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Judyth Groner

Forfatter af All About Hanukkah

24 Works 1,714 Members 23 Reviews 1 Favorited

Om forfatteren

Image credit: via Perelman Jewish Day School

Værker af Judyth Groner

All About Hanukkah (1988) 243 eksemplarer
My Very Own Haggadah (1974) 221 eksemplarer
Where Is the Afikomen? (1985) 135 eksemplarer
Let's Visit Israel (2004) 99 eksemplarer
All About Yom Kippur (1997) 92 eksemplarer
My First Hebrew Word Book (2005) — Forfatter — 72 eksemplarer
Come, Let Us Welcome Shabbat (1978) 60 eksemplarer
My Very Own Rosh Hashanah Book (1978) 56 eksemplarer
My Very Own Yom Kippur Book (1978) 51 eksemplarer
My Very Own Sukkot Book (1664) 47 eksemplarer
All About Passover (2000) 46 eksemplarer
My Very Own Megillah (1977) 42 eksemplarer
My Very Own Simchat Torah Book (1981) 42 eksemplarer
Let's Make Latkes (Board) (1991) 42 eksemplarer
My very own Chanukah book (1977) 35 eksemplarer
You Can Do a Mitzvah (1999) 35 eksemplarer
My Very Own Shavuot Book (1982) 24 eksemplarer
Make Your Own Megillah (Purim) (1998) 22 eksemplarer
My Very Own Jewish Community (1984) 6 eksemplarer

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A pretty little board book with colorful pictures and few words for a very young child. Reading the reviews, I realized the book is as much about means of transportation as it is about places in Israel. A young boy travels to Ben Gurion airport, the hills of Jerusalem, the wall of the Old City, a kibbutz, Eilat, the desert, Masada, Beersheva, and the Dead Sea by plane, in a tour bus, on foot, in a tractor, in a glass-bottomed boat, in a jeep, in cable car, on a camel, and by floating respectively. There is very little detail in the pictures and no almost no information in the text, no real interaction with people, and nothing obviously Jewish about the book (although the locations have a Jewish connection), even though it is published by Kar-Ben and is a PJ Library book. But it ends with an invitation to visit what might well be a charming country; it's a sweet book.… (mere)
½
 
Markeret
raizel | 3 andre anmeldelser | Jan 6, 2022 |
The word "Pascha" comes from the Hebrew word "Pesach," meaning "Passover." In the understanding of Orthodox Christians, the Jewish ritual of Passover is a prophetic foreshadowing of the Death, Burial, and Resurrection of Christ and of our Redemption through His Body and Blood.
 
Markeret
sagocreno | Jul 22, 2019 |
Like the Eastern Orthodox liturgical calendar, which begins each year on September 1, the Jewish liturgical calendar begins on Rosh HaShanah, which usually falls in September based on the Jewish lunar calendar.
 
Markeret
sagocreno | 1 anden anmeldelse | Jul 22, 2019 |
This old favorite gives children an illustrated introduction to Yom Kippur and makes the concepts of forgiveness, repentance, and starting over easy to grasp. The words are complemented by music to accompany holiday songs.
 
Markeret
HandelmanLibraryTINR | Nov 5, 2017 |

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Statistikker

Værker
24
Medlemmer
1,714
Popularitet
#14,983
Vurdering
½ 3.7
Anmeldelser
23
ISBN
59
Udvalgt
1

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