Pomegranate Candleholder
0.00₪
Made from sleek metal and cut in a charming pomegranate shape, this Shabbat
tea light holder is perfect for travelling as well as at home, and can be purchased
as a single or a pair.
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Each year in mid-February, the Common Swifts arrive in our area to nest. One of the nesting sites the swifts have chosen is the Western Wall. Swifts don’t nest in trees; they nest in cracks and crevices in buildings and walls. I find it moving to know that the migration pattern of these birds was observed thousands of years ago, and that when Jeremiah used this metaphor as he tried to return the People of Israel to their path, he might even have been looking at the Western Wall. -
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Joseph is a fruitful bough, even a fruitful bough by a well; whose branches run over the wall (Genesis 49:22, King James Version)
This is the blessing Jacob gives to Joseph before his death. We find this verse written on amulets from the first century, and with good reason. In Talmudic times, Talmudic sages taught that Joseph and his descendants were protected against the Evil Eye; that is, the Evil Eye has no power over them. The Talmud compares Joseph’s descendants to fish in the sea—the water covers them, so the Evil Eye can’t control them. So it is for Joseph’s descendants, too: the Evil Eye can’t control them. -
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Pomegranate Wall Hanging
0.00₪Pomegranate wall hanging designed by the israeli artist Shraga Landesman.
Pomegranate from aleph to taf (A to Z)
It is said that the Torah is as full as a pomegranate. Why did the sages choose the pomegranate? Because in most types of fruit, there’s a small space full of air. The Torah, like the pomegranate, is so full of seeds there’s not even a drop of air.
To illustrate this saying, I chose to fill the pomegranate with all the letters, from aleph to taf, which are used to write the Torah.





