Showing posts with label Rabbi Reuven Boshnack. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rabbi Reuven Boshnack. Show all posts

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Michael Shapiro's Niggun for Maoz Tzur - Video & MP3 - Shared by Rav Moshe Weinberger


This past Shabbos, which was Shabbos Chanukah, at shalosheudos, Rav Moshe Weinberger pointed out that everyone only knows only one niggun to Maoz Tzur. It is a beautiful tune, but why is there only one? He therefore said that he has been singing a different tune from Michael Shapiro with his family for about 30 years! He taught the shul (Aish Kodesh in Woodmere, NY) the tune for the first time right there at Shalosheudos.

In order to track down a recording of the song, a special Yid who was there, Rabbi Reuven Boshnack recorded himself singing as much of it as he could remember and sent it to Rabbi Gavriel Bellino, a connoisseur of Michael Shapiro's music who B"H found it! 

You can listen to it using the youtube video above or downloading the mp3 HEREYou can also click here to order Michael Shapiro's music CDs.

If you may be in Aish Kodesh in Woodmere, NY next Chanukah, make sure to listen a few times so you can be ready to sing it with us! 

P.S. Rav Weinberger held a beautiful mesiba for Zos Chanukah last night hosted by Reb Roni Goldberg. See below for a little video clip I took on my Blackberry (yes - they still exist, at least through my office) of the chevra dancing to one of my favorite songs, Reb Shlomo's Hazor'im B'Dima (music by Nochi Krohn). Enjoy!


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Friday, May 20, 2011

Sefas Emes Project Available Online - English Explanatory Translation

My friend Rabbi Reuven Boshnack has made his sefer with an explanatory translation of selected pieces from the Sefas Emes and insights into the teachings available online.

You can pick it up at Lulu HERE. I have a copy and it is kedai. He should IY"H be coming out with another similar sefer on the Beis Yaakov of Izbiz. Exciting!

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Sunday, October 10, 2010

Shiur on Shnayim Mikrah - Rabbi Reuven Boshnack

The Whole inyan of shnayim mikrah v'echad Targum (reading each verse from each Torah portion twice followed by reading the Aramaic translation once) is very deep.
Here is a shiur from Rabbi Reuven Boshnack which was given to the Brooklyn College guys last week on the topic. Enjoy!
CLICK HERE to get the shiur.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Am I Wrong to Join the Rat Race?

A particular piece from the Me'or Einayim in Parshas Ve'eschanan struck me hard this past Shabbos. This is particularly so because I'm working hard studying for the bar exam now (which I'm taking tomorrow and the next day). The piece also struck me because I'm planning on earning my "gold and silver" working very long hours at the job I'm IY"H starting in November. Here's a summary/translation of the relevant parts from the middle of the first piece in Ve'eschanan:

The root of all of the desires, pleasures, and ways of this world are "gold" and "silver." Money is the means through which one can attain all of the desires and pleasures of this world. But their source in the upper world are Ahava (love of Hashem, in the case of silver) and Yirah (fear of Hashem, in the case of gold). [Reb Nachum then proves this with various verses] Since gold and silver are rooted in Ahavas Hashem and Yiras Hashem, the verse "Mine is the silver and mine is the gold," (Chagai 2:8) applies to it. And "mine = for my sake." Meaning that silver (love, desires) and gold (fear and anxiety) are meant as means to come to love of Hashem and Yiras Hashem.

When man desires gold and silver, runs after it day and night wihtout rest, chases after his livelihood, and amasses wealth, he falls into the trap of the yetzer hara. This in turn results in one being cut off continually from the Creator of the world. This is a trap laid out before all of the living. In fact, most people in the world come to sin by cutting into others' livelihood, hurting others financially, stealing, and the like. Such people do not believe in the fact that everyone has only what Hashem desires them to have and has absolutely nothing from anyone else (Yuma 38b). This is why the 600,000 letters of the Torah (which correspond to the 600,000 souls of the Jewish people) cannot touch one another in a Sefer Torah; because even though the Torah is one unit, each letter (and Jewish soul) is separate and one may not touch that which is designated for another person. (Ibid.)

If one is smart and knows and believes this (that all of the desires and fears of this world are meant as means to assist one in drawing himself close to the root of those desires and fears, Ahavas Hashem and Yiras Hashem), then he would not run after his livelihood day and night. And as Shlomo Hamelech (source?) said, "אם לא היה האדם רודף אחר פרנסתו, היה פרנסתו רודפת אחריו." "If one would not chase after his livelihood, his livelihood would run after him."

It is the nature of things on a lower level to run after things on a higher level to be nullified into them and elevated through them. The majority of the world who run after the physical world, and are cut off from Hashem, place themselves on a lower level than the physical things of this world, which are rooted in the highest levels of Ahava and Yirah. Therefore, they run after gold, silver, and livelihood all of the time because those things exist on a higher level than them.

But a Jewish soul that is connected to the Creator of the world and runs after Ahavas Hashem and Yiras Hashem directly (as opposed to running after making a living, gold, and silver, etc.) is thereby connected to the ultimate source. Such a person is therefore on a higher level than all of the gold and silver which are less connected to the Divine source than this Jew is because they are a more constricted (lower) form of that light. This is why this person's livelihood runs after him; because he is on a higher level than it is.

If a person does as he should do, as we mentioned above, the livelihood which is designated to him will run after him so that it can be elevated through him to its root from which it came...

I know that later in the fall, IY"H, I'll be working very long hours. This sounds like I'm falling right into the yetzer hara's trap. On the other hand, since I cannot think of any alternative right now which wouldn't constiute a dereliction of my duties as a husband, father and Jew, how could I not do what I'm planning to do?

I think at my current level of lack of connectedness to Hashem, if I tried to go back to not working too hard, it would not work in any case. My wife pointed out an analogy to what is says in Eruvin 13b, that when one runs after gedula, gedula runs away, but if one runs away from gedula, gedula persues him. She correctly pointed out that when one runs away from greatness, but is looking over his shoulder, hoping greatness will follow, he is still essentially running after it. Here too, if I did not pursue a livelihood fully, hoping that it would chase after me, I would essentially still be running after it and would certainly not merit Shlomo Hamelech's (?) promise!

I'm not sure there are any real answers here. The best I can figure it, if I can remind myself in tiny hisbodedus'n through each day that everything I'm running after are rooted in Elokus and if I ask Hashem constantly to help me elevate the hidden Elokus in everything I'm involved in to its source, then maybe I'll increase my connecttion to Hashem. And if do that, maybe in a few years some non-hishtadlus-intensive parnasa will just come knocking at my door, just begging me to leave the rat race behind and spend a lot more time on Avodas Hashem... Who knows...

Picture courtesy of istockphoto. Please donate to my son's cheder by going to minivanraffle.org to buy a raffle ticket. The drawing for a new minivan, car, or $20,000 cash will be IY"H Chanukah time. $100 for 1 ticket. $360 for 5. Where the form says "Referred by," please write "Dixie Yid." Tizku l'mitzvos! Click here to get Dixie Yid in your e-mail Inbox or here to subscribe in Google Reader.

Friday, July 9, 2010

Connecting the Beginning and End of the Torah - R' Boshnack on Likutei Moharan

I am happy to have the zechus to share a very deep shiur given by Rabbi Reuven Boshnack, the heiliger Brooklyn Colleger Rebbe. He gave this shiur during his recent stint as guest lecturer at the Young Israel of Staten Island, as a guest of the world renowned Rabbi Elie Mischel.

CLICK HERE to listen to the shiur

Picture court
esy of Rabbi Boshnack. Click here to get Dixie Yid in your e-mail Inbox or here to subscribe in Google Reader.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Rabbi Boshnack's Shiur on Sfiras HaOmer & His New Beis Yaakov of Izbitz Source Sheet

Rabbi Boshnack has done it again. Please CLICK HERE for a pdf he used a shiur on the Beis Yaakov of Izbitz on Parshas Shemini. It's amazingly elucidated and illustrates how the Izbitzer can show you a new way to look at things. It's eye opening and explains what the Beis Yaakov is saying very well. His sheets are also organized to highlight the inevitable "Izbitzer Twist" and the "Practical Advice" that comes from the Torah.

Also, he gave a shiur on Sefiras HaOmer which you can listen to AT THIS LINK. (47 MB mp3 file)

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Thursday, March 4, 2010

How Do We Know There Are 613 Mitzvos? - R. Reuven Boshnack at Brooklyn C

Shiur by Rabbi Reuven Boshnack to the guys at Brooklyn College: How Do We Know There are 613 Mitzvos?

CLICK HERE to listen.

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Saturday, February 20, 2010

Special Shout-Outs to Stollel & Ushi Weinberger


I was talking to my holy friend Rabbi Reuven Boshnack at Shalosh Sheudos after Shalosh Sheudos tonight at Aish Kodesh and he told me about some readers that I didn't know about. To be honest, I wasn't really sure I still had that many readers. I haven't posted very much original stuff in the last 6 months or so, and I was begining to wonder if my hits were just coming from google image searches. f

But tonight, he told me at the "Stollel's big wedding"™, he had an amazing time with the heiliger Stollel members and that they mentioned that they read "the Dixie Yid." Woo hoo! Shout-out to the Stollel! It's a kavod that you read this blog! (For everyone else, sample videos below)

And of course, I have to be makir tov to "the makor," the Jawboner Rebbe, who also, I hear tell, has laid his eyes on this site.

Also, I heard that even the newly bearded Reb Ushi Weinberger is a reader! Gevalt!

Now that I realize I still have some readers, I feel bad about being less active. I'll try to remedy that, IY"H, if I can. If anybody knows how to speed up a paper on § 363 all-asset sales and how to prevent effective violations of the absolute priority rule with what are essentially sub rosa plans of reorganization, I'd appreciate it!



And of course the classic:


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Friday, February 12, 2010

Amazing Elucidated Sourcesheet on Beis Yaakov of Izbitz by R' Reuven Boshnack

Reb Reuven Boshnack, (JLI Rabbi at Brooklyn College, therapist, and up-and-coming dayan) has put together a very nice sourcesheet on a piece from the the Beis Yaakov of Izbitz on Parshas Mishpatim. He's put it together in a very creative and thoughtful way.

It includes 1) the actual text of the Beis Yaakov, scanned, 2) a section called "Musagim," Concepts, which sumarizes the major concepts brought out by the Izbitzer in that piece, 3) the Izbitzer twist, showing how the the Izbitzer masterfully presents a concept in a way that we wouldn't have expected and 4) a section called "Practical Advice," which gives you a take-away point from the piece.
It's a great thing to learn with a child or Chevrusa. An amazing "study guide." Enjoy!

You can see that pdf HERE.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

Why I'm not Ready For Rosh Hashana - Audio Shiur by R' Reuven Boshnack


This shiur was given by Rabbi Boshnack yesterday at Queens College. Kedai to listen fi you can!

CLICK HERE to get the shiur.

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Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Pre Slichos Kumzitz & Divrei Torah With R' Boshnack - Audio

Below is the audio from a kumzitz with some divrei Torah right before Slichos this past Motzoi Shabbos, led by Rabbi Reuven Boshnack, the campus rabbi at Brooklyn College. Enjoy!

CLICK HERE to listen.

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Friday, September 11, 2009

Learning How to Listen - An Elul Audio Shiur by R' Reuven Boshnack

Rabbi Reuven Boshnack, the campus rabbi at Brooklyn College, gave a shiur this past Wednesday night on "Learning How to Listen" in Elul.

CLICK HERE to listen.

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Sunday, July 26, 2009

Why Can't We Cancel Tisha B'Av? - Audio Shiur by R' Reuven Boshnack

Rabbi Reuven Boshnack, who seems to me to be a real protoge of Rav Weinberger, is a rebbe to the students at Brooklyn College. He gave a shiur this week entitled "Why Can't We Just Cancel Tisha B'Av?"

GIVE A LISTEN!

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Friday, July 17, 2009

How To Be Lost Even When You Know Where You Are

The following shiur was given last night at Brooklyn College, where Rabbi Reuven Boshnack is the Rav to the student body. He discusses the meaning of "alone" and connects the Jews' travels in Parshas Matos-Masei to our travels looking for our source, our home. Drawing from Rav Soliveichick, the Izbitzer, Rav Kook and many other sources, this is a great shiur to understanding what it means to be alone.

CLICK HERE to download the mp3 shiur. (48 minutes)

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Friday, February 6, 2009

Our Avodah During Shovavim - Fixing the Unfixable

Rabbi Reuven Boshnack was kind enough to share a shiur that he gave at a Melaveh Malka to a Sephardi chevra in Flatbush. It is on the topic of what our avodah is during this time of Shovavim. I think what he says in this shiur is really fundamental to understanding Teshuva and how we should approach those things which make teshuva seem either difficult or impossible. The shiur is really kedai. He handles a few sensitive topics so this shiur is for men only.

CLICK HERE to listen to this mp3 shiur by either left clicking to listen to the shiur right away or right clicking and selecting "Save Target As" to download.

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Thursday, January 15, 2009

Kavanos to Have When Painting a House - R' Boshnack in New Orleans


As I referenced two days ago, my friend Rabbi Reuven Boshnack, in his role as rabbi at Brooklyn College, accompanied a bunch of Hillel members down to New Oreleans to paint someone's house that was damaged by Hurricane Katrina. He taught Torah every day of the trip. He has been mezakeh us by sharing some of what he spoke about each day of the trip, even on Shabbos. Awesome!

1/5
Before Scraping

We understand, that the paint here, waiting to be scraped, has been waiting since the creation of the world for us to come and scrape it. You see there are sparks of holiness, little points of destiny waiting for us, all the way down here in New Orleans.

So while we are scraping while monotony sets in, let’s focus on the message that paint scraping holds for us. There are layers that need to be scraped away, thoughts, feelings and actions that prevent us from being real. They keep us with connecting with others, they keep us from connecting with Hashem, and they keep us from connetction with ourselves. They need to be scraped away, to reveal the pure Neshama beneath.

1/6
Before Priming the walls

Now that the paint has been scraped, and our walls have been removed, we can begin again. The first step is what are the yesodos, the foundations of our lives, what are the fundaments, of emunah and yesodei hatorah that we live by? As you apply the primer keep this in mind, before we can actually paint, to interact with the world, we must understand our inner priorities first. As you put on the primer, think and try to formulate your yesodos.

1/8
Before we started painting

We’re now about to paint. R Shlomo Carlebach, in a famous torah, explained how we are all “painted”- with the superficial identification to torah and mitzvos. It’s just a mask. We’re not talking about how you are on the inside, only the way things look. You know, there are schools that won’t let sincere ehrlich jews in, because their third cousins aren’t in kollel in Lakewood. R Shlomo said, that no matter how well you paint,,you always miss a spot.

On the other hand, we should try to paint ourselves in a color which is the same on the outside as it is on the inside. We know that there was a guard outside of Raban gamliel’s Yeshiva, that would not let you in unless you were tocho k’boro- the same on the inside as you were on the outside. The Kotzker rebbe said, “What manner of demon could see the inner workings of a person? Rather, a person who went to the yeshiva for external reasons, would be dissuaded by the guard. A person who was Tocho Kboro, would figure out a way in anway, they’d go through the skylight if they had to.

Let’s try to make our Yiddishkeit real and meaningful, and a color that matches our insides

1/9
Before starting the last day of work

Do you know what it means "Makeh B’patish?" No, it doesn’t mean to hit something with a hammer. The Melacha of Maka B’patish means to put the finishing touches on something. Why is it assur to do the Melacha of Makeh B’patish? On Shabbos we have to see the world as if everything is done, so clearly putting the finishing touches are prohibited. Today, we are racing against the clock, to get in those finishing touches, before Shabbos. That’s what erev Shabbos is all about.
Also we know, that hakol holech achar hachosam, how you end it is the most important thing. Right now we’re trying to seal in all of the the thoughts and feelings and love and friendship and to seal all of our work in with a kiss.

In the Park

R' Soloveitchik said, we may have brought back shmiras Shabbos, but we have not yet brought back shmiras erev Shabbos. What’s so important about erev Shabbos? Isn’t it just Friday?

The Sefas Emes says, “In Choshen Mishpat, we have a halacha, If I sell you a field, surrounded by other fields, You need to buy a road from me, but If I give you a field surrounded by other fields, I must give you a road, because if a person is giving, it is assumed that the person is giving with a generous hand. Shabbos is called a matana tova, a good present. How do we get to Shabbos if it is so different than the rest of the week? Hashem gives us a road called Erev Shabbos.”We’re spending Shabbos in a place where people view Shabbos as a collection of don’ts, we need to be mechazek ourselves to show all of them that it is truly a good present.

Oneg Shabbos

The alter Rebbe said, that song is the pen of the soul. When you sing a person’s niggun, you touch the depths of the person who composed it. We’re singing a song from the Tzemach Tzedek. He was a person who wrote over 300,000 pages of manuscripts, proficient in every area of the torah. While singing his niggun, we’re trying to touch that great person in the deepest way.

Why do we have to be so careful about singing an old niggun in the way that it was transmitted? The song we are singing is the chernobler hakkafos niggun. The Chernobler Maggid closed his eyes on simchas torah, when he awoke- he brought this niggun down.

When we sing a niggun, we’re trying to connect, through every note and movement, you know, miss a beat, you lose the rhythm. Did you know that R Shloime Twerski, Hornosteipler Rebbe of Denver, used to spend hours, being “me’ayen” into a niggun, if a note or two belonged there?

Ok,,now that our voices are hoarse from singing, let me tell you something. In this week’s Parsha Yaakov says, “Hashem appeared to me in Lud, and said he’ll increase me, and give me Eretz Yisrael. Efraim and Menashe will be like Reuven and Shimon to me, and they’ll have inheritance equal to the shevatim. Then on the way from Padan, Rachel died, and I buried her there.”

I heard the following from my Rebbi, who quoted Rav Saadia Gaon. Do you know who Rav Saadia Gaon was? He met people, who met Rabbis from the Talmud. We’ve met people who met the Rav, who met Rav Kook, who met the Lubavitcher Rebbe.

Anyway, Rav Saadia Gaon, said Yaakov was saying, Yosef, I never told anyone, but Hashem promised me great things as I was in Lud, but then tradgedy after tragedy happened. Rachel died, you disappeared, and any time I would even think about such a nevuah, it was a source of pain. But now that I see Efraim and Menashe,I know that Hashem, kept his word.

My Rebbe’s father was sitting next to him at a graduation of one of Rebbe’s daughters, and he told him, if you would have told me when I was in Mathausen, that one day I’d be sitting with hundreds of Jews at a graduation of my granddaughter, I’d have told you that you were crazy.

So many times, we think all of the nevuos which we have seen in tanach are so far fetched, they’ll never happen. This quote from Rasag tells us even Yaakov had given up on them, but it teaches us never to give up on Hashem’s promises to us.
These gatherings are sometimes called Sheves Achim, where jews get together, to sing together and encourage each other. It’s a great thing to do. We should continue sitting together and singing, until moshaich comes and teaches us a new song, vsham nashir shir chadash, bivinyan bayis Hamikdash hageula Hashelama vemisis…

Shalosh Seudos

In just a few hours, we’re going home, and facebook will become plastered with the pictures of our trip. Now, I’m not an antitechnology crusader, but I want to warn you about the dangers of digital media.

We lost our camera last week, with all of the pictures on the memory stick. It was a little upsetting. But if you think about it, our memories really should be a lot stronger than all of the pictures we take. Whenever we experience something, we take a picture. Now this is a little disturbing, we’re relying upon the pictures instead of our memories. And maybe, it’s cheapening them.

Let’s try something. Can you close your eyes and picture your favorite memory from the trip. Take a minute. What did it feel like? Was there wind blowing? Was it warm or cool? What did it smell like? Look at the details. You’ll notice that you can “zoom in” on certain details, or remove some noise or obstruction.

When we rely on our pictures for our memories, we confine them only to what was in the viewfinder of the camera, and only that millisecond, not before or after. If it’s a video, whatever happened outside that viewfinder or duration of the clip.
If we do it the other way- you get everything, and you never need a picture to revisit your memories. You can do this exercise all the time.

We see two different types of writing in the Torah, the writing of a Torah, ink on parchment, and the writing of the luchos habris- on the tablets. The difference of course, is that the writing is something separate from the parchment in the Sefer Torah, but in the case of the Luchos, it is the Luchos. Our experiences can be like letters written on the parchments of our lives, or they could become apart of them. The choice is yours.

There is the story of the Volper Rav, one of the students of the Maggid of Mezrich due to setbacks in his life, ultimately became an alcoholic and wandered around. Once, in an inn, a certain Chasid heard someone reciting secrets of Torah. But he couldn’t see where they were. A careful search revealed that they were coming from a poor man, drunk and hiding under the furnace. He realized that this must be the Volper Rav. The chassid located the Volper Rav’s room, and began to search his possessions, for a manuscript of the Maggid’s Torahs. The Rav returned to the room, and asked this man what he was doing. The Chassid, embarrassed, said, “Iwas looking for a manuscript of the Maggid’s torah.” The Rav said, “What’s wrong with you, when I was at the Maggid, he, the students and the Torah were all, one. So, who needs a manuscript?”
The way we deal with and revisit our memories, will allow us to make them a greater part of us.



-Dixie Yid

(Picture courtesy of Natasha Hollander)

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Shout Out to R' Reuven Boshnack, the New Orleanser Rebbe


Rabbi Reuven Boshnack just got back from a whirlwind chesed tour of New Orleans, Louisiana, in his role as Rebbe of the Brooklyn College Chassidim. Yasher koach Reuven. Keep spreading the Torah!

-Dixie Yid

(Picture courtesy of Rabbi Boshnack)

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Thursday, January 1, 2009

Overcoming the "Post Chanukah Letdown" - Audio Shiur


My friend Rabbi Revuen Boshnack showed me the way to this shiur by Rabbi Judah Mischel, a rebbe at Reishit Yerushalayim, I believe, and an alleged Dixie Yid reader. I believe he was pointed to the shiur by the Rabbi Reichman Ruach Revival blog. In this shiur, R' Mischel teaches us how to keep the light of Chanukah with us during our "Post Chanukah Letdown."

Listen or download HERE!

-Dixie Yid

(Picture courtesy of Reishit Yerushalayim)

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Sunday, December 28, 2008

Dreidels and Gelt (The Inside Story)


The Koznitzer Magid, in the sefer Avodas Yisroel, says that one of the purposes of the holy days is to bring the light of those days into the times afterward. The holy days are times of mochin d'gadlus, a time of epandeded consciousness. The holidays are mashpia that sense of mochin d'gadlus into the times of mochin d'katnus, small-mindedness, that follow them. The light of Chanukah is followed by the dark winter months of Teves and Shvat, so we want to be mashpia the light of chanukah onto Teves and Shvat's mochin d'katnus.

To mirror this process, the gedolim (adults, who parallel the mochin d'gadlus) are mashpia, give, to the ketanim (children, who parallel mochin d'katnus) dreidels to play with and gelt on Chanukah. By giving these things to the children to use on Chanukah, we parallel the process of how Chanukah is mashpia the mochin d'gadlus of Chanukah onto the cold dark winter months that follow it, which don't have any Yomim Tovim.

Spiffy, eh? And a big toda raba to my friend Rabbi Reuven Boshnack who showed me that piece at his house on the fourth day of Chanukah!

-Dixie Yid

(Picture courtesy of alexandergallery.biz)

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Monday, December 8, 2008

Beautiful Audio of Melaveh Malka with Rav Mordechai Twerski/Brooklyn College


Rabbi Reuven Boshnack, the rabbi of Brooklyn College, brought a large number of his students to Rav Mordechai Twersky in Brooklyn, for a very special Melaveh Malka on Motzoi Shabbos. He made a very high quality recording of the melaveh Malka. They do a lot of really beautiful zmiros from Carlebach and Yehudah Green. RAv Twersky spoke very niecely to the students there and it's very worth listening to!

CLICK HERE to listen to this mp3 shiur by either left clicking to listen right away or right clicking and selecting "Save Target As."

-Dixie Yid

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