PURIM
PESACH PARSHAT HACHODESH
PESACH SHABBAT HAGADOL
PESACH
PESACH - 1st Day
PESACH - 2nd Day
PESACH - SHABBAT CHOL HAMOED
PESACH - SHABBAT of PESACH
PESACH - 7th Day
PESACH - 8th Day
PESACH - YIZKOR
ISRAEL INDEPENDENCE DAY
LAG B'OMER
SHAVUOS - FIRST DAY
SHAVUOS HOLIDAY
1975 |
1978
|
1979
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1980
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1981
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1984
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Defining Judaism- June 1986
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Fear, Joy, and Enhancement of Life- June 1995
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Is It Hard to be a Jew- May 1990
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Marriage, Responsibility, Forgiveness, and Being There- June 1996
|
New Beginnings, Relationships, The Seder, and Shavuos- May 2001
|
Noso- May 1983
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Problems, Inner Strength, Today, and Shavuos- June 1997
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Reading Others, False Impressions and Harmony- May 1991
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Relationships, Risk, Shavuos, and G_d- May 1994
|
Second Chances, The Physical, Spiritual, and Shavuos- June 2003
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Shavuos 1978 #2
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Shavuos 1980 #2
|
Shavuos #2
|
Shavuos #3
|
Shavuos Yiskor
|
Shavuos Yiskor Service 1978
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What a Jewish Education Must Have- May 1985
|
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SHAVUOS - SECOND DAY
TISHA B'AV
SELICHOS
ROSH HASHANA
American Judaism, Communism, and Collapse- 1991 |
Commitment, The Necessary Ingredient- 1989 |
Cooperation, Emotion, Morality, and School- 1993
|
Drugs, The Competitive Edge, and Judaism
|
Drugs, The Competitive Edge, and Judaism- 1989
|
Erev Rosh Hashana 1978
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Expectations, Rewards, and Parental Approval- 1996
|
Federation Dvar Torah- 1994
|
First Day Rosh Hashana
|
First Day Rosh Hashana 1979
|
First Day Rosh Hashana 1980
|
First Day Rosh Hashana 1992
|
First Day Rosh Hashana #2 |
First Day Rosh Hashana- Determining Which Beliefs Are True |
|
First Evening of Rosh Hashana- We Need To Be Judged
|
First Night Rosh Hashana |
First Night Rosh Hashana 1980
|
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First Night Rosh Hashana 2000
|
Free Will, Teshuva, and Making Right Moral Decisions- 2001
|
October 1982
|
October- Ki Thavo- 1981
|
Pain, Lies, Truth, and Renewal- 1992
|
Rosh Hashan- Jewish Herald Voice |
Rosh Hashana |
Rosh Hashana 1978 #2 |
Rosh Hashana 1978
|
Rosh Hashana #2 |
Rosh Hashana #3
|
Rosh Hashana #4
|
Rosh Hashana Stories for Children
|
Second Day Rosh Hashana
|
Second Day Rosh Hashana 1979
|
Second Day Rosh Hashana #2
|
Sin, Spirituality, Connectedness, and Mitzvahs- 1997
|
The Hidden Things Last Forever- 1988 |
Treaties, Dreams, and Differences- 1993 |
Uncertainty, Faith, and Charity
|
Uncertainty, Faith, and Charity- 1991 |
Weariness, The Inner Life, and Religion- 1990 |
|
Why We Dont Sound the Shofar on Shabbos
|
Why We Need Torah and Knowledge- 1986
|
Yaakov, Jewish Community, and Reclaiming Shabbat- 1994
|
Rosh Hashana Article 07-07-08 |
Rosh Hashana 2009 |
|
SHABBOS SHUVA
KOL NIDREI
YOM KIPPUR
Can Love of G_d Overwhelm Everything Else- 1984
|
Control, Relationships, Awe, G_d, and Yom Kipppur- 1999
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Guilt, Time, Repentance, and The Future- 1994
|
How Should We Judge People- 1984
|
How To Handle Rejection- 1990
|
Loneliness, Shame, and Teshuva- 1987
|
Not Encouraging Others is Also a Sin- 1987
|
Perfection, Depression, and The Sabbaths- 1985
|
Public Morality, Private Morality, and Leadership- 1992
|
Rampant, Individualism, Family, and Yeshiva- 1988
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Truth, Religion, and Interaction- 1986
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What Do We Mean by Teshuva- 1986
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What does Forgiving and To Be Forgiven Mean- 2000
|
Are You Running Away
|
Yizkor Yom Kippur 1984 |
Yom Kippur 1975 |
Yom Kippur 1977 #2 |
Yom Kippur 1977
|
Yom Kippur 1979 |
Yom Kippur 1980 #2
|
Yom Kippur 1980
|
Yom Kippur 1982
|
Yom Kippur 1993
|
Yom Kippur 1996
|
Yom Kippur 1998
|
Yom Kippur Day
|
Yom Kippur Day #2
|
Yom Kippur Eve
|
|
SUCCOT - FIRST DAY
SUCCOT - SECOND DAY
SHMINI ATZERES
CHANUKA
Chanuka is a Wonderful Holiday
|
Chanuka Story
|
Chanuka- You Needn't Be Blue
|
Chanuka_2000
|
Chanuka_Antisemitism, Withdrawl, Protests, & Violence 2000
|
Chanuka_Creativity, Judaism & Anti-Semitism 1988
|
Chanuka_Does Your Inner Light Glow 1973
|
Chanuka_Draydel Named Topper
|
Chanuka_Dreams, Cloaking, Action & Chanukah 1996
|
Chanuka_G-ds Promise & Reason 1985
|
Chanuka_Have You Found Peace 1967
|
Chanuka_Heartbreaking Problems 1979
|
Chanuka_How Does It Help Being Religious 1986
|
Chanuka_Love,Merging, Attachment & the Soul 1999
|
Chanuka_Mixed Messgaes, Persume Nisa & Action 1998
|
Chanuka_People Need People 1983
|
Chanuka_Perfection, Love Good People 1989
|
Chanuka_Rabbi, I Do Not Understand 1980
|
Chanuka_Routine An Moral Failure 1965
|
Chanuka_Should We Blur Or Stress Differences 1992
|
Chanuka_Should We Use Power 1983
|
Chanuka_The Importance of Hidden Things 1971
|
Chanuka_Time, Chanukah, Renewal & the Future 1997
|
Chanuka_Truth, Justice & Peace Must Be Simultaneous 1987
|
Chanuka_We Jews and the World 1982
|
Chanuka_Will Our Oil Last 1964
|
Chanuka-Latke Story
|
Papa Shames Girls Ballet Video Part 1
|
Papa Shames Girls Ballet Video Part 2
|
|
Obituary
Juliette Mizrahi Radinsky was born in Cairo, Egypt, on September 20,
1934 to emma and Eliezer Mizrahi. She passed away July 14, 2010 at her
home at the age of 75 years.
Juliette was a caring and
intelligent woman. She learned to speak five languages at a very early
age. She spoke French, Arabic, English, Italian, and Ladino (Spanish)
with her grandmother, Perla Mizrahi. She attended an English-American school.
She was a graduate of the American University of Cairo. She won a
scholarship to work towards her masters in Anthropology at the
University of Washington, where she met Joseph Reuben Radinsky. She
married Rabbi Joseph Radinsky on March 23, 1958. They had three
children, Devora Urkowitz, of blessed memory, Dena Radinsky, and
Eliezer Radinsky. Juliette and her husband have eleven grandchildren,
Tzvi and Michelle Urkowitz, Ariel Urkowitz, Eitan Urkowitiz, and Atara
Urkowitz, Rona Lipsky, Shuki Lipsky, and Zev Lipsky, Aviva Radinsky,
Penina Radinsky, Gila Radinsky, and Chavi Radinsky. They celebrated the
birth of their first great grandson, Ezra Urkowitz, earlier this year.
Juliette
was a wonderful wife, mother grandmother, and great grandmother, and
she was also an excellent Rebbetzin. While her husband worked as a
rabbi in Lafayette, Indiana for 13 years and in Houston for 34 years,
she was always available to counsel people. Many people called to seek
her sage advice. She also was a wonderful hostess and cook, and every
Friday night and Saturday afternoon, she would have many, many guests
at her home. She was also known for her wonderful Pesach meals and
hosted regularly close to fifty people. She was an active volunteer and
served as president of Amit Women and was Regional Officer for Midwest
Hadassah. She was an advisor to UOS Sisterhood and chaired many events.
She was a loving, caring wife, mother, grandmother, great grandmother,
aunt, and friend. She always spoke her mind and was known as a
proponent of women's rights even before it became popular. She was also
a very traditional, religious woman, and she was very charitable. She
would give food privately to those in need without them even knowing
from whom it came.
Rabbi Joseph Radinsky may be reached at (713) 729-6750 or
(713) 240-8890
His address is:
9311 Greenwillow
Houston, Texas 77096