Thursday, May 26, 2016

 

Lag Ba'Omer Bonfire on Long Island

What: Lag Ba'Omer Bonfire. fun, Games, Storytelling, and Jewish Songs
Who: Jewish children and their families.
Cub Scout and Boy Scout Units, Girl Scout Units, Hebrew School Classes, Jewish Day School Classes - All Jewish Children and Parents
When: May 26, 2016 3:30 PM - 7:00 PM
Where: Fire Ring at Wantagh Park, Wantagh, NY
Free Admission - Please RSVP - 516-868-7285 or Alyanofsky@email.com
Presented by The Jewish Committee on Scouting, Theodore Roosevelt Council, BSA in association with Chabad Center for Jewish Life.
Bring your own camp chairs, and blankets. Kosher Barbeque supper items for sale or bring your own picnic.
Located on the south shore of Nassau County, NY

Lag Ba'Omer Bonfire and Family Picnic
Fun, Games, Storytelling of Jewish Heroes, Jewish Songs, Gaga, Tug of War, Field Games, Relay Races.
 Service Hours to Boy Scouts who sign up as Game Leaders or Referees in advance
For more information and to RSVP - 516-868-7285 or Alyanofsky@email.com

Cubs and Scouts wishing to perform a skit, Tell a story or Participate as a Leader Or Referee For service hours Please email Alyanofsky@email.com

Directions to Wantagh Park

Take the Wantagh Parkway going south. Exit off the Wantagh Parkway at Sunrise Highway East. Make a right onto Wantagh Avenue. Take to the end and make right onto Merrick Road. At first light make a left into park. Follow the park service road past the administration building. There is a swimming pool a bit past the admin bldg on the left. Turn left into the parking lot before you pass the swimming pool. The bonfire ring is to the east of the pool.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2016

 

Flyer 2016



Saturday, May 05, 2007

 

Join us for a fabulous family and young people's celebration of Lag Ba'Omer, located on the South Shore of Long Island, Nassau County, New York, RSVP to Alan Yanofsky- alyanofsky@email.com - Chairman of the Jewish Committee on Scouting, Theodore Roosevelt Council, Boy Scouts of America Posted by Hello

Wednesday, May 02, 2007

 

Learn how a Torah is written Posted by Hello

 

Boys and girls write on parchment with quills Posted by Hello

 

Boys and girls take in the glow of the fire. Posted by Hello

 

We learn to write on parchment with quills Posted by Hello

 

Writing on parchment with hand cut quill. Posted by Hello

 

Stoking the Lag Ba'Omer Bonfire Posted by Hello

 


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Tuesday, May 01, 2007

 

What is Lag Ba'Omer

Lag Ba'Omer is a time of happy celebration, a day for weddings, picnics, and playfulness. It is observed by playing with toy bows and arrows, and celebrating around a bonfire with singing and dancing.

Lag Ba'Omer is a short way of saying "the 33rd day of counting of the Omer." The first word of the holiday's name, Lag, is simply a combination of two Hebrew letters, lamed (which stands for the number thirty) and gimmel (which stands for the number three). Thus thirty-three. The name of the holiday actually means the thirty-third day of the counting of the Omer. So what does counting the Omer mean?

It is unlikely that anyone knows how many days there are between New Year's Day and July 4th, or between Sukkot and Hanukka off the top of his head. But all religious Jews know that there are precisely fifty days between the second day of Passover and Shavuot. During the first forty-nine days of this period, known as the Omer, each day is counted aloud during the evening service.

In Hebrew, Omer means a sheaf of a harvested crop. (A sheaf is a tied bundle of cut stalks.) When the Temple stood in Jerusalem, priests would offer there, on behalf of all of Israel, newly harvested barley (an Omer, about 3.3 quarts) on the second day of Passover. Their doing so signaled the beginning of Israel's harvest season, a period that lasted seven weeks (forty-nine days). In the Torah, Shavout, which celebrates the giving of the Ten Commandments to Moses on Mount Sinai also celebrates the harvest's end on the fiftieth day after Passover. Thus the entire counting period becomes one of continuous elevation and preparation, from the status of an Egyptian slave to a person ready to receive the Torah.

Although one would think of the harvest period as joyous, in Jewish life the Omer is considered a time of semi-mourning. To this day, no scholar is sure why this is so. The Talmud speaks obscurely of a plague occurring on one Omer that killed 24,000 students of the second-century Rabbi Akiva. What kind of a plague was it that apparently only affected Rabbi Akiva's talmudic students and nobody else and came to an end on Lag Ba'Omer (the thirty-third of the forty-nine days)? Most modern scholars assume that the plague referred to was not an illness.

Rabbi Akiva supported a rebellion against the Roman conquerors of Israel led by a famous Jewish military leader by the name of Bar-Kochba. Moreover, Akiva declared Bar-Kochba to be the Messiah who would liberate the Jews from Roman domination. Although Bar-Kochba did achieve some early military successes, eventually the Romans suppressed his revolt with incredible brutality. Among Bar-Kochba's leading soldiers were thousands of Rabbi Akiva's students. Thus, it is likely that Lag Ba'Omer was a day on which the Jews either achieved a short lived victory over the Romans or gained some respite from the slaughter of battle.

So, the thirty-third day of the Omer, Lag Ba'Omer, is an exception to the semi-mourning. That day is a time of happy celebration, a day for weddings, picnics, and playfulness. It is observed by playing with toy bows and arrows, and celebrating around a bonfire with singing and dancing. Many Orthodox Jews give their three year old children their first haircut on Lag Ba'Omer and a party is held to celebrate the event. Lag Ba'Omer has always been a special day for school age children, so special that it was once the day when younger children could boss the older ones, who had to do as they were told. Lag Ba'Omer belongs to young people, it is your day.

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