It is called a Bar Mitzvah and no, the Torah contains no vowels.
Hebrew doesn't have vowels like in the English language. Instead, markings called nikudot are used to indicate letter pronunciation. Torah scrolls do not have these markings.
Yes, because it's Hebrew letters with NO symbols and vowels.
The Torah (the Five Books of Moses) is written in Hebrew. The Jews preserve the unchanged Hebrew text in their Torah scrolls. When you encounter the Torah in any other language, you're reading a translation. Other information The Talmud, which contains the Oral Torah is written in Hebrew and Aramaic.
The Torah is written on parchment with ink
The Torah is always now written in Hebrew. Long ago, the Torah was written in Aramaic, which is the ancestor of Hebrew.
It isn't because of difficulty or time-considerations. It's because, like the musical cantillation and the commentary, the vowels are part of our ancient Oral Tradition. They are found in printed copies of the Torah (so no contextual guesswork is needed), but are not permitted to be added in a Torah-scroll.See also:Facts about Torah-scrolls
The Torah reader is anyone, usually the Cantor or Chazan, who chants the passages which are read from the Torah scroll with a customary melody (cantillation; trope).
Terrance Michael Nearey has written: 'Phonetic feature systems for vowels' -- subject(s): Phonetics, Vowels
The Torah is written ... and read from ... in Hebrew.
You must mean, "What language has no vowels"...? If that was your question, then I would answer, "Hebrew", the language of Israel.
The Torah was dictated by Gcd and written down by Moses. Once Moses died the Torah was "sealed".
The Torah was and is written on parchment scrolls.
Deuteronomy 33:4.