- said to
eulogize the deceased. The
mourners traditionally make a tear (
keriah or kriah, קריעה) in an
outer garment before or at the funeral. The tearing...
- A baal
keriah (Hebrew: בַּעַל קְרִיאָה, 'master of the reading'),
colloquially called the baal
korei (Hebrew: בַּעַל קוֹרֵא, 'master-reader'), is a member...
- an
outer garment that is torn
before the
procession in a
ritual known as
keriah. In some traditions,
mourners wear a
black ribbon that is cut in
place of...
- le-todah : din
birkat ha-gomel mi-tokh
sefer Ḳeriʼah ha-ḳedoshah] ([Israel : ḥ. mo. l., 2003] ; repr.
Sefer ḳerʼiah ha-ḳedoshah : hu shulḥan ʻarukh ʻal hilkhot...
- Ikuv
keriah (Hebrew: עיכוב קריאה, lit. 'delaying the reading') was a
practice of
European Jews in
which a
person could delay the
Torah reading in the synagogue...
- Ch. 73. See also:
Tearing keriah for
Jerusalem Archived May 1, 2009, at the
Wayback Machine; Ask the Rabbi:
Kosel Keriah Epstein, Donneal.
Halachos for...
-
further prayers are
recited by the
congregation while this is done. Ikuv
keriah,
rarely practiced today, was a
procedure by
which community members could...
- Zohar",
Jewish Encyclopedia Shifra Baruchson,
Sefarim ve-korim:
tarbut ha-
keriah shel
Yehude Italyah be-shilhe
haRenesans (Ramat Gan: Bar–Ilan University...
-
district superintendent,
unlike clergy who are
appointed by a bishop. Baal
keriah Cantor Holy
orders The term "lector" is used in
preference to that of "reader"...
- the
Torah reading. In most
synagogues it is read responsively: the baal
keriah (Torah reader)
singing two verses, and the
congregation responding with...