Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q17004170> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 57 of
57
with 100 triples per page.
- Q17004170 subject Q6595902.
- Q17004170 subject Q6916093.
- Q17004170 subject Q6917955.
- Q17004170 subject Q7237891.
- Q17004170 subject Q8164208.
- Q17004170 subject Q8529548.
- Q17004170 subject Q8566457.
- Q17004170 subject Q8792111.
- Q17004170 abstract "Jewish law today prescribes several kinds of hand washing (Hebrew: נטילת ידיים, n'tillat yadayim): Washing of hands when one wakes from his sleep (known in Yiddish as נעגל וואַסער, negel vasser), poured out from a vessel three times, intermittently, over each hand. This washing is said to remove an evil spirit from one's fingers. Washing of hands before prayer. Washing of hands when one touches his privy parts, or the sweat from his body (excluding his face), or when one crops his fingernails Washing of hands when one leaves the latrine, lavatory or bathhouse Washing of hands when one leaves a cemetery Washing of hands before breaking bread served in one's supper, and only bread made from one of the five chief grains (wheat, cultivated barley, spelt, wild barley, and oats) Washing of hands after eating a meal where the salt of Sodom was served at that table Washing of hands (practised by the Cohanim, or priests, of some communities) prior to going up to bless the people, as prescribed in the Sacerdotal Blessing (Heb. ברכת כהנים). Washing of hands when, prior to eating, one dips a morsel of food within a liquid (e.g. water, honey, oil, etc.) which then clings to that morsel, with the one exception of fruits, seeing that they do not require hand washing. In two of these hand washings, water is poured out over one's hands with the aid of a vessel, viz., 1) whenever one wakes from his sleep, and 2) before eating bread. These hand washings are nearly always accompanied with a special blessing prior to concluding the actual act of washing (see infra). Although the minimal quantity of water needed to fulfill one's religious duty is 1/4 of a log (a liquid measure of capacity equal to the bulk or volume of one and half medium-sized eggs), and must be sufficient to cover at least the middle joints of one's fingers, water poured out in excess of this amount is considered praiseworthy in Jewish law. The hand washing made when one leaves the lavatory or latrine, or when one touches his privy parts, or sweat, may be done simply with running tap water (faucet).The most developed and, perhaps, important of these washings is the washing of hands before eating bread. Such washing of hands is called in Hebrew, netilat yadayim, meaning "the lifting up of the hands." It is looked upon with such rigidity, that those who willfully neglect its practice are said to make themselves liable to excommunication, and bring upon themselves a state of scarcity, and are quickly taken out of the world.".
- Q17004170 thumbnail SilverWashingCup.jpg?width=300.
- Q17004170 wikiPageExternalLink short-history-of-jewish-handwashing.html.
- Q17004170 wikiPageExternalLink The-Laws-Upon-Awakening-in-the-Morning.htm.
- Q17004170 wikiPageExternalLink Hand_Washing.shtml.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q1060201.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q107427.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q123006.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q1304973.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q1686568.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q18813.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q191825.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q1978681.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q2071112.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q211351.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q223644.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q2356587.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q2529380.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q26403.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q2904193.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q2915314.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q302997.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q305760.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q319219.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q34990.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q358404.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q37085.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q387422.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q43290.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q448939.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q467138.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q51676.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q5915427.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q6595902.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q6916093.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q6917955.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q7237891.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q728973.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q794587.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q8067188.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q8164208.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q8529548.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q8566457.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q8641.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q8792111.
- Q17004170 wikiPageWikiLink Q896575.
- Q17004170 comment "Jewish law today prescribes several kinds of hand washing (Hebrew: נטילת ידיים, n'tillat yadayim): Washing of hands when one wakes from his sleep (known in Yiddish as נעגל וואַסער, negel vasser), poured out from a vessel three times, intermittently, over each hand. This washing is said to remove an evil spirit from one's fingers. Washing of hands before prayer.".
- Q17004170 label "Handwashing in Judaism".
- Q17004170 depiction SilverWashingCup.jpg.