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| All Videos Not Recorded on Sabbath or Holiday |
1934-2010
Any person who has children who study Torah and who has encouraged
other children
to study Torah is considered as if that person never died
Rabbi Mark Urkowitz - Son-in-Law Eulogy
Rona Lipsky & Atara Urkowitz - Granddaughters Eulogy
Rabbi Eliezer Radinsky - Son Eulogy
Rabbi David Radinsky - Brother-in-Law Eulogy
Rabbi Joseph Radinsky - Husband Eulogy
| Bar Mitzvah Speech | 1998 |
| Parshas HaChodesh | Why Shabbos HaChodesh |
Obituary
Juliette Mizrahi Radinsky was born in Cairo, Egypt, on September 20, 1934 to emma and Eliezer Mizrahi. She passed away July 14, 2010 at her home at the age of 75 years.
Juliette was a caring and intelligent woman. She learned to speak five languages at a very early age. She spoke French, Arabic, English, Italian, and Ladino (Spanish) with her grandmother, Perla Mizrahi. She attended an English-Arabic. She was a graduate of the American University of Cairo. She wonw a scholarship to work towards her masters in Anthropology at the University of Washington, where she met Joseph Reuben Radinsky. She married Rabbi Joseph Radinsky on March 23, 1958. They had three children, Devora Urkowitz, of blessed memory, Dena Radinsky, and Eliezer Radinsky. Juliette and her husband have eleven grandchildren, Tzvi and Michelle Urkowitz, Ariel Urkowitz, Eitan Urkowitiz, and Atara Urkowitz, Rona Lipsky, Shuki Lipsky, and Zev Lipsky, Aviva Radinsky, Penina Radinsky, Gila Radinsky, and Chavi Radinsky. They celebrated the birth of their first great grandson, Ezra Urkowitz, earlier this year.
Juliette was a wonderful wife, mother grandmother, and great grandmother, and she was also an excellent Rebbetzin. While her husband worked as a rabbi in Lafayette, Indiana for 13 years and in Houston for 34 years, she was always available to counsel people. Many people called to seek her sage advice. She also was a wonderful hostess and cook, and every Friday night and Saturday afternoon, she would have many, many guests at her home. She was also known for her wonderful Pesach meals and hosted regularly close to fifty people. She was an active volunteer and served as president of Amit Women and was Regional Officer for Midwest Hadassah. She was an advisor to UOS Sisterhood and chaired many events. She was a loving, caring wife, mother, grandmother, great grandmother, aunt, and friend. She always spoke her mind and was known as a proponent of women's rights even before it became popular. She was also a very traditional, religious woman, and she was very charitable. She would give food privately to those in need without them even knowing from whom it came.