the Jewish orthodox community - определение. Что такое the Jewish orthodox community
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Что (кто) такое the Jewish orthodox community - определение

HISTORIC COMMUNITY IN PRZEDECZ, POLAND
The Jewish community of Przedecz, Poland; Przedecz (Jewish community)
  • Memorial at the site of the Przedecz Jewish cemetery
  • Memorial plaque for the Jews of Przedecz, [[Chamber of the Holocaust]], [[Mount Zion]], [[Jerusalem]]

Orthodox Judaism         
  • Haredi schoolgirls at the [[Western Wall]].
  • [[Chaim Sofer]], the leading ''halakhic'' authority of the Hungarian "zealots" during the Orthodox-Neolog schism.
  • [[David Zvi Hoffmann]], the single most prominent Orthodox theoretician who dealt with the critical-historical method.
  • [[Isaac Bernays]] in clerical vestments. The ministerial style of dress seen here was ubiquitous among German and Western European (neo)-Orthodox Jews.
  • A Jewish man pilloried in the synagogue, a common punishment in the pre-emancipation Jewish community in Europe.
  • [[Moses Sofer]] of [[Pressburg]], considered the father of Orthodoxy in general and ultra-Orthodoxy in particular.
  • Young [[Samson Raphael Hirsch]], the ideologue of Orthodox secession in Germany.
  • Lakewood]], [[New Jersey]], U.S., the world's largest [[yeshiva]] outside Israel
  • Ultra-Orthodox demonstrators (over 300,000 took part), protesting for the right of [[Yeshiva]] students to avoid conscription to the Israeli Army. Jerusalem, 2 March 2014.
ONE OF THE THREE MAJOR JUDAISM MOVEMENT, AND THE FORMAL ONE IN ISRAEL
Levels of orthodoxy in Judaism; Jewish Orthodox; Orthodox Jews; Orthodox Jew; Orthodox Jewish; Orthodox jews; Role of women in orthodox; Jewish Orthadox; Orthadox Judaism; Orthadox Jew; Orthadox jew; Orthodox jew; Orthodox Halakha; Frum Jew; Frum Jews; Orthodox Jewish movement; Religous jews; Jewish orthodox; Dosim; Orthodox judaism; Jewish orthodoxy; Traditionalist Judaism; Orthodox Jewry; Judaic Orthodoxy; Judaic orthodoxy; Jewish Orthodoxy; Jewish Orthodoxism; Jewish orthodoxism; Judaic Orthodoxism; Judaic orthodoxism; Gesetztreu; Orthodox Judaism.; History of Orthodox Judaism
¦ noun a major branch within Judaism which teaches strict adherence to rabbinical interpretation of Jewish law and its traditional observances.
Orthodox Judaism         
  • Haredi schoolgirls at the [[Western Wall]].
  • [[Chaim Sofer]], the leading ''halakhic'' authority of the Hungarian "zealots" during the Orthodox-Neolog schism.
  • [[David Zvi Hoffmann]], the single most prominent Orthodox theoretician who dealt with the critical-historical method.
  • [[Isaac Bernays]] in clerical vestments. The ministerial style of dress seen here was ubiquitous among German and Western European (neo)-Orthodox Jews.
  • A Jewish man pilloried in the synagogue, a common punishment in the pre-emancipation Jewish community in Europe.
  • [[Moses Sofer]] of [[Pressburg]], considered the father of Orthodoxy in general and ultra-Orthodoxy in particular.
  • Young [[Samson Raphael Hirsch]], the ideologue of Orthodox secession in Germany.
  • Lakewood]], [[New Jersey]], U.S., the world's largest [[yeshiva]] outside Israel
  • Ultra-Orthodox demonstrators (over 300,000 took part), protesting for the right of [[Yeshiva]] students to avoid conscription to the Israeli Army. Jerusalem, 2 March 2014.
ONE OF THE THREE MAJOR JUDAISM MOVEMENT, AND THE FORMAL ONE IN ISRAEL
Levels of orthodoxy in Judaism; Jewish Orthodox; Orthodox Jews; Orthodox Jew; Orthodox Jewish; Orthodox jews; Role of women in orthodox; Jewish Orthadox; Orthadox Judaism; Orthadox Jew; Orthadox jew; Orthodox jew; Orthodox Halakha; Frum Jew; Frum Jews; Orthodox Jewish movement; Religous jews; Jewish orthodox; Dosim; Orthodox judaism; Jewish orthodoxy; Traditionalist Judaism; Orthodox Jewry; Judaic Orthodoxy; Judaic orthodoxy; Jewish Orthodoxy; Jewish Orthodoxism; Jewish orthodoxism; Judaic Orthodoxism; Judaic orthodoxism; Gesetztreu; Orthodox Judaism.; History of Orthodox Judaism
Orthodox Judaism is the collective term for the traditionalist and theologically conservative branches of contemporary Judaism. Theologically, it is chiefly defined by regarding the Torah, both Written and Oral, as revealed by God to Moses on Mount Sinai and faithfully transmitted ever since.
History of the Jews in Wieluń         
ASPECT OF HISTORY
Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/History of the Jewish community of Wielun (Poland); History of the Jewish community of Wielun (Poland); History of the Jewish community of Wieluń
Wieluń, Poland is a small town (population in 2006: about 24,400 inhabitants) situated in the south of central Poland, between the large cities of Łódź and Kraków. A Jewish presence in Wieluń was recorded from the early part of the 16th century (1537).

Википедия

Jewish community of Przedecz

The Jewish community of Przedecz, which accounted for a large proportion of the population of Przedecz, a town in western Poland, was wiped out in the Holocaust. In Yiddish the city was known as Pshaytsh. In Hebrew, it was called "Pshedetz". [See memorial plaque.] The town, which dates from the 14th century, is located midway between Chodecz and Kłodawa. It is 75 km (47 mi) northwest of Łódź, 150 km (93 mi) west of Warsaw and 130 km (81 mi) east of Poznań. On the southeast, it borders on Lake Przedecz.