Shlomo Carlebach - Leaving Judaism, Converting to Judaism, #Messiah / Stories - Messianic Age
Reb Shlomo Carlebach ztl - Leaving Judaism, non-Jews Converting to Judaism, and Embracing the Torah of the #Messiah" #mashiach #shlomocarlebach #rebnachmansays #converting Traffic to Mount Sinai during the times of the Messiah 1:11 Jewish community in Curaçao Dutch island / Caribbean 5:46 Reb Nachman Says 6:24 Torah on why people are Leaving Judaism, or Converting to Judaism, Mount Sinai 9:27 Torah of harav kook - 10:52 religion is going through three stages 12:16 Now we are entering the third phase. 13:58 reb tzadok hakohen 15:24 Reb Shlomo. Many years ago, there was a big ecumenical meeting with representatives from all Christian denominations and Eastern religions. Surprisingly, I was also invited to attend The Jewish community in Curaçao can be traced back to the mid-17th century, when the first Jewish immigrants arrived from Spain, Portugal, and the Netherlands. The first Jewish settler was Samuel Cohen, a Dutch-Jewish interpreter who arrived in 1634 on a Dutch fleet. These immigrants established Congregation Mikvé Israel-Emanuel, the oldest synagogue in the Americas that is still in use today In 1492, the Jews of Spain, after years of persecution and forced conversion to Catholicism, were expelled en masse. Initially, they sought refuge in nearby Portugal but eventually spread throughout Europe into other places with larger Jewish populations, like Belgium, Greece, Italy, Turkey, and Holland.[1] So many of the Sephardic Jews from Spain and Portugal had settled in Amsterdam, that by the year 1700, the city's community was the largest Jewish center in Western Europe. When the Dutch West India Company began efforts to exploit the resources of the Americas and was placed in charge of colonizing, the Sephardim became involved as translators and traders. The Dutch first moved into the previously Portuguese-led colonies in Brazil and then expanded to other Portuguese and Spanish colonies in the Caribbean