5783·29 Apr 2023·Achrei Mot-Kedoshim 5784·4 May 2024 5785·10 May 2025·Achrei Mot-Kedoshim 5786·25 Apr 2026·Achrei Mot-Kedoshim 5787·1 May 2027 5788·6 May 2028·Achrei Mot-Kedoshim 5789·28 Apr 2029·Achrei Mot-Kedoshim ...
In practice, the last portion of the Book of Deuteronomy is read during the morning service, which is immediately followed by the beginning of the Book of Genesis. Many synagogues in the UK hold parties or celebratory events after the Simchat Torah service. Hakafot and the Torah's Feet ...
Prof.Raanan Eichler “America Scroll” Unearthed Beneath the Lincoln MemorialPres.Abraham Lincoln Symposium:More Responses No items found. GeneralAbout UsAsk a RabbiContact UsעבריתTerms of UseRSS Torah PortionGenesisExodusLeviticusNumbersDeuteronomy...
is sometimes referred to asinyana deyoma, an Aramaic term for “the matter of the day.” This is an interesting construction because it implies that the study in the presence of the weekly chanted portion is current and pressing.
3:4:29-33·5 p’sukim Nasso: The JPS B’nai Mitzvah Torah Commentaryby Rabbi Jeffrey K. Salkin(paid link) List of Dates Parashat Nasso is read in the Diaspora on: Look up the date of Parashat Nasso in a past or future year
Leviticus 21 and Ezekiel 44 regulate whom priests may marry. What rationale lies behind these laws? The Rape of the Unbetrothed Virgin in Torah and Assyrian Law A Comparative Analysis Relegating Redemption of the Firstborn to a One-time Event in the Wilderness ...
Of the animals that can be eaten, the kidneys, fats around the stomach, a portion of the liver, the diaphragm, and the juicy body fats were to be burnt on the altar. The kidneys symbolise to the thought making process. The juicy fats around the stomach, the good fats of the body and...
(Yovel), when property reverts to its original ownership. Bechukotai (“In My Laws”) is the final Torah portion in the Book of Leviticus. It begins describing blessings that follow obedience to God's laws and curses that come with desecration of them. It ends with laws of vows and ...
Parashat Behar-Bechukotai (Leviticus 25:1-27:34). Read on 13 May 2056 / 27 Iyyar 5816 in the Diaspora. Torah reading, Haftarah, links to audio and commentary.
[23] The shaded portion of the text in the following schematic figure represents the damage to the scroll. The dotted line between the first two columns on the right represents the margin where the textual specialist could have cut off the damaged section of the scroll and attached t...