Printed fromChabadWhitePlains.com
ב"ה
Times displayed for
White Plains, New York USA | change

Shabbat, November 8, 2025

Calendar for: Chabad of White Plains 31 Soundview Ave, White Plains, NY 10606   |   Contact Info
Halachic Times (Zmanim)
Times for White Plains, New York USA
5:06 AM
Dawn (Alot Hashachar):
5:43 AM
Earliest Tallit (Misheyakir):
6:35 AM
Sunrise (Hanetz Hachamah):
9:04 AM
Latest Shema:
9:55 AM
Latest Shacharit:
11:38 AM
Midday (Chatzot Hayom):
12:05 PM
Earliest Mincha (Mincha Gedolah):
2:39 PM
Mincha Ketanah (“Small Mincha”):
3:43 PM
Plag Hamincha (“Half of Mincha”):
4:42 PM
Sunset (Shkiah):
5:25 PM
Shabbat Ends:
11:39 PM
Midnight (Chatzot HaLailah):
51:22 min.
Shaah Zmanit (proportional hour):
Jewish History

The rains began to fall on the 17th of Cheshvan of the year 1656 from creation (2105), flooding the earth and rising above the highest mountains. Only Noah and his family survived, in the ark built to that end by Divine command, and a pair of each animal species, who entered with him into the ark.

The following is a chronology of the Flood, as indicated by the dates and time periods given in the Torah's account and calculated by Rashi:
Cheshvan 17: Noah enters ark; rains begin.
Kislev 27: Forty days of rain end; begin 150 days of water's swelling and churning, during which the water reaches a height of 15 cubits above the mountain peaks.
Sivan 1: Water calms and begins to subside at the rate of one cubit every four days.
Sivan 17: The bottom of the ark, submerged 11 cubits beneath the surface, touches down on the top of Mount Ararat.
Av 1: The mountain peaks break the water's surface.
Elul 10:Forty days after the mountain peaks becom visible, Noah opens the ark's window and dispatches a raven.
Elul 17: Noah sends the dove for the first time.
Elul 23: The dove is sent a second time, and returns with an olive leaf in its beak.
Tishrei 1: Dove's third mission. Water completely drained.
Cheshvan 27: Ground fully dried. Noah exits ark.
(This chronology follows the opinion of the Talmudic sage Rabbi Eliezer; according to Rabbi Joshua's interpretation, the Flood began on Iyar 17, and all above dates should be moved ahead six months.)
Total time that Noah spent in the ark: 365 days (one solar year; one year and 11 days on the lunar calendar).

Link: See the Torah's account of the Great Flood, Rashi's commentary, and insights and interpretations from sages, scholars and mystics through the ages on the Noach Parshah Page

Daily Thought

We are representatives of the One Above. And as such, we live as two opposites at once:

We are not beings for ourselves. We are but agents of that which is beyond us.

Yet we must be freethinking, independent beings—because to represent the One Above, we must have our own will and our own sense of being as He does.

And if you should say, “But this is an impossibility! Two opposites in a single being!”

Yes, you are correct, it is an impossible paradox without resolution.

Which is why this renders us representatives of the Impossible One Above.

Chayei Sarah 5752.