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Now known as Hatzalah South Florida Emergency Medical Services, the non-profit volunteer organization is a fully licensed advanced life support service provider, and provides emergency basic life support and advanced life support response and transport in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties, serving communities in some areas of ...
Camp Sol Taplin is one of the largest and most experienced Jewish summer day camps in the area, featuring more than 20 camp themes with activities for every interest. Recently added facilities on campus include a gymnastics studio for its competitive and recreational gymnastics programs, Cycling studio, Group and Private Pilates studios, and ...
Rabbi Samuel Machtai, the "Radio Rabbi", conducted the first High Holy Days Services in 1942. The service was held in a storefront, where 20 Miami Beach Jewish families gathered to provide a house of worship for themselves and for Jewish servicemen. [2] Two years later, the Beth Sholom Jewish Center decided to hire a full-time rabbi.
More than 900 donors and guests were expected to attend the largest single fundraising event in Miami-Dade’s Jewish community, including Israel’s former Prime Minister Naftali Bennett.
Values like family, food, humor and resilience can help Miami’s Black and Jewish communities build bridges, Glendon Hall and Joshua Sayles argue.
MIAMI - A portion of Southwest 2nd. Avenue was officially named in honor of Isidor Cohen, one of Miami's first Jewish settlers, merchant and civic booster, in a ceremony that highlighted the ...
The main office of Westchester Hills Cemetery. The synagogue created the Westchester Hills Cemetery of the Free Synagogue in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York in 1919 when it acquired the northern portion of the non–sectarian Mount Hope Cemetery, which had been created in the 19th century. There are some 1,500 individual grave sites, a Community ...
The original Hatzalah emergency medical services (EMS) was founded in Williamsburg, a neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, by Hershel Weber in the late 1960s. [3] His aim was to improve rapid emergency medical response in the community, and to mitigate cultural concerns of a Yiddish-speaking, Hasidic community.