Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Orthodox Judaism" ¶ 32
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Ashkenazic and Orthodox
It has become the authoritative halakhic guide for much of Orthodox Ashkenazic Jewry in the postwar period.
In the Diaspora in Ashkenazic Orthodox communities, the ceremony is performed only on Pesach, Shavuot, Sukkot, Shemini Atzeret, Rosh Hashanah, and Yom Kippur.
The former, though narrower in scope, enjoys much wider popularity and is considered authoritative by many adherents of Orthodox Judaism, especially among those typically associated with Ashkenazic yeshivas.
The term is sometimes used, especially in Israel, to cover all Orthodox Jews who follow a " Lithuanian " ( Ashkenazic and non-Hasidic ) style of life and learning, whatever their ethnic background.
Following the investigation, The Guardian reported, a spokesman for the London Chief Rabbi said Boteach " did not possess the appropriate United Synagogue rabbinical ' practice certificate '" for presiding over services in Orthodox Ashkenazic synagogues in Britain.

Ashkenazic and Jews
Halakha () ( Sephardic Hebrew pronunciation ) ( ha-la-chAH )— also transliterated Halocho ( Ashkenazic Hebrew pronunciation ) ( ha-LUH-chuh ), or Halacha — is the collective body of religious laws for Jews, including biblical law ( the 613 mitzvot ) and later talmudic and rabbinic law, as well as customs and traditions.
The principal difference is between Ashkenazic and Sephardic customs, although there are other communities ( e. g. Yemenite Jews ), and Hassidic and other communities also have distinct customs, variations, and special prayers.
There is a custom among some Ashkenazic Jews not to eat them during Passover, except for the elderly, infirm, or children, who cannot digest plain matzah ; these matzot are considered to be kosher for Passover if prepared otherwise properly.
Some Ashkenazim do not cook with matzah, believing that mixing it with water may allow leavening ; the mixture is called " gebrochts " by Ashkenazic Jews.
Rabbeinu Gershom instituted a rabbinic decree ( takhanah ) prohibiting polygamy among Ashkenazic Jews.
Tarshish is a family name found among Jews of Ashkenazic descent.
Additionally, in Medieval Hebrew, Germany is known as Ashkenaz, and is the origin of the term Ashkenazic Jews.
He is the author of Seliha 42-Zechor Berit Avraham (" Remember the Covenant of Abraham "), a liturgical poem recited by Ashkenazic Jews during the season of Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippur.
* To wear tefillin and recite the blessings in an undertone: This opinion, based on Maimonides, is the ruling of Moses Isserles who writes that this is the universally accepted practice among Ashkenazic Jews.
The halachic rulings in the Shulchan Aruch generally follow Sephardic law and customs whereas Ashkenazi Jews will generally follow the halachic rulings of Moses Isserles whose glosses to the Shulchan Aruch note where the Sephardic and Ashkenazic customs differ.
Ashkenazi Jews, also known as Ashkenazic Jews or Ashkenazim (,, singular:,, ; also, " The Jews of Ashkenaz "), are the Jews descended from the medieval Jewish communities along the Rhine in Germany from Alsace in the south to the Rhineland in the north.
In this sense, " Ashkenazic " refers both to a family ancestry and to a body of customs binding on Jews of that ancestry.
Klezmer ( Yiddish כליזמר or קלעזמער, pl כליזמר, כליזמרים, from Hebrew כלי זמר — instruments of music ) is a musical tradition of the Ashkenazic Jews of Eastern Europe.
In 1613 John Frederick, Administrator of the Prince-Archbishopric, followed by settling Ashkenazic Jews in the city, but during the turmoil of Catholic conquest and Lutheran reconquest the last archival traces of Jews date from 1630.
In the areas today known as France and Germany, Ashkenazic Jews began using the term semikhah again, this time using it to refer to a formal " diploma " conferred by a teacher on his pupil, entitling the pupil to be called Mori ( my teacher ).
Perhaps the greatest divisions since the time of the division between the Sadducees and Pharisees two millennia ago are the divisions within the Ashkenazic community that have arisen in the past two centuries, ever since the Enlightenment and the Renaissance influenced Jews from northern and eastern Europe.
He also enclosed a 150-year-old firman, which authorised the Ashkenazic Jews to rebuild their ruined synagogue.
During this time, Yosef was severely criticised by other major members of the Haredi religious community in Israel, particular the Ashkenazic Jews who generally sided with the Likud and the right in opposition to the perceived secularist tendencies of Labour and the left.
Today, there are also populations of Ashkenazic Jews in Venice, mainly Lubavitchers who operate one of two kosher foodstores, a yeshiva, and the aforementioned Chabad synagogue.

Ashkenazic and have
Over the last two thousand years variations have emerged among the traditional liturgical customs of different Jewish communities, such as Ashkenazic, Sephardic, Yemenite, Hassidic, and others, however the differences are minor compared with the commonalities.
This is especially common among Ashkenazic Jews, because most of their European names were taken later and some were imposed by the German and Austro-Hungarian Empires ( explaining why many Ashkenazi Jews have German or European-sounding names ).

Ashkenazic and based
This order is based on medieval Ashkenazic manuscripts.
The division of parashot found in the modern-day Torah scrolls of all Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Yemenite communities is based upon the systematic list provided by Maimonides in Mishneh Torah, Laws of Tefillin, Mezuzah and Torah Scrolls, Chapter 8.
For this reason, to a modern reader the wording of the Seder Rav Amram appears far closer to an Ashkenazic than a Sephardic text, a fact which misled Moses Gaster into believing that the Ashkenazic rite was based on the Babylonian while the Sephardic rite was essentially Palestinian.

Ashkenazic and most
One of the most important Ashkenazic Rabbanim of the past century was Rabbi Meir Kagan or the Hafetz Haim.
Currently, the most ubiquitous type of matzo is the traditional Ashkenazic type, which is hard like a cracker.
In many western countries the most common form is the hard form of matza which is cracker-like in both appearance and taste, used in all Ashkenazic and most Sephardic communities.
The text most commonly studied in Ashkenazic Yeshivot is the Mishnah Berurah written by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan, the Chofetz Chaim.
Such scrolls are used for the reading of the haftarot in many, perhaps most, Lithuanian-style yeshivot, and in a number of Ashkenazic synagogues, especially in Israel.
His opinion was cited as halacha by Moses Isserles in Rema on Shulchan Aruch, which is the foundation for most of current Ashkenazic practice.
Despite this, Sephardic and Ashkenazic concepts of kosher differ ; perhaps the most notable difference being that rice, a major staple of the Sephardic diet, is considered kosher for Passover but is forbidden kitniyot for most Ashkenazim.
Heilprins are to be found in almost all Ashkenazic communities, but they are not necessarily of the same family, since most of the family names borne by the Jews of Austria, Germany, and Russia were assumed indiscriminately by order of their respective governments toward the end of the 18th century or at the beginning of the 19th.

Ashkenazic and their
A large population of Sephardic refugees, who fled via the Netherlands as Marranos eventually settled in Hamburg and Altona Germany in the early 16th century, eventually appropriating Ashkenazic Jewish rituals into their religious practice.
He was the spiritual guide of the fledgling Ashkenazic Jewish communities and was very influential in molding them at a time when their population was dwindling.
While many terms from the Talmud and Mishna exist in Modern Hebrew, their pronunciation is in line with Modern Hebrew, whereas in the Yeshivish Variant, they maintain their Ashkenazic variant.
During the Middle Ages, Christian authorities forced Ashkenazic Jewish authorities to interpret these passages in relation to their beliefs about Jesus of Nazareth.
Standard Ashkenazic custom, or minhag, restricts the extent to which one may take a haircut, shave or listen to music, though communities and individuals vary their levels of observance of these customs.
In other Jewish communities, both Ashkenazic and Sephardic, all males wear the " tallis ", but only the married ones wear it over their heads.
He drove hundreds of thousands of Mizrahi voters to the polls to vote for Begin, whose populist messages struck a chord in their hearts after the three decades of almost completely Ashkenazic Mapai hegemony.

0.322 seconds.