DON’T JUST LEAVE, BURN THE MAP!
ב״ה

 
This Week at Chabad of Pacific Palisades
Candle Lighting
Candle Lighting Times for
Pacific Palisades:
Friday, Apr. 18
7:10 pm
 

Chabad of Pacific PalisadesEmail: [email protected]Phone: 310-454-7783www.ChabadPalisades.com

 
 
Rabbi's Message
Message from the Rabbi
 
 

Dear Friends,

Pesach (Passover) is not just a story of the past, it is the blueprint for personal freedom in every generation. The word “Mitzrayim” shares its root with “meitzarim”, narrow places or straits. Leaving Egypt is about breaking free from the inner limitations that constrict us, such as fear, self-doubt, addiction, or despair.

The Baal Shem Tov taught that the Exodus happens every day. In fact, the Torah commands us to remember it daily, because the journey from slavery to freedom is a constant one.  

The Lubavitcher Rebbe explained that true freedom doesn’t mean doing whatever we want, it means rising above the animal instincts that trap us, and connecting to our G-dly soul, which is truly free. In a farbrengen (Chassidic gathering), the Rebbe said: “On Pesach, every Jew is granted the power to go out of his own personal Egypt and leave behind the things that hold him back from being who he truly is.”. 

Look around the world today. There are so many forces trying to enslave us: screens, noise, fear, stress. Pesach reminds us that Hashem is constantly pulling us out. We just must be willing to move our feet and walk forward.

When we eat the matzah, called the "bread of faith," we’re internalizing simplicity, trust, and humility.

This year, don’t just celebrate freedom. Live it. Don’t just leave Egypt. Burn the map. Wishing you Shabbat Shalom and Chag Sameach!

Rabbi Zushe Cunin

 
 
 
Service Times
Holiday Schedule

Please note: All services will take place at Chabad Castellammare by RSVP only. Passes are required to enter Palisades. Please text Rebbetzin Zisi 310-628-4446 by Friday at 5pm if you will join.

Friday, April 18
Evening Services 7:00 PM
Light candles at 7:09 PM

Saturday, April 19
Morning Services 9:30 AM
Evening Services 7:00 PM
Light holiday candles after 8:07 PM from a pre-existing flame

Sunday, April 20
​​​​​​
Morning Services 9:30 AM
​​​​​​Yizkor Memorial Services 11:00 AM
Followed by Kiddush Lunch
Meal of Moshiach 6:30 PM
Holiday Ends 8:08 PM

 
 
 
Service Times
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This Week @
This Week @ www.ChabadPalisades.com
  
By the Numbers
14 Facts About Acharon Shel Pesach
While it’s usually the Passover Seders that get the most attention, the rest of the eight-day holiday is special too and the last day certainly packs a punch!
  
Omer
Download the Omer Counter Today!
  
Your Questions
Why Stay Up on the 7th Night of Passover?
In many Jewish communities—both Ashkenazi and Sephardic—there’s a beautiful tradition of staying up late (or even all night) on Shevi’i shel Pesach.
  
Project Purpose
Personality, Passion, and Purpose
We're in the third week of Project Purpose.
 
 
Parshah
Parshah in a Nutshell

The name of the Parshah, “Shemini,” means “eighth” and it is found in Leviticus 9:1.

On the eighth day, following the seven days of their inauguration, Aaron and his sons begin to officiate as kohanim (priests); a fire issues forth from G‑d to consume the offerings on the altar, and the divine presence comes to dwell in the Sanctuary.

Aaron’s two elder sons, Nadav and Avihu, offer a “strange fire before G‑d, which He commanded them not” and die before G‑d. Aaron is silent in face of his tragedy. Moses and Aaron subsequently disagree as to a point of law regarding the offerings, but Moses concedes to Aaron that Aaron is in the right.

G‑d commands the kosher laws, identifying the animal species permissible and forbidden for consumption. Land animals may be eaten only if they have split hooves and also chew their cud; fish must have fins and scales; a list of non-kosher birds is given, and a list of kosher insects ( four types of locusts).

Also in Shemini are some of the laws of ritual purity, including the purifying power of the mikvah (a pool of water meeting specified qualifications) and the wellspring. Thus the people of Israel are enjoined to “differentiate between the impure and the pure.”

Learn: Shemini in Depth
Browse: Shemini Parshah Columnists
Prep: Devar Torah Q&A for Shemini
Read: Haftarah in a Nutshell
Play: Shemini Parshah Quiz

 

 
 
 
Today's Quote
Today's Quote
Every man is obligated to say: For my sake the world was created.
— Talmud, Sanhedrin 37a

 
 
Chabad World News
Chabad World News