Pulsating Purim Parties March 9 & 10
February 25, 2009 by admin
Filed under Upcoming Events

Join us for our annual Purim party and festivities.
Enjoy our Royally Spirited Open Bar, Palatial Festive feast, Children’s Arts N’ Crafts, Original Purim Delicacies, Irresistible Ambiance, Live Music & Song, Purim Insights with Rabbi Ari and much more.
Monday, March 9 @ 7:30 pm for Megilah reading and break-fast. At Cong. Kol Israel 603 St Johns Pl. (bet Classon/Franklin Ave) Subway 2/3/4/5 to Franklin Ave.
Suggested Donation $5 Child, $10 Adult $18 Family
Sponsor $180
For more info please contact us at 347.787.0864 – Info@brooklynyid.com
Tuesday, March 10 10:00am-12:00pm
The Luria Academy Family & Friends Purim Extraveganza
Join us for Megilah Reading and Purim Brunch at the Franklin Park Lounge 618 St John’s Pl as we celebrate together.
Purim Stimulus Zany Video
What is A Soul?
February 4, 2009 by admin
Filed under Featured Essays
By: Tzvi Freeman

Answer:
The soul is to the body what the astronaut is to the spacesuit. Take the astronaut out of the suit, and the suit’s basically useless. Take the soul out of the body, and the body basically collapses. (Which is what death is – the separation of body and soul.)
A soul is Divine energy, a little piece of G-d within you. It is that part of you that exists beyond matter, beyond your body and your five senses. If you were blind, deaf, tongueless, noseless, and touch insensitive, you would still be alive inside yourself. But what part of you is still alive? That’s the soul.
Simon Jacobson, author of Towards of Meaningful Life, explains the soul like this: “A soul is our inner identity, our raison d’être. Just like the ’soul’ of a musical composition is the composer’s vision that energizes and gives life to the notes played in a musical composition – the actual notes are like the body expressing the vision and feeling of the soul within them. Each soul is the expression of G-d’s intent and vision in creating that particular being.”
How do I express my soul?
To express your soul, you need to nourish your soul. A starving man cannot run a race, and a starving soul will find it very difficult to express itself.
Nothing is more nourishing for the soul than studying Torah. When you study Torah, you’re reading G-d’s mind, and when you’re reading G-d’s mind, your soul gets high, powering up with great gobs of spiritual energy, which it can then use to express itself by performing mitzvot.
What are “mitzvot”? Mitzvot are G-dly deeds – deeds with which G-d empowered our souls to express themselves and connect with Him. With certain mitzvot, we do not see a tangible, physical result (at least not immediately) – they’re spiritual, so we can’t see with our physical eyes the effect they have on ourselves and our world. But many mitzvot, while no less spiritual in essence, have the added benefit of a tangible, physical result – an improved relationship, and kinder society, a better world. The common denominator of all mitzvot is that they connect the person with his/her Creator and draw G-dliness into our world

