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Mordechai Rubin |
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Mordechai Rubin is a content editor and staff writer at Chabad.org. He studied advanced rabbinics at yeshivot in the U.K. and U.S., and currently lives in Pittsburgh with his wife Devorah, and their five children.
A distinct style of Torah study, pilpul (פִּלְפּוּל) is a Hebrew term that literally means “sharpness” or “pepperiness.”
A beit midrash (בֵּית מִדְרָשׁ), literally “house of study,” or “study hall,” is the traditional Jewish space devoted to Torah study.
Was Isaac fooled by Esau’s behavior?
Does “lasuach” mean prayer?
Scriptures lists cream, milk, a calf, and some cakes. Or is there more to it?
Why does it differ from the Song of the Sea?
The verse specifically states, "And you shall put them in a basket."
The Mitzvah of Leaving the Forgotten Sheaf (Shikchah)
Among the 613 mitzvot of the Torah, there is one that stands apart. While most mitzvot are performed intentionally—lighting Shabbat candles, giving tzedakah, studying Torah—the mitzvah of shikchah, leaving the forgotten sheaf, can never be done on purpose...
Was the location of the future Temple not yet chosen, or did G-d choose to deliberately keep it hidden?
What does the word totafot actually mean?
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