Tag: Reading
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part XIII)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part XII)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part XI)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part X)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part IX)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part VIII)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part VII)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part VI)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part V)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part IV)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part III)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part II)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery.
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part I)
Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery?
Sincerely,
Isaac Greenberg
Knesset Approves Arrangements Act in Preliminary Vote 58 – 50
Both Minister Moshe Kahlon (Kulanu) and Coalition Chairman David Bitan (Likud) warned that the bill would be suspended should it meet resistance from the Supreme Court.
JLI Introduces Five-Week Hebrew Reading Course
If you want to participate in synagogue but find it hard to follow what’s going on, this is for you.
You Asked, I Answered! – Teenage Myths And Facts, Reading Benchmarks, And Bedtime
There’s a lot of work taking place during adolescence that is necessary for teens to develop core character traits for the future. Teens who test boundaries and who have the passion to explore are working on themselves.
Reading Strategies For Emergent Readers
We read books of poems and prose – Some of these and some of those.
Read some too, and you’ll agree, Books are good for you and me!
Great Presidential Campaign Reading
Not only is the weather heating up, but so too is the election season. Included here are some highly recommended books on presidential campaigns.
Why Robert Wistrich Is Required Reading on Past, Present and Future Antisemitism
Prof. Wistrich’s passing has deprived the world of the most cogent analyst of anti-Semitism, perhaps ever, {Prof. Wistrich, in a word, is irreplaceable.