Showing posts with label Jewish calendar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jewish calendar. Show all posts

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Gimmel Tammuz: Long live the Rebbe!

Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the Lubavitcher Rebbe, was born on 11 Nissan 5662 (April 18, 1902) in Nikolaiev, which was part of the Russian Empire and present-day Ukraine. The Rebbe (as he is most commonly known) is the 7th Grand Rebbe (Admor) of the Chabad dynasty and served as head of the Lubavitch dynasty from 1951 until 1994, during which he opened the doors of Chassidus to tens of thousands of Jews around the world and prepared the world for Moshiach.

The Rebbe's father, Levi Yitzchak, was a descendant of the Tzemach Tzedek, the third Rebbe of Chabad.  The Rebbe's father was his primary teacher. In 1927 the Rebbe moved to Berlin. On 14 Kislev 5689 (1928) the Rebbe married Chaya Mushka Schneerson, the daughter of the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, in Warsaw, Poland. After the wedding the Rebbe lived in Berlin and studied philosophy and mathematics at the University of Berlin. In 1933 the Rebbe moved to Paris, where he completed a degree in electrical engineering. After his degree he continued to study mathematics at the Sorbonne. Recently, the Rebbe's Torah discourses during his time in Berlin and Paris have been discovered and published.

In 1941, the Rebbe fled Nazi-occupied France to Portugal, and with his wife boarded the Serpa Pinto ship which departed from Lisbon and arrived in New York City on June 12, 1941 (exactly 53 years to the Gregorian date of his passing), which was also the 28th of Sivan 5701 (the 70th anniversary of which was last Tuesday, the yartzheit of the Holy Tanna Yonasan ben Uziel). Upon the Rebbe's arrival in the U.S., his father-in-law appointed him to oversee the main Chabad institutions, and in the year 5703 he was appointed as head of the Chabad publishing house. Also in this year, the  Rebe published his first book, Hayom Yom, a compilation of teachings of the sixth Chabad Rebbe, arranged by the day of the Jewish calendar, studied to this day on a daily basis by all those connected to the Rebbe.

In the year 5710 (1950), the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe left this world, and on the 10th of Shvat 5711 (the 70th anniversary of which was also this year, 5771), which was also the 1st yartzheit of his father-in-law, the Rebbe gave his most famous Chasidic discourse, Basi LeGani, which was a commentary on his father-in-law's last discourse. The Rebbe later related that 10 Shvat 5771 was the date on which his leadership of Chabad began in a revealed manner.

During the years of the Rebbe's leadership, a wide range of institutions were established to spread the teachings of Chassidus and Jewish practice and heritage across the world. In the first five years of his leadership, the Rebbe established a chain of Chabad schools in North Africa, Chabad Youth movements in Israel, New York and Canada, Chabad women's organizations in Israel, Australia and the U.S., and the Chabad summer camp movement, which exists today in 40 different countries.

In 5727, after the six-day war and the Liberation of Jerusalem and the Old City, the Rebbe oversaw the renovation and re-opening of the Tzemach Tzedek synagogue in the Jewish Quarter (where a special celebration will take place tomorrow evening). In the 1980's the Rebbe started the Tzvaos Hashem youth movement, and called for parents to purchase a letter for $1 in a new Sefer Torah for all Jewish children under the age of 13 (a project which he initiated for adults as well) whose purpose was to unite all Jewish children through the Torah. Aside from three trips to Chabad camps in the Catskills in the 1950's, the Rebbe never left New York City during his years as leader of the Chabad movement.

770 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY

Hundreds of thousands of people around the world had the zechus of meeting with the Rebbe, or writing to him, and receiving his blessing. Between 1986 and 1992 the Rebbe distributed one-dollar bills to be given to tzedaka to his thousands of weekly visitors. Every Sunday, a long line of people waited up to six hours to collect shliach mitzva from the Rebbe, ask a question and ask for a blessing.

On every Jewish and Chasidic holiday, the Rebbe conducted a hisvadus celebration in at his center, 770 (named after its address, 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn, New York). Jews of all backgrounds flocked to these gatherings. During them the Rebbe sat in the middle of the Beis Midrash on a bimmah  and delivered words of Torah related to the weekly Parsha or the particular holiday. Between the various discourses, which lasted late into the naight, the attendants would sing niggunim and drink lechayim according to the Rebbe's glances.

To our great fortune, almost every word the Rebbe spoke was recorded by satellite, phone or fax and disseminated to Chasidim worldwide. The discourses given on Shabbat and other holidays, during which the use of technology is restricted, were recorded by a group of attendees at the end of Shabbat or the festival and then faxed to the Chasidim. While the Rebbe did not write his discourses himself, his students would gather after each discourse and record the discourses -- some of which lasted for up to thirteen hours -- for publication.

In the 1980's, the Rebbe called on his Chasidim to act to hasten the redemption. In the 1990's the Rebbe called on Chasidim to announce in public that the time has arrived to prepare for the arrival of Moshiach Tzidkeinu. In 1991, the Rebbe said: "I have done everything I can, now I am handing over to you; do everything you can to bring Moshiach!" Below is a satellite feed from a 1985 12 Tammuz Gathering with the Rebbe from Jewish TV. The 12th of Tammuz is a Chasidic holiday celebrating the release of the Rebbe's father-in-law, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, from prison. The video includes two Chasidic discourses given by the Rebbe during the height of the movement's Messianic sentiment, each about 25 minutes long, separated by a session of singing by the Chasidim:



According to the Chasidic dictum u'faratza -- and you shall spread -- the Rebbe encouraged his Chasidim to set foot to the farthest corners of the globe and engage Jews of all backgrounds to engage in Torah and mitzvot, Through the mivtzaim, the Rebbe called on his Chasidim to light Chanukah candles in city centers and malls to instill Jewish pride, conduct Lag BaOmer parades with an emphasis on youth involvement, set up stands to perform the mitzvah of the Lulav on Sukkos, dsitribute matza on Passover, blow the Shofar on Rosh Hashana all around town and college campuses, and arrange public Purim Seudos in cities and college campuses around the world. The Rebbe made sure to direct Chasidim to keep events free of charge and provide for those who could not afford the means to purchase items needed to fulfill the mitzvot.

The Rebbe's Ten Mivtzoim project called on all Jews to take the plunge and keep 10 major mitzvas: Ahavas Yisroel (love of your fellow Jew, i.e. concern for their physical and spiritual well-being), Jewish education, Torah study, Tefillin (for Jewish men), Mezuzah, Tzedakah (charity), filling the home with Jewish books, lighting Shabbos candles, keeping Kosher, and keeping the laws of family purity (Mikvah and Niddah).

In the 1980's the Rebbe called to raise awareness of the importance of the 7th Noahide Laws among non-Jews and to urge humanity to adhere to them. The Rebbe's efforts led to a bill passed by the U.S. Congress on January 3, 1991 to designate March 26, 1991 as Education Day, in coincidence with the beginning of the Rebbe's 90th year. The bill acknowledges the Seven Noahide Laws as "the bedrock of society" and praises the Rebbe and Chabad for promoting these values and principles throughout the world.

On 27 Adar 5752 (1992), while standing at the grave of his father-in-law, the Rebbe suffered a stroke, which subsequently impaired his ability to speak. Eight months after the stroke the Rebbe appeared publicly every so often, on a special balcony built outside his room, on the Western side of 770. During this time, the Chasidim would sing Yechi Adoneinu Moreinu V'Rabbeinu Melech HaMoshiach L'Olam Voed, to which the Rebbe would quietly nod his head. On 27 Adar 5754 (1994), the Rebbe entered a coma and was hospitalized. Three months later, on Gimmel Tammuz (June 12, 1994), the Rebbe departed, leaving the world ready for Moshiach in body and spirit. In a letter to the 2nd President of Israel, Yitzchak ben Tzvi, the Rebbe wrote:
From the time that I was a child attending cheder, and even before, the vision of the future Redemption began to take form in my imagination – the Redemption of the Jewish People from their final Exile, a redemption of such magnitude and grandeur through which the purpose of the suffering, the harsh decrees and annihilation of Exile will be understood...(Igros Koidesh Vol. 12, p. 404)
It is said that tzaddikim are more available to each and every Jew once they are freed from the physical limitations of the body and of this world. On the day of the Rebbe's Yartzheit, it is a good day to write a letter to the Rebbe from wherever you are, light a candle in memory of the Rebbe, ask for all you need on a physical and spiritual level, and of course...

ASK FOR MOSHIACH!

  יחי אדוננו מורנו ורבינו מלך המשיח לעולם ועד



Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Friday: Partial solar eclipse, Erev Rosh Chodesh Tammuz

This Friday, Erev Rosh Chodesh Tammuz, will mark the third of a rare series of three eclipses within a month and a half of each other: a partial solar eclipse on June 1st (Yom Yerushalayim), a lunar eclipse on June 15th, and the upcoming partial solar eclipse on July 1st. Although I usually refrain from personal rants, I must say that I feel my blogging activity was affected by these celestial phenomena (all of which it goes without saying are completely in the hands of the Creator of the Universe, who can do what He wills at any point): From Lag Ba'Omer through June 10th I was completely without words; around June 15th, which was the week of Parshas Shlach, I felt inspired to blog about the birthpangs of Mashiach after a period of relative concealment, and now again I feel somewhat at a loss for words but nonetheless motivated to try and put the pieces together, taking a bird's eye view of this year.

Looking back a bit further, a major point this year was March 9th, which marked the beginning of the 9th wave on the Mayan Calendar, the last stretch before the expected Great Transformation of 2012. According to the Mayan calendar, the seventh wave, which brought about global consciousness, began in 1755 BCE, which marks the beginning of the spread of Jewish mysticism according to the Ba'al Shem Tov's prophecy. The eighth wave - galactic consciousness -  began on January 5 (17 Tevet), 1999 (around the time when the internet really took off), and the ninth - universal consciousness - began on March 9th of this year.

Two days after March 9th (3 Adar Bet), a tsunami hit Japan, ensuing a global nuclear crisis that is still unfolding to this day, which has delivered a major blow to man's aspirations for nuclear power worldwide (and to the Iranian nuclear program in particular). As if Japan wasn't enough, a week later, the US and NATO countries declared war on Libya.

According to astrologers, solar eclipses, which occur every six months, set the tone for the next half-year of personal and global phenomena. The last solar eclipse occurred on January 4th of this year. During that time, I blogged about the relevance of such an event for Israel and the Jewish people, and in particular about the potential for negative outcomes (G-d forbid). However, looking back, the message of January-June 2011 is that Israel's destiny is greater than we can imagine; Hashem is shaking the entire world up in preparation for our redemption. If the first half of 2011 brought us an international nuclear crisis and unprecedented political revolution across the entire Middle East, what lies ahead? These are the questions that are born during a moment when the sun, earth and moon are aligned, in an era which ancient cultures saw as the last chapter of history.

Finally, how fitting that Erev Rosh Chodesh Tammuz be the day on which the far oceans will witness a solar eclipse; on Gimmel Tammuz, our leader Joshua, the messenger who saw that the Land of Israel was very good, commanded the sun to halt in the sky and remain there until the Jewish people conquered all of their enemies, and were able to dwell in the Land. Of course Gimmel Tammuz is also the day when the Tzaddik of our generation, the Lubavitcher Rebbe, ascended to the upper worlds, leaving us with his legacy and teachings, more alive than ever.

The Rebbe taught that although Tammuz is a month which originally held days of mourning, it has the potential to be the month of redemption, which was revealed in a year as late in history as 1927, when the previous Lubavitcher Rebbe was freed from prison in Soviet Russia. Upon his release the Rebbe informed the generations to come:
It was not myself alone that the Holy One, blessed be He, redeemed on Yud-Beis Tammuz, but also all who love the Holy Torah and observe its commands, and so too all who bear the name ‘Jew’.
May the light of the moon shine like the light of the sun, and may the light of the sun shine seventyfold, and may all darkness be transformed into light.

A guten choidesh!

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Bnei Yisasschar on Rosh Chodesh Adar

The following is adapted from a shiur given by Deena Tzippora Gerber in Jerusalem on Rosh Chodesh Adar Alef 5771.

Rosh Chodesh Adar, the celebration of the beginning of the month of Adar, begins Thursday night, Feb. 3 and lasts through Saturday night, Feb. 5th. This year, there is an extra month inserted into the Jewish calendar in order to synchronize the lunar and solar cycles (that's the reason that Chanukah always falls in the winter, as opposed to Ramadan, which is on a purely lunar calendar and therefore sometimes falls in the summer and sometimes in the winter).

Although we conventionally think that the extra month is Adar Bet, the extra month is actually Adar Alef, since, as we know, Purim falls in Adar Bet, and therefore Adar Alef is the wildcard, unknown month. As we know that Adar is a month associated with joy, auspicious times for the Jewish people, the unity of opposites and redemption, this means that Thursday night begins a period of an extra, "free" month of joy and eit ratzon (period of divine compassion, listening).

According to the kabbalistic text Bnei Yissaschar, the month of Adar is associated with the zodiac sign of Pisces, the fish, symbolizing the ability to swim in water and derive life from it, rather than become overpowered by water, such as in the floods in the time of Noah. Today we are witnessing heaving floody worldwide. Water can have both a chaotic quality and a life-giving quality. Torah and mitzvot, symbolized by the symbol of the bucket, associated with the month of Shvat and the character of Moses, enables us to hold, carry and use water in a way that gives life, rather than be subsumed by it.

Adar is also connected with the tribe of Naftali. The root of the word Naftali is debatable, but Rashi connects it to the word 'p'til', which describes canisters who have a lid so tight that even in a setting of impurity they remain intact and maintain their purity. This represents Queen Esther, who even inside a foreign hostile king's palace remained completely whole and committed to her people and their purpose in history.

Purim, which occurs in Adar Bet, has a deep connection with Yom Kippur (some say Yom Kippur = Yom K'Purim, or 'a day like Purim'). On Yom Kippur, we received the second tablets, after Moses broke the first, after the people sinned at the Golden Calf. Purim in a similar way is a time for internalizing the Torah, and reestablishing emunah in the heart after losing the connection in exile.

The angel associated with the month of Adar is the angel Avrachiel, which literally means 'I will bless God'. The name also alludes to the concept of 'havracha', which means planting a limp, bent-over branch of a tree into the ground, generating a new tree. Adar is the beginning of the individual and collective revitalization, instigated by miracles after a long dry-spell of exile.

Rebbe Nachman teaches that the terrifying feeling that God has abandoned a person can be transformed into the highest level of Ayeh, the seeking of highest and most hidden manifestations of God in places where he has yet to be found.

A lot is scheduled to happen on Thursday-Friday-Saturday of this week. A large cyclone is headed for Australia, 30,000 people have evacuated. A huge storm is affecting over 100 million people across the US. A day of rage is planned on Saturday against Syrian leader Assad. Egypt is in a state of chaos and world leaders are clueless as to how to respond. Let's hope that God's purpose and guiding hand become clear and that Adar is a time of  ליהודים היתה אורה ושמחה ששון ויקר כן תהיה לנו

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Adar: From despair to joy in the blink of an eye

Haman begging the mercy of Esther / Rembrandt

During the partial solar eclipse in the beginning of 2011, I blogged about the uniqueness of the Jewish calendar, and the place that Adar Bet plays in synchronizing the solar and lunar cycles of the Jewish calendar. Now, before Rosh Chodesh Adar Alef this Friday-Saturday, I'll write a bit more about the significance of Adar, the differences and similarities between Adar Alef and Adar Bet, which occurs this year, and Purim.

Rebbe Nachman teaches that all beginnings used to come from Pesach, but that now, they come from Purim. (This is especially relevant for me, considering that I returned to Israel as an observant Jew awaiting Mashiach after many years away on Rosh Chodesh Adar last year...after I dreamt of a petek (note) that read 'Purim b'Uman').

Purim is the time of nahafoch hu - the point at which opposites meet. Everything can turn from bad to good - for an individual, for Am Yisrael, and for the world - in one moment. Teshu'at Hashem K'Heref Ayin - Hashem's help comes in the blink of an eye. This is especially relevant today, as Israel is losing 'friends', left and right. The situation can seem bleak, but Hashem is in contol, and netzach Yisrael lo yishaker - There is no betrayal for the Eternal of Israel.

Adar is also the month of joy. The rabbis taught that if a person has an upcoming trial against a non-Jew, he should try to have the trial fall in the month of Adar. Since this year there are 2 Adars, there is twice as much eit ratzon, or time when we are judged with compassion. Adar is also a time of increased love between Jews and feelings of oneness with the Jewish people. At Sinai, we stood as one when we received Torah, and peace and love among us, rich to poor, famous to simple, Tunisian to Canadian, young to old, etc, is the vessel through which we are blessed.

The Purim story tells the story of the attempts of Persian minister to bring about a death sentence for the entire Jewish people (sound familiar?), as a result of a Jew's loyalty to Hashem. Through the efforts of a Jewish spy-queen, the tables are turned, the minister is hung, the loyal Jew is honored, and the people are victorious (now let's eat). Purim is a celebration of the reversal of bad fate, and the ability of things to turn from entirely doomsdayish to entirely sweetened (b"H).

Today, Iran is calling for Israel to be wiped off the map, and all the international community can offer are weak sanctions, giving Iran time to perfect its weaponry. Last week, the British Guardian published a letter justifying the killing of Israeli Jews for political goals, and then published a defense of that letter. All across the Western world (Edom), Israel's right to build homes and defend itself is being challenged. After the recent events in Egypt, many in Israel are questioning whether the seemingly rock-solid U.S. military and financial support will withstand future crises. Hezbollah is already ruling Lebanon on Israel's northern border, and events in Egypt are likely to bring about a Muslim Brotherhood - Hamas regime on its southern border. Islamist sentiment is also fermenting in Jordan and Syria following the events in Egypt.

Thus Israel is facing real geopolitical threats on its key borders, and real political/cultural threats from key policymakers around the world. Ishmael and Edom, who have intermittently taken turns at pestering us, are now both against or turning against us. Suddenly it feels like no one is with us....and that is what many discussions of the Messianic era forsee, that Israel (not to mention every individual on a personal level, Hashem should help) will be increasingly isolated into a corner and threatened from all sides (just open the book of Daniel or Zecharia), putting us in a situation that ein lanu al mi lehisha'en ki im al avinu shebashamayim -- we have no one to trust other than our Abba in Shamayim!!

In last week's Dvar Malchut, a weekly collection of teachings of the seven Chabad Rebbes on the Parsha, the Rebbe teaches that although we might think that the phrase 'As soon as Adar begins, joy increases' refers only to Adar Bet, since Adar Bet is the home of Purim, it actually applies to Adar Alef as well, because the dictum itself rests on the principle of increase, thereby naturally extending to Adar Alef. The ingrained nature of joy is to spread. LaYehudim Haita Ora V'Simcha V'Sasson V'Yikar Ken Tehiyeh Lanu - in he end of the day, the Jews in Persia had light and joy and celebration and honor, may it be so for us as well!

משנכנס אדר מרבין בשמחה!!!!!!

Friday, January 14, 2011

Zodiac signs updated

Zodiac in a 6th-century synagogue in Beit Alpha, Israel

Accommodating millenia of subtle shifts in earths axis, astronomers are claiming to have restored the original zodiac, shifting the Gregorian dates corresponding the when the sun is in each 'house':
Capricorn: Jan. 20-Feb. 16.
Aquarius: Feb. 16-March 11.
Pisces: March 11-April 18.
Aries: April 18-May 13.
Taurus: May 13-June 21.
Gemini: June 21-July 20.
Cancer: July 20-Aug. 10.
Leo: Aug. 10-Sept. 16.
Virgo: Sept. 16-Oct. 30.
Libra: Oct. 30-Nov. 23.
Scorpio: Nov. 23-29.
Ophiuchus:* Nov. 29-Dec. 17.
Sagittarius: Dec. 17-Jan. 20.
* Discarded by the Babylonians because they wanted 12 signs per year.
The months of the Jewish calendar, which synchronizes the lunar and solar cycles, are named according to the month names of the Babylonian calendar, dating back to the Babylonian exile of the Jewish people which began in 586 BCE.

In Jewish sources, the zodiac is first mentioned in Sefer Yezirah, a mystical text traditionally attributed to Abraham, in which the names of the 12 signs are Hebrew translations of the Latin names. In the midrash anthology Yalkut Shimoni,  the 12 signs of the zodiac are associated with the 12 tribes of Israel. The zodiac also corresponds to the 12 months of the Jewish calendar, and the 12 attributes of the soul.

Calculate your Hebrew birthday here and the parallel zodiac month below (courtesy of Shirat Devorah):

Nissan = Aries
Iyar = Taurus
Sivan = Gemini
Tamuz = Cancer
Av = Leo
Elul = Virgo
Tishrei = Libra
Cheshvan = Scorpio
Kislev = Sagittarius
Teves = Capricorn
Shevat = Aquarius
Adar = Pisces

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Solar Eclipse, Adar Bet and the Lunar Calendar

sunrise in jerusalem on the morning of the 2010 lunar eclipse
Ha'aretz reports that a partial solar eclipse will be seen today in Israel and in much of Europe, North Afrca and central Asia. In Israel the eclipse will be at it's fullest at 10:41 a.m. GMT (that's 3:41 AM EST or 12:41 AM PST). 

Last Rosh Chodesh Av, before which there was a great deal of messianic speculation, Israel experienced a total solar eclipse.  Prior to that, Israel experienced a solar eclipse during August 1999, also when Bibi was Prime Minister, reports Israel Truth Times. And, going back further, the Christian Astrology and Prophecies site informs us that on November 1, 1948, a comet was seen near the sun during a solar eclipse seen in Africa, months after the State of Israel was born in May 1948. What the site leaves out is that November 1948 is an important date in itself, especially considering the current discussion of borders: the November 1948 armistice line divided West and East Jerusalem. On the one hand, this was a great victory for Israel, securing control of much of the holy city and enabling it to begin to re-establish it as its capital. On the other hand, this left the Kotel and the Old City in the hands of Jordan, until 1967. Essentially, anyone supporting a return to 'pre-'67' borders is a supporter of the November 1948 armistice line. (Keep in mind: If all the Arab world wants is 1967 borders, why did they instigate war against Israel when the situation was exactly so?)

According to the the Talmud, Masechet Brachot (Tractate on Prayer), a solar (as opposed to a lunar) eclipse is a bad omen for non-Jews but a good sign for the Jewish people. During a solar eclipse, the strength of non-Jewish civilization is eclipsed, so to speak, by the moon, representative of the Jewish people. While the Gregogrian calendar is based on the sun's cycle, the Jewish holidays are celebrated according to the moon's movements, with modifications to align the calendar as a whole with the sun's cycle as well. This year, for example, an additional lunar month (Adar Bet) is inserted into the Jewish calendar, which will offset the trend of this year's 'early' Channukah. Lucky for us, Adar is the month of joy: the rabbis said that if one has an upcoming trial against a non-Jew, he should try to have the trial fall in the month of Adar. Since this year there are 2 Adars, there is twice as much eit ratzon, or time when we are judged with compassion.

In this way the moments of a solar eclipse, like the month of Adar, are auspicious: a relatively small effort on our behalf in the right direction can bring about massive shifts in the world and in the worlds above. 

If you read this in time, try to tune in with your thoughts, words and actions while Israel is experiencing moments of unhampered strength, by doing one or more of the following:

1. Say a chapter of Tehillim (Psalms), such as the one for your year (your age +1), or for a relative who passed away (the age they would be now +1), or one you connect to, with love for the entire Jewish people as one in mind.

2. Give tzedaka to the poor of Eretz Yisrael (if it's late where you are, then preferably online). By giving tzedaka to Eretz Yisrael, it is like we are fulfilling the mitzva of being here. Walking home through the center of town in Jerusalem yesterday evening, I encountered more people than ever collecting tzedaka. Old limping men, old religious women, young married women, all cold from the winds blowing as evening approaches. Tzedaka brings the geulah.

3. Learn Zohar or another book about the inner dimension of Torah, such as Rebbe Nachman's teachings, or Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh's books. Learning the inner dimension of Torah also has the power to bring about our collective and ultimate redemption.

4. Make someone you love happy. Cheering up a fellow Jew no matter what reasons there are for being down is a huge mitzvah.

5. Light a candle for a tzaddik and pray for what you or your loved ones need.

Kol HaYeshu'ot!!

Sunday, July 4, 2010

4th of July and the 3 weeks

יום העצמאות בארה"ב תש"ע = תלתא דפורענותא = 1648

July 4th, 1776 = י"ז בתמוז תרל"ו

Discuss with other readers in real-time