Congratulations to the rabbi on his daughter’s wedding!!!
Dear Rabbi Michi,
Congratulations on your daughter’s wedding!!!
Wishing the newlyweds much happiness, success, joy and love, and of course, to you, the Rabbi.
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I also join in!
thanks.
Good luck 🙂
I wholeheartedly agree!
May the Rabbi always be blessed to see the joys of his family and in general with an abundance of broad-mindedness.
Congratulations!
Joining the congratulations?
Congratulations!
Congratulations
Joining in with heartfelt wishes [even if the heart and emotion don't mean much…]
Thank you everyone for the well wishes. Best wishes.
As Judah and more to read
J”A joins the Han”l and blesses with a great blessing
H’ Ish Ben Mohar”r Almoni
Mazal Tov!!!
And the Hasidic custom of getting married in the month of Elul is well known:)
If anything, why doesn't the rabbi write a book on matters of home peace
as is the custom of every national religious rabbi (and not only..) who respects himself?
First, the answer in the body of the question (actually two answers in the body of the question).
Secondly, I think that ultra-Orthodox rabbis do not write less about these matters.
1. Custom
2. Rabbi
3. National-Religious
4. Honoring the Jewish People
What are the 2 answers in the question? 1,3? 2,3?
Or actually, the custom of every rabbi, then there is no need for anything more, and even more is better, everything is considered a sumin.
Last but not least: If they've already written, why do I need to bring hay to the Ofraim?!
And I'm not a religious Zionist rabbi.
The last one is a bit difficult because even some of the last of the followers brought straw to the Ophirites, and if so, I would include all of this in the tradition. However, the tradition is not the main thing, and so the first one is the main thing.
By the way, one should learn from the fact that I am not a religious Zionist, that a religious Zionist rabbi is a different person from a non-religious Zionist rabbi, and that he is not a rabbi with one degree and a religious Zionist with a second degree, like a blue ball. And that's it.
And it seems that he came to be precise about the hyphen, and they are the things that the hyphen fuses the two properties to create a new, indivisible entity.
Long live our perfect Rabbi Michi!!
I also join the commotion, many, many congratulations on your daughter's wedding 🙂
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