Look up kehilla or kehillah in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Kehilla or kehillah (Hebrew: קהילה) means "congregation" in Hebrew. The term may refer to:
Kehilla (modern), the elected local communal Jewish structure in Eastern Europe (Poland's Second Republic, the Baltic States, Ukrainian People's Republic) during the interwar period (1918–1940)
Kehillah Jewish High School, Palo Alto, California, US
Kehilla Community Synagogue, a synagogue in Oakland, California
Look up kehilla or kehillah in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Kehilla or kehillah (Hebrew: קהילה) means "congregation" in Hebrew. The term may refer...
Kehilla Community Synagogue is an unaffiliated Jewish congregation and synagogue, located in the suburb of Piedmont, Oakland, in the San Francisco Bay...
Look up congregation or kehilla in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Congregation may refer to: Church (congregation), a religious organization that meets...
officiellement vicaire patriarcal de la Kehilla Rafic Nahra officiellement vicaire patriarcal de la Kehilla Collège des Bernardins Nahra P. Rafic Portals:...
The Rabbi Emeritus of Woodside Synagogue Ahavas Torah, and the Rav of Kehillas Ohr Somayach, and lecturer at Ohr Somayach in Jerusalem. Breitowitz was...
In 2014, OK Kosher won the rights to the .kosher domain name. In 2015, Kehilla Kosher from Los Angeles merged with OK Kosher. The agency often expands...
under the general auspices of Khal Adath Jeshurun, which is an Orthodox kehilla that serves the mostly German-Jewish community of Washington Heights and...
Europe's oldest recorded and most well-known Jewish communities (in Hebrew, Kehilla), first mentioned by the Sephardi-Jewish traveller Ibrahim ibn Yaqub in...
unified force, the terrible poverty and the barbaric behaviour of the Kehilla representatives toward the wretched, exhausted, starved public... The slogan:...
meaning 'little town'. Despite the existence of Jewish self-administration (kehilla/kahal), officially there were no separate Jewish municipalities, and the...
World War I he was elected as the Socialist vice-president of the Vilna Kehilla. Kleit left Lithuania for political reasons and lived in Berlin, Cairo...
synagogues remain in Tower Hamlets: the Congregation of Jacob Synagogue (1903 – Kehillas Ya'akov), the East London Central Synagogue (1922), the Fieldgate Street...
Palestine. In 1924, Agudath Israel obtained 75 percent of the votes in the Kehilla elections. The Orthodox community polled some 16,000 of a total 90,000...
rabbis are buried here. Kehillas Belz of New York has a section within the Beth Moses section of Wellwood Cemetery. The Belz Kehilla still dedicated (Mekudash)...
founders of New York City, but some Jews took refuge in Seridó. The Sephardic kehilla in Zamość in the 16th and 17th centuries was the one of its kind in the...
immigration to Palestine was a form of escapism. After the 1936 Warsaw kehilla elections, Henryk Ehrlich accused Zionist leaders Yitzhak Gruenbaum and...
yeshiva of Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin Yaakov Feitman (born 1948), rabbi of Kehillas Bais Yehudah Tzvi, Cedarhurst, New York Aharon Feldman (born 1932), rosh...
by local administrative bodies, called the Councils of Elders (Qahal, Kehilla), constituted in every town or hamlet possessing a Jewish population. These...
Rosh Beth Din (Chief Justice) of the AHU (an acronym for the threesome kehilla of Altona, Hamburg, and Wandsbek). He was the author of Mishnas DeRebbi...
Judaism Jewish ghettos in Europe, a neighborhood where Jews lived together. Kehilla (modern), early 20th century successors to the Central/Eastern European...
Ashlag are prominent in this field, the former rationally and in terms of a kehilla (community) of Jews in galut (the diaspora) influencing their non-Jewish...
Founder/CEO of Canderel, Chancellor of Concordia University, Board Member of Kehilla Group Montreal, Trustee/Board Member of Jewish General Hospital Foundation...