Chabad on Tampa

Chabad on Tampa Where Every Jew Is Family!

Coming down to the wire 🤩HUGE THANK YOU to all those that supported us so generously especially during these tough times...
12/22/2023

Coming down to the wire 🤩

HUGE THANK YOU to all those that supported us so generously especially during these tough times!

You can make a real impact!Join us now on “the front lines”. Click the link to contribute and partner with us in our imp...
12/21/2023

You can make a real impact!
Join us now on “the front lines”. Click the link to contribute and partner with us in our important mission to bring more light to the world ❤️🙏🏻

As a Jew we stand on the front lines—At Chabad on Tampa we stand on the front lines—As one united family we stand together on the front lines—On the front lines of Judaism, on the front lines of kindness, on the front lines of light.This trait is in our DNA.3836 years ago, Avraham Avinu, Abrah...

הנה לא ינום ולא יישן שומר ישראל!!
10/09/2023

הנה לא ינום ולא יישן שומר ישראל!!

https://www.chabadontampa.com/news/article_cdo/aid/6043264/jewish/Thousands-at-Kotel-Welcome-Eighth-Childrens-Torah-Scro...
08/09/2023

https://www.chabadontampa.com/news/article_cdo/aid/6043264/jewish/Thousands-at-Kotel-Welcome-Eighth-Childrens-Torah-Scroll.htm?fbclid=IwAR08mWVgoAp20LMP2sg09n_brNKTHO8XDMaPzXm3uQm40cCoaJxyyATHcYw_aem_AT5Qi4TufsCRejd4YAsYz3wkSvl2I2ug--F9Cy3q2PKr1PtP4pszNSuqdFHeT_DkFGU =facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=fb_en

JERUSALEM—For the thousands of children and adults who gathered yesterday at the Kotel (Western Wall), it was a day of great joy—and not only for the completion of the eighth Children’s Sefer Torah. They were also there to celebrate the massive international effort over the past few months tha...

Today in Jewish History: Fast of Tammuz 17The fast of the 17th of the Hebrew month of Tammuz, known as Shivah Asar B’Tam...
07/06/2023

Today in Jewish History: Fast of Tammuz 17

The fast of the 17th of the Hebrew month of Tammuz, known as Shivah Asar B’Tammuz, is the start of a three-week mourning period for the destruction of Jerusalem and the two Holy Temples.

Abstaining from food and drink is the external element of a fast day. On a deeper level, a fast day is an auspicious day, a day when G‑d is accessible, waiting for us to repent.

The sages explain: “Every generation for which the Temple is not rebuilt, it is as though the Temple was destroyed for that generation.” A fast day is not only a sad day, but an opportune day. It’s a day when we are empowered to fix the cause of that destruction, so that our long exile will be ended and we will find ourselves living in messianic times; may that be very soon.

Fast Ends: 8:39 PM

 Lag BaOmer, the 33rd day of the Omer count is a festive day on the Jewish calendar. It is celebrated with outings (on w...
05/09/2023



Lag BaOmer, the 33rd day of the Omer count is a festive day on the Jewish calendar. It is celebrated with outings (on which children traditionally play with bows and arrows), bonfires, parades and other joyous events. Many visit the resting place (in Meron, northern Israel) of the great sage and mystic Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, the anniversary of whose passing is on this day.

Today in Jewish History: "Second Passover"A year after the Exodus, G-d instructed the people of Israel to bring the Pass...
05/05/2023

Today in Jewish History: "Second Passover"
A year after the Exodus, G-d instructed the people of Israel to bring the Passover offering on the afternoon of the fourteenth of Nissan, and to eat it that evening, roasted over the fire, together with matzah and bitter herbs, as they had done the previous year just before they left Egypt.
"There were, however, certain persons who had become ritually impure through contact with a dead body, and could not, therefore, prepare the Passover offering on that day. They approached Moses and Aaron . . . and they said: '. . . Why should we be deprived, and not be able to present G-d's offering in its time, amongst the children of Israel?'" (Numbers 9:6-7).
In response to their plea, G-d established the 14th of Iyar as a "Second Passover" (Pesach Sheni) for anyone who was unable to bring the offering on its appointed time in the previous month.

Today in Jewish History:Rebbe Maharash Born (1834)The fourth Rebbe of Chabad-Lubavitch, Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn (1834-1...
04/23/2023

Today in Jewish History:
Rebbe Maharash Born (1834)
The fourth Rebbe of Chabad-Lubavitch, Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn (1834-1882), known by the acronym "Maharash", was born in the town of Lubavitch (White Russia) on the 2nd of Iyar of the year 5594 from creation (1834). His father, Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch (the 3rd Chabad Rebbe, known as the "Tzemach Tzeddek") once remarked that Rabbi Shmuel's birthday, coinciding with the 17th day of the Omer Count, is defined by the Kabbalistic masters as Tifferet sheb'Tifferet ("Beauty of Beauty")
Although Rabbi Shmuel was the youngest of Rabbi Menachem Mendel's seven sons, he was chosen to succeed his father as "rebbe" and leader of Chabad in the movement's capital, Lubavitch (four of his brothers established branches of Chabad Chassidism in other towns in White Russia and Ukraine). In addition to leading his Chassidim, guiding and advising their spiritual and material lives and authoring many maamarim (discourses of Chassidic teaching), Rabbi Shmuel traveled extensively throughout Europe, meeting with government and business leaders to exert pressure on the Czarist regime to halt its instigation of pogroms against the Jews of Russia.
Rabbi Shmuel passed away at age 48 on the 13th of Tishrei, 5643 (1882).

Today in Jewish History: Passing of Tzemach Tzeddek (1866)The third Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn o...
04/04/2023

Today in Jewish History: Passing of Tzemach Tzeddek (1866)

The third Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn of Lubavitch (1789-1866; known as the "Tzemach Tzeddek" after his Halachic work by that name), passed away on Nissan 13.

Today in Jewish History: Birthday of the Lubavitcher Rebbe (1902)The 11th of Nissan, 5662 — April 18, 1902 — marks the b...
04/02/2023

Today in Jewish History: Birthday of the Lubavitcher Rebbe (1902)

The 11th of Nissan, 5662 — April 18, 1902 — marks the birth of the Rebbe 120 years ago. The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh leader in the Chabad-Lubavitch dynasty, is considered to have been the most phenomenal Jewish personality of modern times. To hundreds of thousands of followers and millions of sympathizers and admirers around the world, he was — and still is, despite his passing — "the Rebbe," undoubtedly, the one individual more than any other singularly responsible for stirring the conscience and spiritual awakening of world Jewry.

 The Passing of the Rashab (1920)The fifth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom DovBer Schneersohn ("Rashab"), was born in th...
03/24/2023


The Passing of the Rashab (1920)

The fifth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom DovBer Schneersohn ("Rashab"), was born in the White Russian town of Lubavitch in 1860. After the passing of his father, Rabbi Shmuel (in 1882), he assumed the leadership of Chabad-Lubavitch.
Famed for his phenomenal mind and analytical treatment of Chabad Chassidism, Rabbi Sholom DovBer wrote and delivered some 2,000 maamarim (discourses of Chassidic teaching) over the 38 years of his leadership. In 1897, he established the Tomchei Temimim yeshivah, the first institution of Jewish learning to combine the study of the "body" of Torah (Talmudic and legal studies) with its mystical "soul" (the teachings of Chassidism); it was this unique yeshivah that produced the army of learned, inspired and devoted Chassidim who, in the decades to come, would literally give their lives to keep Judaism alive under Soviet rule.
In 1915, Rabbi Sholom DovBer was forced to flee Lubavitch from the advancing WWI front and relocated to the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don. In his final years, he began the heroic battle against the new Communist regime's efforts to destroy the Jewish faith throughout the Soviet Union.
Rabbi Sholom DovBer passed away in Rostov on the 2nd of Nissan, 1920. His last words were: "I'm going to heaven; I leave you the writings."

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