Yes. In Genesis (21:14) we find that Hagar went to the Beersheva desert. In Genesis (21:31) we discover why it's called Beersheva - the well of oaths - since Abraham made an oath (of peace) there, with Avimelech.
Nova - 1974 The Beersheva Experiment 6-8 was released on: USA: 8 March 1979
No
Parchment was (and is) used for scrolls of the Torah and prophets. For mundane purposes, anything could be used, such as a potsherd or anything else.See also the related LinkFacts about Torah scrolls
Lois Ungar has written: 'Tomorrow we play beersheva'
Tefillin contain scrolls that have sections of Torah written on them.
They are taught Torah, they say blessings over food, and they're taught the various mitzvot (Torah-commands) as they become age-appropriate.
There is no fixed topic. It could be anything related to Torah and Judaism; beliefs, living as a Jew; the current Torah-reading or festival, etc.
A bimah doesn't do anything. It's the platform that the Torah is read and prayers are led from in a synagogue.
The Torah never talks about Moses' enjoyment of anything.
The central thing is the Holy Ark in which the Torah-scroll is kept. There are also chairs or benches, shelves for prayerbooks, a special table on which the Torah is read, and a lectern where the leader of the prayers stands. Anything else is optional.
The Torah doesn't mention anything about a Hebrew blanket. That was from the movie, "The Ten Commandments" (1956).The Torah doesn't mention anything about a Hebrew blanket. That was from the movie, "The Ten Commandments" (1956).
The word Torah means 'Teachings'.