer, Hasidism as Mysticism: Quietistic Elements in Eighteenth Century Hasidic Thought (Princeton, 1993); Gershom Scholem, Major Trends in Jewish Mysticism, 3rd rev. ed. (New York, 1954), pp.325350; Gershom Scholem, The Messianic Idea in Judaism and Other Essays on Jewish Spirituality (New York, 1971), pp.176250; Joseph George Weiss, Studies in East European Jewish Mysticism and Hasidism (London, 1997).

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YIVO | Hasidism: Teachings and Literature

Amaya looking to pierce Indian market as it pursues global growth – Financial Post

Posted By on June 25, 2017

MONTREAL Amaya has its eyes set on India as it looks to grow its online poker business.

India is quite an exciting market, CEO Rafi Ashkenazi told reporters Wednesday after the companys annual meeting where shareholders approved a name change and headquarters relocation to Toronto.

Amaya will become The Stars Group in August when its TSX symbol (TSX:AYA) will also change.

It is opening a head office in downtown Toronto to complement about 300 people who work in technology development in Richmond Hill, north of the city. A small finance office will be maintained for now in Montreal.

Amayas chief operating officer is in India working to finalize a structure that will allow the company to operate with an already licenced partner, likely beginning later this year.

India is an attractive market because of its huge population and the penetration of smartphones that exceed the United States, Ashkenazi said.

He said Amaya hopes eventually to capture at least half of the online poker market that could reach US$150 million in a few years.

Its a booming country and we want to be there and we want to be there in time and make sure that we are as usual the market leader when it comes to poker.

Ashkenazi also has his eyes set on Asia and the United States.

Online gambling is popular in Asia, but developing the right structure is key to entering a lucrative market valued at several billion dollars a year, he said.

Several political initiatives could also eventually open online gambling in large U.S. states like California, New York, Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Illinois.

Poker represents a market of about US$2 billion a year in the U.S. Casino games could be worth 10 times that much for the industry.

Amaya has endured a challenging year. Its founder David Baazov resigned after facing several securities charges and its future as an independent company was in doubt. It withdrew from an attempted a merger with British betting company William Hill PLC and was the subject of an abandoned effort by Baazov to take the company private.

Ashkenazi said those disruptions are in the past, adding that the company isnt changing its name because the Amaya moniker is tainted.

After selling Amayas legacy businesses, he said most people know the company for its ownership of PokerStars.

Excerpt from:

Amaya looking to pierce Indian market as it pursues global growth - Financial Post

Amaya Inc. Gets a New Name and New Target Market for Expansion – The Motley Fool Canada

Posted By on June 25, 2017

Demetris Afxentiou | June 23, 2017 | More on: AYA AYA

Amaya Inc. (TSX:AYA)(NASDAQ:AYA) has finally put a lot of the previous controversies to rest and is looking only at the future, which is bright.

That?s the overall message that is evident in thenew announcements coming from the company.

A difficult year stays in the past

Amaya has been through a roller-coaster ride of changes in the past year. The company lost former CEO and company founder David Baazov who resigned over securities-related charges brought forward last year. Prior to that, there was talk of taking Amaya private, and a deal by Baazov himself was eventually rejected.

Amaya was also the subject of a

Amaya Inc (TSX:AYA)(NASDAQ:AYA) has finally put a lot of the previous controversies to rest and is looking only at the future, which is bright.

Thats the overall message that is evident in thenew announcements coming from the company.

A difficult year stays in the past

Amaya has been through a roller-coaster ride of changes in the past year. The company lost former CEO and company founder David Baazov who resigned over securities-related charges brought forward last year. Prior to that, there was talk of taking Amaya private, and a deal by Baazov himself was eventually rejected.

Amaya was also the subject of a merger with U.K.-based William Hill PLC, but that deal also fell through when both parties walked away from the table.

Amaya CEO Rafi Ashkenazi noted that those difficulties are going to remain in the past and Amaya will forge forward, starting with a new name which was approved at the companys annual meeting.

The new name, The Stars Group, will take effect in August; the companys ticker symbols will change, and Amaya will move into a new head office in downtown Toronto.

Ashkenazi also made the point that the name change was not due to Amaya being tainted, but rather to the realignment of the companys offerings in the PokerStars business and the shedding of other business units over the past few years.

New market opportunities in Asia

One new market that has caught the attention of Amaya of late is India. Online gambling is popular in Asia, and the size of the Indian market as well as the proliferation of smartphones there, which has surpassed even the U.S over the past two years, make it a prime expansion target.

Ashkenazi noted that Amaya is already looking at leveraging a licensed partner to begin operating in India later this year. In terms of potential, Amaya is targeting half of the online poker market, which could be as high as US$150 million over the next few years.

Timing is key, as Amaya aims to establish itself in a leadership position of that market. The boom in smartphone ownership in that market could fuel a significant boom to Amayas revenue should the company be allowed to operate there, and eventually springboard it into other markets in Asia that are already renowned for online gaming.

Other opportunities still exist in the U.S.

Amaya still does not operate in all markets in the U.S. The company has applications pending in a number of states, including California, Florida, Illinois, New York, and Pennsylvania. Amaya was granted approval to operate in New Jersey last year and saw a significant jump in revenues from entering that market.

In terms of market cap, online poker is estimated to be worth approximately US$2 billion annually. Casino games, however, could fetch far more up to 10 times that amount.

As Amaya continues to innovate, roll out to markets, and rebrand itself, theres no doubt that this is a company that should be part of every portfolio.

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Fool contributor Demetris Afxentiou has no position in any stocks mentioned.

Originally posted here:

Amaya Inc. Gets a New Name and New Target Market for Expansion - The Motley Fool Canada


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