Skip to content

StrongComet - iPhoneography

  • Home
  • iPhoneography
    • Themes
      • Italy, September 2015
      • The Mystorin Theatre – SEVEN
      • The Mystery Theater
      • Street Portraits
      • Head In The Cloud
      • Mea Shearim
      • My Ghosts
      • Ladies Of The Park
      • The Dead Sea
      • City Ghosts
  • Links
  • About
    • Bio
    • Features
  • Contact
  • Home
  • iPhoneography
    • Themes
      • Italy, September 2015
      • The Mystorin Theatre – SEVEN
      • The Mystery Theater
      • Street Portraits
      • Head In The Cloud
      • Mea Shearim
      • My Ghosts
      • Ladies Of The Park
      • The Dead Sea
      • City Ghosts
  • Links
  • About
    • Bio
    • Features
  • Contact
  • Home
  • iPhoneography
    • Themes
      • Italy, September 2015
      • The Mystorin Theatre – SEVEN
      • The Mystery Theater
      • Street Portraits
      • Head In The Cloud
      • Mea Shearim
      • My Ghosts
      • Ladies Of The Park
      • The Dead Sea
      • City Ghosts
  • Links
  • About
    • Bio
    • Features
  • Contact
  • Black And White / iPhoneography

Please God III Last one from the Wailing Wall. So many people looking for God there, and elsewhere…Still, nothing in that Wall, not even static electricity…

Published May 22, 2018 · Updated October 26, 2019

Please God III
Last one from the Wailing Wall. So many people looking for God there, and elsewhere…Still, nothing in that Wall, not even static electricity…

Tags: Black And WhiteBlack And White PhotographyiPhoneography

  • Next story Genesis – The first chapter. 🖋🖋🖋🖋🖋🖋🖋 Writing a Torah scroll is a religious act. First and foremost, a kosher (acceptable according to Jewish law) Torah scroll must be hand-written. This is done by a sofer (scribe), a specially trained individual who is devout and knowledgeable in the laws governing the proper writing and assembling of a scroll. Sofer is from the Hebrew root “to count.” According to the Talmud (Kiddushin 30a), these scholars would count each letter of the Torah. More specifically, the modern scribe is called a sofer stam, an acronym for sefer torah (Torah scroll) tefillin (phylacteries) and mezuzah. All these ritual objects must be written according to strict standards regarding size, lettering style, and layout.
  • Previous story Please God II

Follow:

A proud Founder Artist of The New Era Museum!
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
  • Home
  • iPoneography
  • About
  • Features
  • Contact

(c) 2011-2019 Eitan Shavit