Hoadama
All day the farmers toil
Plowing the brown hard soil
Then rushing the plants which the have grown
To us before they spoil.
Carrots, tomatoes
Lettuce, potatoes
All the Yerakos the earth does grow
Each in there own neat row.
String beans and lima beans,
Pepper both red or green.
All of these things the earth does sprout
And cabbage for sauerkraut
Broccoli and cauliflower
Will find you with strength and power.
Beets and celery, sprouts and Brussels
Will strengthen your bones and muscles
So Hashem brings us the rain
Across all the hills and plains.
Over the fields the clouds are sent
To pour down this nourishment
The farmer works from the morn
Gathering stalks of corn.
And we thank Hashem with a Brocha
Borei Pri Hoadoma.
A Horse
A horse is a horse, of course, of course
And no one has heard of a kosher horse
That is of course, because a horse
Doesn’t chew its cud.
Go right to the source and ask a hors
He’ll give you the answer that you’ll endorse
There’s such a thing as a kosher horse?
I’m a treire horse heighh....
Please Say a Brocha
Please say a brocha
That’s the Halocha
Before you eat or drink
Follow the din
Before you bite in
To your favorite treat.
Please say a Brocha
Thats the Halocha
Before you start to chew
Remember the blessing
Before you start "essing"
Show that you are a greatful Jew .
Hamotzie and Shehakol
Ho’adomah and Ha’eitz
Are meant to thank Hashem
For all the food that he creates
Delivered from the East and West
And from the North and South
Right into your mouth.
Yanky Studel
I’m a Yanky Strudel danddy
I eat kosher all the time
All the food that goes into my mouth
Must have a kosher sign.
Yankee strudel went to town
Riding on a rocket
He went to buy some kosher candy
He put it in his pocket.
They were kosher Yessiree!
And that was really dandy
Yanky strudel well you see
Buy only kosher candy.
From The Aisles Of Your Local Grocery
From the aisles of your local grocery
to your nearby candy store
From the shelves of your friendly bakery
to your refrigerator door.
Chorus:
We will shop for only kosher food
for kosher is the best
if a package has a kosher sign
then you know its past the test.
Moishe Mouse
M-0-I-S-H-E M-0-U-S-E
Moishe Mouse
And if you please
He never mixes meat with any cheese
Oh! No!
He only eats Kosher food
As Kosher as can be
M-0-I-S-H-E M-0-U-S-E
Always Make A Brocha
Always always make a Brocha
Whenever you eat
Even it it’s something sour
Or something sweet
Hamoitze on bread
Should be said
Shchakol on milk and meat
And everything that’s sweet .
All The Animals That We Eat
All the animals that we eat,
Must chew their cud and have split feet,
‘Cause Kosher meat just can’t be beat,
So throw away that ham.
Throw away that ham and bacon,
I won’t eat it, your mistaken,
‘Cause I’m a Jew and I’m not fakin’
I want Kosher food.
So every time you’re in the market,
Only buy food with a Kosher sign on it,
It’s good for me and it’s good for you,
And what do you know,
Hashem loves it too.
Chinuch Times Did Change
(T.T.T.O. Sholosh T’nuos)
Times did change in many ways
Yiras Shomayim was not the same
Although they learned night and day
Their hearts, it did not permeate.
The Rebbe Rashab, seeing the plight
Made a Yeshiva, a shining light
Where Chossidus they did learn
And in davening they yearned
True love for Hashem, in their hearts should burn.
Through years of hardship, then and now
When the fire of Torah, they tried to douse
The T’mimim carried through, to Yiddishkeit so true
For with Torah and Chossidus, they were imbued.
For the Chinuch of Yeshiva reached into their hearts
So, from Torah and Mitzvos, they never did part
Giving them the strength, through suffering and pain
True Chossidim of the Rebbe, they did remain.
A Jewish Parade
(T.T.T.O. Eitz Chayim—Tzlil V’zemer III)
A young man was driving along the road
To himself, he was humming aloud
His curiosity forced him to stop
Seeing the fast-growing crowd.
His Yiddishe background was rather vague
On it, his life was not based
An uneasy feeling crept up on him
Seeing a Jewish parade.
But hearing the P’sukim and Yechi
The children’s true simplicity
Sincerity in the air was felt
He could almost feel his soul melt.
From the parade, he could not part
The children’s purity captured his heart
Living his life, since that day
In the true Torah way.
My dear Ima I’m sending this letter
To say the things I’ve never said
Of my impression as your daughter
These thoughts are running through my head.
As far back as I can remember
You said sh’ma with me at night
Each week I saw you welcome Shabbos
I saw your candles burning bright.
You made our home a house of Torah
Encouraged Abba to learn each day
You stood behind him through the hard times
You gave him strength in your own way.
You taught us all about the Mitzvos
Showed us the right way from the start
We always saw your love for Torah
You instilled it in our hearts.
Now your children have grown older
Each one has gone their separate ways
But yet we follow in your footsteps
You made us what we are today.
Now your daughter is a mother
She does the things you used to do
Not only did you build your own home
But Ima you built my home too.
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