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Phyllis Wexler & Mimi Abramson Celebrate Bat Mitzvahs in Israel
Delray Beach's Phyllis Wexler & Boca Raton's Mimi Abramson Have Bat Mitzvahs Under Hadassah Hospital's Famed Chagall Stained Glass Windows

Hadassah Florida Members Phylis Wexler and Mimi Abramson Celebrate Their Bat Mitzvahs Against Stunning Backdrop of Marc Chagall’s 12 Stained Glass Windows at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem
Hadassah Florida Region members Phyllis Wexler from Delray Beach and Mimi Abramson from Boca Raton read from the Sefer Torah at their bat mitzvah against the backdrop of the famed 12 Marc Chagall-designed, stained glass windows in the Abell Synagogue at Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem in Jerusalem. Wexler and Abramson participated in Hadassah’s recent 70th Anniversary of the State of Israel Mission. A bat mitzvah, a traditional Jewish religious ritual for Jewish girls which usually takes place at the age of 12, is a “coming of age” ceremony in which she is now responsible for performing her own “mitzvot” (commandment or good deed) and accepting her responsibilities in the Jewish religion. The tradition for bat mitzvah ceremonies for adult Jewish women began in the U.S. about three decades ago. A Sefer Torah is a hand-written copy of the Torah usually stored in the holiest spot in the synagogue along a wall that most closely faces Jerusalem. Chagall’s 12 stained glass windows, inspired by the Bible’s stories of Jacob’s blessings to his 12 sons and Moses’ blessings to the 12 tribes of Israel, were unveiled in the presence of the artist at the opening of the Abell Synagogue at the 50th anniversary of the Hadassah Medical Organization in Israel in 1962.
Photo Credit: Hadassah
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MEDIA INQUIRIES:
Contact: Renee Young
Hadassah National Public Relations
ryoung@hadassah.org
212.303.8140
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