Tefilah (Jewish prayer) in light of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov. Speaker: Rabbi Nasan Maimon. This anthology of Rabbi Nachman’s teachings about tefila (prayer) began as a small collection called Hishtapkhus Hanefesh (Outpouring of the Soul). It was compiled by Rabbi Moshe Yehoshua Bezhilianski (known as Reb Alter of Teplik) and first published in Jerusalem about Continue Reading »
Tefilah (Jewish prayer) in light of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov. Speaker: Rabbi Nasan Maimon. This anthology of Rabbi Nachman’s teachings about tefila (prayer) began as a small collection called Hishtapkhus Hanefesh (Outpouring of the Soul). It was compiled by Rabbi Moshe Yehoshua Bezhilianski (known as Reb Alter of Teplik) and first published in Jerusalem about Continue Reading »
Tefilah (Jewish prayer) in light of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov. Speaker: Rabbi Nasan Maimon. This anthology of Rabbi Nachman’s teachings about tefila (prayer) began as a small collection called Hishtapkhus Hanefesh (Outpouring of the Soul). It was compiled by Rabbi Moshe Yehoshua Bezhilianski (known as Reb Alter of Teplik) and first published in Jerusalem about Continue Reading »
Tefilah (Jewish prayer) in light of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov. Speaker: Rabbi Nasan Maimon. This anthology of Rabbi Nachman’s teachings about tefila (prayer) began as a small collection called Hishtapkhus Hanefesh (Outpouring of the Soul). It was compiled by Rabbi Moshe Yehoshua Bezhilianski (known as Reb Alter of Teplik) and first published in Jerusalem about Continue Reading »
Speaker: Rabbi Nasan Maimon. 00:00 – The letters of the alef-beis (Hebrew alphabet), and the crowns, vowels, and musical notes of the written Torah. There are 600,000 letters in the Torah, representing the 600,000 root souls of the Jewish People. The yearning to achieve a greater spiritual level actually creates new life-force in a person. Continue Reading »
BeHaAlosekha 5741 (Review) –
Speaker: Rabbi Nasan Maimon, 10th of Adar 2, 5776 (2016-03-20). 00:00 – Review of PARAGRAPHS 1-3 and beginning of PARAGRAPH 4. Speech that is accepted must contain good. Praising tzadikkim causes speech to be accepted. The 365 gidin (tendons) through which the blood flows correspond to the 365 prohibitions in the Torah. What does it Continue Reading »