Wednesday, December 9, 2009

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Monday, December 7, 2009

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Friday, December 4, 2009

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Thursday, December 3, 2009

Aish.com: Jewish History Series (Part 3 of 68) -The World of Abraham






http://www.aish.com/literacy/jewishhistory/Crash_Course_in_Jewish_History_Part_3_The_World_of_Abraham.asp


Jewish History Series (Part 3 of 68)
The World of Abraham
by Rabbi Ken Spiro
By understanding the character of Abraham, the "proto-Jew", one can understand what Jews are all about.

Jewish history doesn't happen in a vacuum. No people's history happens in a vacuum. So first we have to zoom out and get a little understanding of where Abraham fits in the world of his time.
Abraham appears at a period of time called the Middle Bronze period, around the 18th century BCE. (Early civilization is characterized by the metals they predominantly used and the Middle Bronze period includes the period of time from 2200 BCE until 1550 BCE.)
Whereas most anthropologists believe that hominids, forerunners of human beings physically, originated in Africa, human civilization begins in the Middle East in the Fertile Crescent, which is where Abraham was born.
When we say civilization, we are talking about sophisticated arrangements of people living together, not just simple agrarian settlements, not just a few people living in a few huts. About 5,500 years ago in the Middle East, there occurred an evolution of humanity from hunter/gatherers -- people who spend their whole day looking for food -- to people who were able to domesticate livestock. This meant they could raise animals to eat them or to use them for their milk and their hides, and to plow the land to grow crops.
Once this occurred, there was a surplus of food, which led to population growth and people started specializing in types of labor -- you had craftsmen, scholars, priests and warriors. That, in turn, led to the growth of cities.
The earliest civilizations in the world, according to most opinions, began in the area called the Fertile Crescent.

THE FERTILE CRESCENT

The Fertile Crescent encompasses the area flowed by the Nile in Egypt, the Levant (the middle section where Israel is located), and the area flowed by the Euphrates and Tigris Rivers.
The three great rivers contribute mightily to the fertility, and consequent desirability, of this area. The Nile is an incredible river, the largest river in the world. Without the Nile, Egypt would be a desert. In ancient times, 3% of Egypt was arable land, 97% was desert. Also the Euphrates and the Tigris Rivers are two tremendous rivers; they run through what is today basically Iraq and into Turkey, but what historians have dubbed Mesopotamia, which is Greek for "in the middle of two rivers."
There is some debate whether the first civilization sprang up in Egypt or in Mesopotamia (specifically in the section of Mesopotamia called Sumer) but we can be fairly sure that the first hallmark of civilization -- writing -- originated in the Fertile Crescent.
Writing was a tremendous invention though we take it for granted today. It began with pictographs. You drew a stick figure and that stood for "man." Later those pictures evolved into more abstract symbols which stood for phonetic sounds, until eventually there came about a system of three "letters," each representing a sound and combining together to make a word that conveyed an idea. (To this day, Hebrew is based on a three-consonant root system.)
Writing was the single greatest human invention. All the technology of today depends on the collective accumulation of accurately transmitted information, which now comes so fast we can't keep up with it.

"A SPEAKING SOUL"

From the Jewish perspective the ability to express oneself -- whether through writing or speech -- personifies what human beings are all about. We learn that when God created the first human being -- Adam -- He "breathed into his nostrils the breath of life and man became a living soul." (Genesis 2:7) The Hebrew phrase l'nefesh chayah, "living soul," can also be translated as "a speaking soul." (Targum Onkelos)
Of the two earliest civilizations that developed, Egypt is unusual because it's surrounded by desert and so it is virtually unapproachable. Egypt as a civilization survived for close to 3,000 years. This is an incredibly long period of time for civilization to survive. Why did Egypt survive for so long? Because no-one could invade it. It took the Greeks -- specifically Alexander, the Great -- to finish Egypt off, and then it becomes a Greek colony.
Mesopotamia had no such natural defenses. It was a giant flood plain sitting in the middle of the great migration pattern of all ancient peoples. Whatever conqueror came out of Asia or out of Europe set foot here. It had no natural defenses -- no mountains, no deserts -- and it was a very desirable fertile land.
We see the land changing hands many times and a huge number of civilizations in this part of the world -- Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans and then, of course, the Islamic invaders.

AT THE CROSSROADS

In this tumultuous place is where Jewish history begins -- at the bottom of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, in the cradle of civilization. This was the logical place for civilization to begin in terms of the development of agriculture and culture. And it's also a logical place for Abraham to appear, because if Abraham is going to affect the world, he has to be at the crossroads of the ancient migration pathways. If he were born an Eskimo or an American Indian, all of human history would have been different.
But Abraham was born in Mesopotamia, in particular in a bustling place called Ur Kasdim, or Ur of the Chaldees, which has been excavated by archeologists in today's Iraq.
This was then the center of earliest human civilization, a cosmopolitan center. And it is from here that Abraham's journey begins.
NEXT: ABRAHAM'S JOURNEY

Author Biography:
Rabbi Ken Spiro is originally from New Rochelle, NY. He graduated from Vassar College with a BAin Russian Language and Literature and didgraduate studies at the Pushkin Institute inMoscow. He has Rabbinical ordination fromYeshiva Aish HaTorah in Jerusalem and a Masters Degree in History from The Vermont College of Norwich University. Rabbi Spiro is also a licensed tour guide by the Israel Ministry of Tourism. He lives in Jerusalem with his wife and five children where he works as a senior lecturer and researcher on Aish HaTorah outreach programs.
ORDER KEN SPIRO'S BOOK
"WORLDPERFECT: THE JEWISH IMPACT ON CIVILIZATION"


What it would take to constitute a perfect world? Ken Spiro questioned more than 1,500 people of various backgrounds, revealing six core elements: respect for human life; peace and harmony; justice and equality; education; family; and, social responsibility. A highly readable and well-documented book about the origins of values and virtues in Western civilization as influenced by the Greeks, Romans, Christians, Muslims and, most significantly, the Jews.




"This is a book that everyone in the world should read"
Kirk Douglas-Actor and author





This article can also be read at:http://www.aish.com/literacy/jewishhistory/Crash_Course_in_Jewish_History_Part_3_The_World_of_Abraham.asp


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Aish.com: Jewish History Series (Part 2 of 68) The Bible as History





http://www.aish.com/literacy/jewishhistory/Crash_Course_in_Jewish_History_Part_2_The_Bible_as_History.asp


Jewish History Series (Part 2 of 68)
The Bible as History
by Rabbi Ken Spiro
An enormous amount of information in the Bible has been borne out by archeology. There is not much direct evidence, but there is a huge amount of indirect or circumstantial evidence.

We assume that people throughout human history always studied history, but that's not true. As a matter of fact, if you go back more than a couple of thousand years you'll find people had no interest in history. The first historian in the West is Herodotus, a Greek who lived in the 5th century BCE. And he's given the title: Father of History.
Columbia University historian, Joseph Yerushalmi, who wrote an excellent, highly-praised book called Zahor: Jewish History and Jewish Memory, says that "If Herodotus was the father of history, the father of meaning in history was the Jews."
This is a profound idea.
First, not only were Jews recording history well before Herodotus, but while Herodotus might record the events, the Jews were looking at the deeper meaning, and that deeper meaning can be found most importantly and most significantly within the Bible itself.
The first of these stories that we will examine in the future installments of this series pre-dates Herodotus by about 1,300 years. It is the story of Abraham and it is takes place around the 18th century BCE, or 3,700 years ago.
Now don't make the mistake of thinking the Bible is a history book. For example, Abraham, when he appears in the Book of Genesis is already 75 years old. He's one of the most significant figures in Jewish history and the Torah doesn't tell us about him as a child or as a young adult -- we pick up his story when he is an old man already.
The Bible is not concerned with giving us all the details of Abraham's life. It is interested only in history as a means of teaching us the important lessons of life -- it's a book of theology in Jewish worldview first and foremost. Therefore, it focuses on the basic information that we need to know.

HOW ACCURATE IS THE BIBLE?

An article was published recently in the Israeli newspaper Ha'Aretz, smashing the Bible, and in the same week, an article was published in US News and World Report -- a cover story, no less -- supporting the accuracy of the Bible vis-a-vis archeology.
Why such diametrically opposed views? Because archeology is a very complicated field. So a few words of caution are in order.
The definition of archeology is "the discovery and interpretation of the physical remains of previous civilizations and peoples." Note that within the definition of archeology is the word "interpretation". How one archeologist interprets the meaning of a particular find can be very different from how another archeologist interprets the meaning of the same find.
Archeology is not a hard science. When an archeologist finds a piece of rock, a vessel, or a piece of a building, he tries to decide what it means. The find has no label on it, unless it's a written document, and even written documents are open to interpretation.
So when people make definitive statements about what archeology does or doesn't say, you have to be very careful, because the bias of the archeologist affects how he interprets the information.
As the early books of the Bible are concerned, there is little direct evidence for the characters in the Bible. There is, however, a huge amount of indirect or circumstantial evidence -- names, places, business contracts, marriage contracts, migratory patterns. An enormous amount of information in the Bible has been borne out by archeology.
That is as far as the early books of the Bible are concerned, but once we get to later books, like the Book of Kings, for example, there is excellent direct evidence, written records of other emperors, etc. But the early events exist more or less in a historical vacuum and, unfortunately also in an archeological vacuum.
Keep in mind that the same thing that applies in a court of law applies to archeology: Lack of evidence is no evidence of lack. The fact that I haven't found Abraham's camel saddle doesn't mean Abraham didn't have a camel or a saddle. And, indeed, there is a huge amount of circumstantial evidence supporting the basic historicity of the Bible.
Archeology doesn't definitively prove the Bible, and it certainly doesn't discredit it. In fact the more we find, the more we see that there's a tremendous amount of historicity in the text.
In summary, the Bible is not a book of history, yet it contains history and culture, which is more or less borne out by archeology. It's a book of teachings, and it's the ideal way to learn the patterns of history. And if we understand that the reason why we're learning history is to learn lessons, then we have to pay extra special attention to what is going on in the Bible.

PATTERNS IN JEWISH HISTORY

The actions of the fathers are assigned to the children. (Nachmanides)
This is a very famous Jewish saying and Nachmanides was not the only one to say it. What does it mean?
On the microcosmic level, within the stories of Genesis in the Bible, we're going to see that what happens to the ancients will be repeated by their children.
On a macrocosmic level, the personalities and interactions of the early forefathers -- the patriarchs and matriarchs -- are going to be a model for all of Jewish history, and all of human history. This is why we have to pay extra special attention to what's going on at this early phase of the Bible, because here is where the patterns are set.
Additionally, we must remember that the Jewish people are arguably the oldest surviving people on the Planet Earth, and because they have been spread out throughout the world, when we learn Jewish history we have to pay attention to all of human history. It's a great framework. To understand Jewish history means to build a great deal of general knowledge of the history of the world at large.
We can't appreciate Jewish history (or the history of any people for that matter) without understanding the larger context in which it takes place.
In the next installment we are going to zoom out and take a macro look at the world into which the first Jew, Abraham, was born.
NEXT: THE WORLD OF ABRAHAM

Author Biography:
Rabbi Ken Spiro is originally from New Rochelle,NY. He graduated from Vassar College with a BAin Russian Language and Literature and didgraduate studies at the Pushkin Institute inMoscow. He has Rabbinical ordination fromYeshiva Aish HaTorah in Jerusalem and a Masters Degree in History from The Vermont College of Norwich University. Rabbi Spiro is also a licensed tour guide by the Israel Ministry of Tourism. He lives in Jerusalem with his wife and five children where he works as a senior lecturer and researcher on Aish HaTorah outreach programs.
ORDER KEN SPIRO'S BOOK
"WORLDPERFECT: THE JEWISH IMPACT ON CIVILIZATION"


What it would take to constitute a perfect world? Ken Spiro questioned more than 1,500 people of various backgrounds, revealing six core elements: respect for human life; peace and harmony; justice and equality; education; family; and, social responsibility. A highly readable and well-documented book about the origins of values and virtues in Western civilization as influenced by the Greeks, Romans, Christians, Muslims and, most significantly, the Jews.



"This is a book that everyone in the world should read"
Kirk Douglas-Actor and author





This article can also be read at:http://www.aish.com/literacy/jewishhistory/Crash_Course_in_Jewish_History_Part_2_The_Bible_as_History.asp


Like the Jewish History Series? As a non-profit organization, Aish.com relies on readers like you to enable us to provide meaningful and relevant articles. Join Aish.com and help us continue to give daily inspiration to people like you around the world.
Make a secure donation at: http://www.aish.com/membership or mail a check to Aish.com, 400 South Lake Drive, Lakewood, NJ 08701









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Jerusalem 91141
Israel

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Fax - 972-2-627-3172


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Aish.comSpirituality - The Jew from Kuwait


I had missed passing this on but believe it is well worth the read. There are some eye opening things here as well as lessons to learn.
B'H that I should ever judge so harsh again.
Casey

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See this article online:
http://www.aish.com/sp/so/70138567.html
My Muslim background left me unprepared for this shocking discovery.
$artAuthor
My Muslim background left me unprepared for this shocking discovery.
Growing up in Kuwait, I had the best of everything. My father owned a successful construction company, and provided us five children with amenities like piano lessons, swimming, calligraphy and trips all over the world. Although we were Muslims like everyone else, we were totally secular and my father always aimed to shield us from religious people whom he described as crazies.
I grew up being told that Israelis and Jews were the lowest type of creature in existence, put on Earth only to kill us Arabs. In math class the teacher would say, "If one rocket killed X number of Jews, how many would six rockets kill?"
My father was rabidly anti-Israel. He was a product of Nasser's school of thought: secular from a Muslim point of view, yet deeply dedicated to the idea of pan-Arab unity. Israel, he believed, was an American proxy in the post-colonial Middle East.
My father was a supporter of the PLO since the 1960s when Yasser Arafat (who founded the PLO while living in Kuwait) was raising money from wealthy Palestinians working in Gulf States. As an engineer, my father participated in a program where the engineering association in Kuwait would deduct money from his monthly salary to be sent directly to the PLO. He insisted that war and resistance was the only way to deal with Israel.
In the summer of 1990, when I was 12 years old, our lives changed completely. We were on vacation when Saddam Hussein invaded and annexed Kuwait. My father's business -- along with much of the country -- was ravaged. Our savings became worthless pieces of paper. We could not go back to Kuwait, so we immigrated to Canada. My father did manage to sneak back in for a few days to retrieve important business documents that would later be useful in recovering compensation from a United Nations fund.
Praying in the Dark
Of my family, I'm the only one who stayed in Canada. My father never really adjusted to life in the New World, and he had good business contacts back in Jordan, so my parents returned there. All my siblings also moved back to the Middle East. One brother runs a successful company in Jordan, two brothers are studying in Egypt (one dentistry and the other business), and my sister lives in Dubai where she works in the banking industry.
One evening in 2003, I was studying at the university library in London, Ontario, when I happened to notice an older man. From his chassidic garb, he looked like a religious Jew. My curiosity was aroused, so I approached him and asked, "Are you Jewish?"
With a gentle smile on his face, he said, "No, but I like to dress this way." I didn't know whether he was joking or not. All the religious people I had come across in the past were pretty scary. Are Jews supposed to be funny?
His name was Dr. Yitzhak Block, a retired professor of philosophy. We exchanged a few words and then he asked about my background. My family history is pretty complex, and I get a headache every time I have to explain it all. So I simply told him that I'm an Arab from Kuwait, and mentioned that my grandmother from my mother's side is Jewish.
My mother's parents met in Jerusalem when my grandfather, an Arab from the West Bank, was serving in the Jordanian army fighting the Zionists. He was 18 years old and my grandmother was 16. Her father ran a school in Jerusalem -- the same school where she would jump off the wall to meet my handsome, uniformed grandfather. They fell in love, got married, and lived for a number of years in Shechem (Nablus).
After my grandfather was discharged from the Jordanian army, the family moved to Kuwait, where oil profits were fueling huge business and construction projects. That's where my mother met my father and got married.

Knowing about my grandmother's Jewish background always made me curious about Jews. Whenever we were on vacation in Amman, Jordan, I used to constantly watch the Israeli channel -- when my parents weren't around. My favorite was the Israeli national anthem, and I would stay up late waiting to hear them play it at the end of the TV transmission.
Standing there in the university library, this religious Jew, Dr. Block, looked at me and said, "In Muslim law, you're considered Muslim, since the religion goes by the father. But according to Jewish law, you're Jewish, since Jewish identity is transmitted by the mother."
My head started to spin and memories of my childhood in Kuwait began to surface. I recalled how my grandmother had a funny name on her documents, Mizrachi, which I never heard before. She also had a small prayer book with Hebrew letters, and she prayed in the dark crying. (I thought the Wailing Wall was so named because crying was a part of prayer.)
Aside from a vague family legend, my grandmother never mentioned anything about being Jewish -- but now the pieces were fitting into place. I thanked Dr. Block for the conversation, and ran home to tell my roommate what I heard. He smiled and said, "So you're a Mus-Jew!" I was not amused.
I went to my room and called my mother. She rebuffed the story, saying, "Don't listen to people like that. We are Muslims and that's that."
I decided to call my grandmother myself and bring up the subject.
I beat around the bush a bit -- after all, she'd been denying it for the past 50 years -- and then finally blurted out, "Grandma, are you Jewish?"
She didn't answer the question directly, but she started crying and spoke about the years of Arab-Israeli conflict. She told me how her brother Zaki had been killed in Jerusalem before the rebirth of the State. To me that was sufficient confirmation of her Jewishness and I decided to leave it at that.
Over the next few months, I avoided the whole issue of Judaism, mainly for the sake of not upsetting my mother. Besides, I was just finishing university, and career was my main priority. I was content with telling myself that I belonged to a mixed-faith family.
Streaming Tears
About a year later, I was rollerblading one day in my neighborhood when I took a hard fall and badly sprained my wrist. The road was smooth so I couldn't figure out why I had fallen. I couldn't stop thinking that it seemed like a push from Above. These thoughts caught me by surprise, since I wasn't into spirituality and I never had any religious connection. I was a bodybuilder, had tons of friends, and was on the heels of a successful career as a foreign exchange trader. So why had this happened?
Because my wrist was heavily bandaged, I was forced to take off work for a few days. Dr. Block had mentioned the name of his synagogue, so that Saturday morning, I decided to go check out the scene. I was hesitant at the thought of everyone being from European background and me the only Middle Easterner, but I decided to go anyway.
I called a cab and got dropped off at the synagogue. As I walked in, the first person I saw looked Indian. He shook my hand, said "Shabbat Shalom," and handed me a kippah. Then I saw a black man which really surprised me. And Dr. Block was there, too.
I was handed a prayer book, shown the proper page, and before I knew it everyone was singing, V'Shamru:
"And the Children of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, to make the Sabbath an eternal covenant for their generations. Between Me and the Children of Israel, it is a sign forever that in six days God made heaven and earth, and on the seventh day He rested and was refreshed."
Something hit me and I felt as though I knew this song. I just stood there taking in the sounds, the smells and the sights. Everything felt whole and perfect. It was the opposite of everything I'd ever heard about Jews or Judaism. At this point my tears were streaming in freefall.
It was the opposite of everything I'd heard about Jews.
After the services finished, I met everyone over Kiddush. I spoke with an Egyptian couple and we shared our personal stories. Jews from all backgrounds were gathered together and I was another piece of this puzzle.
After Kiddush, I accepted Dr. Block's invitation to join him for lunch. I told him: "I can't believe I'm here, singing and praying in Hebrew. I could never have imagined it."
He smiled and said, "It's not so hard to believe. Every Jew is born with a little Torah and a little Menorah inside." He then pressed his shoulder up against mine and said, "All it takes is for another Jew to bump into him and light it up."
Dreams of Peace
My interest grew from there, and I began studying Torah and keeping Shabbat. Last year I spent a month in Israel touring and studying on Aish HaTorah's Jerusalem Fellowships program. It was a great "homecoming."
I still keep in close contact with my family and old friends. They're wonderful people and I love them very much. Yet it's hard to relate to them on many levels. In the Arab world there are tons of misconceptions and misinformation regarding Israel. So I am working to develop a program to educate Arabs about Jews and Judaism, to dissolve the stereotypes propagated by the Muslim media and schools. I hope that my unique background can help bridge some of that divide.
Another way I hope to achieve this is to help establish economic relations between Israel and Arab countries. That would create trust and shared experience, which could be directed toward the goal of a genuine and lasting peace.
Another issue I'm trying to address is how the Arab world is filled with Holocaust denial. This past summer I went to Auschwitz, and I am working to produce the first-ever Arabic documentary about the Holocaust. I want to explain to Muslims in their own language exactly what happened.
It often seems like the Arab-Israeli conflict is intractable. Yet I believe in today's world, there is a real opportunity for a breakthrough. Arabs today have a more universal education, which makes them more open and curious. Also they are meeting Israelis and Jews in their travels around the world, which breaks down misconceptions. And as we saw during the recent protests in Iran, many young people in the Muslim world are yearning for reform. On top of all this, they have high-speed Internet access which opens up all kinds of new avenues of communication, and the possibility of forming new friendships unrestricted by borders or political agendas. Perhaps this can be the basis of a grassroots movement to mend relations and hopefully one day achieve peace.
My Jewish cousins are all living as Muslims in the Middle East.
The other issue that needs urgent attention is intermarriage in Israel. Unfortunately, a story like my grandmother's is not so rare. Many young Jewish women are wooed by Arab men and brought back to live in their villages. The children and grandchildren are never told the truth, especially with political tensions and the emotional unrest this would cause a family. As a result, many Jews are lost to our people. My mother has five sisters, and from there I have a few dozen cousins who are all Jewish -- all living as Muslims in the Middle East. I recently met a seventh-generation Israeli, whose cousin married a Palestinian and went to live in Saudi Arabia; her descendents are Jews living in Saudi Arabia.
All my relatives know that I'm practicing Judaism, and for the most part they're accepting. I can talk to them about Judaism and they're politely interested. We love and respect each other. My father is resistant, however, given that secularism and war against Israel are the two ideological pillars of his life. When I first became interested in Judaism, I didn't tell him straight out. We were having a political discussion and I mentioned that I support the State of Israel. That ignited a big clash and I've learned to only discuss these matters with him in an indirect way. I always know when I've crossed the line; he gets angry and calls me a "Zionist."
The other big exception -- not surprisingly -- is my grandmother. I've asked her a number of times for more information about her family background, but she refuses to talk about it. Maybe one day I will find the key to opening her up.
Growing up, I was taught that Jews were the source of all evil, descended from monkeys and pigs. On the other hand, I had the image of my grandmother holding her small prayer book with the Hebrew letters, praying with tender devotion. She is the sweetest person I know and there's no way she came from a bloodthirsty gang of murderers. She gave me a Jewish soul, and in her own way, it was she who kept my Jewish spark alive.


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Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Travel Blast








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Greetings,

I am writing to let you know when your shopping at Shekinah's Garden starting today Wednsday Dec. 2, 2009 through next Wednsday Dec. 9, 2009, you may take 10% off your already discounted price and on your entire purchase. Now how cool is that!

Simply click on the "Current Coupons" in the left hand top of the Main Menu and add the coupon to your shopping cart. Enjoy your day and have a great week.



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Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Watermelon Soap Slices





Watermelon Slices Soap, Watermelon Taffy Fragrance
$7.00
A mix of watermelon, lime, lemon and bergamot followed by middle notes of marigold and juicy watermelon. HMMMM Aprox. 5 oz. These soaps are made as ordered. Please allow ample time to have us make it for when you need it. Thanks!




© 2002-2009 All rights reserved.
Shekinah's Garden
4135 Cornell St, Des Moines, IA, 50313, USA.
Phone: 641-715-3800 access code 56333 (8:00 am to 10:00p.m. Central Time, Monday -Saturday)


Monday, November 30, 2009

Free Ground Shipping from Tractor Supply





Tractor Supply Company






© 2002-2009 All rights reserved.
Shekinah's Garden
4135 Cornell St, Des Moines, IA, 50313, USA.
Phone: 641-715-3800 access code 56333 (8:00 am to 10:00p.m. Central Time, Monday -Saturday)


Kosher Specials




Gourmet kosher bakery, challahs hamentachen, rugulach etc.
Meat Sale Items:
Brick Roast
Item #229337

Supervision-Vaad of The Five Towns  

Brand-Kosher.com Sale Price-$47.96 $63.96 Weight 4 lb Cost / lb $11.99
Flanken (Short Ribs)
Item #229321 Supervision-Vaad of The Five Towns  

Brand-Kosher.com Sale Price $17.48 $25.00 weight-1.75 lb Cost / lb-$9.99
Cubed Tender Beef Chuck
Item #229315 Supervision-Vaad of The Five Towns  Brand-Kosher.com

Sale Price-$12.98 $17.38

Weight-2 lb Cost / lb$6.49

Chicken Cutlets
Sale Price: $7.98 $11.98
Weight: 2 lb
Cost / lb: $3.99 $5.99

Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns


Bakery Sale Items:
Zomick's
Apple Pie

Apple Pie

Sale Price: $7.99 $9.99

Weight: 1 lb
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Pareve, Pas Yisroel, Yoshon)
Zomick's
Breakaway Challah

Breakaway Challah

Price: $5.49

Weight: 1 lb
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Pareve, Pas Yisroel)

Mini Cheese Puffs
Mini Cheese Puffs
Sale Price: $10.99 $12.99
Weight: 1 lb
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Dairy) 

Sticky Cinnamon Stick - 4 Pack
Sticky Cinnamon Stick - 4 Pack
Sale Price: $6.99 $7.99
4 Pieces
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Pareve, Pas Yisroel, Yoshon)

 
© 2002-2009 All rights reserved.
Shekinah's Garden
4135 Cornell St, Des Moines, IA, 50313, USA.
Phone: 641-715-3800 access code 56333 (8:00 am to 10:00p.m. Central Time, Monday -Saturday)


Kosher Specials at Kosher.com

Gourmet kosher bakery, challahs hamentachen, rugulach etc.
Meat Sale Items:
Brick Roast
Item #229337

Supervision-Vaad of The Five Towns  

Brand-Kosher.com Sale Price-$47.96 $63.96 Weight 4 lb Cost / lb $11.99
Flanken (Short Ribs)
Item #229321 Supervision-Vaad of The Five Towns  

Brand-Kosher.com Sale Price $17.48 $25.00 weight-1.75 lb Cost / lb-$9.99
Cubed Tender Beef Chuck
Item #229315 Supervision-Vaad of The Five Towns  Brand-Kosher.com

Sale Price-$12.98 $17.38

Weight-2 lb Cost / lb$6.49

Chicken Cutlets
Sale Price: $7.98 $11.98
Weight: 2 lb
Cost / lb: $3.99 $5.99

Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns


Bakery Sale Items:
Zomick's
Apple Pie

Apple Pie

Sale Price: $7.99 $9.99

Weight: 1 lb
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Pareve, Pas Yisroel, Yoshon)
Zomick's
Breakaway Challah

Breakaway Challah

Price: $5.49

Weight: 1 lb
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Pareve, Pas Yisroel)

Mini Cheese Puffs
Mini Cheese Puffs
Sale Price: $10.99 $12.99
Weight: 1 lb
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Dairy) 

Sticky Cinnamon Stick - 4 Pack
Sticky Cinnamon Stick - 4 Pack
Sale Price: $6.99 $7.99
4 Pieces
Supervision: Vaad of The Five Towns   (Pareve, Pas Yisroel, Yoshon)

"Christmas Memories" Quilted Throw@Shekinah's Garden




"Christmas Memories" Quilted Throw

What a lovely way to remember moments from holidays past. 100% cotton throw features a quilted design and seven - 4" x 6" plastic pockets for displaying photos and cards. Poly filled. Machine wash. 50" x 60".



Text on Product- Joy Cherish Memories Happy Holidays Good Times Together


Width: 50" Height: 60"
$90.91




'My Kotel Arrest' * Jacob Neusner: Reform Returnee * Eli Valley's 'Metamorphosis'



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