Tomorrow Only: Rare Opportunity to Be Blessed by the Tzaddik and Mekubal Rav Yeshayahu Pinto During Son’s Bar Mitzvah.
Rav Yeshayahu Pinto, shlit”a, a ga’on and mekubal, is a grandson of the Baba Sali, and a great tzaddik and mekubal in his own right. He was recently appointed Chief Rabbi of Morocco—the birthplace of the Abuchatzeira family—by the King of Morocco.
His Manhattan residence is a center for the dissemination of Torah, which draws masses of Yidden, as well as the greatest Admorim and Roshei Yeshiva from around the world who come to receive the brachos of the great mekubal. Wherever he goes, whether Eretz Yisroel, Morocco, or the Upper West Side, he is inundated by the masses.
In recent months, the Rav has been afflicted with a terrible illness—which has not stopped him from disseminating Torah—but has prevented him from seeing the masses of Klal Yisroel.
Tomorrow, Monday, throughout the entire day, the doors will be open for a rare opportunity.
The occasion is the bar mitzvah of his beloved son, Meir Eliyahu. The celebration will begin with Hanachas Tefillin in the morning. This will be followed by three (!) hachnasas sifrei Torah (one in the memory of Rabbeinu Yoel of Satmar, and the other two in memory of the Rav’s grandparents). Throughout the day, the Rav will receive people in honor of these occasions, distributing honey and many brachos in anticipation of a blessed, sweet year.
Beginning at 8:30 in the morning, the doors will be open… with the celebrations lasting until late into the afternoon. Anyone wishing to seize this rare opportunity to receive these rare and precious brachos is welcome to make their way to the Shuva Yisrael Center, 122 East 58th Street, where they are sure to walk away inspired and blessed for a year filled with sweetness and blessing
3 comments:
How can one find out if women are welcome? Or how it works with a woman going in alone...
The address is Shuva Yisrael Center, 122 East 58th Street. You can look up the soul phone number and call the Rabbi there, or someone else, and ask them. I’m sure there is a women’s section.
K’siva v’Chasima Tova
Presume he himself is from the famous holy family Pinto, Rav Chaim Yosef Pinto, who was a chief Rabbi of Morocco. They stem originally from Portugal.
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