יום חמישי, 18 יוני 2026Thursday, June 18, 2026
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יום חמישי, ג׳ תמוז תשפ״וThursday, June 18, 2026
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missed

Ask the Rabbi / From the Paper

Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part XIII)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

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Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part XII)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

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Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part XI)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

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Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part X)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

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Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part IX)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

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Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part VIII)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

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Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part VII)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

Ask the Rabbi

Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part VI)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

Ask the Rabbi

Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part V)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

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Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part IV)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

Ask the Rabbi

Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part III)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

Ask the Rabbi

Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part II)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery. Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

Ask the Rabbi

Q & A: A Missed Torah Reading (Part I)

By Rabbi Yaakov Klass

Question: If a person was ill on Shabbos and unable to go to shul to hear Keri’at haTorah, must he have someone read it to him in shul upon his recovery? Sincerely, Isaac Greenberg

MUSSAR – Avi Ganz

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Freedom Is the Ownership of Time

By Itamar Frankenthal

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