Chaya epstein chicago




















The secret of how we're still here! Birkat Kohanim - No strings attached! Wait 'til you hear what words can do! But really Is this Jewish compassion? What's at stake?

Wild details of the tenth and final plague. Class 1. Chanuka Bonus. The power of tears, the danger of tears.. Her great impact. Back to Basics Classes. I present before you today a blessing and a curse Chaya Rivka Epstein, Resides in Lakewood, NJ. Includes Address 5 Phone 5 Email 3. Resides in Brooklyn, NY. Also known as Chava Epstein. Includes Address 3 Phone 2 Email 1. Includes Address 2 Phone 2 Email 1. Resides in Monroe, NY. Also known as Chaye Epstein. Includes Address 4 Phone 3 Email 8.

Includes Address 1 Phone 2 Email 3. Includes Address 1 Phone 1. In Brooklyn, the pious set curbside bonfires of suspect sheitels, and there have been reports of wig burnings in Israel. The Chicago Rabbinical Council has called for calm even as local sheitel vendors report a rash of phone calls from customers anxious to know their wigs' provenance. The crisis could lead to the greatest product recall in the history of Judaism, but it also touches on broader concerns, as it opens the sensitive issue of differences between faiths.

According to Orthodox teaching, because hair is erotically attractive a married woman should reserve its viewing for her husband's pleasure. The purity of sheitels having been called into question, some Orthodox women are taking the alternative of wearing a snood or a hat.

But in the Lubavitch branch of the Orthodox community, to which Epstein belongs, a human-hair wig is considered optimal, as it fits tightly over a woman's locks, completely covering them. When the controversy reached the North Side school where Epstein teaches, she considered exchanging her wig for one made of artificial hair. Then she recalled a bit of rabbinical reasoning known as a double doubt.

India is a leading supplier to the international hairpiece market, with much of the hair collected at the Tirupati temple in southern India. Besides going into sheitels, it is used to make wigs for those who have lost their own hair to disease.

Rabbi Shalom Elyashiv, a spiritual leader of Israel's Orthodox community, last month decided that Indian hair violated avoda zara, the prohibition against idol worship. Amid the uproar that ensued, the Chicago Rabbinical Council has been trying to steer a middle course, according to its executive director, Rabbi Joseph Ozarowski.

The group, which enrolls local Orthodox rabbis, has advised that sheitels known to be made from Indian hair should not be destroyed but set aside, pending further investigation of the religious implications of their origin.



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