Ask a rabbi that.
The Mezuzah is Mentioned in the Torah so it would make sense that the Mezuzah's been around for as long as the Torah has. Considering the books that refer to the Torah bring you back till the time of the Torah such as Maimonides - 12th century Talmud - 5th century Mishna - 2nd Psalms - 10 BCE That would make the Torah 3322 years old.
The Gemara is the commentary of the Torah-sages on the Oral Torah. Together, the Oral Torah (Mishna) and the Gemara make up the Talmud.
Greece has synagogues, so they would have the regular Hebrew Torah.
The Torah is the basis of the Christian's Old Testament.
Any number of scribes can write a Torah-scroll.
We actually should, but it's generally prohibitively expensive, so it never became customary.
We actually should, but it's generally prohibitively expensive, so it never became customary.
hospitals do make it big so that when the hospital is full they have lots of rooms left
God had Moses write the Torah (Exodus 34:27, 24:12, and Deuteronomy 31:24) as a testimony that He gave the Torah's commands to the Israelites; and so that the contents of the Torah should not be denied or forgotten.
Well the the root grow so big so they can collect the water and the top of the trees grow so big to make shade to the bottom of the tree so the water does not evaporate
They don't get big.
The Mishnah and the Gemara make up the Talmud. These are the Oral Torah, which serve to explain the written Torah. The laws of the Oral Torah were received by the Israelites from God at Mount Sinai, along with the written Torah (Talmud, Berakhot 5a). The Talmud was put into writing 1510 years ago, so that it wouldn't be forgotten during the Jewish exile.