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The Parable and Its Lesson: A Novella (Stanford Studies in Jewish History and C)

Page 20

by S. Agnon


  Hoshana Rabba The seventh day of the autumn festival of Sukkot.

  Kaddish Prayer of praise in Aramaic; also recited by mourners.

  Kohen (pl. kohanim) A descendant of the priests who served in the Jerusalem Temple.

  Ma’asim tovim Good deeds. Maskilim (sing. maskil) The literate elite in the Jewish community.

  Melamed A teacher of young children.

  Mezuzah Small box containing a parchment scroll attached to doorways.

  Midrash The exegetical and storytelling component of rabbinic texts.

  Mikvah Ritual bath used monthly by women after their menses.

  Mishnah The code of Jewish law compiled in Palestine around 200 CE. The text for which the Talmud serves as a commentary.

  Mitzvot Commanded deeds; generally, the daily acts a Jew is obliged to perform under Jewish law.

  Pilpul Clever dialectical solutions to textual problems, often verging on sophistry.

  Rashi Acronym of Rabbi Shlomo Yitzhaki, the famous eleventh-century French commentator on the Bible and the Talmud.

  Shamash Sexton of a synagogue and assistant to a rabbi.

  Shavuot Festival seven weeks following Passover marking the giving of the Torah at Sinai.

  Sukkah Booths in which meals are eaten during the festival of Sukkot.

  Sukkot The harvest festival that takes place the week following Yom Kippur.

  Talit (pl. talitot) Shawl with four fringes worn by men during morning prayer.

  Targum An Aramaic translation of the Bible that is traditionally studied along with the Hebrew when studying the weekly portion of the Torah.

  Tefillin Black leather boxes and straps containing biblical verses written on parchment, worn by men on the arm and the head during morning prayers.

  Tsadik (pl. tsadikim) A righteous person who excels in his relationships both to God and to man.

  Yahrzeit The anniversary of the death of a family member.

  Yeshivah (pl. yeshivot) Academies of advanced Talmud study.

  Yizkor Memorial prayer for the dead recited on major festivals.

  Zohar The central text of medieval Jewish mysticism.

 

 

 


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