Sunday, April 11, 2010

Yom HaShoah – Holocaust Remembrance Day

At Sunset on April 11th the State of Israel begins a 24 hour period of remembrance and  mourning for the 6 million victims of the Holocaust, called “HaShoah” (The Catastrophe) in Hebrew. On Yom HaShoah, Holocaust Remembrance Day, we remember those that suffered, those that fought, and those that died. In the Jewish calendar the day is Nitzan 27th which was the beginning of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.

After Sunset, communities across Israel hold candle-light memorials. During these memorials Holocaust survivors speak and families light candles for members of their family who died in the Holocaust. The following morning at 10 am the observance continues with the sounding of air raid sirens for two minutes throughout the entire country. For the duration of the sounding, work is halted, people walking in the streets stop, cars pull off to the side of the road and everybody in schools, on military bases, at places of work stand in silent reverence to the victims of the Holocaust.

Witness this moving event from 2009 by watching this video:

Yom HaShoah is a day of deep mourning. Six million Jews were executed; many families were completely decimated. It is important for Israel never to forget the devastation of the Holocaust; accordingly, it is just as important for the world to also remember.

Each year thousands of Jewish teens from countries around the world travel to Poland to participate in “The March of the Living.” They march the three-kilometer distance from Auschwitz to Birkenau, the largest concentration camp complex built by the Nazis during World War II. All Israeli teenagers participate and are sponsored by the Israeli government. This trip is not a vacation; it is considered an important part of the school curriculum and an important step in helping young people to understand the Holocaust. They walk in tribute to all victims of the Holocaust. They learn the lessons of the Holocaust and the significance to vow Never Again.

Thank you our dear friends, for your continued support of Israel. We hope and pray that through remembering and support like yours this will never happen again. Please remember Israel and all the vict

ims of the Holocaust at sunset April 11th through sunset April 12th.

Blessings to all, from JesusBoat.com

 

1 comment:

  1. Regarding "grafted in" (part of title of the blog):

    I want to comment on that.
    A logical analysis (found in www.netzarim.co.il (Netzarim.co.il is the website of the only legitimate Netzarim-group)) (including the logical implications of the research by Ben-Gurion Univ. Prof. of Linguistics Elisha Qimron of Dead Sea Scroll 4Q MMT) of all extant source documents of “the gospel of Matthew” and archeology proves that the historical Ribi Yehosuha ha-Mashiakh (the Messiah) from Nazareth and his talmidim (apprentice-students), called the Netzarim, taught and lived Torah all of their lives; and that Netzarim and Christianity were always antithetical.

    The origins of the “Noakhide laws” are the Netzarim Jews. It was the beit din ha-Netzarim that decided about these. But those mitzwot wereonly a starting point not the end. The end point was non-selectively Torah-observance. Read more in the “Benei Noakh”-section in the “History Museum” in the above Netzarim-website.

    Thos whom believed that Ribi Yehoshua was the Mashiakh, and whom wanted to be grafted in to Israel was in the first century required to first practise some of the basic mitzwot (outlined in the above section I referred to), then come before the beit din ha-Netzarim and obligate themselves to do their utmost to learn and to keep all of the mitzwot for geirim (see “Glossaries” in the website I referred to) non-selectively; and the beit din ha-Netzarim would grant the title geir toshav. This was and still is the Halakhah established by the beit-din ha-Netzarim.

    Regards,
    Anders Branderud

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