Posted on 02/15/2015 8:29:28 AM PST by jonatron
Shul - a Synagogue
Bas Mitzvah - Girls' version of the Bar Mitzvah coming-of-age celebration.
Motzei Shabbos - Saturday night after the completion of the day of rest.
Parshas Mishpatim - The weekly biblical portion : Exodus 21:124:18
You are TARGET if you stand unarmed, in uniform, in plain sight.
A “Security Guard” is armed with a first line of defense in front of him.
Who was the shooter? There was more than one - what about the others?
Shooter as shot and killed by police in a subway station.
Name with held so far. Want to guess?
Time to stand up to them! They are p***ssies, and run crying at the slightest resistance!
Let's go krystalnacht on them and see how the sand nazis like it!
“Want to guess?”
Alex, can I have an “M”?
Sounds like an organized attack.
But....Obama sez it’s just random.
So Jews are specifically targeted. When will. $hitface call them random folk?
Sounds like another Obama random shooting. -Tom
Oxymoron: Unarmed “Security Guard”
“Oxymoron: Unarmed Security Guard
Exactly. An unarmed security guard is just another barmitzvah guest.
Uh...not a Nordic name?
It is entirely legitimate for the American people to be deeply concerned when youve got a bunch of violent, vicious zealots who behead people or randomly shoot a bunch of folks at a Bas Mitzvah in Copenhagen.
The way I read it was the “security guard” was a volunteer from the congregation and had no security training. He was just another unarmed citizen wearing a target.
The left will use the Copenhagen shootings as the catalyst to call for a ban on smokeless tobacco.
Around here it seems to be spelled and pronounced bat mitzvah not bas mitzvah. Been to enough of them to be pretty sure about it.
Seems theres some variation.
‘Bas mitzvah’ would generally identify one as from a more traditional Ashkenaz background where Yiddish was likely spoken at least at one time in the past.
‘Bat’ would indicate being more comfortable with modern Hebrew, or perhaps from a Sefardi background.
The same breakout is sometimes evident in pronouncing something as common as Yis-rah-AYL vs. Yis-ROH-ul for Israel.
Where I am is San Francisco, so the local Jews seem to be mainly Ashkenazi US types here for many generations, with a fair sprinkling of new immigrant Israelis.
San Francisco is noted for having very few orthodox Jews, so the preference for ‘bat’ likely is a statement about being more comfortable with the modernity of modern Hebrew.
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