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Chizuk is a recurring theme throughout Jewish scripture and rabbinic literature, often reflecting the necessity of moral and spiritual fortitude. In the Gemara, specifically in Brachot 32b, the Sages note that four things require continuous chizuk: Torah study, good deeds (maasim tovim), prayer, and proper behavior (derech eretz). [3]
Maasim, officially the Municipality of Maasim (Cebuano: Lungsod sa Maasim; Tagalog: Bayan ng Maasim; Maguindanaon: Inged nu Maasim, Jawi: ايڠد نو ماسم), is a municipality in the province of Sarangani, Philippines. According to 2020 census, it had a population of 64,940 people.
Berber Jews cca. 1900. Toshavim (Hebrew: תושבים, "residents") or bildiyīn (Moroccan Arabic: بلديين, lit. 'of the country, natives') [1] is a generic reference to non-Sephardic Jews who inhabited lands in which the Jews expelled from Spain in 15th century settled ("Megorashim", "expellees"). [2]
Mawsim or moussem (Arabic: موسم), waada, or raqb, is the term used in the Maghreb to designate an annual regional festival in which worshippers usually combine the religious celebration of local Marabouts or Sufi Tariqas, with various festivities and commercial activities.
מַעֲשִׂים טוֹבִים, מע״ט (ma'asim tovim) - good deeds מעבר לדף, מע״ל ( mei-eiver ledaf ) - on the other side of the page מעת לעת, מע״ל ( mei-eit la-eit ) - ( Halachah , Kashrut ) 24 hours; lit. from a time to [the same] time
Sarah Bas Tovim (lived in the late 17th and early 18th centuries) was a Ukrainian Jewish woman, author of Shloshe Shearim ("Three Portals") the most widely circulated of the tkhines, Yiddish-language prayer booklets intended mainly for Jewish women. [1]
"Devarim Tovim" (Good Words), on Ecclesiastes. Alshich calls Ecclesiastes, on account of its deep thoughts, "Waters without end" (oceans). He endeavors in the commentary to illustrate, as the central idea of the book, the dictum, "All is vain, except the fear of the Lord, which is the essential condition of man's real existence," Venice, 1601.
Tuwim, sometimes anglicized as Tuvim, is a Hebrew language surname which comes from the Hebrew tovim (טובים ) meaning "good". Notable people with this surname include: Judith Tuvim, birth name of Judy Holliday (1921–1965), American Jewish actress, comedian, and singer; Irena Tuwim (1899–1987), Polish-Jewish poet and translator