yes you do
-- Dress neatly and modestly. -- Treat the synagogue and its contents with respect. Cover your head with a hat while you're inside. -- Make arrangements to leave your dog with someone else while you're inside the synagogue. -- Wash your hands when you enter the synagogue, and after any use of the rest room while you're inside. -- If a service is in progress, take a seat and watch quietly. Keep conversation to a minimum, try to speak only when you need to, and then do so softly. Try to hold your questions until the service is ended.
165 km taking this route:Take A3 KÖLN, from Frankfurt, to A560 BONN at JUNCTION 5 (KREUZ (interchange) BONN/SIEGBURG).Take A560 to A65 BONN.Take A65 to A565 BONN.Take A565 to BONN.
hi Im vienna it take about 6 13h
in synagogue.
Cover Your Head At All TimesWhen You Go Inside You Should Take Your Shoes Off.
No, because a synagogue is a building where Jews meet for worship, and a hydrofoil is a really fast boat.
Mostly. Actually, we're kinda' lame. ;P Just remember to take your shoes off when you step inside. :)
1. No. They take them off when the go to sleep and go into a store, though. 2. My wife and many of our friends are Thai Buddhists. Shoes are always removed when entering either a Buddhist Temple or a home/apartment.
The Bat Mitzvah takes place in the synagogue.
To get gas out of shoes, place them outside in a well-ventilated area for a few hours to allow the gas to dissipate. You can also sprinkle baking soda inside the shoes to help absorb the gas odor. If the gas smell persists, consider washing the shoes according to the manufacturer's instructions.
7/8 inch
We puzzled for hours over this question, and couldn't come up with anything tthat elderly Jews take to the synagogue that's peculiar to the elderly ... that is, anything that a younger Jew would not take. Then we got a phone call from a member of our family, concerning their travel plans that will bring them to us for the coming holiday, and suddenly the answer clicked! The most common thing that elderly Jews take to the synagogue that their younger co-religionists do not take is . . . . . their grandchildren.