As we prepare for Shabbat, remember when you need someone, lean on me.
Playing for Change shares Lean on Me.
Shabbat Shalom
As we prepare for Shabbat, remember when you need someone, lean on me.
Playing for Change shares Lean on Me.
Shabbat Shalom
Listen to the Music was a big hit for the Doobie Brothers and a fun way to welcome Shabbat especially when musicians from Playing for Change come together from around the world joining to sing its message.
So Listen ( and sing along) with the Music
Shabbat Shalom
Marvin Gaye’s classic song is performed by Playing for Change bringing musicians from around the world together to make beautiful music together. A wonderful framing for Shabbat.
Shabbat Shalom.
This Shabbat I wanted to share that we are together in a march towards a better place.
John Legend offers this beautiful rendition of the Simon and Garfunkel classic, Bridge Over Troubled Water.
Shabbat Shalom
Bob Marley sings Redemption Song
Shabbat Shalom
One Day…
Shalom Aleichem is the song about welcoming the Angels of Shabbat.
This version is an upbeat bluegrass-style written by Rabbi Micah Becker Klein and joined by Eric Aber- banjo, Jay Luft- bass, Eric Lindberg- dobro, Doni Zasloff- vocals.
It is good to sing a new song for Shabbat!
Shabbat Shalom
At Shabbat Dinner, we bless our children and spouses, wishing the best for them as they move forward through the challenges of life, ever so grateful for their presence in our life.
This Shabbat Alicia Keys soaring song Good Job offers such a blessing for those heroes among us.
Shabbat Shalom
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N63tvQBwSSw
Ana Bekoach is a mystical prayer employing the 42 letters of the name of God to create this mystical prayer. The acrostic is seven lines of six words each. The prayer is attributed to Nechuniah dating back to second- century Israel.
Siddur Lev Shalem explains a particular phrase Tatir Tz’rurah, Undo the Knot, as perhaps referring to the exile in both its physical and spiritual sense. As we enter Shabbat, we pray that all that has kept us physically and spiritually constrained give way; instead, we hope to begin experiencing the gentle expansiveness of Shabbat. This plea reflects the mystical view that the forces of judgment, constriction, and negativity should not have power or authority on Shabbat.
Shabbat Shalom