E-Tora:


Upcoming Events:

 Subscribe to our newsletter:
  Submit
 Search:
  Submit
PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
6.jpg

nagłówek2.JPG



 

B"H

 

PARSZA KI TAWO

Księga Powtórzonego Prawa 26:1-29:8

Moses instructs the people of Israel: When you enter the land that G-d is giving to you as your eternal heritage, and you settle it and cultivate it, bring the first-ripened fruits (bikkurim) of your orchard to the Holy Temple, and declare your gratitude for all that G-d has done for you.

Our Parshah also includes the laws of the tithes given to the Levites and to the poor, and detailed instructions on how to proclaim the blessings and the curses on Mount Grizzim and Mount Ebal -- as discussed in the beginning of the Parshah of Re'ei. Moses reminds the people that they are G-d's chosen people, and that they, in turn, have chosen G-d

The latter part of Ki Tavo consists of the Tochachah ("Rebuke"). After listing the blessings with which G-d will reward the people when they follow the laws of the Torah, Moses gives a long, harsh account of the bad things -- illness, famine, poverty and exile -- that shall befall them if they abandon G-d's commandments.

Moses concludes by telling the people that only today, forty years after their birth as a people, have they attained "a heart to know, eyes to see, and ears to hear."

 

Haftara: Księga Izajasza 60:1-22

PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
Home :: Chabad Lubawicz :: Aktualności :: Święta :: Cykl życia :: Judaizm i życie :: Kontakt
Chabad Lubawicz Polska Judaizm i Żydzi w Polsce Slominskiego 19 Suite 508 Warsaw, Poland 48-22-637-53-52
Powered by Chabad.org © 2001-2012 Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center. All rights reserved.
In everlasting memory of Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen, pioneer of Torah, Judaism and Jewish information on the web
rebe1.jpg
1.jpg
4.jpg
3.jpg
2.jpg
5.jpg
Wirtualny_Sztetl_baner.JPG
logo.jpg

facebook.gif