Yes. Judaism has set portions of the Torah (Pentateuch) which are read on specific days. When these are to be read, the Torah scroll is placed on an elevated lectern in front of the congregation and read.
The Torah is read in the synagogue several times per week.
A lectern is a stand in a church where the Bible or other religious texts are read or displayed during services.
If it is primarily to rest a book on, it might be referred to as a LECTERN which is normally used to rest the Holy Bible on it when being read by the priest or other assigned reader. It might be large enough to hold more than one book that may be used during a particular meeting by the speaker at the Lectern.
A Christian lectern is a stand or podium in a church where the Bible or other holy scriptures are placed during religious services. It is typically used by the clergy to read passages of scripture or deliver sermons to the congregation.
Yes. They have the Jewish Bible. To read more about this, please see the Related Question below.
The Torah scroll is kept in an ark called the Aron Kodesh (Holy Ark). It is read on a stand called a Bimah.
The holy book of the Muslims is the Qur'an. It is also read at weddings.
because that's the language it was originally written in. (Only Christians choose to read the Bible in translation. Jews prefer the original Hebrew.)
The Ten Commandments is not so much a book as a chapter. The Jewish Holy Book is the Tanakh which roughly (though not exactly) corresponds with the Old Testament. To read more, please see the Related Question.
At the lectern or pulpit.
It is the place the Bible is placed and read from, and where sermons are made from. Reading pieces from the Bible is a very important part of services in all Christian denominations, so the lectern is important.
The Holy Book of Judaism is the Tanakh. Israel is a nation without an official state religion. (While Israel is the Jewish State, it is only Jewish in the ethnic sense, not the religious sense.) Most Israelis are Jews, but there are Muslim, Christian, Druze, and Baha'i minorities who each have their own holy books. To read more about the Jewish Holy Book, please read the Related Question below.