- A
sukkah or
succah (/ˈsʊkə/; Hebrew: סוכה [suˈka]; plural, סוכות [suˈkot]
sukkot or
sukkos or sukkoth,
often translated as "booth") is a
temporary hut...
- 33a
Babylonian Talmud,
Tractate Bechorot, 5b
Babylonian Talmud,
Tractate Succah, 40b
Babylonian Talmud,
Tractate Gittin, 45b , for example,
Babylonian Talmud...
- the miracle. The
blessings for
Hanukkah lights are
discussed in
tractate Succah, p. 46a.
Megillat Antiochus (probably
composed in the 2nd century) concludes...
- fire, so such a unit was put into the cemetery. A
decorated wooden board Succah used in
Fischach in the
first quarter of the 20th
Century is in the collection...
-
Jewish Chronicle. 23
February 2012. Cohen, Justin. "Wembley
Stadium hosts succah for the
first time!". jewishnews.timesofisrael.com.
Retrieved 15 February...
- 1007/bf01679792. JSTOR 20101094. S2CID 143121150.
Grossman 2004, p. 181.
Succah 51a–52b Adelman,
Howard (2001-11-18). "Italian
Jewish Women at Prayer"....
- also have been used by the
religiously observant Levine family to
create a
succah during Sukkot. The
house was
originally built for the
Levin family. It later...
- hours. No work is
permitted on this day. At the end of the holiday, the
succahs are dismantled.
Their poles and nets will be
stored until the next Harvest...
-
tractates that are
sometimes studied in the
spring semester.
These include Succah, Pesachim, and Makkos. As is true in many Lithuanian-style Yeshivas, the...
-
Heritage List for England.
Retrieved 7
September 2015.
Historic England. "
Succah 2
metres south west of
synagogue (1254575)".
National Heritage List for...