Search Results for: Guest house
Cleveland Heights Shabbos Guest House!
Cleveland Heights Shabbos Guest House!
Cleveland Heights Shabbos Guest House!
Cleveland Heights Shabbos Guest House!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Short Term Rent!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Rent or Purchase!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Rent or Purchase!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Rent or Purchase!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Rent or Purchase!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Rent or Purchase!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Rent or Purchase!
Great Cleveland Heights House for Rent or Purchase!
Why It Really Is So Important Not to Travel or Have Guests for Pesach – Pikuach Nefesh Literally is in Your Grasp
by Mendel Singer, PhD, MPH (Master of Public Health)
The consensus is remarkably broad: Rabbinical experts, leading physicians, the CDC and Hatzolos. They all agree. People should not be traveling for Pesach. People from the hard hit NY/NJ/CT area especially should not be traveling and shouldn’t be leaving home except for the true necessities. In Lakewood, Rabbinic and medical leaders are telling people not to get together for Pesach – even within Lakewood! This is very hard to do. New chossonim and kallos will be making Pesach by themselves. Families will be apart. It will be hard logistically and emotionally. It may mean using kulos you normally wouldn’t rely on. But is it really necessary? But my (fill in the blank) can’t make Pesach. Can’t? There are some cases where this is literally true. But we need to
ask ourselves – what if being together for Pesach causes, chas v’shalom, a tragedy? Hashem would know. Your family would know. Certain friends and neighbors would know. But most importantly, you would know. How would you live with yourself? After all the experts said not to do it.
We are hearing of terrible tragedies, not just sick elderly, but some healthy frum people in their 30’s and 40’s who have died. About 1/3 of cases are age 20-44, and about 1 in 5 of the hospitalization. This is all too real. Who is at risk? All adults are at risk. Some are at greater risk of death than others. How many will get infected? We are expecting several hundred thousand cases in Ohio alone. How many will die? Way too many.
But we can be very careful in the house! We can clean constantly! When a person with COVID-19 coughs, droplets travel up to 6 feet – and onto surfaces. On metal, it survives for about 2 days. And people touch things! And then they touch their face – about every 3-5 minutes, though they aren’t aware of it. If an infected individual is in the house, before they even know they have the infection, they will be leaving the virus around the house. If someone is isolated in the house, they will have touched things first before reaching their area of isolation. Someone else will interact with that person. It is very hard to contain. There are many large families where all members got the infection.
What if the visitors and the local family just all self-quarantine for 14 days? But it may be much, much longer than 14 days. During those 14 days, if someone gets infected, you now have 14 days from then. That could repeat again for each person in the house getting infected. 14 days could easily turn into a month. And what happens if you have trouble with your refrigerator/oven/plumbing around/during Pesach? How do you get it fixed?
What we don’t know can kill. How many people are infected but show no symptoms? We can’t know until we have capacity to do population testing. Can these people without symptoms transmit the infection – yes, but we don’t know how common that is. How many children are infected without symptoms and able to transmit? We don’t know. Does recovering from the virus mean you’re immune? Most likely, but we don’t know for how long. It certainly isn’t expected to be lifelong immunity. Will immunity last until the end of this outbreak, including potential second wave in the fall? We don’t know. We know some people have tested positive within a month after recovering and having tested negative, though the cases we know about haven’t had symptoms. Can they transmit? We don’t know. But we are literally learning more every day.
But maybe we will all end up getting it eventually anyway? The extreme measures we are adopting is intended not only to minimize the number of cases, but to “flatten the curve” – minimize the number of cases at any one time so we don’t overwhelm our hospitals and intensive care units. This is a real concern. In NY, Gov. Cuomo is talking about a huge shortage of ventilators in the next 2 weeks. Many other states are not far behind. Our local hospitals are very concerned. But that isn’t the only reason to try and delay cases. It won’t be that long before we know much more about the effectiveness of several promising treatments that are being tested now. Delaying cases may mean pushing cases to a time when it can be treated successfully. The stay home measures are critical to saving lives – perhaps someone you love, or even you. A vaccine is a long way off. Several have just started testing, but to know that they work and to mass produce it – probably 8 to 12 months. Meanwhile, social distancing, stay home and various other measures are our primary means of saving lives. That and washing our hands very well and often. 20 seconds, with soap.
In Lakewood they sell “Pesach meals in a box” – all 10 Yom Tov meals for a family of 5 for $349. Where there is need, people step in. Videos are posted teaching how to make Pesach at home. We can do this.
But there’s another way to look at this – a more positive way. We have a very great opportunity. By not getting together with others, by not traveling for Pesach, we can be oisek in the mitzvah of pikuach nefesh! I have confirmed this with HaRav Boruch Hirschfeld, Shlita. How many of us have dreamed of having the chance to save a life, to fulfill the mitzvah of pikuach nefesh? This is your chance. The people who do this mitzvah daily are begging you. And many have changed their plans. Yasher koach to them all!
As a professor who does public and population health, I am speaking out. My colleagues and many former students of mine are working day and night at the Cuyahoga County Board of Health or at/with the hospitals, or other community health organizations. As someone who suffers from an immune system disorder, I can’t be on the front lines with them. I am at home. Like most of us should be.
Stay Home, Save Lives. Pikuach nefesh is literally within your grasp.
Mendel Singer, PhD MPH
Associate Professor and Vice Chair for Education
Department of Population and Quantitative Health Sciences
Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine
Yeshivat Netiv Aryeh – Open House
Cleveland Friends of Yeshivat Netiv Aryeh invite alumni, friends, parents and prospective talmidim to an open house. Thursday, November 9, 2017, 8-10pm at the home of Jeffrey and Adina Soclof, 4470 University Parkway, University Heights, OH.
Featured Guest: Rav Chanan Bina, Rebbe
Yeshivat Netiv Aryeh – Open House
Cleveland Friends of Yeshivat Netiv Aryeh invite alumni, friends, parents and prospective talmidim to an open house. Thursday, November 9, 2017, 8-10pm at the home of Jeffrey and Adina Soclof, 4470 University Parkway, University Heights, OH.
Featured Guest: Rav Chanan Bina, Rebbe
5 Bedroom House for Sale 24474 Maidstone Ln Beachwood $459,000 – REDUCED (Photo Gallery)
5 Bedrooms + Office/3.5 Bathrooms on a Beautifully Landscaped 1/2 Acre in Beachwood. 4,152 square feet.
- Full Home Audio and Smart Light Switches
- New Appliances (Stainless Fridge, Double Oven, 2 Water Heaters, etc.)
- Large Master Bath with Steam Shower, Hot Tub and Heated Floor
- Open Floor Plan with Full Guest Suite
- Spacious Backyard with Waterfall & Fish Pond and Wooden Swingset
- Office/Exercise Room/Extra Bedroom
- Walking Distance to Beachwood Park, Aquatic Center and Shuls (.7 miles from Green Road Shuls)
5 Bedroom House for Sale 24474 Maidstone Ln Beachwood $459,000 – REDUCED (Photo Gallery)
5 Bedrooms + Office/3.5 Bathrooms on a Beautifully Landscaped 1/2 Acre in Beachwood. 4,152 square feet.
- Full Home Audio and Smart Light Switches
- New Appliances (Stainless Fridge, Double Oven, 2 Water Heaters, etc.)
- Large Master Bath with Steam Shower, Hot Tub and Heated Floor
- Open Floor Plan with Full Guest Suite
- Spacious Backyard with Waterfall & Fish Pond and Wooden Swingset
- Office/Exercise Room/Extra Bedroom
- Walking Distance to Beachwood Park, Aquatic Center and Shuls (.7 miles from Green Road Shuls)
5 Bedroom House for Sale 24474 Maidstone Ln Beachwood $479,000 (Photo Gallery)
5 Bedrooms + Office/3.5 Bathrooms on a Beautifully Landscaped 1/2 Acre in Beachwood. 4,152 square feet.
- Full Home Audio and Smart Light Switches
- New Appliances (Stainless Fridge, Double Oven, 2 Water Heaters, etc.)
- Large Master Bath with Steam Shower, Hot Tub and Heated Floor
- Open Floor Plan with Full Guest Suite
- Spacious Backyard with Waterfall & Fish Pond and Wooden Swingset
- Office/Exercise Room/Extra Bedroom
- Walking Distance to Beachwood Park, Aquatic Center and Shuls (.7 miles from Green Road Shuls)
5 Bedroom House for Sale 24474 Maidstone Ln Beachwood $479,000 (Photo Gallery)
5 Bedrooms + Office/3.5 Bathrooms on a Beautifully Landscaped 1/2 Acre in Beachwood. 4,152 square feet.
- Full Home Audio and Smart Light Switches
- New Appliances (Stainless Fridge, Double Oven, 2 Water Heaters, etc.)
- Large Master Bath with Steam Shower, Hot Tub and Heated Floor
- Open Floor Plan with Full Guest Suite
- Spacious Backyard with Waterfall & Fish Pond and Wooden Swingset
- Office/Exercise Room/Extra Bedroom
- Walking Distance to Beachwood Park, Aquatic Center and Shuls (.7 miles from Green Road Shuls)
Beachwood House for Sale
Buckhurst Drive in Beachwood. Mid-century modern split-Level. 4- Bedroom, 3 Full-Baths, 2-1/2 Baths. Finished basement with office. Spacious full guest suite with kitchen. One acre corner lot. $330,000. Call 216-454-0110.
Beachwood House for Sale
Buckhurst Drive in Beachwood. Mid-century modern split-Level. 4- Bedroom, 3 Full-Baths, 2-1/2 Baths. Finished basement with office. Spacious full guest suite with kitchen. One acre corner lot. $330,000. Call 216-454-0110.
Hachnosas Sefer Torah at Yeshivas Tiferes Avigdor – June 28th
(Previously posted with incorrect date)
On Sunday, June 28th, Yeshivas Tiferes Avigdor (Rabbi Brog’s Yeshiva) in Wickliffe will be hosting a Hachnosas Sefer Torah starting at 1pm from Beis Avner (Telshe guest house), followed by a hot buffet.
Hachnosas Sefer Torah at Yeshivas Tiferes Avigdor – June 28th
(Previously posted with incorrect date)
On Sunday, June 28th, Yeshivas Tiferes Avigdor (Rabbi Brog’s Yeshiva) in Wickliffe will be hosting a Hachnosas Sefer Torah starting at 1pm from Beis Avner (Telshe guest house), followed by a hot buffet.
Hachnosas Sefer Torah at Yeshivas Tiferes Avigdor
On Sunday, June 21st, Yeshivas Tiferes Avigdor (Rabbi Brog’s Yeshiva) in Wickliffe will be hosting a Hachnosas Sefer Torah starting at 1pm from Beis Avner (Telshe guest house), followed by a hot buffet.
Mezuzah on a Rental By Rabbi Yirmiyohu Kaganoff
(RabbiKaganoff.com)
Question #1: Tenancy
“We rented a new apartment but did not put up mezuzos immediately, figuring that we had thirty days to do so. Someone told me that Rav Moshe held that we should put up mezuzos immediately. Is that true?”
Question #2: Temporary Dwelling
“When we went to visit our children in Ramat Beit Shemesh for two weeks, they had borrowed for us a brand-new apartment that the owners themselves had not yet used. I was surprised to see mezuzos on the doors already. My son-in-law explained that he put up mezuzos in the entire apartment, so that we could use it. Was he required to do so? I thought that one is not required to have mezuzos unless one lives in a place for at least a month.”
Cleveland Heights’ Excellent Location Corner of Shannon and Janette
HOUSE RENTAL – HALF OF LARGE DUPLEX
3553 SHANNON RD. – RECENTLY FULLY REMODELLED
FIVE BEDROOMS; TWO AND ONE-HALF BATHS
(TWO BEDROOMS AND ONE BATH ON THE THIRD FLOOR – GREAT FOR GUESTS)
CENTRAL AIR
KOSHER KITCHEN
*FLEISHIG SINK AND OVEN/RANGE
*MILCHIG SINK AND OVEN/RANGE
LARGE BASEMENT W/STORAGE
AVAILABLE AUGUST 1
Open Letter to the Cleveland Orthodox Jewish Community From Over 60 Concerned Doctors
PDF of Cleveland Doctors Letter
As Torah observant Jews, we recognize the obligation to save lives (נפשׁ פּיקוּח (as a value that overrides nearly every other religious obligation. We likewise seek to avoid situations of נפּשׁוֹת סכּנת) threats to human life), even when undertaken for supremely important purposes – tefilla, celebrations of shabbos and yom tov and Torah study. As physicians, we are concerned that over the next few weeks and months our community will see an increase in the local spread of COVID19, which could ו”ח ּendanger the health and lives of many of our friends, neighbors and family. We write what follows both to reiterate basic public health principles and warn the community about specific risks to be avoided.
The following are the basic principles of infection control that remain as relevant now as when this pandemic began:
- COVID-19 is an airborne virus that is spread primarily through respiratory droplets: Talking, coughing, singing, and shouting generate droplets that can travel significant distances and remain on surfaces for hours. This means that our davening and simchas are not risk-free; such gatherings can be the starting point for serious outbreaks.
- Masks (when worn over both the nose and mouth) reduce the spread of these respiratory droplets and decrease the likelihood of being infected and infecting others. This is not a political opinion or ideological fad; it has been an accepted infection control practice in the clinic, hospital ward, and operating room for the past century.
- Physical distancing, even while outdoors, protects you and others from coming into contact with infectious material. By the same principle, coming close to other people – even sharing a l’chaim or leaning in to wish a “mazel tov” – can spread infection. Any crowded event, even if planned carefully and with the best of intentions, can lead to the spread of the virus. This includes such normally benign venues as a beis medrash or men’s mikva during the pre-yom tov rush.
- The virus can spread after the crowd is gone by remaining on one’s hands after touching a contaminated person or surface. If the hands come close to the eyes, nose, and mouth, minutes or even hours later, COVID-19 can enter. Sanitizing the hands thoroughly and often is essential to staying safe.
- You do not need to feel sick to be contagious. Data demonstrate COVID patients can be contagious up to two days prior to exhibiting symptoms, or can be infected without any symptoms at all, making it easy for COVID-19 to spread silently among or between households and communities. That means you don’t have to look or feel sick to get others sick. But if you do feel unwell, it is especially important to protect those around you by isolating yourself.
We ask that every member of our community re-commit to keeping everyone safe by:
- Avoiding creating or attending events in which there is crowding.
- Wearing a mask – properly and consistently – in shul, in the beis medrash and in school – and teaching your children to do the same.
- Isolating or quarantining after exposure to high risk situations, even if it means missing out on shul, school or a simcha.
- Being mindful of the risks when traveling to, or hosting guests from, other communities and geographic regions.
As physicians, we remind you to:
- Consider what we all have to lose: Local schools and shuls have invested enormous amounts of energy, time and money toward the goal of bringing us back in person. Rabbonim, doctors and lay leaders have set aside other projects to devote themselves almost exclusively to this goal. This achievement should not be taken for granted nor assumed to be permanent.
- Trust medicine and science: While there are many uncertainties in medicine, what we have written is based on the best available scientific evidence right now. As doctors, we began our careers with a commitment to “do no harm” and we are now asking the same of our community.
- Remember what this virus is capable of doing: Our friends and family in the New York area have had first-hand experience with the carnage of an out-of-control epidemic. That our community, ה”בּ ,was unaffected a few months ago does not mean that we are immune now. This virus has killed nearly 200,000 people, in the United States and over 1,000 in Israel, and while we may be tired, it is not. This is no time to let down our guard.
We conclude with wishes for year of health, success and safety for our entire community, and with earnest prayers to the Ribono Shel Olam to protect His people.
Names appear in alphabetical order and have been updated as of 9/17/2020, 4:00 PM
Mark Aeder MD General and Transplant Surgery
Josh Arbesman MD Dermatology
Daniel Asher MD Anesthesiology, Cardiothoracic Anesthesiology
David Bar-Shain MD Pediatrics, Clinical Informatics
Akiva Berger DDS General Dentistry
Nate Bergman DO Internal Medicine, Geriatrics
Yael Dahan MD Anesthesiology
Joel David DO Internal Medicine
Francine Erenberg MD Pediatric Cardiology
Ben Esraeilian DPM Podiatry
Daniel Fleksher MD Internal Medicine
Elisha Fredman MD Radiation Oncology
Rachel Garber MD Pediatrics
Sara Goldman MD Psychiatry, Adult Inpatient Psychiatry
Jessica Goldstein MD Emergency Medicine
David Gottesman MD Gastroenterology
Dovid Gutman MD Internal Medicine
Adam Haas MD Anesthesiology
Rafi Israeli MD Emergency Medicine
Avi Jacobs MD Cardiology
Lawrence Jacobs MD Cardiology
Daniel Kahn DO Nephrology
Saul Kane MD Gastroenterology
Fred Kessler MD Gastroenterology
Jonathan Klein MD Emergency Medicine
Michael Kurin MD Gastroenterology
Jeffrey Lautman MD Nephrology
David Lever MD Gastroenterology
Yehudah Lindenberg MD Neurology
David Liska MD Colorectal Surgery
Rebecca Lowenthal MD, MPH Family Medicine
Leon Margolin MD Pain Medicine
Shmuel Margolin MD Internal Medicine
Yael Mauer MD, MPH Internal Medicine, Primary care and hospital medicine
Bryan Michelow MD Plastic Surgery
Howard Nathan MD Internal Medicine, Hospitalist
Joel Peerless MD Critical Care
Meir Pollack MD Gastroenterology
Moshe Prero MD Pediatrics
Michael Rothberg MD, MPH Internal Medicine
Yosef Rudolph MD Neurology
Samuel Salamon MD Ophthalmology
Yehuda Salamon MD Anesthesiology
Amy Schechter MD Internal Medicine
Gila Schiowitz DO Pediatrics, Hospitalist
Steven Schwartz MD Geriatrics
Seth Sclair MD Gastroenterology, Transplant Hepatology
Shelly Senders MD Pediatrics
Anna Serels MD Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation
Marina Shpilko DO Emergency Medicine
Warren Sobol MD Ophthalmology, Retina
Benjamin Spinner MD Psychiatry, Child Psychiatry
Josh Sunshine MD Neurology
Ira Taub MD Pediatrics, Pediatric Cardiology
Yael Taub MD Emergency Medicine
Philip Toltzis MD Pediatric Critical Care, Infectious Disease
Franky Weinberger DO Rheumatology
Rachel Weinerman MD Reproductive Endocrinology and Infertility
Ari Wiesen MD Gastroenterology
Carly Wilbur MD Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine
Brian Wolovitz MD Internal Medicine
Rebbetzin Shula Kazen, 96, The ‘Queen of Cleveland’
Revered for her fiery personality and rock-solid faith forged during a childhood in the former Soviet Union, Rebbetzin Shula Shifra Kazen nourished, guided and inspired thousands during decades of communal leadership in Cleveland, Ohio. She passed away on March 24 in New York at the age of 96.
She was born in 1922 in Gomel, Belarus, then part of the newly-created Soviet Union.1 The eldest of seven children born to Rabbi Yitzchak Elchanan and Maryasha (Garelik) Shagalov, her life began in difficult circumstances. Russia had been devastated by the terrible civil war that birthed the Bolshevik revolution, and thousands were dying of starvation.
When the family dreamed of bread, Maryasha Shagalov told Shula to recite Psalms with concentration, and the day would come when they would have more than enough food. Shula prized saying Psalms, something that would sustain and encourage her for the rest of her long life.
By law, all children were required to attend public school, where Communist ideals were taught. Determined to raise their family according to Jewish law and tradition, the Shagalovs refused to send their children to the public schools. Eventually, the large family became known to the government, which revoked their rations of food and fuel, and even had them evicted from their home onto the frozen streets.
The Shagalovs moved into the local synagogue, where Elchanan continued battling for Jewish life, which included serving as mohel (circumcisor). He was often accompanied by Shula, who assisted him in his sacred (and illegal) task.
In 1937, he was arrested for illegal activities in support of Judaism for the last time. Years later it was learned that he was executed three months after his arrest, but his widow and orphans were left wondering about his fate for decades.
Facing an unrelenting barrage of pressure from the Communist government, Maryasha had no choice but to send her children into hiding. As the eldest, 14-year-old Shula took a 12-hour trip to the home of Rabbi Bentzion (Bentche) and Esther Golda Shemtov, pillars of the underground Chabad-Lubavitch network of Jewish life.
The Shemtovs sent her to Moscow, where she found work in a knitting factory that Bentzion Shemtov had arranged. It was one of the few places where people could find legal employment that did not require them to work on Shabbat.
Her job was to carry hundred-pound bags of material on her back from the supplier to the factory. After the material was made into scarves or other headgear, Shula would carry it to the buyer, who would pay her. Shula helped support her mother and younger siblings with her earnings.
Shortly after she turned 18, Shula was introduced to her future husband, Zalman Katzenelenbogen (later shortened to Kazen). Like her, he had also lost his father to the Communists in the dreadful purge of the fall of 1937.
Shula did not have a single decent outfit in which to meet her future husband. One friend loaned her stockings, another a shawl, a third one a coat, and somehow she was able to obtain boots. The only clothing she owned was a dress and a coat that “grew” with her. She received the coat at age ten, refitted it countless times, and wore it up to her wedding. For her wedding, a friend sewed her a white dress made of inexpensive fabric.
The wedding was held on 12 Elul, 1940, in a forest at the edge of Malachovka, outside of Moscow. Any religious ceremony was punishable by imprisonment or death, including a traditional Jewish wedding, so it had to take place in complete secrecy. After their wedding, Shula and Zalman Kazen settled in Leningrad. [Read more…]
Making Dairy Bread II By Rabbi Yirmiyohu Kaganoff
(RabbiKaganoff.com)
Question #1: The Whey to Celebrate Shavuos!
“May I add dairy ingredients to bread that I intend to serve with a milchig meal on Shavuos?”
Question #2: English Danish
“Is one permitted to make pastry with butter when it will not be noticeable that the product is dairy?”
Question #3: Sour Cream Kugel
“As my daughter was preparing a kugel for seudah shlishis, she added sour cream to the dough. The kugel is too large to consume at one meal, even for our large family. Once it is removed from its oven tray, there will be no indication that it is dairy. May we eat it?”