by Tzvi Gluckin
by aish.com
The Talmud, a vast and deep reservoir of Jewish legal and ethical teachings, has been the bedrock of Jewish life and learning for millennia.
by Rabbi Ahron Lopiansky
A thousand years after Sinai, the Jews reaffirmed their commitment to Torah. Why two acceptances?
by Unpacked
With the destruction of the Second Temple, the rabbis feared for the survival of Jewish life and practice. The Oral Law was written down for the first time to ensure it would always endure.
Everyone knows that the Talmud is full of disagreements. Does this mean that the information is inaccurate? Actually it proves the opposite!
by Aish HaTorah’s Discovery Seminar
The content of the Talmud, the accompanying oral part of the Torah, was actually transmitted before the written Bible.
How Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews preserved their scholarship and unique customs while maintaining Jewish unity.
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Time to put on your Talmudic thinking caps.
by Rabbi Shraga Simmons
A quarter-million people celebrate Siyum Hashas – completing the 7-year daily Talmud study cycle.
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Appreciating the trailblazing scholarly work of Rabbi Yitzchak al-Fasi.
by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan
In many respects, the Oral Torah is more important than the Written Torah.
Torah Themes
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