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Talmud – Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Posted By on February 6, 2015

El Talmud () es una obra que recoge principalmente las discusiones rabnicas sobre leyes judas, tradiciones, costumbres, narraciones y dichos, parbolas, historias y leyendas.

Existen dos importantes versiones del Talmud: el Talmud de Jerusaln (Talmud Yerushlmi), que se redact en la entonces recin creada provincia romana llamada Philistea,[1] y el Talmud de Babilonia (Talmud Bvli), que fue redactado en la regin de Babilonia, en Mesopotamia. Ambas versiones fueron redactadas a lo largo de muchos siglos por generaciones de eruditos provenientes de muchas academias rabnicas establecidas desde la Antigedad en adelante.

El judasmo considera al Talmud ser la tradicin oral, mientras que la Tor (Pentateuco) constituye la tradicin escrita.[2]

El Talmud extiende, explica y complementa al Tanaj, pero no puede, por definicin, contradecir a la parte ms importante o esencia de la misma, a la Tor.

El Talmud est dividido en dos partes, la Mishn y la Guemar. La Mishn a su vez est formada por 6 rdenes (sedarim):

Existen dos Talmud: El de Jerusaln y el de Babilonia. El sistema de redaccin del Talmud consiste en una serie de leyes basadas en la tradicin oral de La Tor que fue redactada en un libro llamado (Mishn) a cuyos autores se les conoce como "Tanaim". sta es idntica tanto en el Talmud de Jerusaln como en el Talmud de Babilonia. La Guemar son las discusiones de sabios conocidos como "Amoraim" que explican la Mishn, y sus explicaciones fueron escritas en arameo. En estas explicaciones est la diferencia entre el Talmud de Jerusaln y el de Babilonia, mas las dos llegan a la misma conclusin solo que por caminos distintos.

En cuestin temtica el Talmud se divide en Halaj (textos de carcter legal) y Hagad (parbolas e historias). La tradicin oral del Pentateuco transmitida a Moiss est en su mayora en el Talmud, es por eso que es un libro fundamental de estudio para la religin juda.

Portada del Talmud de Babilonia, edicin de Vilna, 1881.

Primera pgina del "Tratado Brajot", el primero que se halla en el Talmud. Ntese que el texto original figura en el centro de la pgina, mientras que las notas e interpretaciones subsecuentes son dispuestas alrededor del mismo.

Pgina del "Tratado Pesajim", Talmud Babilnico Koren, edicin bilinge e ilustrada, publicada en Jerusaln.

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Talmud - Wikipedia, la enciclopedia libre

Talmud – Wikipedia

Posted By on February 6, 2015

Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera.

Il Talmud (ebraico , che significa insegnamento, studio, discussione dalla radice ebraica --, LMD) uno dei testi sacri dell'Ebraismo. Il Talmud riconosciuto solo dall'Ebraismo che, assieme ai Midrashim e ad altri testi Rabbinici o mistici noti del Canone ebraico, lo considera come trasmissione e discussione orale della Torah. La Torah orale fu rivelata sul monte Sinai a Mos e trasmessa a voce, di generazione in generazione, fino alla conquista romana. Il Talmud fu fissato per iscritto solo quando, con la distruzione del Secondo Tempio di Gerusalemme, gli Ebrei temettero che le basi religiose di Israele potessero sparire.

Il Talmud consiste in una raccolta di discussioni avvenute tra i sapienti (Chakhamim) e i maestri (rabbanim) circa i significati e le applicazioni dei passi della Torah scritta, e si articola in due livelli:

I termini Talmud e Ghemara vengono spesso usati in maniera intercambiabile. La Ghemara forma la base di tutti i codici della Halakhah (legge rabbinica) e viene spesso citata in altra letteratura rabbinica. L'intero Talmud anche conosciuto con il nome di Shas (in ebraico: ?), acronimo di Shisha Sedarim, i sei ordini (Zeraim, Moed, Nashim, Nezikin, Kodashim, Tohorot) in cui divisa la Mishnah. La suddivisione del Talmud identica a quella della Mishnah: i Shisha Sedarim si suddividono in Massechtot - trattati, i quali a loro volta sono composti da capitoli.

Secondo la tradizione ebraica la Torah scritta non pu essere applicata senza la Torah orale.[1]

Nel 586 a.C. vi fu la distruzione del Tempio di Gerusalemme di Salomone (secondo il Talmud nel 416 a.e.v.) ed il popolo ebraico deportato in Babilonia. Allora divenne necessario precisare in che modo mantenere una vita ebraica in terra d'esilio e in mancanza del santuario di Gerusalemme. Questa fu l'opera degli scribi (Soferim), fondatori della Grande Sinagoga, interpreti della Torah scritta e maestri della Torah orale. Dopo il ritorno da Babilonia i tre ultimi profeti (Aggeo, Zaccaria e Malachia), lo scriba Esdra e poi gli uomini della Grande Sinagoga assicurarono la trasmissione della tradizione orale che pass successivamente attraverso i farisei e le loro grandi scuole (Yeshivot).

In origine, la cultura ebraica si sviluppava oralmente, quando i rabbini esponevano e discutevano la Legge (la legge scritta espressa nella Bibbia ebraica) e commentavano il Tanakh senza il beneficio di opere scritte (ad eccezione dei libri biblici), anche se alcuni potevano aver tenuto delle note personali (Meghillot setarim), ad esempio le sentenze del tribunale ebraico. La situazione cambi drasticamente a causa della distruzione della comunit ebraica e del Secondo Tempio nell'anno 70 e.v. e il conseguente sconvolgimento delle relative norme sociali e giuridiche. Mentre i rabbini si trovarono ad affrontare una nuova realt - soprattutto l'ebraismo senza il Tempio (che serviva come centro di insegnamento e di studio) e senza una Giudea almeno parzialmente autonoma - si gener una pletora di problematiche giuridiche e il vecchio sistema di studio orale non pot esser mantenuto. Fu durante questo periodo che il discorso rabbinico inizi a essere messo per iscritto.[2][3]

La prima legge orale registrata potrebbe essere stata fatta in forma midrashica, dove la discussione halakhica strutturata come commentario esegetico del Pentateuco (Torah). Ma una forma alternativa, organizzata per argomento anzich per versetto biblico, si afferm verso l'anno 200 e.v. quando Rabbi Judah haNasi redasse la Mishnah (ebraico: ).

La Legge Orale non era certo monolitica; piuttosto, variava tra le diverse scuole rabbiniche. Le due pi famose erano la Scuola di Shammai e la Scuola di Hillel. In generale, tutti i pareri validi, anche quelli non normativi, furono registrati nel Talmud.

Presto, di fronte a situazioni nuove e a divergenze di scuola, fu necessario ricavare dalla Torah, scritta e orale, le decisioni pratiche. Questa fu opera dei rabbini e specialmente dei 71 membri del Sinedrio.

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Talmud - Wikipedia

Talmud Wikipdia

Posted By on February 6, 2015

Un article de Wikipdia, l'encyclopdie libre.

Le Talmud (hb.: talmoud, tude) est lun des textes fondamentaux du judasme rabbinique, ne le cdant en importance qu la Bible hbraque, dont il reprsente le versant oral. Il est rdig dans un mlange d'hbreu et d'aramen. Le Talmud est le fondement de la loi juive ou Halakha.

Compos de la Mishna et de la Guemara, il compile les discussions rabbiniques sur lensemble des sujets de la Loi juive, classs en six ordres (shisha sedarim, abrg Sha"s). Abordant les problmes selon sa faon propre, il traite comme en passant dthique, de mythes, de mdecine et dautres questions, et restitue l'interprtation traditionnelle telle qu'elle s'est dveloppe dans les acadmies de Palestine et de Babylonie[1], d'o les deux versions du Talmud, dites Talmud de Jrusalem et Talmud de Babylone.

Sitt cltur, le Talmud a fait lobjet de nombreux commentaires et exgses, les uns tentant den extraire la matire lgale, les autres den poursuivre les discussions en dveloppant sa dimension casuistique, aboutissant de savantes discussions et des interprtations novatrices.

Les pharisiens puis les rabbins, contrairement aux sadducens puis aux karates du Moyen ge, ont toujours affirm l'existence d'une Torah orale transmise de gnration en gnration, de matre lves. Pour le judasme, il n'est pas possible d'appliquer les prceptes bibliques sans passer par l'interprtation que les Sages en ont faite. De plus la Torah crite ordonne d'couter les sages de sa gnration (Parachat Choftim, Dvarim chap.17 versets 8 11).

Cette Torah orale prend son origine avec Mose lui-mme qui, aprs avoir reu les tables de la Loi sur le mont Sina et en avoir ralis plusieurs copies pour les dignitaires, la transmet Josu, qui la transmet son tour ses successeurs spirituels et ainsi de suite jusqu la Grande Assemble, anctre du Sanhdrin[2]. Du point de vue historique et littraire, elle se dveloppe concurremment la littrature apocalyptique, apocryphe ou pseudpigraphique, qui tente de prolonger le message biblique par la lettre, tandis que la Torah orale le fait par lesprit, au moyen dun enseignement exclusivement oral[3].

Aprs la deuxime destruction du Temple, les successeurs des pharisiens, les docteurs de la Loi, portent dsormais le titre de rabbi (littralement mon matre en hbreu) et prennent en main le destin de la nation. Ils crent un judasme sans temple et ouvrent des acadmies Yavn, puis en Galile, afin de se livrer un travail d'interprtation de lcriture suivant des canons d'hermneutique qui s'affinent progressivement et mettent en ordre les traditions transmises.

Lorsque les circonstances politiques agitant la Jude au IIesicle menacent la prennit de cet enseignement, il est dcid de procder la mise par crit de celui-ci. Ces travaux sont consigns dans les recueils dits 'Midrachei Halakha', qui offrent un commentaire des textes lgislatifs du Pentateuque, verset par verset.

On considre gnralement qu'aux alentours du Iersicle, la rdaction de la Mishna est entame, les lois et leurs interprtations tant organises non plus par verset biblique mais par thme. Elle est clture par Rabbi Yehouda Ha-Nassi, aux environs de 200 EC.

Du IIIe au Vesicle, les rabbins (dsormais appels Amoram et non plus Tannam) se donnent pour tche d'lucider les textes de la Mishna, de les commenter, d'en rechercher les sources bibliques et d'en concilier les contradictions apparentes, et cela tant en Palestine qu'en Babylonie. La rdaction du Talmud s'achve aux environs de l'an 500 EC[4].

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Talmud Wikipdia

Talmud Wikipedia

Posted By on February 6, 2015

Der Talmud (hebrisch, deutschBelehrung, Studium) ist eines der bedeutendsten Schriftwerke des Judentums. Er besteht aus zwei Teilen, der lteren Mischna und der jngeren Gemara, und liegt in zwei Ausgaben vor, dem Babylonischen (Talmud Bavli) und dem Jerusalemer Talmud (Talmud Jeruschalmi). Der Talmud enthlt selbst keine Gesetzestexte, sondern zeigt auf, wie die Regeln der Tora in der Praxis und im Alltag von den Rabbinen verstanden und ausgelegt wurden.

Der Talmud liegt in zwei groen Ausgaben vor. Nach Umfang und inhaltlichem Gewicht ist der Talmud Bavli, der Babylonische Talmud (abgekrzt: bT), das bedeutendere Werk. Er entstand in den relativ groen, geschlossenen jdischen Siedlungsgebieten, die nach der Zerstrung Jerusalems durch die Rmer im judenfreundlicheren Perserreich existierten, genauer gesagt in Sura und Pumbedita. Dieses Gebiet wurde im Judentum traditionell als Babylon bezeichnet, obwohl eine Stadt oder ein Staat solchen Namens seit dem Untergang des neubabylonischen Reiches im 5. Jahrhundert v.Chr. nicht mehr existierte. Als magebliche Autoren gelten die Rabbiner Abba Arikha (genannt Raw), Samuel Jarchinai (Mar) sowie Rav Aschi.

Daneben steht der erheblich krzere, in seinen Bestimmungen oft weniger strenge und weniger wichtige Talmud Jeruschalmi, der in Palstina entstand. Im Altertum nannte man ihn talmud eretz israel (Talmud Land Israel) oder auch talmud de-maaraba (Talmud des Westens). Heute nennt man ihn meist Talmud Jeruschalmi (Jerusalemer Talmud). In der wissenschaftlichen Literatur wird er als Palstinischer Talmud bezeichnet (abgekrzt: pT).[1] Christliche Gelehrte nennen ihn bisweilen auch Palstinensischer Talmud. [2][3] Hier gilt nach jdischer Tradition, die auf Maimonides zurckgeht, als wichtigster Autor Rabbi Jochanan.

Wenn einfach vom Talmud gesprochen wird, ist in der Regel der Babylonische Talmud gemeint.

Der erste Druck des Talmud stammt von Daniel Bomberg, einem aus Antwerpen stammenden Christen, der zwischen 1516 und 1539 in Venedig ttig war. Die von Bomberg eingefhrte Folio-Zhlung wird heute noch benutzt.

Es gibt verschiedene Methoden der Stoffgliederung im Talmud:

Kernstck des Talmud ist die Mischna (hebrisch: (Lehre durch) Wiederholung). Es handelt sich hierbei um jenen Teil der Tora (hebrisch), den Gott nach jdischer Tradition Moses am Berg Sinai mndlich offenbart hat und der in der Folgezeit auch zunchst nur mndlich weitergegeben, im 1. oder 2. Jahrhundert schlielich aber doch kodifiziert wurde. Ihre endgltige Form gefunden hat die in Hebrisch abgefasste Mischna im 2. Jahrhundert unter redaktioneller Federfhrung von Jehuda ha-Nasi. Sie ist im Babylonischen und im Jerusalemer Talmud im Wesentlichen identisch.

Die zweite Schicht des Talmud ist die Gemara (aramisch: Lehre, Wissenschaft), die aus Kommentaren und Analysen zur Mischna in aramischer Sprache besteht. Sie sind die Frucht umfangreicher und tief philosophischer Diskussionen unter jdischen Gelehrten insbesondere in den Akademien von Sura und Pumbedita. Ausgehend von den meist rein juristischen Fragestellungen wurden Verbindungen zu anderen Gebieten wie Medizin, Naturwissenschaft, Geschichte oder Pdagogik hergestellt. Auch wurde der eher sachliche Stil der Mischna mit diversen Fabeln, Sagen, Gleichnissen, Rtseln etc. angereichert. Die Gemara war zwischen dem 5. und 8. Jahrhundert abgeschlossen. Anders als die einheitliche Mischna weichen die Fassungen der Gemara in der babylonischen und der palstinischen Talmudausgabe voneinander ab.

Beim Babylonischen Talmud kommen schlielich als dritte Schicht die Kommentare aus spterer Zeit hinzu. Hervorzuheben sind insofern insbesondere jene von Rabbi Schlomo ben Jizchak (genannt Raschi), einem im 11. Jahrhundert in Frankreich und Deutschland wirkenden Talmud-Gelehrten.

Die stndige Fortentwicklung der Tradition durch Diskussionen, Kommentare und Analysen prgt den durchgngig dialektischen Stil des Talmud. Das bevorzugte Mittel der Darstellung ist der Dialog zwischen verschiedenen rabbinischen Lehrmeinungen, der am Ende zu einer Entscheidung fhrt und den mageblichen Stand der Tradition wiedergibt.

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Jesus in the Talmud – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posted By on February 6, 2015

For the related article discussing the Hebrew name Yeshu as found in Talmud and other Jewish literature, see Yeshu. For the similar sounding Hebrew or Aramaic name, see Yeshua (name).

The Talmud contains passages that some scholars have concluded are references to Christian traditions about Jesus. The history of textual transmission of these passages is complex and scholars are not agreed concerning which passages are original, and which were added later or removed later in reaction to the actions of Christians. Scholars are also divided on the relationship of the passages, if any, to the historical Jesus, though most modern scholarship views the passages as reaction to Christian proselytism rather than having any meaningful trace of a historical Jesus.[citation needed]

The first Christian censorship of the Talmud happened in the year 521.[1] However, far better documented censorship began during the disputations of the Middle Ages. Advocates for the Christian church alleged that the Talmud contained insulting references to Jesus and his mother, Mary. Jewish apologists during the disputations said there were no references to Jesus in the Talmud, and claimed Joshua and its derivations was a common Jewish name, that they referred to other individuals. The disputations led to many of the references being removed (censored) from subsequent editions of the Talmud.

In the modern era there has been a variance of views among scholars of the possible references to Jesus in the Talmud, depending partly on presuppositions as to the extent to which the ancient rabbis were preoccupied with Jesus and Christianity.[2] This range of views among modern scholars on the subject has been described as a range from "minimalists" who see few passages with reference to Jesus, to "maximalists" who see many passages having reference to Jesus.[3] These terms "minimalist" and "maximalist" are not unique to discussion of the Talmud text, they are also used in discussion of academic debate on other aspects of Jewish vs. Christian and Christian vs. Jewish contact and polemic in the early centuries of Christianity, such as the Adversus Iudaeos genre.[4] "Minimalists" include Jacob Z. Lauterbach (1951) ("who recognize[d] only relatively few passages that actually have Jesus in mind"),[3] while "maximalists" include Herford (1903), (who concluded that most of the references related to Jesus, but were non-historical oral traditions which circulated among Jews),[5][6] and Schfer (2007) (who concluded that the passages were parodies of parallel stories about Jesus in the New Testament incorporated into the Talmud in the 3rd and 4th centuries that illustrate the inter-sect rivalry between Judaism and nascent Christianity[7][pageneeded]).

Some editions of the Talmud are missing some of the references, which were removed either by Christian censors starting in the 13th century,[8] or by Jews themselves due to fear of antisemitic reprisals, or some were possibly lost by negligence or accident.[9] However,[citation needed] most modern editions published since the early 20th century have restored most of the references.

During the Middle Ages a series of debates on Judaism were staged by the Christian church including the Disputation of Paris, the Disputation of Barcelona, and Disputation of Tortosa and during those disputations, Jewish converts to Christianity, such as Pablo Christiani and Nicholas Donin claimed the Talmud contained insulting references to Jesus.[10] An early work describing Jesus in the Talmud was Pugio Fidei ("Dagger of Faith") (c. 1280) by the Catalan Dominican Ramn Mart, a Jewish convert to Christianity.[11] In 1681 Johann Christoph Wagenseil translated and published a collection of anti-Christian polemics from Jewish sources, with the title Tela Ignea Satan, sive Arcani et Horribiles Judorum Adversus Christum, Deum, et Christianam Religionem Libri (Flaming Arrows of Satan, that is, the secret and horrible books of the Jews against Christ, God, and the Christian religion) which discussed Jesus in the Talmud.[11] The first book devoted solely to the topic of Jesus in the Talmud was the Latin work Jesus in Talmude published in 1699 by Rudolf Martin Meelfhrer, a student of Wagenseil at Altdorf.[12] In 1700, Johann Andreas Eisenmenger published Entdecktes Judenthum (Judaism Unmasked), which included descriptions of Jesus in the Talmud, and which would become the basis of much anti-Semitic literature in later centuries such as The Talmud Unmasked written in 1892 by Justinas Bonaventure Pranaitis.[13]

Starting in the 20th century the topic of Jesus in Judaic literature became subject to more unbiased, scholarly research, such as Das Leben Jesu nach judischen Quellen written in 1902 by Samuel Krauss, which was the first scholarly analysis of the Judaic anti-Christian polemic Toledot Yeshu (The Biography of Jesus).[12] In 1903, Unitarian scholar R. Travers Herford wrote Christianity in Talmud and Midrash, which became the standard work on the topic in the Christian world, and he concluded that a large number of references referred to Jesus, not as a historical individual, but instead as the messiah of Christianity.[14] In 1910, Hermann Strack wrote Jesus, die Hretiker und die Christen nach den altesten judischen Angaben, which found no evidence of a historical Jesus in the Talmud.[12] In 1922 Joseph Klausner wrote Yeshu ha-Notzri (Jesus of Nazareth) which concluded that "the evidence [for a historical Jesus] in the Talmud is scanty and does not contribute much to our knowledge of the historical Jesus; much of it is legendary and reflects the Jewish attempt to counter Christian claims and reproaches" but he did conclude some material was historically reliable.[15] In 1950 Morris Goldstein wrote Jesus in the Jewish Tradition, including sections on the Toledoth Yeshu. In 1951, Jacob Z. Lauterbach wrote the essay Jesus in the Talmud.[16] In 1978 Johann Maier wrote Jesus von Nazareth in der talmudischen berlieferung, in which he concludes that there is virtually no evidence of the historical Jesus in the Talmud, and that the references to Jesus were "legendary" and probably added late in the Talmudic era "as a reaction to Christian provocations".[17] In 2007, Peter Schfer wrote Jesus in the Talmud in which he tried to find a middle ground between "anti-Jewish Christian" and "apologetic Jewish" interpretations. He concluded that the references to Jesus (as the messiah of Christianity) were included in the early (3rd and 4th century) versions of the Talmud, and that they were parodies of New Testament narratives.[18]

In the first few centuries CE, there were many sects of Judaism (such as Pharisees, Essenes, and Sadducees) each claiming to be the correct faith.[19] Some scholars treat Christianity, during that era, referred to as Early Christianity, as simply one of many sects of Judaism.[20] Some sects wrote polemics advocating their position, and occasionally disparaging rival sects. Some scholars view the depictions of Jesus in the Talmud as a manifestation of those inter-sect rivalries thus the depictions can be read as polemics by the rabbinic authors of the Talmud which indirectly criticized the rival sect (Christianity), which was growing and becoming more dominant.[21]

Peter Schfer concluded that the references were not from the early tannaitic period (1st and 2nd centuries) but rather from the 3rd and 4th centuries, during the amoraic period.[22] He asserts that the references in the Babylonian Talmud were "polemical counter-narratives that parody the New Testament stories, most notably the story of Jesus' birth and death"[23] and that the rabbinical authors were familiar with the Gospels (particularly the Gospel of John) in their form as the Diatessaron and the Peshitta, the New Testament of the Syrian Church. Schfer argues that the message conveyed in the Talmud was a "bold and self-confident" assertion of correctness of Judaism, maintaining that "there is no reason to feel ashamed because we rightfully executed a blasphemer and idolater."[24]

By way of comparison the New Testament itself also documents conflict with rabbinical Judaism, for example in the John 8:41 charge "We are not born of fornication."[25] and "Are we not right in saying that you are a Samaritan and have a demon?"[26] and in return in the description in Revelation of a "synagogue of Satan."[27]

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Cancer meets Talmud: Why do bad things happen to us?

Posted By on February 6, 2015

It may well be that random mutations occur, and this is actually what I heard before: Cancerous cells are always present in us. But in general they're killed by the immune system. So, I suppose that a well working immune system also helps to fight cancerous cells and this, too, can be influenced by our ways of life. It's not only about our personal decisions, but also about technical arrangements that we cannot escape. For example, the products of nanotechnology were on the market before some researchers began asking themselves if they could possibly be dangerous, when they enter the lungs as fine dust. But I understand that the study will be warmly welcomed by entrepreneurs and state authorities who want to free themselves from the responsibility they have concerning working conditions and technical products they put onto the markets.

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Cancer meets Talmud: Why do bad things happen to us?

Luke 8v40-56:- The Ruler of the Synagogue Jairus, unlike Pharisee Simon, humbled himself – Video

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Luke 8v40-56:- The Ruler of the Synagogue Jairus, unlike Pharisee Simon, humbled himself
Luke 8v40-56:- The Ruler of the Synagogue Jairus, unlike Pharisee Simon, humbled himself to Jesus, Omnipotent Son of our Supernatural Father God, his desires...

By: Chaudhry Rajinder Nijjhar Jatt

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Luke 8v40-56:- The Ruler of the Synagogue Jairus, unlike Pharisee Simon, humbled himself - Video

Hurva Synagogue – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posted By on February 6, 2015

The Hurva Synagogue, (Hebrew: , translit: Beit ha-Knesset ha-Hurba, lit. "The Ruin Synagogue"), also known as Hurvat Rabbi Yehudah he-Hasid ("Ruin of Rabbi Judah the Pious"), is a historic synagogue located in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem.

The synagogue was founded in the early 18th century by followers of Judah he-Hasid, but it was destroyed by Muslims a few years later in 1721. The plot lay in ruins for over 140 years and became known as the Ruin, or Hurva. In 1864, the Perushim rebuilt the synagogue, and although officially named the Beis Yaakov Synagogue, it retained its name as the Hurva. It became Jerusalem's main Ashkenazic synagogue, until it too was deliberately destroyed after the withdrawal of the Israeli forces by the Arab Legion[5] during the 1948 ArabIsraeli War.[6]

After Israel captured East Jerusalem from Jordan in 1967, a number of plans were submitted for the design of a new building. After years of deliberation and indecision, a commemorative arch was erected instead at the site in 1977, itself becoming a prominent landmark of the Jewish Quarter.[3] The plan to rebuild the synagogue in its 19th-century style received approval by the Israeli Government in 2000, and the newly rebuilt synagogue was dedicated on March 15, 2010.[7]

The Hurva Synagogue today stands off a plaza in the centre of Jerusalem's Jewish Quarter. Excavations carried out at the site in July and August 2003 revealed evidence from four main settlement periods: First Temple(800600 BCE), Second Temple(100 CE), Byzantine and Ottoman.[8] Three bedrock-hewn mikvahs (ritual baths) were uncovered there dating from the 1st century.[9] The earliest tradition regarding the site is of a synagogue existing there at the time of the 2nd-century CE sage Judah haNasi.[10] By the 13th century, the area had become a courtyard, known as Der Ashkenaz (the Ashkenazic Compound),[6] for the Ashkenazic community of Jerusalem.[11] In 1488, Obadiah ben Abraham described a large courtyard containing many houses for exclusive use of the Ashkenazim, adjacent to a "synagogue built on pillars," referring to the Ramban Synagogue.[12] The Ramban Synagogue had been used jointly by both Ashkenazim and Sephardim until 1586, when the Ottoman authorities confiscated the building. Thereafter, the Ashkenazim established a synagogue within their own, adjacent courtyard.[6]

In the winter of 1700, a group of around 500 Ashkenazim led by Rabbi Judah he-Hasid arrived from Europe.[6] They were mystics who were intent on advancing the arrival of the Messianic Era by settling in Jerusalem and leading ascetic lives.[13] A few days after their arrival in the city, he-Hasid died, and without a leader, their messianic hopes dissipated and the community began to disintegrate.[6] Those who remained managed to build forty dwellings and a small synagogue in the Ashkenazic Compound.[6] Soon after, they endeavoured to construct a larger synagogue, but the task proved expensive.[13] They found themselves having to bribe the Ottoman authorities in order to enable them to proceed with their building project.[13] Unexpected costs relating to the construction, financial hardships and the burden of various other taxes drained their funds. They became impoverished and were forced to take loans from local Arabs, eventually falling into severe debt.[6] Pressure and threats from the creditors led to a meshulach (rabbinical emissary) being sent to abroad to solicit funds for repayment of the loans.[14] In late 1720, with the debts still outstanding,[15] the Arab lenders lost patience and set the synagogue and its contents alight. The leaders of the community were imprisoned and shortly after, all the Ashkenazim were banished from the city.[16] Over the course of time, shops were built in the courtyard and the synagogue was left desolate, in a pile of rubble. It thus became known as the "Ruin of Rabbi Judah he-Hasid".[13]

Between 1808 and 1812 another group of ascetic Jews, known as Perushim, immigrated to Palestine from Lithuania. They were disciples of the Vilna Gaon and had settled in the city of Safed to the north. Some had wished to settle in Jerusalem and reclaim the Ashkenazic Compound. They were worried, however, that descendants of the Arab creditors still held the old promissory notes relating to the century-old debts incurred by he-Hasid's followers and that a new group of Ashkenazic immigrants would possibly inherit responsibility for repayment. The descendants of a group of Hasidim who made aliyah in 1777 also presented a problem. They apparently objected to any effort by the Perushim to take control of the synagogue ruin, claiming it had never belonged to the Perushim or their ancestors. The Hasidim claimed they had closer ties with the original owners and that their rights to the parcel of land were greater.[17]

Nevertheless, in late 1815, leader of the Safed Perushim, Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Shklov, arrived in Jerusalem with a group of followers. They directed their main efforts to rebuilding he-Hasid's synagogue, which had symbolised the expulsion of the Ashkenazim from Jerusalem. By this, they intended to demonstrate the re-establishment of Ashkenazic presence in the city. Rebuilding one of Jerusalem's ruins would also have symbolic kabbalistic significance. The "repairing" of an earlier destruction would represent the first step of rebuilding the entire city, a prerequisite for the arrival of the Messiah.[17]

In 1816 they "pleaded with the powers in the city of Constantinople to obtain a royal decree that the Arabs residing in Jerusalem would not be permitted to enforce the debts of the Ashkenazim", but nothing came of it. A year later, several leaders of the group, including Avraham Shlomo Zalman Zoref and Solomon Pach, travelled to Constantinople endeavouring to obtain such a firman (imperial decree). Two years later, in 1819, their efforts were realised and the century-old debts were cancelled.[18] The group acquired a legal document delineating the entire site acquired by he-Hasid in 1700. The area now included dilapidated dwellings and shops built by the creditors' heirs on part of the site. Next, they had to secure another firman that would permit construction at the site, including the building of a large synagogue. Two successive missions in 1820 and 1821 to obtain the firman from the sultan's court failed.[18]

Still awaiting imperial permission to build in the courtyard, the Perushim wished to rely on an old firman given to the Jews in 1623, which stated that there could be no objection to them building in their own quarters. Having received a supporting document issued by the Qadi of Jerusalem in March 1824, it was possible for them begin rebuilding the dwellings in the courtyard. In practice, however, construction never materialised as they were unable to exercise their authority over the plot of land. This was apparently due to confrontation with the Arab squatters and the local government's disregard of the documents proving their ownership of the courtyard.[19]

In 1825, following the disruption the group were experiencing, Shapira travelled to Europe once again. He hoped to secure the necessary firman, which would place the courtyard firmly in the Perushim's possession, and also to raise funds to cover the costs incurred trying to redeem the courtyard. His mission, however, was unsuccessful, as was a later mission attempted in 1829 by Shlomo Zalman Zoref, a Lithuanian-born silversmith.[19]

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This is zionism: The Synagogue of Satan –

Posted By on February 6, 2015

On February 3rd, Cholly Knickerbocker, reporting in his society news column in the Hearst Press, which appeared in the N.Y. Journal-American, stated on the subject of Rothschild, Jacob Schiff,

Today it is estimated by Jacobs grandson, John Schiff, a prominent member of New York society, that the old man sank about $20,000,000 for the final triumph of Bolshevism in Russia.

On October 1st, Mao Tse Tsung declares the founding of the Peoples Republic of China in Tiananmen Square, Beijing. He is funded by Rothschild, created Communism in Russia and handled by the following Rothschild agents: Solomon Adler, a former United States Treasury official who was a Soviet Spy; Israel Epstein, the son of a Jewish Bolshevik imprisoned by the Tsar in Russia for trying to foment a revolution there; and Frank Coe, a leading official of the Rothschild owned IMF.

In December 16ths Jewish Chronicle, Israeli Prime Minister, David Ben-Gurion, is quoted with the following statement,

Jerusalem is not the capital of Israel and world Jewry; it aspires to become the spiritual center of the world.

Figures reveal that as planned by the Rothschilds, every nation involved in World War 2 greatly multiplied their debt, bringing them further and further under Jewish control. Between 1940 and 1950, United States Federal Debt went from 43 billion dollars to 257 billion dollars, a 598% increase. During that same period Japanese debt increased by 1,348%, French debt increased by 583%, and Canadian debt increased by 417%.

James Paul Warburg appearing before the Senate on 7th February arrogantly states,

We shall have World Government, whether or not we like it. The only question is whether World Government will be achieved by conquest or consent.

Thus the Rothschilds get to work on their plan for global government which starts with a three step plan to centralize the economic systems of the entire world. These steps are:

Israel passes their law of return, guaranteeing every person born of a Jewish mother, throughout the world, the right to dwell in the State of Israel, however the Palestinians, who had lived there for 1,300 years, are denied that right.

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This is zionism: The Synagogue of Satan -

London schools cancel synagogue trips citing security fears after Paris terror attacks

Posted By on February 6, 2015

It points to intense anxiety within the Jewish community following the Islamist attacks on the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo magazine and a Kosher supermarket in the French capital last month.

The Coombe Federation which runs separate boys and girls schools in New Malden, Surrey, cancelled planned visits to Kingston Synagogue as part of an educational programme marking the 70th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.

Both schools held a detailed programme of lessons and assemblies to commemorate the holocaust but governors voted not to send pupils to the synagogue after hearing that security had been stepped up in line with advice.

A local primary school, which has not been named, also pulled out of a recent educational visit to learn about Judaism, according to Rabbi Samuel Landau of the local orthodox United Synagogue.

We were open with the schools about the fact that we have enhanced security measures in place, he said.

This has never been about blaming the schools or having a go at the schools but I dont want this to be the beginning of a worrying trend.

In a joint letter to newspapers Rabbi Landau and Rabbi Charley Baginsky, of Kingston Liberal congregation, said that the motivation was fear fear of the children being in a synagogue, fear of association with Jews.

They said that although the schools felt they were acting in the childrens interests, the result was a threefold victory to perpetrators of terror and extremism.

First, it gives in to the fear that these terrorists created rather than combating it with strength and care, they said.

Second, it deprives the children of an education against extremism.

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London schools cancel synagogue trips citing security fears after Paris terror attacks


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