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  1. json/Kabbalah/Gan Naul (Abulafia)/English/Sefaria Community Translation.json +79 -0
  2. json/Kabbalah/Gan Naul (Abulafia)/English/merged.json +81 -0
  3. json/Kabbalah/Gan Naul (Abulafia)/Hebrew/Gan Naul Abulafia.json +0 -0
  4. json/Kabbalah/Gan Naul (Abulafia)/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  5. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/English/Moses Cordovero's Introduction to Kabbalah, Annotated trans. of Or ne'erav, Ira Robinson, 1994..json +0 -0
  6. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/English/Sefaria Community Translation.json +283 -0
  7. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/English/YU Torah miTzion Beit Midrash.json +307 -0
  8. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/English/merged.json +0 -0
  9. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/Hebrew/Or Neerav -- grimoar.json +0 -0
  10. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/Hebrew/Or Neerav, Furth 1701..json +352 -0
  11. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  12. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Pardes Rimonim/English/Jardรญn de Granadas [es].json +68 -0
  13. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Pardes Rimonim/English/Sefaria Community Translation.json +180 -0
  14. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Pardes Rimonim/English/merged.json +180 -0
  15. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Pardes Rimonim/Hebrew/Pardes Rimonim, Koretz, 1780..json +410 -0
  16. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Pardes Rimonim/Hebrew/Pardes Rimonim.json +0 -0
  17. json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Pardes Rimonim/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  18. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Barukh She'amar on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark B Greenspan.json +0 -0
  19. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Barukh She'amar on Pesach Haggadah/English/merged.json +0 -0
  20. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Barukh She'amar on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Barukh Sheamar on Haggadah, Tel Aviv 1968.json +0 -0
  21. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Barukh She'amar on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  22. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Batei HaNefesh on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Otzar Perushei Ha-haggadah, Chida. Jerusalem, 1959.json +0 -0
  23. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Batei HaNefesh on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  24. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Ritva's Commentary -- Wikisource.json +370 -0
  25. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +367 -0
  26. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Divrei Negidim on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark Greenspan.json +0 -0
  27. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Divrei Negidim on Pesach Haggadah/English/merged.json +0 -0
  28. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Divrei Negidim on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Haggadah shel Pesach LaMaharal, London, 1960.json +0 -0
  29. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Divrei Negidim on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  30. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Ephod Bad on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark Greenspan.json +0 -0
  31. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Ephod Bad on Pesach Haggadah/English/merged.json +0 -0
  32. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Ephod Bad on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Haggadah Ephod Bad, Warsaw, 1872.json +0 -0
  33. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Ephod Bad on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  34. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Geulat Olam on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Otzar Perushei Ha-haggadah, Chida. Jerusalem, 1959.json +0 -0
  35. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Geulat Olam on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  36. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark Greenspan.json +521 -0
  37. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah/English/merged.json +518 -0
  38. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Mahzor Roma, Bologna 1540.json +544 -0
  39. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +540 -0
  40. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kos Eliyahu on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark Greenspan.json +0 -0
  41. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kos Eliyahu on Pesach Haggadah/English/merged.json +0 -0
  42. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kos Eliyahu on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Haggadah Kos Eliyahu. Djerba, 1938.json +0 -0
  43. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kos Eliyahu on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  44. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Maarechet Heidenheim on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark Greenspan.json +0 -0
  45. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Maarechet Heidenheim on Pesach Haggadah/English/merged.json +0 -0
  46. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Maarechet Heidenheim on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Haggadah shel Pesach im perush Tevele Bondi, Frankfort, 1898.json +0 -0
  47. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Maarechet Heidenheim on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json +0 -0
  48. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Maaseh Nissim on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark Greenspan.json +0 -0
  49. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Maaseh Nissim on Pesach Haggadah/English/Sefaria Community Translation.json +270 -0
  50. json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Maaseh Nissim on Pesach Haggadah/English/merged.json +0 -0
json/Kabbalah/Gan Naul (Abulafia)/English/Sefaria Community Translation.json ADDED
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+ "title": "Gan Naul (Abulafia)",
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+ "heTitle": "ื’ืŸ ื ืขื•ืœ (ืื‘ื•ืœืขืคื™ื”)",
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+ "So with the exchanges (in the order of the letters), the raw material has brought out matters that are contrary. For example, I heard it said that the fools flip the word, <i>betzelo</i> (in his shade) [in the phrase] (Song of Songs 2:3), \"I delight to sit in his shade.\" So they said, <i>tzaluv</i> (the crucified one), is added [here]. And the one who interpreted it like this said, \"I delight to sit in the shade of the crucified one.\" As he went with this, he did not know the statement (Deuteronomy 21:23), \"Do not leave his corpse overnight on the stake.\" And the proof [that it is incorrect is in the continuation of the verse], \"for a hanging corpse is an affront to God,\" [such that] one would not want to sit in its shade. Rather, one who wants to hang, 'should hang upon a tall tree.' And this is the foolishness and evil of the one who wants to transform the words of the Torah into heresy. For behold, if the Song of Songs - which is the holy of holies - were to be profane and all of its ideas like their simple understanding, God forbid, all of its words would only indicate the love of a physical bride and groom. 'But wickedness be far from God; wrongdoing, from the Omnipresent.' There was never a proper sage - one from the Children of Israel, who are the holy descendants from the children of Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov and the students of Moshe, Aharon, David and Shlomo - who [even] considered that the Song of Songs is anything but a parable for the Congregation of Israel together with the Holy One, blessed be He. For He is like a perfect Groom to her in all matters, and she is like a perfect bride in all matters, He in divinity and she in humanity. And the love and clinging between them is shared in the way of ascent and descent - this One ascends and that one descends. \"Who is this one who has ascended from the desert\" (Song of Songs 3:6); \"I have descended to the walnut orchard\" (Song of Songs 6:11). This hints to the virgin, the blessing for whose blood is, \"who has set the walnut tree [in] the Garden of Eden.\" "
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+ "So with the exchanges (in the order of the letters), the raw material has brought out matters that are contrary. For example, I heard it said that the fools flip the word, <i>betzelo</i> (in his shade) [in the phrase] (Song of Songs 2:3), \"I delight to sit in his shade.\" So they said, <i>tzaluv</i> (the crucified one), is added [here]. And the one who interpreted it like this said, \"I delight to sit in the shade of the crucified one.\" As he went with this, he did not know the statement (Deuteronomy 21:23), \"Do not leave his corpse overnight on the stake.\" And the proof [that it is incorrect is in the continuation of the verse], \"for a hanging corpse is an affront to God,\" [such that] one would not want to sit in its shade. Rather, one who wants to hang, 'should hang upon a tall tree.' And this is the foolishness and evil of the one who wants to transform the words of the Torah into heresy. For behold, if the Song of Songs - which is the holy of holies - were to be profane and all of its ideas like their simple understanding, God forbid, all of its words would only indicate the love of a physical bride and groom. 'But wickedness be far from God; wrongdoing, from the Omnipresent.' There was never a proper sage - one from the Children of Israel, who are the holy descendants from the children of Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov and the students of Moshe, Aharon, David and Shlomo - who [even] considered that the Song of Songs is anything but a parable for the Congregation of Israel together with the Holy One, blessed be He. For He is like a perfect Groom to her in all matters, and she is like a perfect bride in all matters, He in divinity and she in humanity. And the love and clinging between them is shared in the way of ascent and descent - this One ascends and that one descends. \"Who is this one who has ascended from the desert\" (Song of Songs 3:6); \"I have descended to the walnut orchard\" (Song of Songs 6:11). This hints to the virgin, the blessing for whose blood is, \"who has set the walnut tree [in] the Garden of Eden.\" "
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json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/English/Moses Cordovero's Introduction to Kabbalah, Annotated trans. of Or ne'erav, Ira Robinson, 1994..json ADDED
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+ "title": "Or Neerav",
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+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org",
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+ "versionTitle": "Sefaria Community Translation",
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+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ืชืจื’ื•ื ืงื”ื™ืœืช ืกืคืจื™ื",
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+ "actualLanguage": "en",
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+ "categories": [
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+ "Ramak"
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+ "text": {
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+ "Introduction": [],
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+ "PART I": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": [
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+ [],
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+ []
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ "PART II": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": []
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+ },
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+ "PART III": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": []
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+ },
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+ "PART IV": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": []
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+ },
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+ "PART V": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": []
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+ },
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+ "PART VI": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": []
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+ },
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+ "PART VII": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "Letter Alef": [],
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+ "Letter Bet": [],
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+ "Letter Gimel": [],
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+ "Letter Daled": [],
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+ "Letter Heh": [],
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+ "Letter Vav": [],
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+ "Letter Zayin": [],
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+ "Letter Chet": [],
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+ "Letter Tet": [],
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+ "Letter Yod": [],
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+ "Letter Kaf": [],
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+ "Letter Lamed": [],
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+ "Letter Mem": [],
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+ "Letter Nun": [],
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+ "Letter Samekh": [],
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+ "Letter Peh": [],
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+ "Letter Tzadi": [],
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+ "Letter Kof": [
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+ "",
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+ "",
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+ "<i>Kedem</i>. Keter, แธคokhmah."
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+ ],
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+ "Letter Resh": [],
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+ "Letter Shin": [],
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+ "Letter Tav": []
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+ },
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+ "Appendix The Introductory Material": {
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+ "": []
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "schema": {
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+ "enTitle": "Or Neerav",
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+ "key": "Or Neerav",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื”ืงื“ืžื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Introduction"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื",
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+ "enTitle": "PART I",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
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+ "enTitle": "Subject"
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+ "heTitle": "",
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+ "enTitle": ""
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+ }
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื‘",
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+ "enTitle": "PART II",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
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+ "enTitle": "Subject"
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+ "heTitle": "",
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+ "enTitle": ""
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+ }
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื’",
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+ "enTitle": "PART III",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
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+ "enTitle": "Subject"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "",
127
+ "enTitle": ""
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื“",
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+ "enTitle": "PART IV",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
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+ "enTitle": "Subject"
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+ },
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+ {
140
+ "heTitle": "",
141
+ "enTitle": ""
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื”",
147
+ "enTitle": "PART V",
148
+ "nodes": [
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+ {
150
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
151
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
152
+ },
153
+ {
154
+ "heTitle": "",
155
+ "enTitle": ""
156
+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "PART VI",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
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+ "enTitle": "Subject"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "",
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+ "enTitle": ""
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื–",
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+ "enTitle": "PART VII",
176
+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
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+ "enTitle": "Subject"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Alef"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื‘",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Bet"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื’",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Gimel"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื“",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Daled"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Heh"
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Vav"
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื–",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Zayin"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื—",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Chet"
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+ },
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื“",
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื˜ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Samekh"
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื–",
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื—",
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื˜",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Kof"
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื›",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Resh"
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Shin"
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Tav"
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+ "heTitle": "ื ืกืคื—: ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืช",
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+ "versionSource": "http://www.torontotorah.com",
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+ "versionTitle": "YU Torah miTzion Beit Midrash",
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+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ื™ืฉื™ื‘ื”-ื™ื•ื ื™ื‘ืจืกื™ื˜ื™ ื‘ื™ืช ืžื“ืจืฉ ืชื•ืจื” ืžืฆื™ื•ืŸ",
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+ "Ramak"
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+ "Introduction": [],
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+ "PART I": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "Now that we have spoken about those who distance themselves from this wisdom [kabbalah]โ€ฆ we shall now come to describe those who draw near to itโ€ฆ For in those who draw near we have seen three groups: one mistaken, one sinning, and one desirable:",
29
+ "The mistaken group includes some of our generation, who have had no introduction to Tanach, Mishnah or Talmud, and they engage in this wisdom. Without any doubt they are completely wrong, for several reasons:",
30
+ "First, they have never seen the light of dialectical studyโ€ฆ and so they take the allegory found in this wisdom, to the point that they nearly imagine corporeality in the heavenly entitiesโ€ฆ And they think these are not allegories, and do not descend to the depth of the reasoning.",
31
+ "Secondโ€ฆ the order of levels in the wisdom of our holy Torah is: mastering Tanach, then mastering Mishnah, then mastering Kabbalah. They have ascended to mastering Kabbalah without the ladder and the path of the levels.",
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+ "",
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+ "The sinning group includes those who draw near to this wisdom because they see themselves as great sages who lack nothing but this wisdomโ€ฆ Can it be that such a smart person would have a less wise person speak before him regarding this wisdom, and not respond with his own share? This group also includes those of coarse arrogance, who also study for non-altruistic purposesโ€ฆ May G-d save us from them and from their portion.",
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+ "",
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+ "And the desirable group includes those who take the straight path, who have a share in Tanach and a share in Talmud and its rulings which we have in Mishnah. They learn this wisdom to enter its secrets to know their Creator, to achieve the wonderful level of true knowledge of the torah, and to pray before their Creator to unite, via their mitzvot, G-d and his Shechina, and that is the most desirable service before the Creator of all."
52
+ ]
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ "PART II": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "": []
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+ "": []
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+ "": []
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+ "": []
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+ },
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+ "PART VII": {
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+ "Subject": [],
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+ "Letter Alef": [],
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+ "Letter Bet": [],
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+ "Letter Gimel": [],
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+ "Letter Daled": [],
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+ "Letter Heh": [],
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+ "Letter Vav": [],
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+ "Letter Zayin": [],
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+ "Letter Chet": [],
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+ "Letter Peh": [],
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+ "Letter Tzadi": [],
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+ "Letter Kof": [],
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+ "Letter Resh": [],
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+ "Letter Shin": [],
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+ "Letter Tav": []
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+ "enTitle": "PART III",
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื–",
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Yod"
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+ },
245
+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Kaf"
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื‘",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Lamed"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื’",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Mem"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื“",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Nun"
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื˜ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Samekh"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื˜ื–",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Ayin"
268
+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื–",
271
+ "enTitle": "Letter Peh"
272
+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื—",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Tzadi"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื˜",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Kof"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื›",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Resh"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื›ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Shin"
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+ },
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+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื›ื‘",
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+ "enTitle": "Letter Tav"
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ืกืคื—: ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืช",
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+ "enTitle": "Appendix The Introductory Material",
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+ "heTitle": "",
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+ "enTitle": ""
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+ }
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ }
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+ "versionSource": "https://www.nli.org.il/he/books/NNL_ALEPH001323856 ",
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+ "versionTitle": "Or Neerav, Furth 1701.",
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+ "status": "locked",
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+ "license": "Public Domain",
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+ "digitizedBySefaria": true,
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+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ืื•ืจ ื ืขืจื‘, ืคื™ื•ืจื“ื, ืชืก\"ื",
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+ },
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+ "Appendix The Introductory Material": {
73
+ "": [
74
+ [
75
+ "<b>ืขืžื•ื“ ื”ืฉืขืจ</b>",
76
+ "ืกืคืจ",
77
+ "<strong><big>ืื•ืจ ื ืขืจื‘</big></strong>",
78
+ "ืžื”ืจื‘ ื”ืžืงื•ื‘ืœ ื”ืืœื“ื™ ื›ืžื•ื”ืจ\"ืจ <b>ืžืฉื” ืงื•ืจื“ื•ืื™ืจื• ื–\"ืœ</b>",
79
+ "ืžืชื•ืง ืœื ืคืฉ ื•ืžืจืคื ืœืขืฆื ืžื”ื“ืขื•ืช ื”ื–ืจื•ืช ื”ืžืชื•ืืจื•ืช ืœืžืชืจื—ืงื™ื ืžื—ื›ืžืช ื”ืืžืชื™ ื–ื” ื”ืฉืขืจ ืœื”' ืœื–ื›ื•ืช ืื—\"ื› ืœื›ืกืค' ืื•ืจ ื™ืงืจ ื”ื•ื ื”ืžืื•ืจ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ืคื™' ื”ื–ื•ื”ืจ:",
80
+ "ื•ื”ื—ืœืง ื”ืฉืฉื™ ืžื”ื—ื‘ื•ืจ ื”ื–ื” ื”ื•ื ืงืฆื•ืจ ืžืฉื•ื‘ื— ื•ืžืคื•ืืจ ืžื”ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืช ืฉื‘ืืจ ื”ืจื‘ ื–ืฆ\"ืœ ื‘ืืจื•ื›ื” ื‘ื™ืžื™ ื‘ื‘ื—ืจื•ืชื• ื‘ืกืคืจ <b>ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื</b> ืฉืœื•: "
81
+ ],
82
+ [
83
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ืžืช ืจ' ืžืฉื” ื‘ืืกื•ืœื”</b>",
84
+ "ืืžืจ ื”ืฆืขื™ืจ ืžืฉื” ื‘ืกื•ืœื”",
85
+ "ืขืœื™ ืœืฉื‘ื— ืืœ ื”ื—ื›ื ื›ืžื”ืจ' ื’ื“ืœื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ื”ืจื‘ ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ ื–ืฆ\"ืœ ื›ื™ ืฉืžืจ ื‘ืจื™ืช ืื—ื™ื ื•ืื”ื‘ืชื• ื”ืงื“ื•ืžื” ื‘ืืจืฅ ื”ืฆื‘ื™ ืชื•ื‘\"ื‘ ืขืงื“ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ืื ื™ ืืœ ื”ื“ืจ ืชื•ืจืชื• ื•ื”ืขืžื™ื“ื ื™ ืขืœ ื™ืžื™ื ื• ืœืขื–ืจื• ืœืกืžื›ื• ื•ืœืชืžื›ื• ืœื”ืจื™ื ืžื›ืฉื•ืœ ืžื“ืจืš ื”ืกืคืจ ื”ื ื›ื‘ื“ ื”ืœื–",
86
+ "ื•ื”ื—ื•ื˜ ื”ืžืฉื•ืœืฉ ืขืžื ื• ื”\"ื” ื”ื™ืฉื™ืฉ ื•ื ืขืœื” ืจื‘ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืขื•ืฉื” ื—ื™ืœ ื‘ืจื‘ ืขื•ื– ื•ืชืขืฆื•ืžื•ืช ื‘ืžืœืื›ืช ื”ื“ืคื•ืก ืœืฉื ืฉืžื™ื ื•ื‘ืืžื•ื ื” ื‘ืื•ืคืŸ ื›ื™ ื‘ื˜ื—ื ื• ื‘ื—ืกื“ ืืœ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืžื•ื’ื” ื›ื”ืœื›ืชื• ื›ืคื™' ืกื“ืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืœ ืฉืœื• ื•ืฉื—ื™ืชื” ืœื ื™ืฉืชื›ื— ื‘ื™ื”.",
87
+ "ื•ืœื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื™ื ืขื ื•ืขืœื™ื”ื ืชื‘ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ืฉืžื™ื ืžืขืœ:",
88
+ "ื•ืืœื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืฉืจ ื“ื‘ืจ ืžืฉื” ื‘ืกื•ืœื” ื‘ืจืื•ืชื• ื”ื—ื‘ื•ืจ ื•ืžืขืœืชื• ื•ืืช ื™ืงืจ ืชืคืืจืช ื’ื“ื•ืœืชื•:",
89
+ "ื›ืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื—ืœืง ื‘ืขื•ืœื ื”ื ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื•ืช ื—ืฆื•ื‘ื•ืช ืžืชื—ืช ื›ืกื ืขื•ืฉื” ืืจืฅ ื‘ื›ื—ื• ื•ื‘ืชื‘ื•ื ืชื• ื ื˜ื” ืฉืžื™ื. ื•ื–ืืช ื”ื‘ืจื›ื” ืืฉืจ ื‘ืจืš ืžืฉื” ืื™ืฉ ื”ืืœื“ื™ื ืืช ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื˜ื”ืจ ืจืขื™ื•ื ื™ื ื•ืœืฉื™ืช ื‘ื˜ื—ื•ืช ื—ื›ืžื” ืœืื•ืจ ื‘ืื•ืจ ื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื•ื ืขืœืžื” ืžืขื™ื ื™ ื›ืœ ื—ื™. ืขื“ ืขืช ื‘ื ื”ื—ื›ื ื‘ื ื• ื™ืฆ\"ื• ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ื—ืžื” ืžืžืงื•ืžื” ืœื”ืื™ืจ ืœืืจืฅ ื•ืœื“ืจื™ื ื‘ืื•ืจ ื—ื‘ืจื•ื”ื• ืฉืจื™ื. ืงืจืื•ื”ื• ื ื“ื™ื‘ื™ ื”ืขื ื˜ืขืžื• ื•ืจืื• ืžืชืงื• ื•ืขืจื›ื•. ื•ื›ืœ ืื™ืฉ ื™ืฉืื ื• ื‘ื—ืฉืงื• ื‘ื—ื™ืงื•:",
90
+ "ื•ื–ื” ื—ืœืงื™ ืžื›ืœ ืขืžืœื™. ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืชืฉื•ืจืช ืฉื™ืจืช ืžื”ืœืœื™.",
91
+ "ืœื›ื• ื ื ื–ืžื™ืจื™ ืจื ื ื™ ื•ืฉื™ืจื™",
92
+ "ืœื”ืœืœ ืœืคืืจ ืœืขื•ืฉื” ืžืื•ืจื™ื:",
93
+ "ื•ื ื˜ืข ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ืฉืœื—ื™ื• <b>ื‘ืคืจื“ืก</b>",
94
+ "ื•ื”ืื™ืจ <b>ื‘ืื•ืจ</b> ื–ื” ืœืžืจืคื ื‘ืฉืจื™ื:",
95
+ "ืžืชื•ืงืŸ ื•ื™ืคื” ื›ืฉื•ื”ื ื•ื™ืฉืคื”",
96
+ "<b>ื•ื ืขืจื‘</b> ืœื›ืœ ืคื” ื‘ืฆื•ืฃ ื”-ื“ื‘ื•ืจื™ื: ",
97
+ "ื•ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืž๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืžื•ืŸ ื•ื ืกืชืจ ืœื”ืžื•ืŸ:",
98
+ "ื‘ืืจืฅ ืฆื‘ื™ ื”ื™ื ื‘ื—ื“ืจื™ ื—ื“ืจื™ื:",
99
+ "ืขื“ื™ ืงื <b>ื’ื“ืœื™ื”</b> ื•ืืžืจ ื™ื”ื™ ืื•ืจ",
100
+ "ื›ื—ื•ื ืฆื— ืขืœื™ ืื•ืจ ื•ื’ืœื” ืกืชืจื™ื:",
101
+ "ืขื•ื“ื ื™ ืืœ ืœื‘ื™ ืžื“ื‘ืจ. ื•ืื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื—ื‘ืจ:",
102
+ "ืงื—ื” ื“ื•ื“ ืื•ืจ ื ืขืจื‘ ื›ืžื•ืฆื ืฉืœืœ ืจื‘:",
103
+ "ืœืื™ืฉ ื’ื“ืœ ื•ืจื‘ ื›ืืจื™ื” ื‘ืจื—ื•ื‘ื•ืช:",
104
+ "ื•ื‘ื• ืชืžืฆื ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ืžื“ื•ื‘ืจ ื ื›ื‘ื“ื•ืช:",
105
+ "ื‘ืžืกื‘ืช ืžื“ื•ืช ื•ืชืงื•ืŸ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืช:",
106
+ "ื•ืกื•ื“ ื›ืชืจ ืขืœื™ื•ืŸ ื•ื—ื›ืžื” ืจื•ื ื—ื‘ื™ื•ืŸ:",
107
+ "ื•ื‘ื™ื ื” ื‘ืืคืจื™ื•ืŸ ืจื—ื•ืงื•ืช ื•ืงืจื•ื‘ื•ืช:",
108
+ "ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื‘ื™ืžื™ื ื ื’ื‘ื•ืจื” ื‘ื” ื“ื™ื ื:",
109
+ "ื›ื”ืจ ืžื•ืจ ื•ืœื‘ื•ื ื” ื•ื—ื•ืžื•ืช ื ืฉื’ื‘ื•ืช:",
110
+ "ื•ืžื“ืช ืชืคืืจืช ื‘ืืžืฆืข ื ืงืฉืจืช:",
111
+ "ื•ื ืฆื— ืื•ื’ืจืช ืœืฉื•ื‘ื‘ ื‘ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช:",
112
+ "ื•ื”ื•ื“ ื•ื™ืกื•ื“ ื’ื™ืœื” ืœืžืœื›ื•ืช ื”ื›ืœื”:",
113
+ "ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจื•ืช ื—ืœื™ืœื” ื•ืขืœ ืžืœืืช ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื•ืช:",
114
+ "ื‘ืชื•ื›ื• ื›ืœ ืขื•ืฉืจ ื•ื‘ื• ื›ื•ืฉืจ ื™ื•ืฉืจ:",
115
+ "ืœืžืกืคืจ ื”ืขืฉืจ ื‘ืจื™ืื•ืช ื’ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช: "
116
+ ],
117
+ [
118
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ืžืช ืจ' ื’ื“ืœื™ื” ืงื•ืจื“ื•ืื™ืจื•</b>",
119
+ "ืืžืจ ื”ืฆืขื™ืจ ื’ื“ืœื™ื” ื‘ืŸ ืœื\"ื ื›ืžื”ื•ืจ\"ืจ ืžืฉื” ืงื•ืจื“ื•ืื™ืจื• ื–ืฆ\"ืœ",
120
+ "ืžืื– ื”ืคืœื ื”' ื—ืกื™ื“ ืœื• ื–ืืช ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืื‘ื ืžืจื™ ื•ื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ืืœื™ื• ืœื”ื’ื“ื™ืœ ืชื•ืจื” ืœื”ืคืœื™ื ืชื•ืฉื™ื” ื‘ื—ื›ืžืช ื”ืจื–ื™ื ืจืื™ื ื• ืฆื“ืงืชื• ืขื•ืžื“ืช ืœืขื“ ืœื”ืœื”ื™ื‘ ืœื‘ื•ืช ื”ืžืขื™ื™ื ื™ื ื•ื ืคืงื—ื• ืขื™ื ื™ื”ื ื‘ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืชื™ื• ื”ืืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืœื ื–ื–ื• ืžื—ื‘ืชืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื–ื›ื• ืœื ืขื•ืจ ื›ืคื™ื”ื ืžืชืžื•ืš ื‘ื—ื›ืžื•ืช ื”ืžื—ืงืจื™ื•ืช ืืฉืจ ื“ืจื›ื ื—ืฉืš ื•ื—ืœืงืœืงื•ืช ื•ืฆื“ื™ืงื™ื ื™ืฉืžื—ื• ื™ืขืœืฆื• ื‘ื—ื›ืžืช ื”ืืžืช ืœื”ืชื”ืœืš ืœืคื ื™ ืืœื“ื™ื ื‘ืื•ืจ ื”ื—ื™ื™ื:",
121
+ "ื•ืžืขืชื” ื”ืงื•ื ื˜ืจื™ืก ื”ื–ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืกืœืช ื ืงื™ื” ืžื ื•ืคื” ื‘ื ืคืช ื”ืจื‘ ืื‘ื ืžืจื™ ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ื•ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื‘ืงืฆื•ืจ ื”ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืช ืฉื ืชื‘ืืจื• ื‘ืืจื•ื›ื” ื‘ืกืคืจ <b>ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื</b> ืืฉืจ ืœื• ื•ืขื ืคืจืงื™ื ื ื•ืกืคื™ื ื‘ืชื—ืœืชื• ืœื”ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ืœื”ื•ืจื•ืช ืชื•ืขืœืช ื”ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื”ื›ืจื— ืœืžื•ื“ื” ืจืื™ืชื™ ื”ื™ื•ืชื• ืžืฆื•ื™ ื‘ื™ื“ ืจื‘ื™ื ื ื›ื‘ื“ื™ ืืจืฅ ื‘ืฉื’ื ื™ื•ื“ืข ืื ื™ ื›ื™ ืœื ืขืฉื” ืœื• ื”ืจื‘ ืžื”ื“ื•ืจื ืžืกืคืงืช ื›ืืฉืจ ื”ื™ื” ืขื ืœื‘ื‘ื• ื•ื™ืจืืชื™ ืคืŸ ื™ืงืจื”ื• ื›ืžืงืจื” ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืชืคืœืช ืจ\"ื” ื›ื™ ื’ื•ื ื‘ ืžืขืžื“ื™ ื•ืžื™ ืฉื”ื“ืคื™ืกื• ื‘ืœื™ ืจืฉื•ืชื™ ืœื ื™ืจื“ ืœืกื•ืฃ ื“ืขืช ื”ืจื‘ ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ ื•ืœื ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืชืงืŸ ืžื” ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ื’ื ื‘ืชื• ืžื˜ืขื•ืช ืกื•ืคืจ ืืœื ืฉื”ืฉืžื™ื˜ ื•ื’ืจืข ื•ืื ื™ ืžื•ื‘ื˜ื— ื‘ืจื—ืžื™ ืฉืžื™ื ืฉืื–ื›ื” ืœืชืงืŸ ื”ืžืขื•ื•ืช ื‘\"ื”.",
122
+ "ื•ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ืืชื ืœื™ื“ืŸ ื ื™ืžื ื‘ื™ื” ืžืœืชื ื›ื™ ืื—ืจื™ ืฉื”ืจื‘ ืื‘ื ืžืจื™ ื–\"ืœ ื”ืกื‘ื™ืจ ืคื ื™ื ืฉืœื ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื‘ืจื›ืช ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”' ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ื ื ื•ืจืื™ื ืจืง ื’' ื•ื‘ื›ืŸ ื›ื“ืขืช ื”ื—ื›ื ื”ื—ืกื™ื“ ืื—ื™ ืืžื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื ื”ืœื•ื™ ื–ืฆ\"ืœ ื”ื›ืจื™ืข ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื’\"ื› ื•ื‘ื›ืŸ ื™ืชืงื“ืฉ ื•ื›ื•' ื›ืคื™ ื”ื ื•ืกื— ื”ืžืคื•ืจืกื ืฉื›ืŸ ืžืฆื ืœื• ืกืžื•ื›ื•ืช ื‘ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื•ื”ืจ ื•ื’ื ื–ื” ืžืŸ ื”ื”ืฉืžื˜ื•ืช ืฉืจืื•ื™ ืœื”ื’ื™ื” ื‘ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ื”ืชืคืœื” ื”ื ื–'.",
123
+ "ื•ื›ืืฉืจ ื—ืฉืงื” ื ืคืฉื™ ืœื”ืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื”ื’ื”ืช ื”ืงื•ื ื˜ืจืก ื”ืžืขื•ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื•ืžืฆืืชื™ ืืช ื”ื—ื›ื ื”ืฉืœื ื”ืจืž\"ืข ืžืคืื ื• ื ืจ\"ื• ื‘ื›ืœ ื‘ื™ืช ืื‘ื™ ื ืืžืŸ ื”ื•ื ืืฉืจ ืื”ื‘ ืœื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœื• ืจื•ื‘ื™ ืชื•ืจื•ืชื™ื• ื‘ื”ื ื“ื‘ืง ืžืื“ ืœืื”ื‘ื” ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืงื“ื ื•ื–ื›ื” ื‘ื• ืœื”ื’ื™ื”ื• ื•ืœื”ืขืžื™ื“ื• ืขืœ ืžื›ื•ื ื• ืžืกื›ื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื—ืœืงื™ื• ืขื ืžื” ืฉื ืชื‘ืจืจ ืœื• ืžื›ื•ื•ื ืช ื”ืจื‘ ื‘ืฉืืจ ื”ื—ื‘ื•ืจื™ื ื”ื ื—ืžื“ื™ื ืžื–ื”ื‘ ื•ืžืคื– ืจื‘ ื•ื›ืžืฉืคื˜ ื”ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื•ื”ืฆืœื™ื— ื’\"ื› ืœื‘ื™ืื•ืจ <b>ืกื“ืจ ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื</b> ืืฉืจ ืคื™ืจืฉ ื”ืจื‘ ื‘ื“ืจื›ื™ ื”ืกื•ื“",
124
+ "ื•ืื—ื–ื” ืื ื›ื™ ืืฉื™ืช ืœื‘ื™ ืœื›ืœ ืคืจื˜ื™ ื”ืชืงื•ื ื™ื ื•ื”ื ืื•ื ื™ ืงื•ืจื ืื ื™ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืฉืคืชื™ื ื™ืฉืง ืžืฉื™ื‘ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื ืฆื•ื—ื™ื ืœื›ืŸ ืฉืžื— ืœื‘ื™ ื•ื™ื’ืœ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื™ ื•ื”ืกื›ืžืชื™ ืœื–ื›ื•ืช ื‘ื”ื ืืช ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ืจืืฉื™ืชื ื• ืžืฆืขืจ ืื•ืœื™ ื™ื—ื ืŸ ื”' ื•ืื—ืจื™ืชื ื• ื™ืฉื’ื ืžืจื“ ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืฉืžื• ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื ื•ืขื ื”' ืืœื“ื™ื ื• ืขืœื™ื ื•.",
125
+ "ืื›ื™\"ืจ:\n"
126
+ ],
127
+ [
128
+ "<b>ื”ืงื“ืžืช ื”ืžื’ื™ื”</b>",
129
+ "ืืžืจ ื”ืžื’ื™ื”",
130
+ "ืžื—ื ื” ืืœืงื™ื ื–ื” ื“ื•ืจ ื“ื•ืจืฉื™ื• ื™ืฉืžื— ื‘ืขื•ืฉื™ื• ื›ืžื—ื•ืœืช ืžื—ื ื™ื. ืจืื• ืขื™ื ื™ื ื• ื›ืŸ ืชืžื”ื• ืขื•ืœื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืืจืฅ ืœื ื˜ื•ืข ืฉืžื™ื ื•ื›ืฆืืช ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืฉืžืฉ ื‘ืฆื”ืจื™ื ืื•ืจ ื ื’ื” ืขืœื™ื”ื. ืคืชื— ื“ื‘ืจื™ื”ื ื™ืื™ืจ ื•ื™ื–ื”ื™ืจ ืžื—ื–ื” ืฉื“ื™ ืœื”ืงื“ืฉ ืœืžื“ื™ ืืœ ื’ื ื–ื™ ืจื–ื™ ืชื•ืจื” ืขืจื•ื›ื” ื•ืฉืžื•ืจื” ืžืžืขื•ื ื•ืช ืืจื™ื•ืช ืžื”ืจืจื™ ื ืžืจื™ื ืžืขื•ืœืคืช ืกืคื™ืจื™ื",
131
+ "ื‘ืžืกืชืจื™ื ืžืคื ื™ ื’ื•ื” ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื•ื ื“ื•ื” ืžื–ื‘ื— ืจืฉืขื™ื ืชื•ืขื‘ื”. ื•ืืฃ ื’ื ื–ืืช ืžื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœื• ืœื›ื‘ื•ืช ืืช ื”ืื”ื‘ื”. ื›ื™ ื™ืฉืจื™ื ื“ืจื›ื™ ื”'. ื™ืฉืคื•ื˜ ืขื ื™ื™ ืขื ื™ืฉืคื•ืช ืฉืœื•ื. ื•ื›ื™ ื™ื“ื‘ืจ ื—ื™ืœื™ื ื™ื’ื‘ืจ. ืืœ ืขืžื• ื•ืืœ ื—ืกื™ื“ื™ื•.",
132
+ "ื”ืœื ื—ื›ืžื” ืชืงืจื ืœืฉืจื™ื“ื™ ื‘ืžืกืคืจ ืฉืžื•ืช ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ืžื–ืžื•ืช ืชืขืœื•ืžื•' ื—ื›ืžื”. ืจื•ืžืžื•ืช ืืœ ื‘ื’ืจื•ื ื ืฉื•ื‘ืข ืฉืžื—ื•ืช ื ืขื™ืžื•ืช ื‘ื™ืžื™ื ื. ื•ื™ื“ืจื›ื• ืœืฉื•ื ื ืขื˜ ืกื•ืคืจ ืžื”ื™ืจ. ื“ื’ืžื™ืจ ื•ืกื‘ื™ืจ ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ืคืชืื™ื ื”ืขื ื ื“ื”ื ื”ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ื‘ื—ืฉืš ืฆืจื•ืฃ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ืขื•ื ื™ ื•ืจื•ื‘ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืื—ื•ื– ื‘ื—ื‘ืœื™ ื‘ื•ื– ื”ื•ืœืœื•ืช ื•ืฉื›ืœื•ืช ื‘ื’ืœื•ืช ื”ื—ืœ ื”ื–ื” ื›ืจื•ื ื–ืœื•ืช ืœื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื ื‘ืขืจ ืžื“ืขืช ืžืขืช ืœื˜ืขืช ืขืฅ ื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ื’ืŸ.",
133
+ "ื›ื™ ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ื ืจื’ืŸ ืžืจืืฉื™ืช ื“ื’ืŸ ื™ืฆื ื—ื•ื— ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื—ื™ื ื”ืคืจื™ื ื•ื—ื˜ืืช ืงืกื ืžืจื™ ื›ืขืช ื‘ืžืจื•ื ืชืžืจื™ื ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”' ื™ืžื™ ืชืžื™ืžื™ื ื•ื“ืจืš ืฆื“ื™ืงื™ื ืžืงื™ื ืžืขืคืจ ืืจืฅ ื•ื™ื ืจื—ื•ืงื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ื ืคืฉ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื”ืžื” ืžื—ื•ืฉืงื™ื ืฉื•ืงืงื™ื ืœืฉืžื•ืข ืืช ื“ื‘ืจ ื”' ื•ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืขืชื™ืงื™ื. ื•ืขืชื” ืœื ืจืื• ืื•ืจ ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ื”ื•ื ื‘ืฉื—ืงื™ื ื›ื™ ืžืจืืฉ ืฆื•ืจื™ื ืืจืื ื• ื•ืžืžืฆื“ื™ืงื™ ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ืืฉื•ืจื ื•. ื”ื•ืฆืง ื—ืŸ ื‘ืฉืคืชื•ืชื ืฉื•ืฉื ื™ื ืžื™ืžื™ื”ื ื ืืžื ื™ื ืžืžืขื™ืŸ ื’ื ื™ื ื‘ืืจ ืžื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื. ื•ื›ื™ื•ื ื™ื ืืœ ืืจื•ื‘ื•ืชื™ื”ื ืฉืชื• ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ืคื™ื”ื ืงื•ืจืื™ื ืืœ ื”' ื•ื”ื•ื ื™ืขื ื ื–ื” ื™ืืžืจ ืœื”' ืื ื™ ืขื ื ื™ ื‘ืžืจื—ื‘ ื›ื™ ืœื ืฉื›ื‘ ืœื‘ื™ ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ืืฃ ืจื•ื—ื™ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื™ ื•ื–ื” ื™ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื™ื“ื• ืœื”' ืžืžื” ืฉืงื“ืžื”ื• ืกื™ื ื™ ื•ืขืœ ืขื•ืจื•ืช ื’ื“ื™ื™ ืขื–ื™ื ืฉืžื• ืื•ืชื•ืชื ืืฉืจ ื›ืชื‘ื• ืœื”ื•ืจื•ืชื ืœื“ื•ืจื•ืชื ื‘ืจื™ืช ืขื•ืœื.",
134
+ "ื•ื’ื‘ื•ื” ืžืžืจื—ืง ื—ืงื” ื—ืงืง ื•ื—ืœืง ืžื—ื›ืžืชื• ืœื™ืจืื™ื• ื™ืื™ืจื• ื‘ืจืงื™ื• ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื• ื•ื—ืงื™ื• ืœืคืงื•ื— ืขื™ื ื™ื ืขื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืžื™ืžื™ื”ื ืœื ืจืื• ืžืื•ืจื•ืช ืœืกืžื•ืš ื ื•ืคืœื™ื ื•ืชืขืœื•ืœื™' ืชืขื• ื›ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืžืื ื•ืฉ ื ืขื•",
135
+ "ื”ื—ืจืฉื™ื ืฉืžืขื• ื•ื”ืคืกื—ื™ื ื™ืจื•ืฆื• ื•ืœื ื™ื™ื’ืขื• ื•ื”ืขื•ืจื™' ื”ื‘ื™ื˜ื• ืœืจืื•ืช ื‘ืžืจืื•ืช ื”ืฆื•ื‘ืื•' ื ืžื•ืฉื•ืช ื•ืœืงื•ื˜ื•' ืขื ืจืืฉื™ ื”ืžื˜ื•' ื”ื ื” ื•ื™ืœื“ื™ื”ื•ืŸ ื›ืขื ื›ื›ื”ืŸ ื›ืžื•ื—ื–ืง ื›ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื›ืœ ืฆืคื•ื™ ื•ื”ืจืฉื•ืช ื ืชื•ื ื” ืœืจืืฉ ืคื ื” ืœื›ื• ื ื ื”ื’ื‘ืจื™' ืขืฉื•ืช ืกืคืจื™ื ืžืกืคืจื™ื ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืืœ ืœื‘ื™ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืขื“ื” ื‘ืื”ื‘ื” ื™ื•ื ืง ืขื ืื™ืฉ ืฉื™ื‘ื” ื•ื”ืืกืคืกื•ืฃ ื”ืชืื•ื• ืชืื•ื” ืœืชื•ืจื” ื•ืœืชืขื•ื“ื” ื’ืžื•ืœ ื™ื“ื• ื”ื“ื”:",
136
+ "ื•ืืฉืžืข ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืจื•ื–ื ืงืจื™ ื”ืœื ืชืขื ื” ืื›ืฉื•ืจ ื“ืจื™ ื›ื™ ืœื ื›ื—ื“ืช ืืžืจื™ ืžืืจื™ ื“ื•ืจื ื ื•ืจื ืขืœื™ืœื ื‘ื—ืฉื•ื›ื ื•ื ื”ื•ืจื ืขืžื™ื” ืฉืจื. ืืกืคืจื ืืœ ื—ืง ืขืฆื•ืช ืžืจื—ื•ืง ื”ืŸ ื”ืŸ ื›ื‘ืฉื™ ื“ืจื—ืžื ื ืžืขื•ื ื” ืืœืงื™ ืงื“ื ืกืœื” ืœืžื” ื–ื” ืชืฉืืœ ื•ื”ื•ื ืคืœื. ื”' ืฆื‘ืื•ืช ืขืฅ ื•ืžื™ ื™ืคืจ ืื’ื™ื“ื” ื•ืื“ื‘ืจื” ืขืฆืžื• ืžืกืคืจ. ื›ื™ ืœื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื ืกื•ืช ืื•ืชื ื• ืžืœืื›ื™ื• ื™ืฆื•ื” ืœื ื• ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ืžืžืขืœ ื•ืขืœ ื”ืืจืฅ ืžืชื—ืช ื”ืžืชืงื“ืฉื™ื ื•ื”ืžื˜ื”ืจื™' ืœื”ื‘ื™ืŸ ื ืžื”ืจื™ื ื•ืœื–ื›ื•ืช ืืช ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™' ืฉื”ืŸ ื›ื‘ืฉื•ื ื• ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืžืฉืคื˜ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื ืขืœื ืฉื›ืš ืขืœื” ื‘ืžื—ืฉื‘ื” ื•ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื›ืœ ื–ืžืŸ ื•ืขืช ืœื›ืœ ื—ืคืฅ ื‘ื›ืœ ืชื•ืฉื™ื” ื™ืชื’ืœืข. ื•ื”ืžืฉื›ื™ืœ ืœื”ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ืฉืชื™ืงื•ืชื™ื” ืžืกืชื™ื™ื” ื™ื“ื•ื ืœื”' ืžืฉื’ืืช ืืจื™ื”. ื™ืฉื•ื ื•ื™ืฉืืฃ ื•ืœื‘ื‘ื• ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื“ืœืื• ื›ืœ ืืคื™ื™ื ืฉื•ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืืœืงื™ื ืขืฉื”. ืจื ื•ื ืฉื ืฉืคืœ ื•ืืคืœ ื”ืขืงืจ ื•ื”ื˜ืคืœ ืฉื™ื™ืจืื• ืžืœืคื ื™ื• ื›ื™ ืžื ื•ืกืžืš ืฉื‘ืœื•ื—ื•ืช ืื‘ื ื™ื• ืขื“ื™ืŸ ืชืœื•ื™ื™ื ื•ืขื•ืžื“ื™'. ืžืชืจื™ื ื•ืžืขื™ื“ื™ื ื‘ื ืก ื•ืงืฆืฃ ืœื‘ืœืข ื•ืœื”ืฉื—ื™ืช ื”ืžืฉืชืžืฉื™ื ื‘ืชื’ื ืฉืœื ืœืฉืžื” ื‘ืกื ื”ืžื•ืช ืœืขื•ื‘ืจื™ ืจืฆื•ื ื” ืœืคื™ื“ ื‘ื•ื– ืœืขืฉืชื•ืช ืฉืื ืŸ ืชื—ืช ื›ืœ ืขืฅ ืจืขื ืŸ",
137
+ "ื•ืกื ื—ื™ื™ื ื”ื ืœืžื•ืฆืื™ื”ื ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืžื•ืฆื ืคื™ ื”' ื”ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื™ืจืื™ื• ื ืก ืœื”ืกื ื•ืกืก ืžืคื ื™ ืงื•ืฉื˜ ืกืœื”:",
138
+ "ื”ื™ืจื ืืช ื“ื‘ืจ ื”' ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ืฉื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืื”ื‘ื” ืื™ืžื” ื•ื™ืจืื” ื•ืขื ื•ื” ื™ื“ืื’ ืžื—ื˜ืืชื™ื• ื•ื™ืฆืจ ืœื• ืฉืžื ื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื• ืคืฉืข ืœืฉื’ื•ืช ืžืืžืจื™ ื“ืขืช ืืœืงื™ื ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ืคืŸ ื™ืฉื™ื ืืฉื ื ืคืฉื• ืื—ืช ื“ืชื• ื•ื—ื‘ืœ ื ื—ืœืชื• ืœื”ืคืฉื˜ ื•ื ืชื•ื— ื•ื›ืœื™ืœ ืœืืฉื™ื. ื™ื—ื–ืง ื‘ืžื•ืกืจ ืœืืกื•ืจ ืืกืจ ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉืœื ืฉืžืข ืžืจื‘ื•ืชื™ื• ืคืœืก ืžืขื’ืœื•ืชื™ื• ื•ืืจืฉืช ืฉืคืชื™ื• ื›ื™ ื™ืคื•ืœ ื”ื ื•ืคืœ ื•ืžื™ ื™ืงื™ืžื ื• ื”' ื‘ื“ื“ ื™ื ื—ื ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ืขืžื• ืืœ ื ื›ืจ ืืฉืจ ื—ืœืง ืœื ืกื•ืช ื‘ื ืื•ื™ืœื™ื ืžื“ืจืš ืขืฉืื.",
139
+ "ืื™ื›ื” ื™ื•ืขื ืœื”ื ืœื‘ื“ื ื ืจ ืžืฆื•ื” ื•ืชื•ืจื” ืื•ืจ ืืฉืจ ืชืื•ืจ ื”ืฆื‘ื•ืขื™' ื”ืœืœื• ื›ื™ ื›ื—ืฆื™ืจ ืžื”ืจื” ื™ืžืœื• ื‘ืฉื’ื’ืช ืœืžื•ื“ ืขื•ืœื” ื–ื“ื•ืŸ ืฉืื•ืœ ื•ืื‘ื“ื•ืŸ ื—ืžืช ืชื ื™ื ื™ื ื•ืจืืฉ ืคืชื ื™ื ื•ื‘ืื—ืช ื™ื‘ืขืจื• ื•ื™ื›ืกืœื• ืื—ืจื™ ื”ื”ื‘ืœ ื•ื™ื”ื‘ืœื• ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฉืคื˜ ืžืขื•ืงืœ ื•ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ืžืขืฉื” ืžืงื•ืœืงืœ. ืกื•ืจื• ื ื ืžืขืœ ืื”ืœื™ ืื™ืฉ ื ืจื“ื ืขื™ืจ ืคืจื ืื“ื ื›ืกื™ืœ ื•ื‘ืขืจ ืจืขื”ื• ื‘ื™ืขืจ ืžืื™ืฉ ืฉื•ื’ื” ื•ืžืคืชื™.",
140
+ "ื”ืœื ืืžืจืชื™ ืืœื™ื›ื ืื™ืชื ื•ื ืงื™ืชื™. ื›ื™ ื™ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ื‘ืฉ ืžืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื‘ืช ืงื•ืœ ืžืชืขืฉืจ ื•ืื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืžืชื ืฉื ืœืืžืจ ื’ืžืจื ื’ืžื•ืจ ื•ืื ืื™ืฉ ืขื ื™ ื”ื•ื ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื˜ื• ืฉื•ื›ื‘ ื•ืจื•ื›ื‘ ืขืœ ื—ืžื•ืจ ืžืชืคืืจ ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื”ื ืขืœืžื” ื•ืฉืื•ื ื” ื•ืขืœื– ื‘ื” ื•ื›ืœ ืจื•ื— ืื™ืŸ ื‘ืงืจื‘ื•. ื•ื”ื—ื™ ื™ืชืŸ ืืœ ืœื‘ื• ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื—ื‘ื•ืœื•ืช ื ืขืฉื” ืžืœื—ืžื” ื‘ืงืœ ื•ื—ื•ืžืจ ื•ื’ื–ืจื” ืฉื•ื” ื‘ื—ื‘ื™ืœื•' ืฉืœ ืžืฉื ื” ืžืžื“ื‘ืจ ืžืชื ื”. ื•ืžื™ ื’ื‘ืจ ื™ื—ื™ื” ืื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื›ืกื•ืก ื›ืคืจื“ ืื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืŸ ื—ืงื™ ื”ืืœืงื™' ืขืฉื™ืŸ ื•ืœืื•ื™ืŸ ืžื’ื™ื“ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื‘ืฉืžืจื ืขืงื‘ ืจื‘ ืœื”ืฉืœืžืช ืžืฆื•ืชืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื‘ื—ืจ.",
141
+ "ืžื—ืจ ื™ืขืฉื” ื”' ืฆื“ืงื•ืช ืคืจื–ื•ื ื• ืœืžืฉืจืชื™ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ ืจืฆื•ื ื• ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื—ื•ืคื” ื™ืคืจื•ืก ืžืคื” ืœืกืขื•ื“ืช ืœื•ื™ืชืŸ ื‘ื—ืฆืจ ื’ื™ื ืช ื‘ื™ืชืŸ ื•ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื ื›ื•ื” ืžื—ื•ื™ ืงื™ื“ื” ืžื–ืžื•ืจ ืœืชื•ื“ื” ืขืœ ื–ื›ื•ืช ื—ื‘ืจื• ื‘ื”ืœื• ื ืจื• ืชื•ื›ื• ื›ื‘ืจื• ื›ืืฉืจ ื”ื•ื ืฉื. ื•ืฉืžื—ืช ืขื•ืœื ืขืœ ืจืืฉื ืื™ืฉ ื™ื—ื“ ืคื ื™ ืจืขื”ื•. ื›ืœ ืคืขืœ ื”' ืœืžืขื ื”ื• ื™ื—ืœืฆื”ื• ื•ื™ื›ื‘ื“ื”ื• ื™ืคื™ืฅ ืขื ืŸ ืื•ืจื• ืœืจืืฉ ืฆื“ื™ืงื™ ืฉืœ ืขืœื ื•ืขืœื™ื• ื™ืฆื™ืฅ ื ื–ืจื•:",
142
+ "ื–ืืช ื”ืขืฆื” ื”ื™ืขื•ืฆื” ืœืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื”ืžืœืš ื—ืคืฅ ื‘ื™ืงืจื• ื ื—ืช ืจื•ื— ืœืขื ื™ ื•ื ื›ื” ืจื•ื— ื•ื—ืจื“ ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจื• ืืœ ื™ืชื”ืœืœ ื‘ื™ื•ื ืžื—ืจ ื›ื™ ืฉื›ืจ ืžืฆื•ื” ืžืฆื•ื” ืื•ื” ืœืžื•ืฉื‘ ืœื•. ืขื“ ืฉื™ืคื•ื— ื”ื™ื•ื. ื™ืฆื ืื“ื ืœืคืขืœื• ื•ื ืจืฆื” ืœื• ืคืจื™ื• ื‘ืขืชื• ื–ื” ืกื‘ืชื• ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืžืขื˜ ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืžืœืš ื ื—ื•ืฅ ื”ื›ืŸ ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ ืชืœื™ืš ื•ืงืฉืชืš ื•ืขืฉื™ืช ื›ืœ ืžืœืื›ืชืš ื‘ืžืงืจื ืžืฉื ื” ื•ื’ืžืจื. ื•ืขืชื“ื” ืœืš ื‘ืฉื“ื” ืชืคื•ื—ื™ื ืขืจื™ืžื” ืฉืœ ืžืขืฉื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื™. ืื—ืจ ื•ื‘ื ื™ืช ื‘ื™ืชืš ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืขื“ ืœื—ื›ืžื™ื. ืื ืฉืœืžื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ื. ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื ืขืœ ืžื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื•ืžืงื‘ืœื™ืŸ ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื—ื™ืฉื” ืžืขื•ื˜ืจื™ื ื‘ืชืคื™ืœื™ื”ื ื•ื’ื“ื™ืœื™' ื™ืขืฉื• ืœื”ื ืœื”ืชืขื˜ืฃ ื‘ืื™ืžืชื” ื•ืคื—ื“. ื•ืžืชื‘ื•ื“ื“ื™ื ื›ืฉืจืคื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ื›ืฉื‘ืช ืื—ื™ื ื’ื ื™ื—ื“. ื•ืื ื—ื™ ื”' ื™ืืžืจื• ืžืคื ื™ ื ืฉืจ ืงืœื• ืžืืจื™ื•ืช ื’ื‘ืจื• ื•ืงื•ืœ ื›ื ืคื™ ื”ื—ื™ื•ืช ืžืฉื™ืงื•ืช ื‘ืจื•ืš ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื”' ืื•ื”ื‘ ืฆื“ืงื•ืช ื•ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™' ืฉืžื—ื™ื ื›ื ืชื™ื ืชืŸ ืžืกื™ื ื™ ืžืœืคื ื™ ื”' ืžืœืคื ื™ ืื“ื•ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ืืจืฅ:",
143
+ "ืฉืžืขื•ื ื™ ืื—ื™ ื•ืขืžื™ ื•ืœืื•ืžื™ ืืœื™ ื”ืื–ื™ื ื™. ื”ื‘ื™ื ื• ืคืชืื™ื ืจื•ื–ื ื™ื ื”ืงืฉื™ื‘ื• ื”ื–ื”ืจื• ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ื›ื ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืืœืงื™ื ืขืžื›ื. ื•ืื ืช\"ื— ื‘ืžื—ื–ื” ื›ืื™ืœื™ื ืžื ื’ื—ื™ื ืžื ืฆื—ื™ื ื–ื” ืืช ื–ื”. ืœื ืœื›ื ื•ืœื ื• ืœืืžืจ ื–ื›ื•ืจ ื•ืฉืžื•ืจ ืฉืžื•ืขื” ื–ื• ื ืื” ื•ืฉืžื•ืขื” ื–ื• ืื™ื ื” ื ืื”. ื”ืœื ืœืืœืงื™ื ืคืชืจื•ื ื™ื ื”ืืžื•ื ื™ื ืขืœื™ ืคืฉืจ ื“ื‘ืจ ืœื ืœื–ืจื•ืช ื•ืœื ืœื”ื‘ืจ. ื”ืœื ืฆื‘ื ืœืื ื•ืฉ ืขืœื™ ืืจืฅ ื•ืขื“ื•ืช ื”' ื ืืžื ื” ื ื•ื“ืขืช ืœืื–ืŸ ืฉืžืขืช. ื”ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ื’ื ื™ื ื—ื‘ืจื™ื ืžืงืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืงืจื‘ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืชืœื™ืŸ:",
144
+ "ืื ืจื•ื— ื”ืžื•ืฉืœ ืœื›ืœ ื›ื•ืฉืœ ื•ื”ืžื” ืžืชื ื‘ืื™ื ื™ืงื™ืžื•ืŸ ืžืœื™ ื‘ืงืžื™ื ืขืœื™ ื”ื’ื ืฉืื•ืœ ื‘ื ื‘ื™ืื™ื. ื–ืืช ืชืขื ื” ื•ืžื™ ืื‘ื™ื”ื. ืื—ืจ ื›ื•ื•ื ืช ื”ืœื‘ ื”ืŸ ื”ื ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื. ื•ืื ื™ ื‘ืชื•ืžื™ ืœืžืฉื•ืคื˜ื™ ืืชื—ื ืŸ. ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืืช ื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืื’ืจืช ื”ื–ืืช ืœื›ืฃ ื–ื›ื•ืช ื‘ืžื”ื•ืช ื•ืื™ื›ื•ืช. ืื ืœื ืžื“ืื’ื” ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื ืคืฉื™ ืฉืžืชื ื™ ืžื–ื›ื™ืจ ื•ืžื–ื”ื™ืจ. ืžืฉื›ื™ืœื™ ืขืžื™ ื ื“ื™ื‘. ื—ื‘ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืฉื ื‘ืจื ื‘ืฆืœื ืืœื ืฆื“ืง ื™ื“ื‘ืจ ืžืฉืจื™ื ื™ืฉืคื•ื˜. ื›ื™ ืœื ื’ื‘ื” ืœื‘ื™ ื›ืœ ื—ื•ืฉื™ ื‘ื™ ื•ืœื ืจืžื• ืขื™ื ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืืœืงื™ื ื–ื” ืกื™ื ื™. ื•ืœื ื”ืœื›ืชื™ ื‘ื’ื“ื•ืœื•ืช ื•ื‘ื ืคืœืื•ืช. ืืช ื”ืžืœืš ื”' ืฆื‘ืื•ืช. ื›ื™ ืจืืชื” ืฉืคื—ื” ื•ืฆื“ืงื” ืžืžื ื™. ื•ื ืงืœื•ืชื™ ืขื•ื“ ืžื–ืืช ื•ืฉืคืœืชื™ ืžืืจืฅ ืื“ื‘ืจ ืœื›ื‘ื•ื“ ืืœืงื™ื ื• ืฉื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืฆื™ื•ืŸ. ื•ื”ื•ื ืจื—ื•ื ื™ื›ืคืจ ืขื•ืŸ:"
145
+ ]
146
+ ]
147
+ }
148
+ },
149
+ "schema": {
150
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืจ ื ืขืจื‘",
151
+ "enTitle": "Or Neerav",
152
+ "key": "Or Neerav",
153
+ "nodes": [
154
+ {
155
+ "heTitle": "ื”ืงื“ืžื”",
156
+ "enTitle": "Introduction"
157
+ },
158
+ {
159
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื",
160
+ "enTitle": "PART I",
161
+ "nodes": [
162
+ {
163
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
164
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
165
+ },
166
+ {
167
+ "heTitle": "",
168
+ "enTitle": ""
169
+ }
170
+ ]
171
+ },
172
+ {
173
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื‘",
174
+ "enTitle": "PART II",
175
+ "nodes": [
176
+ {
177
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
178
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
179
+ },
180
+ {
181
+ "heTitle": "",
182
+ "enTitle": ""
183
+ }
184
+ ]
185
+ },
186
+ {
187
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื’",
188
+ "enTitle": "PART III",
189
+ "nodes": [
190
+ {
191
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
192
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
193
+ },
194
+ {
195
+ "heTitle": "",
196
+ "enTitle": ""
197
+ }
198
+ ]
199
+ },
200
+ {
201
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื“",
202
+ "enTitle": "PART IV",
203
+ "nodes": [
204
+ {
205
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
206
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
207
+ },
208
+ {
209
+ "heTitle": "",
210
+ "enTitle": ""
211
+ }
212
+ ]
213
+ },
214
+ {
215
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื”",
216
+ "enTitle": "PART V",
217
+ "nodes": [
218
+ {
219
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
220
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
221
+ },
222
+ {
223
+ "heTitle": "",
224
+ "enTitle": ""
225
+ }
226
+ ]
227
+ },
228
+ {
229
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื•",
230
+ "enTitle": "PART VI",
231
+ "nodes": [
232
+ {
233
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
234
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
235
+ },
236
+ {
237
+ "heTitle": "",
238
+ "enTitle": ""
239
+ }
240
+ ]
241
+ },
242
+ {
243
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืœืง ื–",
244
+ "enTitle": "PART VII",
245
+ "nodes": [
246
+ {
247
+ "heTitle": "ื ื•ืฉื",
248
+ "enTitle": "Subject"
249
+ },
250
+ {
251
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื",
252
+ "enTitle": "Letter Alef"
253
+ },
254
+ {
255
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื‘",
256
+ "enTitle": "Letter Bet"
257
+ },
258
+ {
259
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื’",
260
+ "enTitle": "Letter Gimel"
261
+ },
262
+ {
263
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื“",
264
+ "enTitle": "Letter Daled"
265
+ },
266
+ {
267
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื”",
268
+ "enTitle": "Letter Heh"
269
+ },
270
+ {
271
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื•",
272
+ "enTitle": "Letter Vav"
273
+ },
274
+ {
275
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื–",
276
+ "enTitle": "Letter Zayin"
277
+ },
278
+ {
279
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื—",
280
+ "enTitle": "Letter Chet"
281
+ },
282
+ {
283
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื˜",
284
+ "enTitle": "Letter Tet"
285
+ },
286
+ {
287
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™",
288
+ "enTitle": "Letter Yod"
289
+ },
290
+ {
291
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื",
292
+ "enTitle": "Letter Kaf"
293
+ },
294
+ {
295
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื‘",
296
+ "enTitle": "Letter Lamed"
297
+ },
298
+ {
299
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื’",
300
+ "enTitle": "Letter Mem"
301
+ },
302
+ {
303
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื“",
304
+ "enTitle": "Letter Nun"
305
+ },
306
+ {
307
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื˜ื•",
308
+ "enTitle": "Letter Samekh"
309
+ },
310
+ {
311
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื˜ื–",
312
+ "enTitle": "Letter Ayin"
313
+ },
314
+ {
315
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื–",
316
+ "enTitle": "Letter Peh"
317
+ },
318
+ {
319
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื—",
320
+ "enTitle": "Letter Tzadi"
321
+ },
322
+ {
323
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื™ื˜",
324
+ "enTitle": "Letter Kof"
325
+ },
326
+ {
327
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื›",
328
+ "enTitle": "Letter Resh"
329
+ },
330
+ {
331
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื›ื",
332
+ "enTitle": "Letter Shin"
333
+ },
334
+ {
335
+ "heTitle": "ืื•ืช ื›ื‘",
336
+ "enTitle": "Letter Tav"
337
+ }
338
+ ]
339
+ },
340
+ {
341
+ "heTitle": "ื ืกืคื—: ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืช",
342
+ "enTitle": "Appendix The Introductory Material",
343
+ "nodes": [
344
+ {
345
+ "heTitle": "",
346
+ "enTitle": ""
347
+ }
348
+ ]
349
+ }
350
+ ]
351
+ }
352
+ }
json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Or Neerav/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
The diff for this file is too large to render. See raw diff
 
json/Kabbalah/Ramak/Pardes Rimonim/English/Jardรญn de Granadas [es].json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,68 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "language": "en",
3
+ "title": "Pardes Rimonim",
4
+ "versionSource": "Sefaria",
5
+ "versionTitle": "Jardรญn de Granadas [es]",
6
+ "actualLanguage": "es",
7
+ "languageFamilyName": "spanish",
8
+ "isSource": false,
9
+ "direction": "ltr",
10
+ "heTitle": "ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื",
11
+ "categories": [
12
+ "Kabbalah",
13
+ "Ramak"
14
+ ],
15
+ "text": {
16
+ "Author's Introduction": [
17
+ "Estas son las palabras del joven Moisรฉs, hijo de [el rabino] Jacob Cordovero, cuando reflexionรฉ sobre los dรญas de mi juventud. Pasaron y se desvanecieron ante mรญ, mientras perseguรญa todos los deseos y se extinguรญan sin esperanza. Y sucediรณ cuando lleguรฉ a la edad de veinte aรฑos y un vello dorado creciรณ, que mi Seรฑor me despertรณ como a un hombre que despierta de su sueรฑo, y dijo a mi alma: \"Hasta cuรกndo, hija obstinada, ยฟhasta cuรกndo te embriagarรกs con tus pecados? ยฟHasta cuรกndo permitirรกs que tus pensamientos impuros habiten en tu corazรณn y olvidarรกs al Seรฑor, tu Hacedor y Creador desde el seno materno? Ahora, levรกntate, clama a tu Dios y vigila sus puertas dรญa tras dรญa. Y ร‰l sanarรก el altar del Seรฑor, que estรก en ruinas\". Estas son las palabras del joven Moisรฉs, hijo de [el rabino] Jacob Cordovero. Cuando escuchรฉ la llamada, me levantรฉ y recorrรญ la ciudad, los mercados y las calles buscando un lugar donde encontrar descanso que me beneficiara. Entonces, escuchรฉ una voz de la ciudad sagrada que descendรญa desde los cielos, mi Maestro y Rabino, el sabio cabalista, el venerable Rabi Shlomo Alkabetz, que en paz descanse, me condujo a su palacio de enseรฑanzas y me instruyรณ. Me dijo: \"Hijo mรญo, presta atenciรณn a mis palabras, inclina tu oรญdo y escucha las palabras de los sabios\". Me colocรณ en las puertas de la sabidurรญa y el entendimiento, que son mรกs dulces que la miel, y me permitiรณ observar los misterios ocultos de la Torรก. Fui a travรฉs de los dรญas, maravillado por lo bueno y agradable que era dedicarme a esta tarea. Me dije a mรญ mismo: \"Cuรกnto me agradarรญa estar siempre inmerso en esta sabidurรญa\". Su amor me embriagaba constantemente, y sus amantes palabras me deleitaban en todo momento. Cuando llegรณ el momento de cumplir mis votos, me presentรฉ ante los libros del sagrado Rabi Shimon bar Yojai, que descanse en paz, y los estudiรฉ. Mi corazรณn se movรญa como las olas del mar y se tambaleaba como un barco en alta mar en las profundidades de las enseรฑanzas. Dije: \"Tomarรฉ la corona del erudito que llevo en mi cinturรณn y la colocarรฉ sobre la cabeza de cada rebaรฑo, uno por uno. Establecerรฉ un orden en mi mente, separando uno de otro, y cuando mi corazรณn se fortalezca en esta enseรฑanza, me dirigirรฉ a otras\". Entonces, vi que mi consejo era recto y justo desde el Seรฑor, desde los cielos. Abrรญ el rollo de un libro ante mรญ para que me sirviera de memoria y me guiara en sus asuntos y sus รณrdenes. Lo llamรฉ \"Pardes Rimmonim\" (El Jardรญn de Granadas) para indicar las razones conocidas. Primero, esta sabidurรญa es la sabidurรญa de la Cรกbala, que se conoce como \"Pardes\". Segundo, que esta revelaciรณn serรญa un consuelo tanto en este mundo como en el prรณximo, y sustentarรญa todos mis aรฑos. Esto es \"Rimmonim\", granadas, que plantรฉ para mi deleite. Y es como granados, siendo sus portales los รกrboles plantados en รฉl. Y sus capรญtulos son granadas. Y en ellos estรกn dispuestos nuevos conceptos, uno al lado del otro, no uno ni dos, sino llenos como granadas, por lo tanto, se les llama 'Pardes Rimmonim' (El Jardรญn de Granadas). Y vimos que el rollo estรก dividido en treinta y dos secciones, y las llamamos 'puertas' para que sean puertas para entrar en el interior de la Torรก y sus secretos. Ademรกs, dividimos estas puertas en capรญtulos, algunos de ellos son cortos y otros largos, segรบn la naturaleza del tema en cada capรญtulo. Miramos hacia el pozo para que nadie entre en nuestras puertas sin las llaves y los mรฉtodos de las puertas, ya que, Dios no lo quiera, esto podrรญa causar daรฑo en lugar de beneficio. Aquel a quien se le han entregado las llaves, que sean del tamaรฑo adecuado para abrir nuestras puertas, podemos estar seguros de que las abrirรก. Hay varios conjuntos de llaves en esta sabidurรญa, y no esperamos de aquel que se sumerge en la explicaciรณn de los asuntos repetir dos veces lo que ya hemos escrito, ya que esto prolongarรญa nuestra labor. Por lo tanto, no avanzaremos desde el capรญtulo hasta que sepamos que lo que necesita para su comprensiรณn no serรก repetido, sino que nos apoyaremos en lo que ya hemos escrito en el capรญtulo anterior. Asรญ, sus pies no abandonarรกn esta puerta hasta que la entienda adecuadamente, y luego continuarรก su camino sin temor. Y con todo esto, no retiraremos nuestras manos de explicar, como escribimos en el lugar tal o como explicamos en el lugar tal. Y estos son los nombres de las puertas, cada una con sus letras."
18
+ ],
19
+ "Index": [
20
+ [
21
+ "La primera puerta la llamamos 'Diez', no nueve, porque en ella se aclararรก cรณmo fue la concordancia en la aceptaciรณn de nuestros sabios y ancianos, y se profetizรณ que las esferas son diez y no nueve, y no once. El nรบmero de sus capรญtulos es diez. El Capรญtulo 1 es la explicaciรณn de la Mishnรก en el Sefer Yetzirรก 1:3 que dice: \"Diez Sefirot de la Nada en el nรบmero etcโ€ฆโ€",
22
+ "Capรญtulo 2, en el cual se aclararรก esa enseรฑanza de otra manera, y tambiรฉn se incluirรกn otros comentarios de los Tikkunim y el Zohar.",
23
+ "Capรญtulo 3, la explicaciรณn del sรฉptimo Mishnรก y la declaraciรณn 'He comido mi bosque con mi miel' del libro 'Re'aya Meheimna'.",
24
+ "Capรญtulo 4, sobre la explicaciรณn del tema de Tiferet, que establece el equilibrio entre Gevurรก y Netzaj, asรญ como entre Jesed y Hod, segรบn el razonamiento.",
25
+ "Capรญtulo 5, sobre la explicaciรณn de la segunda Mishnรก en el Sefer Yetzirah 1:4: 'Diez y no nueve, diez y no onceโ€™.",
26
+ "Capรญtulo 6, sobre la explicaciรณn del dicho del Rabรญ Meir: 'ร‰l deberรก dar la mitad del siclo'.",
27
+ "Capรญtulo 7, para preservar al buscador del manantial de error, para que no piense que son once o mรกs a partir del poder de su comprensiรณn o algo similar a esto.",
28
+ "Capรญtulo 8, por necesidad, las Sefirot surgen de la investigaciรณn y de la Escritura.",
29
+ "Capรญtulo 9, mediante la investigaciรณn, si uno niega las Sefirot, se le llamarรก hereje. Si no, no.",
30
+ "Capรญtulo 10, sobre la publicaciรณn de los Diez Nombres de las Diez Sefirot extraรญdos de las Escrituras."
31
+ ],
32
+ [
33
+ "El segundo capรญtulo lo llamamos 'Portal de Atzilut' porque en รฉl se revela el motivo por el cual son diez, ni mรกs ni menos, y el motivo de la existencia de Atzilut misma. Y su cantidad de capรญtulos es siete. Capรญtulo 1, sobre la explicaciรณn de un solo motivo para el Rabi Azriel, y la crรญtica del Rabi Yehuda Hayyit y mi respuesta a sus crรญticas.",
34
+ "Capรญtulo 2, sobre la explicaciรณn de otro motivo para el Rabรญ Yehuda Hayyit, el motivo de Rabรญ Menajem Marcenati y nuestras objeciones a ambos, asรญ como tambiรฉn a Rabรญ Azriel.",
35
+ "Capรญtulo 3 sobre la explicaciรณn de nuestro conocimiento de la Cรกbala, que se menciona en varios lugares del Talmud, y otros requisitos. Allรญ se trata del asunto de cรณmo el mundo fue creado en diez expresiones.",
36
+ "Capรญtulo 4 sobre la explicaciรณn de tambiรฉn diez emanaciones en las diez Sefirot.",
37
+ "Capรญtulo 5 sobre la explicaciรณn del discurso de los diez reinos en correspondencia con los que estรกn en el Tratado Rosh Hashanรก.",
38
+ "Capรญtulo 6 sobre la explicaciรณn del significado de Atzilut y del nรบmero diez.",
39
+ "Capรญtulo 7 sobre la investigaciรณn de si es posible otra emanaciรณn (Atzilut) como esta o no, y allรญ se revelarรก el misterio del motivo de Atzilut y el orden de los mundos."
40
+ ]
41
+ ],
42
+ "A Prayer": [],
43
+ "": []
44
+ },
45
+ "schema": {
46
+ "heTitle": "ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Pardes Rimonim",
48
+ "key": "Pardes Rimonim",
49
+ "nodes": [
50
+ {
51
+ "heTitle": "ื”ืงื“ืžืช ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ",
52
+ "enTitle": "Author's Introduction"
53
+ },
54
+ {
55
+ "heTitle": "ืกื™ืžื ื™ ื”ืกืคืจ",
56
+ "enTitle": "Index"
57
+ },
58
+ {
59
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืงืฉื”",
60
+ "enTitle": "A Prayer"
61
+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "",
64
+ "enTitle": ""
65
+ }
66
+ ]
67
+ }
68
+ }
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+ {
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+ "language": "en",
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+ "title": "Pardes Rimonim",
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+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org",
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+ "versionTitle": "Sefaria Community Translation",
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+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ืชืจื’ื•ื ืงื”ื™ืœืช ืกืคืจื™ื",
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+ "heTitle": "ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื",
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+ "categories": [
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+ "Kabbalah",
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+ "Ramak"
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+ ],
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+ "text": {
18
+ "Author's Introduction": [
19
+ "Estas son las palabras del joven Moisรฉs, hijo de [el rabino] Jacob Cordovero, cuando reflexionรฉ sobre los dรญas de mi juventud. Pasaron y se desvanecieron ante mรญ, mientras perseguรญa todos los deseos y se extinguรญan sin esperanza. Y sucediรณ cuando lleguรฉ a la edad de veinte aรฑos y un vello dorado creciรณ, que mi Seรฑor me despertรณ como a un hombre que despierta de su sueรฑo, y dijo a mi alma: \"Hasta cuรกndo, hija obstinada, ยฟhasta cuรกndo te embriagarรกs con tus pecados? ยฟHasta cuรกndo permitirรกs que tus pensamientos impuros habiten en tu corazรณn y olvidarรกs al Seรฑor, tu Hacedor y Creador desde el seno materno? Ahora, levรกntate, clama a tu Dios y vigila sus puertas dรญa tras dรญa. Y ร‰l sanarรก el altar del Seรฑor, que estรก en ruinas\". Estas son las palabras del joven Moisรฉs, hijo de [el rabino] Jacob Cordovero. Cuando escuchรฉ la llamada, me levantรฉ y recorrรญ la ciudad, los mercados y las calles buscando un lugar donde encontrar descanso que me beneficiara. Entonces, escuchรฉ una voz de la ciudad sagrada que descendรญa desde los cielos, mi Maestro y Rabino, el sabio cabalista, el venerable Rabi Shlomo Alkabetz, que descanse en paz, me condujo a su palacio de enseรฑanzas y me instruyรณ. Me dijo: \"Hijo mรญo, presta atenciรณn a mis palabras, inclina tu oรญdo y escucha las palabras de los sabios\". Me colocรณ en las puertas de la sabidurรญa y el entendimiento, que son mรกs dulces que la miel, y me permitiรณ observar los misterios ocultos de la Torรก.",
20
+ "Fui a travรฉs de los dรญas, maravillado por lo bueno y agradable que era dedicarme a esta tarea. Me dije a mรญ mismo: \"Cuรกnto me agradarรญa estar siempre inmerso en esta sabidurรญa\". Su amor me embriagaba constantemente, y sus amantes palabras me deleitaban en todo momento.",
21
+ "Cuando llegรณ el momento de cumplir mis votos, me presentรฉ ante los libros del sagrado Rabi Shimon bar Yojai, que descanse en paz, y los estudiรฉ. Mi corazรณn se movรญa como las olas del mar y se tambaleaba como un barco en alta mar en las profundidades de las enseรฑanzas. Dije: \"Tomarรฉ la corona del erudito que llevo en mi cinturรณn y la colocarรฉ sobre la cabeza de cada rebaรฑo, uno por uno. Establecerรฉ un orden en mi mente, separando uno de otro, y cuando mi corazรณn se fortalezca en esta enseรฑanza, me dirigirรฉ a otras\".",
22
+ "Entonces, vi que mi consejo era recto y justo desde el Seรฑor, desde los cielos. Abrรญ el rollo de un libro ante mรญ para que me sirviera de memoria y me guiara en sus asuntos y sus รณrdenes. Lo llamรฉ \"Pardes Rimmonim\" (El Jardรญn de Granadas) para indicar las razones conocidas. Primero, esta sabidurรญa es la sabidurรญa de la Cรกbala, que se conoce como \"Pardes\". Segundo, que esta revelaciรณn serรญa un consuelo tanto en este mundo como en el prรณximo, y sustentarรญa todos mis aรฑos. Esto es \"Rimmonim\", granadas, que plantรฉ para mi deleite. Y es como granados, siendo sus portales los รกrboles plantados en รฉl. Y sus capรญtulos son granadas. Y en ellos estรกn dispuestos nuevos conceptos, uno al lado del otro, no uno ni dos, sino llenos como granadas, por lo tanto, se les llama 'Pardes Rimmonim' (El Jardรญn de Granadas). Y vimos que el rollo estรก dividido en treinta y dos secciones, y las llamamos 'puertas' para que sean puertas para entrar en el interior de la Torรก y sus secretos. Ademรกs, dividimos estas puertas en capรญtulos, algunos de ellos son cortos y otros largos, segรบn la naturaleza del tema en cada capรญtulo. Miramos hacia el pozo para que nadie entre en nuestras puertas sin las llaves y los mรฉtodos de las puertas, ya que, Dios no lo quiera, esto podrรญa causar daรฑo en lugar de beneficio. Aquel a quien se le han entregado las llaves, que sean del tamaรฑo adecuado para abrir nuestras puertas, podemos estar seguros de que las abrirรก. Hay varios conjuntos de llaves en esta sabidurรญa, y no esperamos de aquel que se sumerge en la explicaciรณn de los asuntos repetir dos veces lo que ya hemos escrito, ya que esto prolongarรญa nuestra labor. Por lo tanto, no avanzaremos desde el capรญtulo hasta que sepamos que lo que necesita para su comprensiรณn no serรก repetido, sino que nos apoyaremos en lo que ya hemos escrito en el capรญtulo anterior. Asรญ, sus pies no abandonarรกn esta puerta hasta que la entienda adecuadamente, y luego continuarรก su camino sin temor. Y con todo esto, no retiraremos nuestras manos de explicar, como escribimos en el lugar tal o como explicamos en el lugar tal. Y estos son los nombres de las puertas, cada una con sus letras."
23
+ ],
24
+ "Index": [
25
+ [
26
+ "First Gate. We named it \"Ten and Not Nine\", because it explains how there was agreement among our sages, elders, and prophets in the understanding that the Sefirot are ten and not nine or eleven. The Gate comprises 10 chapters. Chapter 1 is the explanation of the Mishna in Sefer Yetzira 1:3 \"Ten is the number of the ineffable Sefirot. They number ten, etc.\"",
27
+ "Chapter 2 is the explanation of the same Mishna (Sefer Yetzira 1:3) with a different approach, and other sections from the Tikkunei Zohar.",
28
+ "Chapter 3 is the explanation of the aforementioned Mishna (Sefer Yetzira 1:3) and the portion of \"I've eaten my honey and honeycomb\" in Ra'aya Meheimna.",
29
+ "Chapter 4 is the explanation of Tiferet's crucial position between Gevura and Netzach and between Chesed and Hod, according to logic.",
30
+ "Chapter 5 is the explanation of a second Mishna in Sefer Yetzira 1:4 \"Ten, and not nine. Ten, and not eleven.\"",
31
+ "Chapter 6 is the explanation of the section in Ra'aya Meheimna, \"Commanded to Give a Half-Shekel\" (Zohar 2:187b)",
32
+ "Chapter 7 in order to protect the investigator [student] from error, that they won't think they [the Sefirot] are eleven or more from being too familiar or the like.",
33
+ "Chapter 8 discusses heresy from the power of investigation and text/scripture.",
34
+ "Chapter 9 investigates whether a denier of the Sefirot is considered a heretic or not.",
35
+ "Chapter 10 publicized the ten names that refer to the Sefirot from the scriptures (Genesis 1)."
36
+ ],
37
+ [
38
+ "Second Gate. We named it \"The Reason [Flavor] for Atzilut\", because it explains a reason for why there are ten [Sefirot], no less and no more, and the reason for the reality of Atzilut itself. The Second Gate comprises seven chapters. Chapter 1 explains one reason according to R' Azriel and the understanding of R' Yehuda Chiyiti of this reason, and his criticism.",
39
+ "Chapter 2 explains another reason according to R' Yehuda Chiyiti and R' Menachem Marcanti's reason, followed by our understanding of them two and R' Azriel.",
40
+ "Chapter 3 explains how our Kaballah [understanding of the Sefirot] is ten, which is supported by the Talmud and other imperatives. There we are [actually] dealing with the notion of the Ten Utterances of Creation (Genesis 1:1).",
41
+ "Chapter 4 explains the Ten Utterances in reference to the Ten Sefirot.",
42
+ "Chapter 5 explains the account of \"These Ten Kingdoms\" in reference to the opinion in Masechet Rosh HaShana.",
43
+ "Chapter 6 explains the reason for Atzlilut and the numeration of Ten [Sefirot].",
44
+ "Chapter 7 discusses whether there can be another Atzilut or not, there we reveal the secret of Atzilut and the cosmic order [of the four supernal worlds].\n"
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "Third Gate. We named it \"Is the Ein Sof [synonymous with] Keter\", because it explains how the Ein Sof (G-d as the unknowable infinite and eternal) is thought to be Keter (Crown, the most supernal Sefira) according to many, and how Keter is excluded as a Sefira [by many], specifically R' Shem Tov ibn Shem Tov and his writings. Chapter 1 explains the notion of those who say the Ein Sof is Keter and the logical counter [to this notion].",
48
+ "Chapter 2 [continues to] counter this notion by means of many places in the Zohar.",
49
+ "Chapter 3 explains the thought of R' Shem Tov ibn Shem tov that Keter is not counted in the Sefirot, and the logical refutation supported by R' Shimon bar Yochai in the Zohar.",
50
+ "Chapter 4 explains and treats the Mishna in Sefer Yetzira that led to the [incorrect] conclusion of R' Shem Tov, and offer another interpretation.",
51
+ "Chapter 5 explains the aforementioned Mishna according to R' Shimon bar Yochai.",
52
+ "Chapter 6 treats the account of haIdra \"The Other Forgotten Beam\" to understand R' Shem Tov, and we provide an alternate reading.",
53
+ "Chapter 7 explains the above account in greater detail.",
54
+ "Chapter 8 explains the notion, secret, and explanation of the beautiful account of R' Shimon Bar Yochai, peace be upon him, from the Tikkunei Zohar: Genesis 2 \"Two Chochma (Wisdom) and Binah (understanding); Three Awe of Hashem is the beginning of Da'at (knowledge)\" ."
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "Fourth Gate. We named it \"Essence and Vessels\", because in it we uncover whether the Ten Sefirot are in-essence the same as G-d (elohut) as many think or are G-d's vessels, like a vessel an artisan uses to create (and aren't part of the artisan himself). There are Ten Chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the thoughts of R' Menachem of Recanti who believes [the Sefirot] are vessels.",
58
+ "Chapter 2 reviews the opinion of R' David (Magen David) who believes [the Sefirot] are in-essance the same as G-d.",
59
+ "Chapter 3 is our understanding of their words whether they are discussing G-d's essence or vessels.",
60
+ "Chapter 4 explains our opinion that the Sefirot are a hybrid of the two (ie higher soul of the vessels).",
61
+ "Chapter 5 explains the proof of our opinion from the Zohar, and an initial explanation of the account from R' Eliyahu \"The world is one and not in count\" [in unity not quantity] from the Tikkunim (Zohar Chadash Yitro) .",
62
+ "Chapter 6 explains the remainder of the account, which we split into two due to its length.",
63
+ "Chapter 7 brings another source from the Zohar, \"A point [nekuda] does not exist in light [nehura], etc.\" A section in \"Kav HaMida [Measured Line]\" (Zohar Chadah V'etchanan).",
64
+ "Chapter 8 brings another source from the Zohar from the book Ra'aya Meheimna, \"To whom can you liken me (Isaiah 40:25)\".",
65
+ "Chapter 9 explains the unity of the Ein Sof (Endless Light) and the Ten Sefirot, it also explains whether the \"creation\" of Aztilut [is truly a new creation or not].",
66
+ "Chapter 10 reviews an account from Rashb\"i (R' Shimon bar Yochai, peace be upon him), and explains all the angles (lit. corners) that we dealt with until now."
67
+ ],
68
+ [
69
+ "The fifth gate has been referred to as \"The Order of Emanation,\" as it elucidates the concept of emanation, who emanated from whom, and who preceded whom in relation to the emanation. This is due to the proliferation of various opinions on this matter. The chapters within it are six in number.",
70
+ "Chapter One elaborates on the perspective of the Gaonim who assert that their order emanated and is necessitated by the intention derived from scripture and reasoning.",
71
+ "Chapter Two explains a statement from \"Patach Eliyahu\" by the Rashbi, may his memory be a blessing, from the Tikunim. There, the reason why the foundation sometimes precedes Netzach and Hod is elucidated.",
72
+ "Chapter Three delves into the interpretations of the commentators on the Order of Emanation, aiming to raise objections and insights about them.",
73
+ "Chapter Four elucidates that they cannot manifest through the Crown nor through Wisdom. It expounds on a saying from \"Adra D'Nazir Tana,\" an ancient, primordial thought that they concealed. It is the beginning of Adra, and similarly, a statement preceding the creation of the world existed, solely named and known as itself.",
74
+ "Chapter Five elucidates the Emanation of the first three qualities, as well as several distinctions within Emanation. It explains the frequency of Emanation for each Sefirah apart from others, among the revealed types. Also, it details four configurations of the Sefirot within Chochmah, Binah, Tiferet, and Malchut, and the first statement from the Zohar โ€“ all created through Chochmah.",
75
+ "Chapter Six explicates the order of Emanation for the other Sefirot and the rectification of all the concepts."
76
+ ]
77
+ ],
78
+ "A Prayer": [],
79
+ "": [
80
+ [],
81
+ [],
82
+ [],
83
+ [],
84
+ [],
85
+ [],
86
+ [],
87
+ [],
88
+ [],
89
+ [
90
+ [
91
+ "",
92
+ "",
93
+ "",
94
+ "",
95
+ "... If a person looks at the flow of much water with his eyes, a white liquid is stimulated, etc. So too is this matter. When the spring flows in his mind, he will find ten levels in this thing. As from the colors that appear to our eyes or in our physical mind's eye, this impacts on the [level of the] spiritual; the essence is stimulated by the spirit; and the soul by the essence. And from the soul, it goes from one state to another, until it rises to the place of its nourishment. So it is aroused according to the state of the [original] form."
96
+ ]
97
+ ],
98
+ [],
99
+ [],
100
+ [],
101
+ [],
102
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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128
+ "ื™ื•ื‘ืœ (Yovel/Yuval) is Binah (Understanding). And she is called this way because she completes the fiftieth year in the secret of the Fifty Gates [of Understanding], and she is the fiftieth year, which is the gate that is more marvellous than Moses our teacher, may he rest in peace, as you say (Psalms 8:6): โ€œYou have made him a little less [ืžืขื˜] than divineโ€ [in the Babylonian Talmud, tractate Rosh Hashanah 21b this verse is applied to Moses]. You should not say ืžืขื˜ but ืž\"ื˜ [which has the numerical value of 49, thus one less than 50] etc. And this degree [Binah] is called by this name [ื™ื•ื‘ืœ] when she flows into the fifty gates and gives an influx of abundance and good. And this is the meaning of Yuval, as โ€œand towards a stream [ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, Yuval] it will extend its rootsโ€ (Jeremiah 17:8). And as it will revolve until it has reached the fiftieth gate then in/through it [the fiftieth gate] it will cling to Chochmah (Wisdom). And on this it is said to Moses: โ€œBe silent, thus [ื›ืš] it has come up in thoughtโ€ [Babylonian Talmud, tractate Menachot 29b]. ื›ืš is in Gematria 40 [the text reads ื ', 50, which is probably a mistake for ืž', 40], while silence is in Chochmah which is Yod [ื™', 10]. And it has come up in thought which is Chochmah. [thus the verse โ€œBe silent, thus it has come up in thoughtโ€ refers to the fiftieth Gate of Understanding as it counts 10 (Be silent) + 40 (thus) = 50, ascending to Chochmah]. And because of this he [Moses] did not grasp the subject of the death of Rabbi Aqiva [as Moses had attained to only the fourty-ninth Gate of Understanding], because his death was on the side of the judgement, in the secret of the ascent, as will be explained in the Gate of the Soul [Gate 31 of the Pardes Rimonim], chapter 5. And we will return to our subject that in the cleaving of this gate to Chochmah, then it [this gate] is Yuval and then the whole world is mercy and great abundance, liberty and deliverance, and then we will call this degree [Binah] Yovel/Yuval. "
129
+ ]
130
+ ],
131
+ [],
132
+ [
133
+ [],
134
+ [],
135
+ [
136
+ "We are now obliged to clarify the usefulness of this Shell and its interests in the world, because to say that it is to punish or etc. will not suffice. For the whole object of punishment is asked, it is the evil inclination and the Shell, there will be no Shell and there will be no evil inclination. And it is said that the reason for their creation. in the will of the Creator, is to be that the world and its creatures needed to receive their sustenance and livelihood by the power of law and justice and righteousness, and if they were all non-elective angels in their actions, the world would not benefit from their actions, because they are forced act as angels. And for this reason, man must have a choice, and be inhabited by the evil inclination and the good inclination, that if he, by his own nature, would want to incline towards good, his evil inclination, Samael, would incline him to evil on his left; and when he wants to incline towards evil, on his right will be his good inclination to guilt him, and remind him of the words of his Creator in such a way that he will be rewarded for the inclination, good or bad. And to judge a man according to his deeds, it is necessary that he have aspects which are unclean โ€“ as like a slave who rebels against his master โ€“ to torment the wicked, so that his wickedness and evils in their numbers will cling to wickedness on its proper side, and so he will receive punishment. This matter is clarified well in the Zohar. All of what the Holy One, Blessed be He, caused Himself to go down in order to show all honorable rituals. (stopped at ื•ื›ื™ ืžืืŸ ื—ืžื™ ืขื‘ื“ื)"
137
+ ]
138
+ ],
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+ [
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144
+ "",
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+ "",
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+ "",
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+ "",
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+ "",
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+ "",
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+ "",
151
+ "",
152
+ "And see, R. Shimon [bar Jochai] started praising the Book of Concealment (ืกืคืจื ื“ืฆื ื™ืขื•ืชื), which consists of five chapters with in it the sum/principle of all wisdom of the Kabbalah. And that is why R. Yehudah said that if this is so, it follows that man needs to study only this book. And R. Shimon replied that this is true for one who has entered the Idra and came out. He says \"and came out\" since ten [companions] entered [the Idra Rabba] and only seven came out, because three [of them] died as is described at the end of the Idra [Rabba; Zohar III:127b-145]. But one who does not enter and does not know the preambles that are revealed there, will not be able to profit from the mysteries of this concealed book. And he [= R. Shimon] makes a comparison with a villager etc. [the mashal just prior to the beginning of the ืกืคืจื ื“ืฆื ื™ืขื•ืชื, Zohar III.176a]. And this for sure applies to one who studies [only] the Written Torah and says that everything is contained in it, as he will remain ignorant of everything, as occurred also to the villager [of the mashal]. And therefore the essence of the perfection of knowledge of the Written Torah is the Oral Torah, as we have explained. \n"
153
+ ]
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+ ]
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ "schema": {
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+ "heTitle": "ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Pardes Rimonim",
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+ "key": "Pardes Rimonim",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื”ืงื“ืžืช ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Author's Introduction"
165
+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืกื™ืžื ื™ ื”ืกืคืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Index"
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+ },
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+ {
171
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืงืฉื”",
172
+ "enTitle": "A Prayer"
173
+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "",
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+ "enTitle": ""
177
+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ }
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1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Pardes Rimonim",
3
+ "language": "en",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
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+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Pardes_Rimonim",
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+ "text": {
7
+ "Author's Introduction": [
8
+ "Estas son las palabras del joven Moisรฉs, hijo de [el rabino] Jacob Cordovero, cuando reflexionรฉ sobre los dรญas de mi juventud. Pasaron y se desvanecieron ante mรญ, mientras perseguรญa todos los deseos y se extinguรญan sin esperanza. Y sucediรณ cuando lleguรฉ a la edad de veinte aรฑos y un vello dorado creciรณ, que mi Seรฑor me despertรณ como a un hombre que despierta de su sueรฑo, y dijo a mi alma: \"Hasta cuรกndo, hija obstinada, ยฟhasta cuรกndo te embriagarรกs con tus pecados? ยฟHasta cuรกndo permitirรกs que tus pensamientos impuros habiten en tu corazรณn y olvidarรกs al Seรฑor, tu Hacedor y Creador desde el seno materno? Ahora, levรกntate, clama a tu Dios y vigila sus puertas dรญa tras dรญa. Y ร‰l sanarรก el altar del Seรฑor, que estรก en ruinas\". Estas son las palabras del joven Moisรฉs, hijo de [el rabino] Jacob Cordovero. Cuando escuchรฉ la llamada, me levantรฉ y recorrรญ la ciudad, los mercados y las calles buscando un lugar donde encontrar descanso que me beneficiara. Entonces, escuchรฉ una voz de la ciudad sagrada que descendรญa desde los cielos, mi Maestro y Rabino, el sabio cabalista, el venerable Rabi Shlomo Alkabetz, que descanse en paz, me condujo a su palacio de enseรฑanzas y me instruyรณ. Me dijo: \"Hijo mรญo, presta atenciรณn a mis palabras, inclina tu oรญdo y escucha las palabras de los sabios\". Me colocรณ en las puertas de la sabidurรญa y el entendimiento, que son mรกs dulces que la miel, y me permitiรณ observar los misterios ocultos de la Torรก.",
9
+ "Fui a travรฉs de los dรญas, maravillado por lo bueno y agradable que era dedicarme a esta tarea. Me dije a mรญ mismo: \"Cuรกnto me agradarรญa estar siempre inmerso en esta sabidurรญa\". Su amor me embriagaba constantemente, y sus amantes palabras me deleitaban en todo momento.",
10
+ "Cuando llegรณ el momento de cumplir mis votos, me presentรฉ ante los libros del sagrado Rabi Shimon bar Yojai, que descanse en paz, y los estudiรฉ. Mi corazรณn se movรญa como las olas del mar y se tambaleaba como un barco en alta mar en las profundidades de las enseรฑanzas. Dije: \"Tomarรฉ la corona del erudito que llevo en mi cinturรณn y la colocarรฉ sobre la cabeza de cada rebaรฑo, uno por uno. Establecerรฉ un orden en mi mente, separando uno de otro, y cuando mi corazรณn se fortalezca en esta enseรฑanza, me dirigirรฉ a otras\".",
11
+ "Entonces, vi que mi consejo era recto y justo desde el Seรฑor, desde los cielos. Abrรญ el rollo de un libro ante mรญ para que me sirviera de memoria y me guiara en sus asuntos y sus รณrdenes. Lo llamรฉ \"Pardes Rimmonim\" (El Jardรญn de Granadas) para indicar las razones conocidas. Primero, esta sabidurรญa es la sabidurรญa de la Cรกbala, que se conoce como \"Pardes\". Segundo, que esta revelaciรณn serรญa un consuelo tanto en este mundo como en el prรณximo, y sustentarรญa todos mis aรฑos. Esto es \"Rimmonim\", granadas, que plantรฉ para mi deleite. Y es como granados, siendo sus portales los รกrboles plantados en รฉl. Y sus capรญtulos son granadas. Y en ellos estรกn dispuestos nuevos conceptos, uno al lado del otro, no uno ni dos, sino llenos como granadas, por lo tanto, se les llama 'Pardes Rimmonim' (El Jardรญn de Granadas). Y vimos que el rollo estรก dividido en treinta y dos secciones, y las llamamos 'puertas' para que sean puertas para entrar en el interior de la Torรก y sus secretos. Ademรกs, dividimos estas puertas en capรญtulos, algunos de ellos son cortos y otros largos, segรบn la naturaleza del tema en cada capรญtulo. Miramos hacia el pozo para que nadie entre en nuestras puertas sin las llaves y los mรฉtodos de las puertas, ya que, Dios no lo quiera, esto podrรญa causar daรฑo en lugar de beneficio. Aquel a quien se le han entregado las llaves, que sean del tamaรฑo adecuado para abrir nuestras puertas, podemos estar seguros de que las abrirรก. Hay varios conjuntos de llaves en esta sabidurรญa, y no esperamos de aquel que se sumerge en la explicaciรณn de los asuntos repetir dos veces lo que ya hemos escrito, ya que esto prolongarรญa nuestra labor. Por lo tanto, no avanzaremos desde el capรญtulo hasta que sepamos que lo que necesita para su comprensiรณn no serรก repetido, sino que nos apoyaremos en lo que ya hemos escrito en el capรญtulo anterior. Asรญ, sus pies no abandonarรกn esta puerta hasta que la entienda adecuadamente, y luego continuarรก su camino sin temor. Y con todo esto, no retiraremos nuestras manos de explicar, como escribimos en el lugar tal o como explicamos en el lugar tal. Y estos son los nombres de las puertas, cada una con sus letras."
12
+ ],
13
+ "Index": [
14
+ [
15
+ "First Gate. We named it \"Ten and Not Nine\", because it explains how there was agreement among our sages, elders, and prophets in the understanding that the Sefirot are ten and not nine or eleven. The Gate comprises 10 chapters. Chapter 1 is the explanation of the Mishna in Sefer Yetzira 1:3 \"Ten is the number of the ineffable Sefirot. They number ten, etc.\"",
16
+ "Chapter 2 is the explanation of the same Mishna (Sefer Yetzira 1:3) with a different approach, and other sections from the Tikkunei Zohar.",
17
+ "Chapter 3 is the explanation of the aforementioned Mishna (Sefer Yetzira 1:3) and the portion of \"I've eaten my honey and honeycomb\" in Ra'aya Meheimna.",
18
+ "Chapter 4 is the explanation of Tiferet's crucial position between Gevura and Netzach and between Chesed and Hod, according to logic.",
19
+ "Chapter 5 is the explanation of a second Mishna in Sefer Yetzira 1:4 \"Ten, and not nine. Ten, and not eleven.\"",
20
+ "Chapter 6 is the explanation of the section in Ra'aya Meheimna, \"Commanded to Give a Half-Shekel\" (Zohar 2:187b)",
21
+ "Chapter 7 in order to protect the investigator [student] from error, that they won't think they [the Sefirot] are eleven or more from being too familiar or the like.",
22
+ "Chapter 8 discusses heresy from the power of investigation and text/scripture.",
23
+ "Chapter 9 investigates whether a denier of the Sefirot is considered a heretic or not.",
24
+ "Chapter 10 publicized the ten names that refer to the Sefirot from the scriptures (Genesis 1)."
25
+ ],
26
+ [
27
+ "Second Gate. We named it \"The Reason [Flavor] for Atzilut\", because it explains a reason for why there are ten [Sefirot], no less and no more, and the reason for the reality of Atzilut itself. The Second Gate comprises seven chapters. Chapter 1 explains one reason according to R' Azriel and the understanding of R' Yehuda Chiyiti of this reason, and his criticism.",
28
+ "Chapter 2 explains another reason according to R' Yehuda Chiyiti and R' Menachem Marcanti's reason, followed by our understanding of them two and R' Azriel.",
29
+ "Chapter 3 explains how our Kaballah [understanding of the Sefirot] is ten, which is supported by the Talmud and other imperatives. There we are [actually] dealing with the notion of the Ten Utterances of Creation (Genesis 1:1).",
30
+ "Chapter 4 explains the Ten Utterances in reference to the Ten Sefirot.",
31
+ "Chapter 5 explains the account of \"These Ten Kingdoms\" in reference to the opinion in Masechet Rosh HaShana.",
32
+ "Chapter 6 explains the reason for Atzlilut and the numeration of Ten [Sefirot].",
33
+ "Chapter 7 discusses whether there can be another Atzilut or not, there we reveal the secret of Atzilut and the cosmic order [of the four supernal worlds].\n"
34
+ ],
35
+ [
36
+ "Third Gate. We named it \"Is the Ein Sof [synonymous with] Keter\", because it explains how the Ein Sof (G-d as the unknowable infinite and eternal) is thought to be Keter (Crown, the most supernal Sefira) according to many, and how Keter is excluded as a Sefira [by many], specifically R' Shem Tov ibn Shem Tov and his writings. Chapter 1 explains the notion of those who say the Ein Sof is Keter and the logical counter [to this notion].",
37
+ "Chapter 2 [continues to] counter this notion by means of many places in the Zohar.",
38
+ "Chapter 3 explains the thought of R' Shem Tov ibn Shem tov that Keter is not counted in the Sefirot, and the logical refutation supported by R' Shimon bar Yochai in the Zohar.",
39
+ "Chapter 4 explains and treats the Mishna in Sefer Yetzira that led to the [incorrect] conclusion of R' Shem Tov, and offer another interpretation.",
40
+ "Chapter 5 explains the aforementioned Mishna according to R' Shimon bar Yochai.",
41
+ "Chapter 6 treats the account of haIdra \"The Other Forgotten Beam\" to understand R' Shem Tov, and we provide an alternate reading.",
42
+ "Chapter 7 explains the above account in greater detail.",
43
+ "Chapter 8 explains the notion, secret, and explanation of the beautiful account of R' Shimon Bar Yochai, peace be upon him, from the Tikkunei Zohar: Genesis 2 \"Two Chochma (Wisdom) and Binah (understanding); Three Awe of Hashem is the beginning of Da'at (knowledge)\" ."
44
+ ],
45
+ [
46
+ "Fourth Gate. We named it \"Essence and Vessels\", because in it we uncover whether the Ten Sefirot are in-essence the same as G-d (elohut) as many think or are G-d's vessels, like a vessel an artisan uses to create (and aren't part of the artisan himself). There are Ten Chapters. Chapter 1 reviews the thoughts of R' Menachem of Recanti who believes [the Sefirot] are vessels.",
47
+ "Chapter 2 reviews the opinion of R' David (Magen David) who believes [the Sefirot] are in-essance the same as G-d.",
48
+ "Chapter 3 is our understanding of their words whether they are discussing G-d's essence or vessels.",
49
+ "Chapter 4 explains our opinion that the Sefirot are a hybrid of the two (ie higher soul of the vessels).",
50
+ "Chapter 5 explains the proof of our opinion from the Zohar, and an initial explanation of the account from R' Eliyahu \"The world is one and not in count\" [in unity not quantity] from the Tikkunim (Zohar Chadash Yitro) .",
51
+ "Chapter 6 explains the remainder of the account, which we split into two due to its length.",
52
+ "Chapter 7 brings another source from the Zohar, \"A point [nekuda] does not exist in light [nehura], etc.\" A section in \"Kav HaMida [Measured Line]\" (Zohar Chadah V'etchanan).",
53
+ "Chapter 8 brings another source from the Zohar from the book Ra'aya Meheimna, \"To whom can you liken me (Isaiah 40:25)\".",
54
+ "Chapter 9 explains the unity of the Ein Sof (Endless Light) and the Ten Sefirot, it also explains whether the \"creation\" of Aztilut [is truly a new creation or not].",
55
+ "Chapter 10 reviews an account from Rashb\"i (R' Shimon bar Yochai, peace be upon him), and explains all the angles (lit. corners) that we dealt with until now."
56
+ ],
57
+ [
58
+ "The fifth gate has been referred to as \"The Order of Emanation,\" as it elucidates the concept of emanation, who emanated from whom, and who preceded whom in relation to the emanation. This is due to the proliferation of various opinions on this matter. The chapters within it are six in number.",
59
+ "Chapter One elaborates on the perspective of the Gaonim who assert that their order emanated and is necessitated by the intention derived from scripture and reasoning.",
60
+ "Chapter Two explains a statement from \"Patach Eliyahu\" by the Rashbi, may his memory be a blessing, from the Tikunim. There, the reason why the foundation sometimes precedes Netzach and Hod is elucidated.",
61
+ "Chapter Three delves into the interpretations of the commentators on the Order of Emanation, aiming to raise objections and insights about them.",
62
+ "Chapter Four elucidates that they cannot manifest through the Crown nor through Wisdom. It expounds on a saying from \"Adra D'Nazir Tana,\" an ancient, primordial thought that they concealed. It is the beginning of Adra, and similarly, a statement preceding the creation of the world existed, solely named and known as itself.",
63
+ "Chapter Five elucidates the Emanation of the first three qualities, as well as several distinctions within Emanation. It explains the frequency of Emanation for each Sefirah apart from others, among the revealed types. Also, it details four configurations of the Sefirot within Chochmah, Binah, Tiferet, and Malchut, and the first statement from the Zohar โ€“ all created through Chochmah.",
64
+ "Chapter Six explicates the order of Emanation for the other Sefirot and the rectification of all the concepts."
65
+ ]
66
+ ],
67
+ "A Prayer": [],
68
+ "": [
69
+ [],
70
+ [],
71
+ [],
72
+ [],
73
+ [],
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+ [],
75
+ [],
76
+ [],
77
+ [],
78
+ [
79
+ [
80
+ "",
81
+ "",
82
+ "",
83
+ "",
84
+ "... If a person looks at the flow of much water with his eyes, a white liquid is stimulated, etc. So too is this matter. When the spring flows in his mind, he will find ten levels in this thing. As from the colors that appear to our eyes or in our physical mind's eye, this impacts on the [level of the] spiritual; the essence is stimulated by the spirit; and the soul by the essence. And from the soul, it goes from one state to another, until it rises to the place of its nourishment. So it is aroused according to the state of the [original] form."
85
+ ]
86
+ ],
87
+ [],
88
+ [],
89
+ [],
90
+ [],
91
+ [],
92
+ [],
93
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
97
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
100
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
103
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
110
+ "",
111
+ "",
112
+ "",
113
+ "",
114
+ "",
115
+ "",
116
+ "",
117
+ "ื™ื•ื‘ืœ (Yovel/Yuval) is Binah (Understanding). And she is called this way because she completes the fiftieth year in the secret of the Fifty Gates [of Understanding], and she is the fiftieth year, which is the gate that is more marvellous than Moses our teacher, may he rest in peace, as you say (Psalms 8:6): โ€œYou have made him a little less [ืžืขื˜] than divineโ€ [in the Babylonian Talmud, tractate Rosh Hashanah 21b this verse is applied to Moses]. You should not say ืžืขื˜ but ืž\"ื˜ [which has the numerical value of 49, thus one less than 50] etc. And this degree [Binah] is called by this name [ื™ื•ื‘ืœ] when she flows into the fifty gates and gives an influx of abundance and good. And this is the meaning of Yuval, as โ€œand towards a stream [ื™ื•ื‘ืœ, Yuval] it will extend its rootsโ€ (Jeremiah 17:8). And as it will revolve until it has reached the fiftieth gate then in/through it [the fiftieth gate] it will cling to Chochmah (Wisdom). And on this it is said to Moses: โ€œBe silent, thus [ื›ืš] it has come up in thoughtโ€ [Babylonian Talmud, tractate Menachot 29b]. ื›ืš is in Gematria 40 [the text reads ื ', 50, which is probably a mistake for ืž', 40], while silence is in Chochmah which is Yod [ื™', 10]. And it has come up in thought which is Chochmah. [thus the verse โ€œBe silent, thus it has come up in thoughtโ€ refers to the fiftieth Gate of Understanding as it counts 10 (Be silent) + 40 (thus) = 50, ascending to Chochmah]. And because of this he [Moses] did not grasp the subject of the death of Rabbi Aqiva [as Moses had attained to only the fourty-ninth Gate of Understanding], because his death was on the side of the judgement, in the secret of the ascent, as will be explained in the Gate of the Soul [Gate 31 of the Pardes Rimonim], chapter 5. And we will return to our subject that in the cleaving of this gate to Chochmah, then it [this gate] is Yuval and then the whole world is mercy and great abundance, liberty and deliverance, and then we will call this degree [Binah] Yovel/Yuval. "
118
+ ]
119
+ ],
120
+ [],
121
+ [
122
+ [],
123
+ [],
124
+ [
125
+ "We are now obliged to clarify the usefulness of this Shell and its interests in the world, because to say that it is to punish or etc. will not suffice. For the whole object of punishment is asked, it is the evil inclination and the Shell, there will be no Shell and there will be no evil inclination. And it is said that the reason for their creation. in the will of the Creator, is to be that the world and its creatures needed to receive their sustenance and livelihood by the power of law and justice and righteousness, and if they were all non-elective angels in their actions, the world would not benefit from their actions, because they are forced act as angels. And for this reason, man must have a choice, and be inhabited by the evil inclination and the good inclination, that if he, by his own nature, would want to incline towards good, his evil inclination, Samael, would incline him to evil on his left; and when he wants to incline towards evil, on his right will be his good inclination to guilt him, and remind him of the words of his Creator in such a way that he will be rewarded for the inclination, good or bad. And to judge a man according to his deeds, it is necessary that he have aspects which are unclean โ€“ as like a slave who rebels against his master โ€“ to torment the wicked, so that his wickedness and evils in their numbers will cling to wickedness on its proper side, and so he will receive punishment. This matter is clarified well in the Zohar. All of what the Holy One, Blessed be He, caused Himself to go down in order to show all honorable rituals. (stopped at ื•ื›ื™ ืžืืŸ ื—ืžื™ ืขื‘ื“ื)"
126
+ ]
127
+ ],
128
+ [],
129
+ [
130
+ [],
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+ [
132
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133
+ "",
134
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+ "",
137
+ "",
138
+ "",
139
+ "",
140
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+ "And see, R. Shimon [bar Jochai] started praising the Book of Concealment (ืกืคืจื ื“ืฆื ื™ืขื•ืชื), which consists of five chapters with in it the sum/principle of all wisdom of the Kabbalah. And that is why R. Yehudah said that if this is so, it follows that man needs to study only this book. And R. Shimon replied that this is true for one who has entered the Idra and came out. He says \"and came out\" since ten [companions] entered [the Idra Rabba] and only seven came out, because three [of them] died as is described at the end of the Idra [Rabba; Zohar III:127b-145]. But one who does not enter and does not know the preambles that are revealed there, will not be able to profit from the mysteries of this concealed book. And he [= R. Shimon] makes a comparison with a villager etc. [the mashal just prior to the beginning of the ืกืคืจื ื“ืฆื ื™ืขื•ืชื, Zohar III.176a]. And this for sure applies to one who studies [only] the Written Torah and says that everything is contained in it, as he will remain ignorant of everything, as occurred also to the villager [of the mashal]. And therefore the essence of the perfection of knowledge of the Written Torah is the Oral Torah, as we have explained. \n"
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+ "Author's Introduction": [
22
+ "ื ืื ื”ืฆืขื™ืจ ืžืฉื” ื‘ืŸ ืœื\"ื ื‘\"ืจ ื™ืขืงื‘ ืงื•ืจื“ื•ืื™ืจื• ื‘ืจืื•ืชื™ ื™ืžื™ ื”ื™ืœื“ื•ืช ื—ืœืคื• ืขื‘ืจื• ืœืžื• ื‘ืจื“ืคื™ ื›ืœ ืชืื•ื” ื•ื™ื›ืœื• ื‘ืืคืก ืชืงื•ื”. ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื”ื’ื™ืขื ื™ ืงื•ื ื™ ืืœ ืฉื ืช ื”ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉืขืจ ืฆื”ื•ื‘ ืฆืžื— ื•ื™ืขื™ืจื ื™ ืงื•ื ื™ ื›ืื™ืฉ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื™ืจ ืžืฉื›ืชื• ื•ืื•ืžืจื” ืืœ ื ืคืฉื™ ืขื“ ืžืชื™ ืชืชื—ืžืงื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืช ื”ืฉื•ื‘ื‘ื” ืขื“ ืžืชื™ ืชืฉืชื›ืจื™ืŸ ื”ืกื™ืจื™ ืืช ื™ื™ื ืš ืžืขืœื™ืš ืขื“ ืžืชื™ ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืงืจื‘ืš ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืช ืื•ื ืš ื•ืชืฉื›ื— ื”' ืขื•ืฉืš ื•ื™ื•ืฆืจืš ืžื‘ื˜ืŸ ื•ืขืชื” ืงื•ืžื™ ืงืจืื™ ืืœ ืืœื”ื™ืš ื•ืชืฉืงื•ื“ ืขืœ ื“ืœืชื•ืชื™ื• ื™ื•ื ื™ื•ื ื•ืจืคื ืืช ืžื–ื‘ื— ื”' ื”ื”ืจื•ืก. ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื›ืฉืžืขื” ืืช ืงื•ืœ ื”ืงืจื™ืื” ื”ื•ืžื” ื•ืชืืžืจ ืืงื•ืžื” ื ื ื•ืืกื•ื‘ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื™ืจ ื‘ืฉื•ื•ืงื™ื ื•ื‘ืจื—ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืœื‘ืงืฉ ืœื™ ืžื ื•ื— ืืฉืจ ื™ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ืœื™ ื•ืืฉืžืข ืงื•ืœ ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืขื™ืจ ื•ืงื“ื™ืฉ ืžืŸ ืฉืžื™ื ื ื—ื™ืช ืžื•ืจื™ ื•ืจื‘ื™ ื”ืžืงื•ื‘ืœ ื”ืืœื”ื™ ื”ื—ื›ื ื”\"ืจ ืฉืœืžื” ืืœืงื‘ืฅ ื”ืœื•ื™ ื ืจ\"ื• ื•ื™ื‘ื™ืื ื™ ืืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœื™ ื˜ื™ืจื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื™ื•ืจื ื™ ื•ื™ืืžืจ ืœื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืชืžื•ืš ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืœื‘ืš ื”ื˜ ืื–ื ืš ื•ืฉืžืข ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื•ื™ืฆื™ื‘ื ื™ ืขืœ ื“ืœืชื™ ื”ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื”ืชื‘ื•ื ื” ืžืชื•ืง ืžื“ื‘ืฉ ื•ื ื•ืคืช ืฆื•ืคื™ื ื”ืžื”ื’ื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฆืคืฆืคื™ื ื‘ืขืžืงื™ ืกืชืจื™ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ืคื™ ื›ื“ื‘ืฉ ืœืžืชื•ืง ื•ืืฉืงื•ื“ ืขืœ ื“ืœืชื™ ืžื“ืจืฉื• ื•ืืฉืžืข ื ืืžื• ื•ื™ื•ืขื™ืจื ื™ ืœืœืžื•ื“ ื“ืจื›ื™ ื”ื–ื”ืจ ื•ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช ืœืคืชื•ื— ืฉืขืจื™ื• ื•ื™ืชื—ื–ืง ื›ื™ ื•ืื”ื™ ืขื•ืกืง ื™ืžื™ื ื•ืืฉืชื•ืžื ื•ืื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ืžื” ื ืขื™ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขืกืงื™ ื–ื” ื›ืžื” ื™ืžื™ื ืื”ื™ื” ืœื‘ืŸ ืœื—ื›ืžื” ื”ื–ืืช ื‘ืื”ื‘ืชื” ืืฉื’ื” ืชืžื™ื“ ื“ื“ื™ื” ื™ืจื•ื•ื ื™ ื‘ื›ืœ ืขืช ื•ื‘ื›ืœ ืจื’ืข ืขื“ ืืฉืจ ืœื ืชืฉื›ื— ืžืคื™ ื•ื›ืืฉืจ ื‘ืืชื™ ืœืฉืœื ื ื“ืจื™ ืขืจื›ืชื™ ืœืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ืกืคืจื™ ื”ืืœื”ื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื•ืืชื‘ื•ื ืŸ ื‘ื”ื ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืœื‘ื‘ื™ ื›ื”ื•ืœืš ื‘ืœื‘ ื™ื ื•ื›ืฉื•ื›ื‘ ื‘ืจืืฉ ื—ื‘ืœ ื ื‘ื•ืš ื•ืžืชื‘ืœื‘ืœ ื‘ืขืžืงื™ ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ืื•ืžืจื” ืืงื— ืงืกืช ื”ืกื•ืคืจ ืืฉืจ ื‘ืžืชื ื™ ื•ืืขืจื•ืš ื›ืœ ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉื™ื ืขื“ืจ ืขื“ืจ ืœื‘ื“ื• ืขื“ ืืฉื™ื ืจื™ื•ื— ืœืฉื›ืœื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื“ืจ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขื“ืจ ื•ื›ืืฉืจ ื™ืชื—ื–ืง ืœื‘ื‘ื™ ื‘ื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ืืคื ื” ืืœ ื–ื•ืœืชื• ื•ืืจืื” ื•ื”ื ื” ืขืฆืชื™ ื ื›ื•ื ื” ื•ืžื™ื•ืฉืจืช ืžืืช ื”' ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืžื™ื ื•ืืžืชื— ืžื’ืœืช ืกืคืจ ืœืคื ื™ ืœื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ืชื”ื™ื” ืœื™ ืœืžื–ื›ืจืช ื•ืœื”ื•ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื” ื•ืกื“ืจื™ื” ืงืจืืชื™' <b>ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื</b> ืœืกื‘ื•ืช ื™ื“ื•ืขื•ืช. ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืฉื”ื—ื›ืžื” ื”ื–ืืช ื—ื›ืžืช ื”ืงื‘ืœื” ืžื›ื ื™ื ืื•ืชื ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืคืจื“\"ืก ื›ื ื•ื“ืข ืฉื ื™ืช ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืฉื”ืžื’ืœื” ื”ื–ืืช ืชื”ื™ื” ืœื™ ืœืžืฉื™ื‘ ื ืคืฉ ืœื”ืชืขื“ืŸ ื‘ื” ื‘ืขื•ืœื ื–ื” ื•ืœืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื ื•ืœื›ืœื›ืœ ื‘ื” ื›ืœ ืฉื ื•ืชื™ ื•ื”ื•ื ืคืจื“ืก ืฉื ื˜ืขืชื™ ืœื”ืฉืชืขืฉืข ื‘ื•. ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืœ ืจื™ืžื•ื ื™ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืฉืฉืขืจื™ื• ื”ื ื ื˜ื™ืขื•ืชื™ื•. ื•ืจื™ืžื•ื ื™ื• ืคืจืงื™ื•. ื•ื‘ื ืžืกื•ื“ืจื™ื ื—ื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื–ื” ื‘ืฆื“ ื–ื” ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืฆื“ ื–ื” ืœื ืื—ื“ ื•ืœื ืฉื ื™ื ืืœื ืžืœืื™ื ื›ืจื™ืžื•ืŸ ืœื›ืŸ ื™ื—ืกื ื•ื”ื• ื‘ืฉื ืคืจื“ืก ืจื™ืžื•ื ื™ื. ื•ืจืื™ื ื• ืœื—ืœืง ื”ืžื’ืœื” ืœืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื—ืœืงื™ื ื•ื™ื—ืกื ื•ื ื‘ืฉื ืฉืขืจื™ื ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืฉื”ื ืฉืขืจื™ื ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืืœ ืคื ื™ืžื™ื•ืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื•ืกื•ื“ื•ืชื™ื”. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื—ืœืงื ื• ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ืœืคืจืงื™ื ืžื”ื ืงืฆืจื™ื ืžื”ื ืืจื•ื›ื™ื ืœืคื™ ืžื“ืช ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ืคืจืง ื•ืคืจืง. ื•ืื ื• ืžื—ืœื™ื ืคื ื™ ื”ืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืœ ื™ื›ื ืก ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ื ื• ืืœื” ืื ืœื ื ืžืกืจื• ืœื• ื”ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช ื•ื“ืจื›ื™ ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื›ื™ ื—\"ื• ื™ืฉื™ื’ื”ื• ื”ื™ื–ืง ื•ืœื ืชื•ืขืœืช ื•ืžื™ ืฉื ืžืกืจื• ื‘ื™ื“ื• ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืฉื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœืคืชื•ื— ืฉืขืจื™ื ื• ืื ื• ืžื•ื‘ื˜ื—ื™ื ืฉื™ืคืชื—ื• ืœื• ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ื ื• ืืœื” ื›ืžื” ื•ื›ืžื” ืžืคืชื—ื•ืช ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื”ื–ืืช ื•ืืœ ื™ืงื•ื” ืžืžื ื• ื”ืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื ืฉืชื™ ืคืขืžื™ื ื›ื™ ื™ืืจื™ืš ืœื ื• ื”ืžืœืื›ื” ืœื›ืŸ ืœื ื™ืกืข ืžื”ืคืจืง ืขื“ ืฉื™ื“ืขื ื• ื›ื™ ืžื” ืฉื™ืฆื˜ืจืš ืžืžื ื• ืœื”ืฉื›ืœืชื• ืœื ื ื—ื–ื•ืจ ืืœื ื ืกืžืš ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื›ืชื‘ื ื• ื‘ืคืจืง ื”ืงื•ื“ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื ื™ืขืงื•ืจ ืจื’ืœื™ื• ืžืฉืขืจ ื–ื” ืืœ ื–ื•ืœืชื• ืขื“ ืฉื™ืฉื›ืœื”ื• ื›ืจืื•ื™ ื•ืื– ื™ืœืš ืœื‘ื˜ื— ื“ืจื›ื• ื•ืœื ื™ืคื—ื“ ื•ืขื›\"ื– ืœื ื ืืกื•ืฃ ื™ื“ื™ื ื• ืžืœื‘ืืจ ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื‘ื ื• ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืคืœื•ื ื™ ืื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื ื‘ืืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืœื•ื ื™ ื•ืืœื” ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ืื™ืฉ ืขืœ ื“ื’ืœื• ื‘ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช:"
23
+ ],
24
+ "Index": [
25
+ [
26
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืขืฉืจ ื•ืœื ืชืฉืข</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืื™ืš ื”ื™ืชื” ื”ืกื›ืžื” ื‘ืงื‘ืœืช ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื• ื•ื–ืงื ื ื• ื•ื ื™ื‘ืื ื• ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื ืขืฉืจ ื•ืœื ืชืฉืข ื•ืœื ืื—ื“ ืขืฉ' ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื™'<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฉื ' ืก\"ื™ ืข\"ืก ื‘ืœื™ ืžื” ืžืกืคืจ ืขืฉืจ ื•ื›ื•'",
27
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘ </b>ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื”ืžืฉื ื” ื”ื”ื™ื ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ืื—ืจืช ื•ืขื•ื“ ืžืืžืจื™ื ืžื”ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ื•ื”ื–ื•ื”ืจ.",
28
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžืฉื ื” ื”ื ื–' ื•ืžืืžืจ ืื›ืœืชื™ ื™ืขืจื™ ืขื ื“ื‘ืฉื™ ืฉื‘ืกืคืจ ืจืขื™ื ืžื”ื™ืžื ื",
29
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ืช\"ืช ืžื›ืจื™ืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’ื‘ื•ืจื” ืœื ืฆื— ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื—ืกื“ ืœื”ื•ื“ ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ืกื‘ืจื",
30
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฉื ื” ืฉื ื™ืช ืฉื‘ืกืคืจ ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ืขืฉืจ ื•ืœื ืชืฉืข ืขืฉืจ ื•ืœื ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ",
31
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืจ\"ืž ืคืงื•ื“ื ืœื™ืชืŸ ืžื—ืฆื™ืช ื”ืฉืงืœ",
32
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ืœื”ืฆื™ืœ ื”ืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืขื•ืช ืฉืœื ื™ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื™\"ื ืื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื›ื— ื‘ืงื™ืื•ืช ื•ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื–ื”",
33
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื”ื›ืจื— ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ืžื›ื— ื”ื—ืงื™ืจื” ื•ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘",
34
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ื—ืงื™ืจื” ืื ื”ืžื›ื—ื™ืฉ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื™ืงืจื ื›ื•ืคืจ ืื ืœืื•",
35
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ืคืจืกื•ื ืขืฉืจ ืฉืžื•ืช ืฉื‘ืขืฉืจ ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื"
36
+ ],
37
+ [
38
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉื ื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ื˜ืขื ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื˜ืขื ืœืžื” ื”ื™ื• ืขืฉืจ ืœื ืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื™ื•ืชืจ ื•ื˜ืขื ืœืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉื‘ืขื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื˜ืขื ืื—ื“ ืœืจ' ืขื–ืจื™ืืœ ื•ื”ืฉื’ืช ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื—ื™ื™ื˜ื™ ืขืœื™ื• ื•ื”ื™ืฉื•' ืœื”ืฉื’ื•ืชื™ื•",
39
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื˜ืขื ืื—ืจ ืœืจ' ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื—ื™ื™ื˜ื™ ื•ื˜ืขื ืจ' ืžื ื—ื ืžืจืงื ืื˜ื™ ื•ื”ืฉื’ืชื™ื ื• ืขืœ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืœ ืจื‘ื™ ืขื–ืจื™ืืœ ",
40
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื›ืจืช ืงื‘ืœืชื ื• ืฉื”ื ืขืฉืจ ื‘ื›ืžื” ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืžื”ืชืœืžื•ื“ ื•ืฉืืจ ื”ื›ืจื—ื™ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ื”ืขืกืง ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืฉืจ ืžืืžืจื•ืช ื ื‘ืจื ื”ืขื•ืœื",
41
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื’\"ื› ืขืฉืจื” ืžืืžืจื•ืช ื‘ืขืฉืจ ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช",
42
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ื”ื ื™ ืขืฉืจ ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžื™ ืฉื‘ืžืก' ืจ\"ื”",
43
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื˜ืขื ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืžืกืคืจ ื”ืขืฉืจ",
44
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื—ืงื™ืจืช ืื ืืคืฉืจ ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ืื—ืจ ื›ื–ื” ืื ืœืื• ื•ืฉื ื™ืชื’ืœื” ืกื•ื“ ื˜ืขื ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืกื“ืจ ื”ืขื•ืœืžื•ืช"
45
+ ],
46
+ [
47
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืื ื”ืื™ืŸ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ื•ื ื”ื›ืชืจ</b><br> ืžื˜ืขื ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืื ื”ื\"ืก ื”ื•ื ื”ื›ืชืจ ื›ืืฉืจ ื—ืฉื‘ื• ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืื ื”ื›ืชืจ ื‘ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ืื ืœื ื›ืืฉืจ ื“ืžื” ืจ' ืฉ\"ื˜ ืื‘ืŸ ืฉ\"ื˜ ื•ืคืจืงื™ื• ื”ืœื ื”ื ืฉืžื ื”.<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ืขืช ื”ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื\"ืก ื”ื•ื ื”ื›ืชืจ ื•ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื“ืขืชื ืžืŸ ื”ืกื‘ืจื",
48
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื“ืขืชื ืŸ ื”ื”ื›ืจื— ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื–ื”ื•ืจ ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืจื‘ื™ื",
49
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ืขืช ืจื‘ื™ ืฉื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืŸ' ืฉื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื‘ืืžืจื• ืฉื”ื›ืช' ืื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื•ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื“ืขืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ืกื‘ืจื ื•ืžืจืื™ื•ืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ",
50
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื•ืชื™ืงืŸ ืžืฉื ืช ืก\"ื™ ื”ืžื•ืจื” ืœื›ืื•ืจื” ื“ื›ื“ืขืช ืจ' ืฉื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ื‘ืืจื ื• ื‘ื” ืคื™' ืื—ืจ",
51
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžืฉื ' ื”ื ื–ื›ืจืช ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉืคื™' ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื”",
52
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ื”ืื™ื“ืจื ืื—ืจ ื“ืฉืจื•ืชื ืืฉืชื›ื— ื”ืžื•ืจื” ืœื›ืื•ืจื” ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจ' ืฉ\"ื˜ ื•ื”ืขืชืงื ื• ื‘ื• ืคื™' ืื—ืจ ืœืžืคืจืฉ ืื—ื“ ื•ื”ืฉื’ืชื• ืขืœื™ื•",
53
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžืืžืจ ื”ื ื–' ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืืจื•ืš",
54
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื“ืขืช ื•ืกื•ื“ื• ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืžืืžืจ ื™ืคื” ืœื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื”ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื‘' ืชืจื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ื™ื ื” ืชืœื™ืชืื” ื™ืจืืช ื”' ืจืืฉื™' ื“ืขืช "
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื•ื›ืœื™ื</b> ืžื˜ืข' ืฉื‘ื• ื ื—ืงื•ืจ ืื ื™\"ืก ื”ื ืขืฆื ื”ืืœื”ื•ืช ื›ืืฉืจ ื—ืฉื‘ื• ืจื‘ื™ื ืื• ืื ื”ื ื›ืœื™ื• ื›ื›ืœื™ ื”ืื•ืžืŸ ืœืคืขื•ืœ ื•ืœื ืฉื”ื ืขืฆืžื•ืชื• ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืขืฉืจ<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืง ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจ' ืžื ื—ื ืžืจื™ืงื ืื˜ื™ ืฉื“ืขืชื• ืฉื”ื ื›ืœื™ื",
58
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืง ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจ' ื“ื•ื“ ืฉื“ืขืชื• ืฉื”ื ืขืฆืžื•ืช",
59
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื”ืฉื’ืชื™ื ื• ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืื ืœืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืฆืžื•ืช ืื ืœืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืœื™ื",
60
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ืขืชื ื• ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ืฉื”ื ืขืฆืžื•ืช ื•ื›ืœื™ื",
61
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื›ืจื— ืืœ ื“ืขืชื ื• ืžืชื•ืš ื”ื–ื”ืจ ื•ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืงืฆืช ืžืืžืจ ืžืืœื™ื”ื• ืจื™ื‘ื•ืŸ ืขืœืžื ืื ืช ื—ื“ ื•ืœื ื‘ื—ื•ืฉื‘ืŸ ื•ื›ื•' ืฉื‘ืชืงื•ื ื™ื",
62
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉืืจ ื”ืžืืžืจ ื›ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืืจื›ื• ื—ืœืงื ื•ื”ื• ืœืฉื ื™ ืคืจืงื™ื",
63
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื”ื›ืจื— ืขื•ื“ ืžืืžืจ ืœื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ื ืงื•ื“ื” ื“ืœื ื“ืœื ืงื™ื™ืžื ื‘ื ื”ื•ืจื ื•ื›ื•' ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ืงื• ื”ืžื“ื”",
64
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื”ื›ืจื— ืขื•ื“ ืžืชื•ืš ืžืืžืจ ืœื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืก' ืจ\"ืž ื•ืืœ ืžื™ ืชื“ืžื™ื•ื ื™",
65
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื™ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื”ื\"ืก ื‘ื™\"ืก ื•ื’ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื ื—ื™ื“ื•ืฉ ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื”ืกืคื™' ื—ื“ื•ืฉ ืžื” ื‘ืžืืฆื™ืœ ืื ืœืื•.",
66
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืง ืžืืžืจ ืœื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื‘ืืจ ื›ืœ ืคื™ื ื•ืช ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื ืชืขืกืงื ื• ื‘ืคืจืงื™ื ื”ืงื•ื“ืžื™ื."
67
+ ],
68
+ [
69
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื—ืžื™ืฉื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืกื“ืจ ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ืžื™ ื ืืฆืœ ืข\"ื™ ืžื™ ื•ืžื™ ืงื“ื ืœืžื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืจื‘ื• ื‘ื–ื” ื”ื“ืขื•ืช ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื”ื ืฉืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ืขืช ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ื”ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืขืœ ืกื“ืจืŸ ื ืืฆืœื• ื•ื”ื›ืจื— ืืœ ื›ื•ื•ื ืชื ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืกื‘ืจ'",
70
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืคืชื—ื™ ืœื™ ืœื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื˜ืขื ืœืžื” ื™ืงื“ื™ื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ืœืคืขืžื™ื ืืœ ื”ื ืฆื— ื•ื”ื”ื•ื“",
71
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ืขืช ื”ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืกื“ืจ ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืœืขื•ืจืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื”ืขืจื•ืช",
72
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœื”ื•ื™ื•ืช ืœื”ืชื’ืœื•ืช ืข\"ื™ ื”ื›ืชืจ ื•ืœื ืข\"ื™ ื”ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ืฉื ื‘ื™ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ื‘ืื“ืจื ื“ื ื–ื™ืจ ืชืื ื ืขืชื™ืง ื“ืขืชื™ืงื™' ื˜ืžื™ืจ' ื“ื˜ืžื™ืจื• ื•ื”ื•ื ืชื—ืœืช ื”ืื“ืจื ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ืงื•ื“ื ื‘ืจื™ืืช ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืฉืžื• ืœื‘ื“",
73
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื’' ืจืืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื•ื›ืžื” ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ืช ืืœ ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช. ื›ืžื” ืคืขืžื™ื ื”ืืฆื™ืœื” ื›ืœ ืกืคื™ืจื” ืืœ ื–ื•ืœืชื” ื‘ืžื™ื ื™ ื”ื’ืœื•ื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืืจื‘ืข ืžืขืจื›ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืกืคื™' ื‘ื—ื›ืž\"ื” ื•ื‘ื™ื \"ื” ื•ื‘ืช\"ืช ื•ื‘ืžืœ' ื•ืžืืžืจ ื' ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ื›ืœื ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ืขืฉื™ืช",
74
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืกื“ืจ ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ืฉืืจ ื”ืกืคื™' ื•ืชืงื•ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ื“ืขื•ืช"
75
+ ],
76
+ [
77
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืฉื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื<b> ืกื“ืจ ืขืžื™ื“ืชืŸ</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืกื“ืจ ืขืžื™ื“ืช ื”ื ืืฆืœื™ื ืœืคื™ ืžืงื•ืžื ืœื ืžืงื•ื ื—\"ื• ืฉืื™ื ื ื‘ืขืœ ืžืงื•ื ืืœื ืžืงื•ื ื”ืžืขืœื” ื•ื”ืงื“ื™ืžื” ื›ื™ ืจื‘ื• ื”ื“ืขื•ืช ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืžื ื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืกื“ืจ ืขืžื™ื“ืชืŸ ืœื›ืœ ื“ืขื•ืช ื”ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืจ\"ืœ ืฆื•ืจืช ื”ืื™ืœืŸ ื•ื”ื›ืจื— ื”ืขืงืจื™ืช ืžื”ื ืžืชื•ืš ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™",
78
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœ ืžืื™ืจื•ืช ืขื™ื ื™ื ื”ืžื”ืคืš ืœื ื• ื”ื“ืขื•ืช ื•ื”ืฉื’ืชื ื• ืขืœื™ื•",
79
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืกื“ืจ ื”ืขื•ืœืžื•ืช ืžืŸ ื”ื ืงื•ื“ื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืขื“ ื”ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื•ืฉื ื‘ืืจื ื• ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืืจืฆื•ืช ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ",
80
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืกื“ืจ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ืžืขื•ืœื” ืœืขืœื•ืœ ื‘ืืžืช ื‘ืœื™ ืคืงืคื•ืง ื•ื›ืŸ ืกื“ืจ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ืœื”ื™ื•ืชื ืขืฉืจ",
81
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื‘ืžื” ื”ื ื ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ืœื”ื™ื•ืชื ืขืฉืจื” ืื—ืจื™ ืฉื”ื ืจื•ื—ื ื™ื•ืช ื›ื™ ื”ืจื•ื—ื ื™ื•ืช ืœื ื™ืชื—ืœืง ืœื—ืœืงื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืงืฉืจ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื ื‘ืขืฆืžื ื•ืงืฉื•ืจื ืขื ื”ืžืืฆื™ืœ",
82
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื ื‘ืขืžื™ื“ืชืŸ ื–ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื–ื• ืขื“ ื™' ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืžื™ื“ืชืŸ ื’' ืืœ ื”ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ื’' ืืœ ื”ืฉืžืืœ ื•ื“' ืืœ ื”ืืžืฆืขื™ ื•ื”ื›ืœ ืื—ื“",
83
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ืœื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื\"ืก ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืกื•ืฃ ื•ื”ืชืคืฉื˜ื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืžื“ืจื’ื•ืช ืขื“ ื ืงื•ื“ื” ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื“ื›ืœ ื—ื“ ื›ืœื™ืœ ื‘ื—ื‘ืจื™ื”",
84
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ืœื”ืฆื™ืœ ื”ืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืขื•ืช ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ืžืืฆื™ืœื"
85
+ ],
86
+ [
87
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ื”ื ืžืฉื›ื•ืช ืžืกืคื™ืจื” ืœืกืคื™ืจื” ื•ื›ืžื” ื”ื ื•ืžื” ืขื ื™ื™ื ื ื•ืžื” ืžืฉืžืฉื™ื ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื—ืžืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ืžื” ื”ื ืจืฆื” ื‘ืืžืจื ื ืฉื‘ืจื• ื”ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ื›ืžื” ื”ื ื•ืฆื•ืจืชื",
88
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืฆื™ื ื•ืจื•ืช ืืฉืจ ืœื›ืช\"ืจ ื•ืœื—ื›ืž\"ื” ืขื“ ื”ื”ื•\"ื“",
89
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™ ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืคื™' ื”ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ืžื ืฆ\"ื— ืืœ ื”ืžืœื›ื•\"ืช ื•ืžื”ื•\"ื“ ืืœ ื”ืžืœื›ื•\"ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืจื™ืฉ ืคืจืฉืช ื ื—",
90
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื™ ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื‘ื™ืกื•ื“ ื' ื˜ืžื ื•ื' ื˜ื”ื•ืจ",
91
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช ืœืคื™ ื‘ื—ื™ื ืช' ื”ืžืชื—ืœืคื•ืช"
92
+ ],
93
+ [
94
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืžื™ื ื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืžื”ื•ืช ื•ื”ื ื”ื’ื”</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื”ืžื”ื•ืช ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ื‘ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื•ืœื ืžื”ื•ืช ืžืžืฉ ื—\"ื• ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื ืœื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืœืจื—ืžื™ื ื•ื”ื ื”ื’ืชื• ืฉืœ ืžืœืš ืžืœื›ื™ ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื ืข\"ื™ ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืกืคื™' ื•ื™ื—ื•ื“ื ืืœ ืคืขื•ืœื” ืฉื•ื” ืขื ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื‘ืžื”ื•ืช' ื ื—ืœืงื•ืช ื–ื• ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื–ื• ืจื—ืžื™ื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ื˜ืขื ืืœ ืžืฆื™ืื•' ื”ื™'",
95
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื‘ื ืืฆืœื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืกื›ืžืช' ืืœ ืคืขื•ืœื” ืื—ืช ื•ืฉื ื›ืœ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ื›ืœืœื•ืช ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื›ืคื™ ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ื›ืžื• ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื›ืœื•ืœื•ืช ืžืขืฉืจ ื•ืžืฉื‘ืข ื•ืžื—ืžืฉ ื•ืžืืจื‘ืข ื•ืžืฉืœืฉ",
96
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžื”ื•ืช ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ื‘ื›ืชืจ ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ื”ื™ื•ืชืจ ื›ืœื•ืœื” ืžืขืฉืจ ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืชืจืš ืขืžื•ื“ื™ ืื•ืจ ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืงืฆืช ืžืชืคืœืช ืจ' ื ื—ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืŸ ื”ืงื ื”.",
97
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืชืจ\"ืš ืขืžื•ื“ื™ ืื•ืจ ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื‘ื™ ื ื—ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืŸ ื”ืงื ื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืงืฆืช ืžืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ ื”ืฆืจื•ืฃ ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืกื•ื“ื•",
98
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื—ื›ืžื” ืื ื“ื™ืŸ ืื ืจื—ืžื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉื ื ืขืชื™ืง ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื›ืœ ื”ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื•ื ืขื•ืจืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื",
99
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื‘ื™ื ื” ืื ื“ื™ืŸ ืื ืจื—ืžื™ื ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ื–ื”ืจ ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื–ื”ืจ ืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ืขืœ ืคื•ืž' ื“ืืœื™ื”ื• ืืชื’ื–ืจ ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ืžืคืจืฉ' ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื›ื“ ื’ื‘ื•ืจื” ืžืชืคืฉื˜ืช",
100
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื”ื›ืจื— ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ื \"ื” ืื ื“ื™ืŸ ืื ืจื—ืžื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ืžืคืจืฉืช ืื—ืจื™ ืžื•ืช ื”ื ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ืืœืงื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ืืชืจ ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื‘ื• ื”ืขืชืง ืœืฉื•ื ื• ื•ื”ืขืจื•ืช ื‘ื• ืœื‘ื“",
101
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ื”ืžืืžืจ ื•ืคื™' ืขื“ ื—ืฆื™ื” ื•ืžืชื•ื›ื• ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื‘ื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื ื–'",
102
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ืชืฉืœื•ื ืชืงื•ืŸ ื”ืžืืžืจ ื”ื ื–' ืขื ืจื•ื‘ื™ ืชื•ืขืœืช ืืœ ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื ื–'",
103
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืžื”ื™ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื” ืชื—ืœืช ื”ื•ื™ื•ืชื• ื•ืžื” ืขืงืจื• ื•ืฉืจืฉื• ื•ืฉื ื ืขืชื™ืง ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกืคืจ ื”ืื•' ื•ื ืขื•ืจืจ ืขืœื™ื•",
104
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืงืฉืจ ื”ืกืคื™ืจ' ื•ื™ื—ื•ื“ื ื–ื• ื‘ื–ื• ืขื ื”ื™ื•ืชื ืืœื• ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืืœื• ืจื—ืžื™ื",
105
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืขืฆื™ื‘ื• ื‘ื‘ืชื™ ื’ื•ื•ืื™ ื•ืฉื ื ืขืชื™ืง ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกืคืจ ืื•ืฆืจ ื”ื›ื‘ื•' ื•ืกืคืจ ืฉืขืจื™ ืฆื“ืง ื•ื ืขื•ืจืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื",
106
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื’</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื’' ืจืืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื•ืช ื›ืื—ื“ ื•ืชืงื•ืŸ ืžื” ืฉื ืžืฆื ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื’ืœื•ืช ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืขืœืื” ื•ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืชืชืื” ื•ืฉื ืืชื‘ืืจ ื’' ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ืช ืืœ ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื”ืกืคื™' ื•ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ื›ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื”'",
107
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื“</b> ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ืื›ืœื• ืจืขื™ื ืฉื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื•ื™ืงืจื ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืื•ืจ ื•ืชืงื•ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ื›ื“ ืžืชื—ื‘ืจืŸ ื›ื”\"ื ืฉื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืœืš ืœืš",
108
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜ื•</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžื” ืฉืคื™' ื‘ื–ื”ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืชืขืกืง ื‘ืฉืœืฉ ืจืืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื•ื˜ืขื ืืœ ืขืกืงื ื• ื•ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืงืฆืช ืžืืžืจื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื–ื”",
109
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžื”ื•ืช ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ืืœื™ื ื• ื‘ื—ืก' ืžืคืขื•ืœื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื˜ืขื ืืœ ืข\"ื‘ ื’ืฉืจื™ื ืฉื‘ื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ืžื”ื’ื‘ื•ืจื”",
110
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžื”ื•ืช ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ืืœื™ื ื• ืžื”ืช\"ืช ื•ืฉื ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื™ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื—ื›ืžื” ื‘ื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ื–ื•ื•ื’ื ื™ื—ื“ ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืืœ ื”ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ื ืจืฆื” ื‘ื• ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืืจื•ืš",
111
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื—</b> ื‘ื‘ืื•ืจ ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื”ืช\"ืช ืขื ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื”ืขืœื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ืฉื ื™ื”ื ืืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื”ืชืขื•ืจืจื•ืช ืชื—ืชื•ืŸ ื•ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช",
112
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื˜</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ื”ื”ืชืขื•ืจืจื•ืช ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืžื”ื™ื›ืŸ ื ืžืฉืš ื•ื‘ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืคืจืฉืช ื ื— ื‘ืฉืขืช' ื“ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืชืขื˜ืจ",
113
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื˜ืขื ืืœ ืฆื•ืจืš ื”ื”ืชืขื•ืจืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื”ืชืขื•ืจืจื•ืช ืืœ ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ื™ื ื” ืžื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ื‘ืชื—ืชื•ื ื™ื ืฆื•ืจืš ื’ื‘ื•ื”",
114
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื—ื™ื‘ื•ืง ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืฉืžืืœื• ืชื—ืช ืœืจืืฉื™ ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ืืœ ื–ื•ื•ื’ ืฉืœ ื”ืช\"ืช ื•ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืฉื•ืง ",
115
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขืฆื ื”ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื•ืžื” ื”ื ืืชื• ื•ืžื” ืขื ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ืžื” ื”ื ืžืฉืš ืžืžื ื• ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื•ื•ื™ื•ืช ื”ื ืฉืžื•ืช",
116
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช ืืœ ืื‘ืจื™ ื”ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™ื—ื•ื“ื ื‘ื’' ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื•ื›ืŸ ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ื™ื ื” ื‘ื’' ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช",
117
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžื”ื•ืช ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ื‘ื’' ืžื“ื•ืช ื ืฆื— ื”ื•ื“ ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ื ื•ืขื ืืœ ื ืฆื— ื•ื”ื•ื“ ืฉื‘ืฉื ื ืžื—ืง ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืืœื ืฉื ืื—ื“ ื•ื‘ืืจื• ื‘ื–ื”ืจ",
118
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ืฉื”ื•ื ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ืฉืœืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ืงื• ื”ื—ืกื“ ืงื• ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืงื• ื”ืจื—ืžื™ื ื•ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืค' ื•ื™ื—ื™ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื ื’ืŸ ื”ืžื ื’ืŸ ื•ืฉื ืžื‘ื•ืืจ ืฉื”ื›ืช' ื”ื•ื ืกื•ื“ ื—ืกื“ ื•ืจื—ืžื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืชืขืจื•ื‘ืช ื“ื™ืŸ ื›ืœืœ ื‘ืคืกื•ืง ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ืชื‘ื•ื ื” ื•ื‘ื“ืขืช",
119
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžื”ื•ืช ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ื‘ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ืงื‘ืœืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœ ื•ืข\"ื™ ืžื™ ืžืงื‘ืœืช ื•ืžืฆื™ืื•ืชื” ืื—ืจ ื”ื’ืœื•ืช"
120
+ ],
121
+ [
122
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืชืฉื™ืขื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžื›ืจื™ืขื™ื</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืขืกืง ื‘ื• ืžื™ ืžื›ืจื™ืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ื ืฆื— ื•ื”ื•ื“ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื•ื’ื‘ื•ืจื” ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ื™ื ' ื•ืžื” ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื›ืจืขื” ื•ืžื” ืžืฉืžืฉืช ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฆื•ืจืš ื”ื”ื›ืจืขื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืžืžื“ืช ื”ื—ืกื“ ืœื”ืฉืคื™ืข ืœืจืขื™ื ื•ืœื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืžืค' ืชืจื•ืžื” ื•ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘ื• ื•ืœื ื•ืžื˜ื•ื‘ื• ",
123
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื›ืจืขื” ื•ืคืขื•ืœืชื” ื•ืฉื ื‘ื™ื' ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ืœืฉื ืฉืžื™ื ื•ืžื—ืœื•ืงืช ืงืจื—",
124
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžื›ืจื™ืขื™ื ื•ื‘ื• ืžืชื‘ืืจ ื”ื›ืจืข ื”ืช\"ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืœื’ื‘ื•ืจื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืฉื ืช ืก\"ื™ ืฉืœืฉ ืืžื•' ืืž\"ืฉ ื•ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื›ืจืขื” ื‘ืกื•ื“ ื“' ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ืืฉ ื•ืžื™ื ืจื•ื— ื•ืขืคืจ",
125
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื›ืจืข ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื ืฆื— ืœื”ื•ื“ ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืœื›ืœ ื ืชื—ื” ื‘ืŸ ื–ื•ื’",
126
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื ื™ืฉ ื”ื›ืจืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื” ืœื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ืžื™ ื”ื•ื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืž' ืจ\"ืž ื•ืื ื™ ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ื’ื•ืœื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ื˜ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ื” ืžื›ืจื™ืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื” ืœื›ืชืจ ื›ื“ืคื™' ืจื‘ื™ื",
127
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืฉื™ืืŸ ื›ืชืจ ืžื›ืจื™ืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื—ื›ืžื” ืžื›ืจื™ืข ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืชืจ ืœื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ื”ืกื›ืžื” ืืœ ื”ืžื›ืจื™ืข"
128
+ ],
129
+ [
130
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืขืฉื™ืจื™</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ื</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืžื” ื”ื ืจืฆื” ื‘ืฉื ื’ื•ื•ืŸ ื‘ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื•ืžื” ื”ื ื”ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ื ืฉื™ืชื™ื—ืกื• ื‘ืกืคื™' ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื‘ืืจื• ื‘ื–ื”ืจ ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื—ืžืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžื” ื”ื ืจืฆื” ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื•ืฉื ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉืข\"ื™ ื”ืคืขื•ืœื•ืช ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื•ืช ืžืฉืชื ื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืื• ืœื”ืคืš",
131
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ ื’' ืจืืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืœื‘ื“ื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืฉืš ื‘ื›ืชืจ",
132
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ ื•' ืงืฆื•ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ื–' ืžื™ื ื™ ื–ื”ื‘",
133
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ืื•ืจ ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช",
134
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื›ืœืœ ื”ื’ื•ื•ื ื™ื ื”ื™ื›ืŸ ื”ื ืžืชื™ื—ืกื™ื ื•ืฉื ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ื‘\"ืช ืจืืฉ\"ื™ ืืœื” ืจืืฉื™ ืื‘ื•ืช\n"
135
+ ],
136
+ [
137
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฆื—ืฆื—ื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืขืฉืจ ืฆื—ืฆื—ื•ืช ืฉืขืœ ื”ื›ืช' ื”ืžืคื•ืจืกืžื•ืช ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืžืงื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืจ ืฆ\"ื— ื•ืื•ืจ ืžืฆื•ื—ืฆื— ื•ืื•ืจ ืงื“ืžื•ืŸ ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื–'<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืงืช ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ืฉืืœื” ืœืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ืื™ ื’ื•ืŸ ื–\"ืœ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืฉื” ืฆื—ืฆื—ื•ืช ื•ืกื™ืžื ื ืงืž\"ืฅ",
138
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ืคื™ืจืฉ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืœืจื•ื‘ ื”ืขืœืžื",
139
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ืชื™ืงืŸ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื’' ืฆื—ื•ืช ืฉืขืœ ื”ื›ืช\"ืจ ื•ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช ื‘ื™ืืจ",
140
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืง ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื‘ ื—ืžืื™ ื’ืื•ืŸ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆื—ืฆื—ื•ืช ื•ืคืจื™ืฉืช ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืื”ืจืŸ ืขืœื™ื•",
141
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืค' ืคืงื•ื“ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืกื•ืฃ ืœื ืงื™ื™ืžื ื•ืžืชื•ื›ื• ืžืช๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆื—ืฆื—ื•ืช ื•ื”ืขืœืžืŸ",
142
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆื—ืฆื—ื•ืช ื‘ืžืืžืจ ื‘ืค' ื ื— ืืจ\"ืฉ ืืจื™ืžืช ื™ื“ื™ ื‘ืฆืœื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืขื•ื“ ืžืชื‘ืืจ ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ื‘ืื•ืจ ืจื—ื‘ ",
143
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ืกื“ืจ ื’' ื”ื ืขืœืžื•ืช ืงื“ืžื•ืŸ ืฆื— ืžืฆื•ื—ืฆื— ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื”ื ื‘ื›ืชืจ ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื ืœืžืขืœื” ืžื›ืชืจ ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืช\"ืช"
144
+ ],
145
+ [
146
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœ\"ื‘ ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช ืฉื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื‘ื›ืœืœื ื•ืคืจื˜ื ื•ืฉืžื•ืช ื”ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœื”ื ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืžื ื™ื ื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืฉื ื” ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฉื‘ืกืค' ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ื‘ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืค' ืชืจื•ืžื” ื‘ืคืกื•' ื”ืฉืžื™' ืžืกืคืจื™ื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืชื•ื›ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ืกืคืจ ืกืคืจ ืกืคื•ืจ",
147
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ื‘ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืžื ื•ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“",
148
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจื• ืฉืžื ื” ืžื”ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช",
149
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื•ื“ ื—' ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช",
150
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื•ื“ ื—' ืžื”ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช",
151
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจื• ืขื•ื“ ื—' ืžื”ื ืชื™ื‘ื•ืช ื•ื”ื ื“' ืคืขืžื™ื ื—' ื”ื ืœื‘' ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืื•ืจืš ื‘ื™ืื•ืจื ื—ืœืงื ื•ื ืœื“' ืคืจืงื™ื"
152
+ ],
153
+ [
154
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื<b> ืฉืขืจื™ื</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืขืจื™ื ืฉื‘ื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ืกื™ื‘ืชื ืฉื ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื–'<b><br> ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื’ืœื•ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื‘ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืขืจื™ื ืฉื”ื ื ื’ื“ ื ' ืคืขืžื™ื ืฉื ื–ื›ืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ื•ืชื™ืจื•ืฅ ื™ืชื•ืจื ืœืžืคืจืฉื™ื",
155
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืง ืžืืžืจ ืœื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืค' ื™ืชืจื• ื”ื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื‘ืœื ื•ืžื” ืฉื”ืชืขื•ืจืจื ื• ื‘ื• ื•ืžืชื•ื›ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื™ืชื•ืจ ื”ืคืกื•ืงื™ื",
156
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”' ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืช ืœื”ืฉื›ืœืช ื”ืžืืžืจ ื•ื”ื' ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™ืžื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ื. ื‘' ืคื™' ืฉืžื™ื˜ื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื‘ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ื ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช ื™ืžื™ื ืฉืขื•ืช. ื’' ืขื ื™ืŸ ื’ืœื•ืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืชื• ื“' ืขื ื™ืŸ ื˜ื”ืจืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ื›ืฉื™ืฆืื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื. ื”' ื‘ื‘ืื•ืจ ื—ืœื•ืง ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื™ื•ื‘ืœื ืื• ืžืกื™ื˜ืจื ื“ื™ื•ื‘ืœื",
157
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืžืืžืจ ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ื•ื”ืชืจืช ืœืฉื•ื ื•",
158
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื–' ืคืขืžื™ื ื–' ืฉืขื•ืœื™ื ืž\"ื˜",
159
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื”' ืค\"ื™ ืฉืขื•ืœื™ื ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืฉืœืžื™ื",
160
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ืคืฉืจ ื‘' ื”ื—ืœื•ืงื•ืช ื”ืงื•ื“ืžื•ืช ื‘ื‘' ื”ืคืจืงื™ื ื”ืงื•ื“ืžื™ื"
161
+ ],
162
+ [
163
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืจื‘ื•ื™ ื”ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืช ื‘ืกืคื™' ืขื ื”ื™ื•ืชืŸ ืžืฆื“ ืขืฆืžืŸ ืขืฉืจ ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืช ื™ื“ื•ืขื™ื ืœืกืคื™' ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืืจื‘ืข<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืช ื‘ืขืฆืžืŸ ื•ืกื™ื‘ืชื ื•ื—ื™ื•ื‘ื ื•ื”ื›ืจืชื ืžืชื•ืš ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื”",
164
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช ื‘ืื•ืจ ื‘ืกืคื™ืจื•' ื‘ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืชื ื•ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ืชื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืฉื ื” ืฉื ื™ื” ืฉื‘ืก\"ื™ ืข\"ืก ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ื›\"ื‘ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื•ื’ื•' ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืžืคืจืฉื” ืคืงื•ื“ื™ ื‘ืคืกื•ืง ื•ืืช ื”ืืœืฃ ื•ืฉื‘ืข ื”ืžืื•ืช",
165
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืช ื™ื“ื•ืขื™ื ืžืชื‘ืืจื™ื ื‘ื–ื•ื”ืจ ื•ื”ื ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ืืœ ื”ื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ืืœ ื”ืช\"ืช ื•ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ืืœ ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื•ื ื™ืฆืื• ืžื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื ื“ื™ื ื•ืงื ื•ื›ื•'",
166
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื”ื›ืจื— ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืกืคืจ ื”ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ื”ืืจืฅ ื ื‘ืจืืช ืงื•ื“ื ื”ืฉืžื™ื"
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉื”</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืžืžื˜ื” ืœืžืขืœื”</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืคื•ืจืก' ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ืฉื”ืกืคื™' ื”ื ื™' ืžืžืขืœ ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื™' ืžืžื˜ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ืžื ื™ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื—ืžืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฆื™ืื™ื•ืช ืขืฉืจ ืžืžืขืœื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื•ื™' ืžืžื˜ื” ืœืžืขืœื” ื•ื’ื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื ืขื•ืฅ ืกื•ืคืŸ ื‘ืชื—ืœืชืŸ ื‘ืื•ืจ ื™ืคื”",
170
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื›ื™ ืœื ืœืขืฉืจ ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื‘ื›ืœืœืŸ ืœื‘ื“ ื™ืงืจื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžืžืขืœื” ืœืžื˜ื” ืืœื ื’ื ืœืงืฆืชืŸ ื‘ืงืฆืชืŸ",
171
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžื”ื•ืช ื”ืžื•ืฉื’ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืจ ื”ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืื• ื”ืžืชื”ืคืš ื•ื›ืŸ ืกื‘ืชื• ื•ืฉื ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฉื ืช ืก\"ื™ ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืืž\"ืฉ ื ืงื‘ื” ื‘ืืฉ\"ืก",
172
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืจ ื”ืžืชื”ืคืš ืžืชื•ืš ืžืืžืจ ืžืกืคืจ ื”ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ืžืžืขืœื” ืœืžื˜ื” ื™ื“ืขื™ื ืŸ ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืœื ืœื‘ื“ ื™ืžืฆื ื”ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื–ื” ื‘ืงืฆืช ื”ืกืคื™' ืืœื ืืฃ ื‘ืกืคื™' ืื—ืช",
173
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืžืœื•ื™ ื™ื•ื“ื™\"ืŸ ืฉื‘ื›ืชืจ ื•ืžืœื•ื™ ืืœืคื™\"ืŸ ื•ืขื•ื“ ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืกืคื™ืจื” ืื—ืช ื™ืžืฆื ืกื•ื“ ืื•ืจ ื”ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืงืฆืชื” ืืœ ืงืฆืชื”"
174
+ ],
175
+ [
176
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืฉื” ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืื‘ื™\"ืข</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืจ\"ืช \"ืืฆื™ืœืช \"ื‘ืจื™ืื” \"ื™ืฆื™ืจื” \"ืขืฉื™ื” ื•ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืกื ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื“ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ืขืฉืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ืื” ืขืฉืจ ื“ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ืขืฉืจ ื“ืขืฉื™ื” ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืชืฉืขื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืœืช ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืื” ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ืขืฉื™ื” ื•ื™ื—ื•ืกื ื–ื• ืืฆืœ ื–ื• ืคืฉื˜ ื•ืคื ื™ืžื™",
177
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื—ืœืง ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืช' ืฉืื™ื ื ื ืžื—ืงื™ื ืžืชื™ื™ื—ืกื™ื ื›ื™ ืื ื‘ืื•ืจ ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช",
178
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื—ืœืง ื”ื‘ืจื™ืื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืกื ื”ืžื™ื•ื—ืก ืืฆืœ ื”ืžืงื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืกื ื”ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื•ื‘ื–ื”ืจ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ื•ืจืกื™ื™ื",
179
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื—ืœืง ื”ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ื•ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžื˜ื˜ืจื•ืŸ ื•ืžื™ื˜ื˜ืจื•\"ืŸ ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืืžืจ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ื–ืืช ืœืคื ื™ื ื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ",
180
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืค' ื ื— ืฉืขืจ ื”ื—ืฆืจ ื”ืคื ื™ืžื™ื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื—ื•ื“ ืข\"ื™ ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื‘ื™ื•ืžื ื“ืฉื‘ืชื ืื• ืข\"ื™ ืžื˜ื˜ืจื•ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ืžื™ืŸ ื“ื—ื•ืœ ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืกืœื•ืง ื”ืฉื’ื—ื” ืžื” ืฉื”ืขื•ืœื ืžืชืคืจื ืก ืข\"ื™ ืฉืจ ื”ืขื•ืœื",
181
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืชื•ืขืœืช ื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ืข\"ื™ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ื‘ืขื•ืœื ื”ื–ื” ื•ื™ื—ื“ื” ืขืžื• ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ืขื•ื“ ืชืฉืœื•ื ืคื™' ื”ืžืืžืจ",
182
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื—ืœืง ื”ืขืฉื™ื” ื•ื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ื”ื›ื ืขืช ื”ืงืœื™ืค' ื‘ืงืจื‘ืชื ืืœ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื”",
183
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืงืช ืžืืžืจื™ื ืฉืžืชื•ื›ื ืžืชื‘ืืจื™ื ื“' ื—ืœืงื™ื ื™ื—ื“ ืื• ืฉืœืฉืชื ื™ื—ื“ ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ื' ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉืžืฉ ื‘ื’ื‘ืขื•ืŸ ื“ื•ื",
184
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ื”ืžืืžืจื™ื ื”ืžื ื’ื“ื™ื ืืœื• ืœืืœื• ื‘ื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืจืฉื™ืžื” ื—ืงื™ืงื” ื—ืฆื™ื‘ื” ืขืฉื™ื™ื”"
185
+ ],
186
+ [
187
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ืฉื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ื™ืจืš ื™ืขืงื‘</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื ื–' ื‘ื–ื”ืจ ื‘ืกืคื™' ื ืฆื— ืฉื ืคื’ืžื” ืข\"ื™ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื™ืื‘ืง ืื™ืฉ ืขืžื• ื™ื–ืจื— ืœื• ื”ืฉืžืฉ ื•ื”ื•ื ืฆื•ืœืข ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื“'<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืงืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื‘ื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื ื–ื›ืจ ื•ื‘ื”ืขืจื” ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื‘ื™ืŸ ืกื•ื“ื•",
188
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื”ืงื“ืžื•ืช ืœืคื™' ื”ืžืืžืจ ื•ื”ื ื' ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ื ื›ื ืกื•ืช ืชื•ืš ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื—\"ื•. ื•ื”ื‘' ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื ืฆื— ืืœ ื”ืฉืžืืœ ื•ื”ื•ื“ ืืœ ื”ื™ืžื™ืŸ",
189
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื”ืชื›ืช ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืžืืžืจ ืžืœื” ื‘ืžืœื” ื•ื‘ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืคื’ื ื”ืžื“ื” ื”ื”ื™ื ื•ืชืงื•ื ื”",
190
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“ </b>ืœืชืงืŸ ื”ืžืืžืจื™ื ื”ืžื ื’ื“ื™ื ืœื›ืื•ืจื” ื‘ื–ื”. ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืคืจ' ืจื•ืžื” ืžืชืคืฉื˜ ืืชืคืฉื˜ื•ืช ื“ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ื›ื•'."
191
+ ],
192
+ [
193
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืžื ื” ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ ื”ื™ืจื—</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืขื˜ืช ื”ื™ืจื— ื”ืขืœื™ื•ืŸ ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื”ืช\"ืช ื•ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ืžื ื™ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืงืช ื”ืžืืžืจ ืžืžืกื›ืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ื\"ืจ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ื•ืฉื ื”ืขืชืงื ื• ื›ืœ ื“ืขื•ืช ื”ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ",
194
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืงืช ืฉื ื™ ืžืืžืจื™ื ื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ื–ื” ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืฉื ื™ื”ื ื™ื—ื“ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืžืืžืจ ืฉื”ืขืชืงื ื• ื‘ืคืจืง ื”ืงื•ื“ื ื•ื”ื ืžืืžืจ ืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ื•ื™ื‘ืจื ืืœื”ื™ื ืืช ืฉื ื™ ื”ืžืื•ืจื•ืช ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืžืืžืจ ืจ\"ืž ื•ื‘ืจืืฉื™ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื›ื ื‘ื–ื•ืœืช ื”ืขืจื•ืช ื‘ืžืืžืจ ืขืฆืžื•",
195
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช ืžื”ืช\"ืช ืžืชื—ืœ' ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช' ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืกืคืจ ื”ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ื”ืื•ืจื” ืงื“ืžื” ืœืขื•ืœื",
196
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื ืกื™ืจืช ืื“ื ื•ื—ื•ื” ื”ืžื™ืขื•' ื›ืืฉืจ ื—ืฉื‘ื• ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืคืจืฉืช ืื—ืจื™ ืžื•ืช ืชืื ื” ืืชืขื‘ืจืช ื”' ื‘ืจื—ื™ืžื•ืชื",
197
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ ื”ื™ืจื— ื•ืžืชื•ื›ื• ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืืžืจื™ื ื”ืงื•ื“ืžื™ื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืžืืžืจ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ืค\"ืง ",
198
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื•ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ื”ืžืืžืจื™ื ืฉื‘ืค' ืฉื ื™ ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ื' ืขื•ื“ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ ื•ื˜ืขื ื”ืžื™ืขื•ื˜ ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืงื˜ืจื•ื’ ื‘ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื™ื™ื—ื•ื“' ืข\"ื™ ืžื™ ื•ืžื™ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืื—' ืขืœื•ืช' ืœืžืขืœื”"
199
+ ],
200
+ [
201
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืชืฉืขื” ืขืฉืจ</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ื‘ืŸ ื“'</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื”ืžื™ื•ื—ืก ืฉื ื”ืขืฆื ืœื“ืขืช ื”ืžืงื•ื‘ืœื™ื ื•ืงื“ื•ืฉืชื• ื ื‘ื“ืœืช ืžืฉืืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ืฉืžื•ืช. ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืืจื‘ืขื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืขืœืช ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ืขืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ืžืคื ื™ ื’' ืกื‘ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื–ื›ืจืช ื”ืฉื ื‘ื›ืชื‘ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ",
202
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื”ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื›ื•ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉื ื‘' ื“' ื‘ืขืœื™ื” ื›ื–ื” ื™' ื™\"ื” ื™ื”\"ื• ื™ื”ื•\"ื” ื”ื›ื•ืœืœ ื”ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื‘ื™ื•\"ื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ืืœืคื™\"ืŸ ื‘ื”ื”ื™\"ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฆื•ืจืช ื”ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื‘ืขืฆืžื ื•ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื“' ืžืขืจื›ื•ืช ืฉื‘\"ื“ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช",
203
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ืžืœื•ื™ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื‘ื™ื•\"ื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ืืœืคื™\"ืŸ ื•ื‘ื”ื”ื™\"ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฆื•ืจืช ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื‘ืขืฆืžืŸ ื•ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื“' ืžืขืจื›ื•' ืฉื‘\"ื“ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช",
204
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ืกืคื™ืจื” ื•ืกืคื™' ื•ื—ื™ืœื•ืงื ืœืคื™ ื ืงื•ื“ืชื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ื™ืคื” ืžื”ืชืงื•ื ื™ื ืช\"ื— ืชืฉืข ื–ืžื ื™ืŸ"
205
+ ],
206
+ [
207
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ<b> </b>ืฉืืจ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ืฉืื™ื ื ื ืžื—ืงื™ื ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืœืฉื” ืขืฉืจ<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื—ืœื•ืฃ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ืฉื‘ืช\"ืช ื•ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ืฉื”ื•ื ืฉื ื”ืขืฆื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืช ื‘ืŸ ื“' ืœื›ืœ ืกืคื™ืจ' ื•ืฉื ื' ืœื›ืœื ื•ืฉืžื•ืช ืฉืื™ื ื ื ืžื—ืงื™ื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืฉ' ืื”ื™ื” ื‘ื›ืช' ื•ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื‘ืช\"ืช ืขื ืฉืžืชืขืœ' ื›ืชืจ ืขืœ ื”ืช\"ืช ื•ืฉื ื”ืขืชืงื ื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืฉืขืจื™ ืื•ืจื” ื•ื‘ืืจื ื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื•ื”ืฉื’ื ื• ืขืœื™ื•",
208
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืื”ื™\"ื” ื‘ื›ืช' ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืค' ืื—ืจื™ ืžื•ืช ื\"ืœ ืื™ ื ื™ื—ื ืงืžื™ื” ื“ืื‘ื",
209
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื™\"ื” ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ ืฉ\"ื“ ืžืฉื“\"ื™ ื•ืฆ\"ื‘ ืžืฆื‘ืื•ืช ื ืžื—ืงื™ื ื•ื›ื•'",
210
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื‘ื ืงื•ื“ืช ืืœื”ื™ื ื•ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘' ื ืจืชื™ืงื•ืช ืฉืœ ืฉื ื”\"ื ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ื”\"ื‘ ืจื—ืžื™ื ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืœืžื” ืฉืœ ื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ืฉืœ ืจื—ืžื™ื ื‘ืžืœื›ื•ืช",
211
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื\"ืœ ื‘ื—ืก' ื•ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืืœ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื’ื‘ื•ืจ",
212
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืฉื ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ื—ื“ืจื ืชื ื™ื™ื ื ื\"ืœ ื•ื›ื•'",
213
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืืœื”ื™ื ื‘ื’ื‘ื•ืจื”. ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ื—ื“ืจื ืชืœื™ืชืื” ืืœื”ื™ื ื•ื›ื•'",
214
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืืœื”ื™ื ื‘ื‘ื™ื ื” ื’ \"ื› ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื‘ืฉืขืชื ื“ืกืชื™ืžื ื•ื›ื•'",
215
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืืœื”ื™ื ื’\"ื› ื‘ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืค' ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืกืžื•ืš ืœืงื•ื“ื ื\"ืจ ืฉืžืขื•ืŸ ืข\"ื“ ืฉืžื™ื™ื ื•ื—ื™ืœื™ื”ื•ืŸ",
216
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื‘ืช\"ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžื”ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ืจื™ืฉื ื“ื—ืจื‘ื ื™'",
217
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื</b> ื‘ืฆื•ืจื•ืช ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืค' ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืช\"ื— ืื ื ื—ื–ื™ื ื ืœื™ื” ื‘ื—ืœืžื",
218
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืฆื‘ืื•ืช ื‘ื ืฆื— ื•ื”ื•ื“ ื•ืฉื ื”ื›ืจื— ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื ืืœื”ื™ื ืฆื‘ืื•ืช ื™ื”ื•\"ื” ืฆื‘ืื•' ืžืŸ ื”ื˜ืข' ืฉื›ืชื‘ื• ื”ืžืคืจืฉื™ื",
219
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ืืœ ื—ื™ ื‘ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ืฉื ืฉื“\"ื™ ื‘ื™ืกื•\"ื“ ื•ื‘ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ื‘ืžื˜ื˜ืจื•ืŸ ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉื ืื“ื ื™ ื‘ืžืœื›ื•ืช"
220
+ ],
221
+ [
222
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืื—ื“</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืคืจื˜ื™ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืžื•ืช ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ืข\"ื‘ ื•ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ืž\"ื‘ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื›\"ื‘ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื™\"ื‘ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื•ื™\"ื‘ ื”ื•ื•ื™ื•ืช ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื”ื ื˜\"ื–<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื”ืงื“ืžืช ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ื•ืจื•ื—ื ื™ื•ืช' ื•ืฉื ื”ืขืชืงื ื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกืคืจ ืื•ืจ ื”ืฉื›ืœ ื‘ื’ืœื’ื•ืœ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ืขื ื”ืืœืคื ื‘ื™ืชื ื•ืฉื ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“'",
223
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืงืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื‘ืขืœ ืžืขืจื›ื•ืช ืืœื”ื™ื ื—ื™ื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื’ืœื’ื•ืœ ื”ืฉื ืขื ื”ืืœืคื ื‘ื™ืชื ื•ืžื” ืฉื”ืชืขื•ืจืจื ื• ืขืœื™ื”'",
224
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืืจืืจื™\"ืช๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื•ืฉื ืื”\"ื•ื™ ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ ื•ืฉื ืžื‘ื•ืืจ ื‘ืจื™ื™ืชื ื“ืจื‘ื™ ื™ืฉืžืขืืœ",
225
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื‘ืฉืœืฉ ืจืืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™\"ื“ ื”ื—ื–ืงื” ื™\"ื“ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื™\"ื“ ืจืžื” ื™\"ื“ ื›ื”ื”",
226
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ืข\"ื‘ ื•ื”ืขืชืงืชื• ื•ื ืงื•ื“ื• ื•ืชืงื•ื ื• ืžื”ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ื•ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ืข\"ื‘ ื‘ื—ืกื“ ื•ืจื™\"ื• ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื‘ื’ื‘ื•ืจื”",
227
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืง ืžืืžืจ ืžืกืคืจ ื”ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™\"ื‘ ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืฉื ืข\"ื‘ ื ื›ืœืœื™ื ื•ืงืฆืช ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืืœื™ื•",
228
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื™\"ื‘ ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ ืืœื›ืกื•ืŸ ื‘ื’ืฉืžื™ ื•ื‘ืขื•ืœื ื•ื˜ืขื ืœืžื” ื ืงืจืื™ื ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ ืืœื›ืกื•ืŸ",
229
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืชืœ\"ื™ ื’ืœื’\"ืœ ื•ืœ\"ื‘ ื”ื ื“ืจืฉ ื‘ืกืคืจ ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ืžื” ืขื ื™ื™ื ื• ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ืคืฉื˜ ื•ื ืขืœื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ื™\"ื‘ ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื‘ื™ื ื” ื•ื™\"ื‘ ื‘ืช\"ืช ื•ื™\"ื‘ ื‘ืžืœื›ื•ืช",
230
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื™\"ื‘ ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื ื”ื \"ื– ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื™\"ื‘ ื•ื ืงื•ื“ืชื• ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืžื™ื‘ืจื›\"ืš ื™ื\"ืจ ื™ืฉ\"ื ื•ืฉื ืฆื•ืจื” ื ื›ื•ื ื” ืœื”ืฉื›ืœืช ื”ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื ื•ืžืงื•ืจื™ ืฉื ื›\"ื‘ ื”ื•ื•ื™ื•ืช ื›\"ื“ ืฉืžื•ืช ื‘ืŸ ื“' ื’' ืคืขืžื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ืช ื™\"ื‘ ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื",
231
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ืชืฉืœื•ื ื‘ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืกืคืจ ื”ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ืฉื”ืขืชืงื ื• ื‘ืคืจืง ื•'",
232
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืจื™\"ื• ื”ื•ื™ื•ืช ืฉื”ื ืžืงื•ืจื•ืช ืœืข\"ื‘ ืฉืžื•ืช ืœื“ืข' ื‘ืขืœ ืกืคืจ ื”ืื•ืจื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื“' ืื”ื™\"ื” ื•ื›ืŸ ืข\"ื‘ ื”ื•ื™ื•ืช ื”ื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ืžืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“' ืžืœื•ื™ ื™ื•ื“ื™\"ืŸ ืœื“ืขืช ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื‘ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ืจ ืœืฉื ื‘ืŸ ืข\"ื‘",
233
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื‘</b> ื”ืฉื ืž\"ื‘ ื•ื ืงื•ื“ื• ื•ืฉื ืž\"ื‘ ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืžื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื•ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืคืกื•ืง ืœื›ืœ ื”ื™ื“ ื”ื—ื–ืงื” ื•ืฉืžื•ืช ืจ\"ืช ืฉืœ ืž\"ื‘",
234
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื’</b> ืกื“ืจ ืื•ืคืŸ ืฆืจื•ืฃ ืฉื ืž\"ื‘ ืžืคืกื•ืง ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื•ืงืฆืช ืžืก\"ืง ื‘ืคื™' ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืื•ืจ ืžืงื•ืจื™ื•",
235
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฆืจื•ืฃ ืฉื ื›\"ื‘ ืžืคืกื•ืง ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ื›ื”ื ื™ื ื•ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื ื”ื”ื•ื“ ื•ืฉื ื”ื ืฆื— ื•ืฉื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“",
236
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื™\"ื‘ ื”ื•ื•ื™ื•ืช ืžืฆื•ืจืคื•ืช ืžืฉื ื‘ืŸ ื“'",
237
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื ื•ืคืขื•ืœืชื ื‘ื™\"ื‘ ื—ื“ืฉื™ื ื™\"ื‘ ืžื–ืœื•ืช ื•ื’ืœื’ื•ืœื ื•ืงืฉื•ืจื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืฉื ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช"
238
+ ],
239
+ [
240
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉื ื™ื™ื ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื›ื ื•ื™ื™ื</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื ื•ื™ื™ื ื•ืกื‘ืช ืจื‘ื•ื™ื™ื ื•ืžื” ืขื ื™ื™ื ื ื•ืžื”ื•ืชื ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื•ืช ื”ืื“ื ืžืจื›ื‘ื” ืืœ ื”ืกืคื™ืจื•ืช ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืืจื‘ืขื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืืžืจื ืขื™ืŸ ื™ื“ ืจื’ืœ ืื–ืŸ ื‘ืืœื”ื•ืช ื•ืžืื™ื–ื• ื‘ื—ื™ื ื” ื™ืชื™ื—ืก ื•ืขืœ ืื™ื–ื” ืฆื“",
241
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื”ืขืชืงื•ืช ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกืคืจ ื”ืื•ืจื” ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื’ืœื•ื™ ื˜ืขื ืจื‘ื•ื™ื™ ื”ื›ื ื•ื™ื™ื ืœืคื™ ืจื•ื‘ ื”ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ืช",
242
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืจื›ื‘ื” ื•ืฉื ื‘ืื•ืจ ืžืจื›ื‘' ื“ื•ื“ ื•ืžืจื›ื‘ืช ื™ื•ืกืฃ ื•ืžืจื›ื‘ืช ืื‘ืจื”ื ื™ืฆื—ืง ื•ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ืžืจื›ื‘ื” ืžืจืข\"ื” ื•ื—ืœื•ืคื ื–ื” ื‘ื–ื”",
243
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืืžืจ ืžืกืคืจ ื”ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ืžื•ืจื” ืขืœ ืฉื“ื—ื• ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ื”ืžืœื›ื•ืช ื•ืœื ืจืฆื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืชื ืžืจื›ื‘' ืืœื™ื”"
244
+ ],
245
+ [
246
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• <b>ืขืจื›ื™ ื”ื›ื ื•ื™ื™ื</b> ื“ื‘ืจ ืžืกืคื™ืง ื‘ืคืจ' ืจื•ื‘ ื”ื ืžืฆื ื‘ืกืคืจ ื”ื–ื”ืจ ื›ื™ ื”ื ืขื™ืงืจ ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื›\"ื’<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืืœืฃ",
247
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื‘ื™ืช",
248
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื’ื™ืžืœ",
249
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื“ืœืช",
250
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื”ื",
251
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื•ืื•",
252
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื–ื™ื™ืŸ<b></b>",
253
+ "ืคืจืง ื— ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื—ื™ืช",
254
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื˜ื™ืช",
255
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™'</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื™ื•ื“",
256
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื›ืฃ",
257
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื‘</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืœืžื“",
258
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื’</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืžื<b></b>",
259
+ "ืคืจืง ื™ื“ ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ื ื•ืŸ",
260
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜ื•</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืกืžืš",
261
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื•</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืขื™ืŸ",
262
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื–</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืคื",
263
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื—</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืฆื“ื™",
264
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื˜</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืงื•ืฃ",
265
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืจื™ืฉ",
266
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืฉื™ืŸ",
267
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื‘</b> ื‘ืขืจืš ืื•ืช ืชื™ื•"
268
+ ],
269
+ [
270
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ื”ื™ื›ืœื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–' ื”ื™ื›ืœื•ืช ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื•ืช ื›ืคื™ ื”ื ืžืฆ' ื‘ื–ื”ืจ ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉื ื ื‘ืืจ ืงืฆืช ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ื—ืžืฉื” ืขืฉืจ <br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ",
271
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉื ื™",
272
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™",
273
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืจื‘ื™ืขื™",
274
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื—ืžื™ืฉื™",
275
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉื™",
276
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™",
277
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื— </b>ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื–' ืžื“ื•ืจื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืŸ ืœื›ืื•ืจื” ืฉื‘ืขื” ื”ื™ื›ืœื•' ื›ืžื‘ื•ืืจ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ืชืจื•ืžื”",
278
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื”ื™ื›ืœื•ืช ืื ื”ื ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ืื• ื‘ืจื™ืื” ืื• ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ื•ื”ื›ืจื— ืืœ ื”ื”ืกื›ืžื” ืžืชื•ืš ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื”",
279
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืฉืžื•ืช ื•ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื•ื”ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ื•ืžืขืœืช' ื–ื” ืขืœ ื–ื” ื•ืขื ื™ื™ื ื",
280
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื</b> ืขื•ื“ ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืืช ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื•ืชื•ืขืœืช' ื•ื˜ืขื ืขืœื•ืช ื”ืฆืจื™' ืขืœื™ื”' ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ืงืจ ืืœื”ื™ื ืืœ ื‘ืœืข'",
281
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื‘</b> ื‘ื”ืขืจืช ืื—ืจ ืฉืžืขืœืช ื”ืฆื“ื™ืงื™ื ืœืžืขืœ' ืžืžืขืœืช ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื\"ื› ืžื” ืžืขืœืช ืืœื™ื”ื• ื•ื—ื ื•ืš ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฆื“ื™ืงื™ื ื•ื ืขืฉื• ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื•ืฉื ื‘ืื•' ืขื ื™ื ื ืžืชื•ืš ืžืืžืจื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื—ื ื•ืš",
282
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืืœื™ื”ื• ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืžืขืœืชื• ื•ืขืœ ืžื” ื–ื›ื” ื‘ืขืœื•ืชื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืœืืš ืžืฉืจืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืœืžื” ืœื ื–ื›ื• ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื•ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ืืœ ืžืขืœืช' ืขื ื”ื™ื•ืชื ืžื‘ื—ืจื™ ื”ื ื‘ืจืื™ื",
283
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื“</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืืœื™ื”ื• ื•ื™ื—ื•ืกื• ืงื•ื“ื ืขืœื•ืชื• ืืœ ื”ืžื“ืจื’ื” ื”ื”ื•ื ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ืžืœืืš ืงื•ื“ื ืื• ืœืื•",
284
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื’ืœื ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ืœืจืื•ืช ืคื ื™ ืื“ื ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ืขืช ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื‘ืขื”\"ื– ื•ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืฉืขืงืจ ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ืžื—ืกื“"
285
+ ],
286
+ [
287
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ื—ืžืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืชืžื•ืจื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ืฉื”ื ืจืข ื—ืžื•ืจื•' ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช' ืžื”ื™ื›ืŸ ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉื‘ืขื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื•ื™ื•ืช ื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ืžื”ื™ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืžืฉืœื™ื ื ืื•ืชื™ื ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ",
288
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื“ืจืš ืขืœื™ื™ืช ื”ื ืฉืžื•ืช ื•ื™ืจื™ื“ืช ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื‘ืœื™ ืขื•ื‘ืจื™ ื“ืจืš ื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ืฉืœื ืœื”ื’ืœื ื‘ืื•ื™\" ื˜ืžื",
289
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืชื•ืขืœืช ื”ืงืœื™ืคื” ืืœ ื”ื ืขืœืžื•ืช ื•ืฉื ื‘ืืจื ื• ืชื•ืขืœืช ื™ืฆื”\"ืจ ื‘ืื“ื ื•ื—ื™ื•ื‘ื• ืžื”ื™ื›ืŸ",
290
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขืฉืจ ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ื•ืฉืžื ื•ืคืขื•ืœืชื ื' ืœื' ืœืžืฆื•ื ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ",
291
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœื™ืœื™ืช ื•ืžื—ืœืช ื‘ืช ื™ืฉืžืขืืœ ื•ืชื ื™ืŸ ืขื•ืจ ื•ื™\"ื‘ ื’ื‘ื•ืœื™ื ื˜ืžืื™ื ืฉืœ ืงืœื™ืคื”",
292
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ื ื›ื ืกื•ืช ื‘ืืฆืœื•ืช ื•ื\"ื› ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคื’ื ืฉืœื”ื ื”ืžื›ื•ื ื” ื‘ืกืคื™'",
293
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื– </b>ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ืฉืžืงืฆืช ืžืืžืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ื ืจืื” ืฉื”ื ื™' ื•ืžืงืฆืช ืžืืžืจื™ื ื ืจืื” ืฉื”ื ื’' ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืฉื ืจืื” ืฉื”ื ืืจื‘ืขื”"
294
+ ],
295
+ [
296
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืฉื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ื”ื™ื›ืœื™ ื”ืชืžื•ืจื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื›ืžื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœืงื“ื•ืฉื” ื”ื™ื›ืœื•ืช ื›ืŸ ื™ืฉ ืœืงืœื™ืคื•ืช ื”ื™ื›ืœื•ืช ื•ื”ื ืฉื‘ืขื” ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืžื•ื ื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ",
297
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื‘'",
298
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืœื™ืฉื™",
299
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื“'",
300
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื—ืžื™ืฉื™",
301
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉืฉื™",
302
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™",
303
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื’' ื—ืœืงื™ ื”ืื•ื™ืจ ืืœ ื›ื—ื•ืช ื”ืงืœื™ืคื•ืช"
304
+ ],
305
+ [
306
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืขื”</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื›\"ื‘ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื•ื‘ืคืจื˜ ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืขื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื•ื“' ื—ืœืงื™ื ืฉื‘ืœื•ืžื“ื™ื” ื•ื›ืœื ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ื‘ืชื•ื›ื ื”'",
307
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืจื•ื—ื ื™ื•ืช ื”ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื•ื”ื›ืจืชื",
308
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืจื•ื—ื ื™ื•ืช ื”ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื‘ืกืคื™ืจื” ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื•ื›ืŸ ื—ืœื•ืงื™ื ืœื ืจื•ืช ื”ืžื ื•ืจื”",
309
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื”ืืœืฃ ",
310
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื”ื‘ื™ืช",
311
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื’ื™ืžืœ",
312
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื”ื",
313
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื•ืื•",
314
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื–ื™ืŸ",
315
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื—ื™ืช",
316
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื˜ื™ืช",
317
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื™ื•ื“",
318
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื›ืฃ",
319
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืœืžื“",
320
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืžื",
321
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ื ื•ืŸ",
322
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื—</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืกืžืš",
323
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื˜</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืขื™ืŸ",
324
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืคื",
325
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืฆื“ื™",
326
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืงื•ืฃ",
327
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืจื™ืฉ",
328
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืฉื™ืŸ",
329
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืช ืชื™ื•",
330
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ืžื ืฆืค\"ืš",
331
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื›ื–</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ืžืงื•ืจ ืฉืžืžื ื• ื ืชืืฆืœื• ื›\"ื‘ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžืฆื™ืื•ืชื ื‘ืกื•ื“ ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืื” ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ื•ืขืฉื™ื”"
332
+ ],
333
+ [
334
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืžื•ื ื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื ืงื•ื“ื•ืช</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืงื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ืกื•ื“ื ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ื”ื ืงื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ืจื•ื—ื ื™ื•ืชื ื•ื—ืœื•ืงื ืขื ื”ื™ื•ืชื ืฉื•ื™ื",
335
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื—ื•ืœื ืฉื•ืจืง ื—ื™ืจืง ื‘ื™ื•\"ื“",
336
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ ืฉืœืฉื” ื”ืงื•ื“ืžื™ื ืฉื”ื ืงื™ื‘ื•ืฅ ืฉืคืชื™ื ื•ื—ื˜\"ืฃ ืงืžืฅ ื•ื—ืจ\"ืง ื‘ืœื ื™ื•ื“",
337
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฆืจ\"ื™ ื•ืกื’ื•\"ืœ",
338
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืงืžืฅ ื•ืคืชื— ื•ื—ื˜ืฃ ืกื’ื•ืœ ื•ืงืžืฅ ื•ืคืชื— ื•ืฉื‘ื ืœื‘ื“ื•",
339
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืงื•ืจ ืฉืžืžื ื• ื ืืฆืœื• ื”ื ืงื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ืขื ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืืจืช' ื‘ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช"
340
+ ],
341
+ [
342
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืชืฉืขื” ื•ืขืฉืจื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื˜ืขืžื™ื</b> ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื˜ืขืžื™ื ื•ืกื•ื“ื. ื•ืคืจืงื™ื• ื—ืžืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื–ืจืงื ืžืงืฃ ืฉื•ืคืจ ื”ื•ืœืš ืกื’ื•ืœืชื",
343
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืคื–ืจ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื™ืจื— ื‘ืŸ ื™ื•ืžื• ืงืจื ื™ ืคืจื” ื’ืขื™ื ืชืœืฉื ืชืจืฆื",
344
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืื–ืœื ื’ืจื•ืฉ ืคืกืง ืจื‘ื™ืข ืงื“ืžื ื–ืงืฃ ืงื˜ืŸ ื–ืงืฃ ื’ื“ื•ืœ",
345
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ื˜ืขืžื™ื",
346
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืงื•ืจ ืฉืžืžื ื• ื ืืฆืœื• ื”ื˜ืขืžื™ื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืืจืชื ื‘ื ืงื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ืกื•ื“ ืชื ื•ืขืช' ื‘ื”ื‘ืจื”"
347
+ ],
348
+ [
349
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœืฉื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ืฆื™ืจื•ืฃ</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆื™ืจื•ืฃ ื•ื”ื ื’' ื—ืœืงื™ื ื”ืฆื™ืจื•ืฃ ืชืžื•ืจื” ื’ื™ืžื˜ืจื™ื ื•ื™ืชื‘ืืจื• ื‘ืฉืขืจ ื–ื” ืกื•ื“ื ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืžื•ื ื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืคืขื•ืœืช ื”ืฆืจื•ืฃ ื‘ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ืคืฉื•ื˜ื•ืช",
350
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืคืขื•ืœืช ื”ืฆืจื•ืฃ ื‘ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ื›ืคื•ืœื•ืช",
351
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืกื•ื“ ื”ืฆืจื•ืฃ ื‘ื”ืขืœืžื•",
352
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืคืขื•ืœืช ืฆืจื•ืฃ ื”ื ืงื•ื“",
353
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืชืžื•ืจื” ื‘ื›\"ื‘ ืืœืคื ื‘ื™ืชื•ืช ื•ืจืœ\"ื ืฉืขืจื™ื ืคื ื™ื ื•ืื—ื•ืจ",
354
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ื‘ืกื™ื“ื•ืจ ื“' ืขื’ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ืžืฆื™ื ืจืœ\"ื ืฉืขืจื™ื ื•ื›\"ื‘ ืืœืคื ื‘ื™ืชื•ืช ื•ืฉื ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืกื•ื“ื ื•ื”ืขืœืžื",
355
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ื”ืคืœื’ืช ืžืขืœืช ืืœืคื ื‘ื™ืชื ื”ืขื•ืœื” ื•ื”ื™ื•ืจื“ ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืกื‘ืŸ ืข\"ื‘ ื•ืž\"ื‘ ื•ืžืืžืจ ืคืจ' ืชืจื•ืžื” ืฉื ื“ืž\"ื‘ ืืชื•ื•ืŸ",
356
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื’ื™ืžื˜ืจื™ื ื•ืžื™ื ื™ ื”ืžืกืค' ื•ืกื•ื“ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืจ\"ืช ื•ืก\"ืช ื•ืช\"ืช ื•ืขื•ื“ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืžื–ื™ื ืืœื™ื•"
357
+ ],
358
+ [
359
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืื—ื“</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื ืฉืžื”</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืฉืžื” ื‘ื›ืœ ืคืจื˜ื™ื” ื•ื›ืœืœื™ื” ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืื—ื“ ืขืฉืจ<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืžืงื•ื ืืฆื™ืœื•ืช ื’' ื—ืœืงื™ื ืฉื”ื ื ืคืฉ ืจื•ื— ื•ื ืฉืžื” ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื›ืœื•ืœื•ืช ืžืขืฉืจื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื”",
360
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ืœื ื™ืกืชืœืง ื”ืจื•ื— ื•ื”ื ืคืฉ ืืœ ื™ืกื•ื“ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื•ื”ื ื ืฉืืจื™ื ื”ืจื•ื— ื‘ื’ืŸ ืขื“ืŸ ื”ืชื—ืชื•ืŸ ื•ื”ื ืคืฉ ื‘ืขื”\"ื– ื›ืคื™ ื”ืžืชื‘ืืจ ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื”",
361
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืฉื™ืฉ ืื ืฉื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ื ื ืคืฉ ื•ืœื ืจื•ื— ื•ื›\"ืฉ ื ืฉืžื” ื•ื™ืฉ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ื ื’\"ื› ืจื•ื— ื•ื™ืฉ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื”ืŸ ื’\"ื› ื ืฉืžื” ื•ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื”ืžืœื•ื™ืŸ ืœืื“ื ื•ืžืื™ื–ื” ืžืงื•ื ื ืฉืคืขื• ื•ื ืืฆืœื• ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™ืฆื”\"ืจ ื•ื™ืฆืจ ื”ื˜ื•ื‘",
362
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื“</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆืœื ื•ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื•ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฆืœื ื•ืžืงืจื™ื• ื‘ืขืœื•ืชื• ื•ื›ืœ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื•",
363
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื”</b> ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืชื•ืขืœืช ื”ื ืฉืžื” ื‘ื‘ื•ืื” ื‘ืขื”\"ื–",
364
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื•</b> ืขื•ื“ ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืœื‘ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื—ืจ ืฉืคืกืงื” ื–ื•ื”ืžืชืŸ ืœืžื” ืœื ื ื›ื ืกื• ืœื’\"ืข ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื“ื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื ืฉืœื ืžืชื• ืžื” ืžืขืœืชื",
365
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื–</b> ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื›ื™ืกื•ื™ ื”ื—ื•ื˜ื ื”ืชื•ื”ื ืฉืคื™ืจืฉ ื‘ื–ื•ื”ืจ ืคื™' ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ื˜ื‘ื™ืŸ",
366
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื—</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื ืชื—ื™ ื”ืื“ื ื•ืื™ื‘ืจื™ื• ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืกื•ื“",
367
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื˜</b> ืžืฆื™ืื•ืช ืงืฉืจ ื•ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื”ื ืฉืžื” ื‘ื’ื•ืฃ ื•ืกื•ื“ ื‘ื•ืื” ืœืขื”\"ื–",
368
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™</b> ื‘ืคื’ื™ืžืช ื”ื ืคืฉ ืขืฆืžื” ื•ืžืขืœืช ื‘ืขืœื™ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ",
369
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื™ื</b> ื‘ืคื’ื™ืžืชื” ื‘ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื"
370
+ ],
371
+ [
372
+ "<b>ืฉืขืจ ืฉืœืฉื™ื ื•ืฉื ื™ื™ื</b> ื™ื—ืกื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืฉื <b>ืฉืขืจ ื”ื›ื•ื ื”</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ื• ื™ืชื‘ืืจ ืชื•ืขืœืช ื”ื›ื•ื ื” ื•ืกื•ื“ ื”ื›ื•ื ื” ื‘ืฉืจืฉื™ื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืœื™ ื—ื˜ื ื•ื‘ืœื™ ืคืฉืข ื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืคืจืงื™ื• ืฉืœืฉื”<br> <b>ืคืจืง ื</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืชื•ืขืœืช ื”ื›ื•ื ื” ื•ืกื•ื“ ื”ืฉืคืขืช ื”ืžื›ื•ื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืฆื ื•ืจื•",
373
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื‘</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื–ืง ืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ื•ืžื›ื•ื•ืŸ ื•ืกื“ืจ ื”ืžื›ื•ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืกื“ืจ ื”ื™ื“ื•ืข ื•ืžืชื•ืงืŸ",
374
+ "<b>ืคืจืง ื’</b> ื‘ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ื ื” ื‘ื”ื•ื™ื•ืช ื•ืฉืžื•ืช ื•ื›ื ื•ื™ื™ื",
375
+ "<b>ืขื“ ื”ื ื”</b> ื”ื’ื™ืขื ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืจืงื™ื ื•ื”ืฉืขืจื™ื ื•ืžืกืคืจื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ืžืืชื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื ื™ื ื•ืฉื‘ืขื” ื•ืกื™ืžื ื™ื"
376
+ ]
377
+ ],
378
+ "A Prayer": [
379
+ "<b>ืคื–ืจ ื ืชืŸ ืœืื‘ื™ื•ื ื™ื</b> ื›ื™ ื”ื ืžืคื–ืจื™ื ืžืขื™ื ื•ืชื ืœื”ืฉื‘ื™ืข ืชืื‘ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืžื™ืžื™ ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื•ื“ืข ื•ื‘ืงื™ ื‘ื”ื ื›ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืืช ื”' ื‘ื›ืœ ืœื‘ ื•ืขืœื™ื• ื ืืžืจ ื™ืฉ ืžืคื–ืจ ื•ื ื•ืกืฃ ืขื•ื“. ืืžืช ื›ื™ ื™ืฉ ืฉืขืจ ืืฉืจ ื ืกื’ืจ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืจืฆื•ื ื ื• ืœืคืชื•ื— ื‘ื• ื›ืœืœ ื•ื”ื•ื ื‘ืฉืžื™ื˜ื•ืช ื•ื™ื•ื‘ืœื•ืช ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืžื™ืจืืชื ื• ืœืขืœื•ืช ื‘ื”ืจ ื•ืืคื™' ืžื ื’ื•ืข ื‘ืงืฆื”ื• ื›ื™ ื”ืขืกืง ื‘ื• ื“ื‘ืจ ื ื•ื’ืข ืงืฆืช ื‘ืฉืจืฉื™ ื”ืืžื•ื ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื–ื• ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืืœื ืฉืœื ืžืฆืื ื• ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืฉื™ืฉื‘ื™ืขื ื• ื•ื™ืจื•ื” ืฆืžืื ื ื• ื•ืื ื”ื•ื ื‘ื”ื™ื•ืชื• ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืงื‘ืœื” ื•ืื‘ ื”ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ืจืฆื” ืœื”ืกืชื™ืจ ืกื•ื“ื• ืžื™ ื™ื‘ื ืื—ืจื™ ื”ืžืœืš ืœืคืชื•ื— ืฉืขืจ ืื•ืฆืจื•ืชื™ื• ื‘ืœื ืจืฉื•ืชื•. ืขื•ื“ ื™ืฉ ืฉื ื™ ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืจ ื”ื’ืœื’ื•ืœ ืฉื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ื• ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื’ืœื” ื˜ืคื— ื•ืžื›ืกื” ืืจื‘ืข ืืžื•ืช ืืžื ื ื‘ืœ\"ื‘ ืืœื• ื ืฉื ื•ื ืชืŸ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื• ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื™ ืข\"ื” ืžื”ื–ื”ืจ ืžื”ืชื™ืงื•ื ื™ื ืžืจืขื•ื ืžื”ื™ืžื ื ื•ื™ื ื•ืงื ื•ืกื‘ื ื•ืคืงื•ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืฉื' ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื”ื ืขื™ืžื™ื ื”ื ืžืฆืื™ื ืืชื ื• ื•ื’ื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกืคืจ ื”ื‘ื”ื™ืจ ื•ืกืคืจ ื™ืฆื™ืจื” ื•ืกืคืจื™ ืฉืืจ ื”ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื›ื™ ืžืžื‘ื—ืจ ื ื˜ื™ืขื•ืช ื”ื’ื ื™ื ื”ืืœื” ื ื˜ืขื ื• ื”ืคืจื“ืก ื”ื–ื”. ื•ืืœ ื™ื—ืฉื‘ื ื• ื”ืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ืœืื•ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื• ืœื”ืจื•ืก ื’ื“ืจื™ ื”ื’ืŸ ืืฉืจ ื ื˜ืขื ื• ื›ื™ ื”ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื”ื ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืคืจื˜ ื‘ืจื•ื‘ ืฉืขืจ ืขืจื›ื™ ื”ื›ื ื•ื™ื™ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช ื›ืงืœื™ืคืช ื”ืฉื•ื ื•ื‘ืฉืืจ ืฉืขืจื™ื ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืœื ื ืกืชื™ื™ืขื• ื‘ื• ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ืื ื™ืจืฆื” ื”ืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ืœื—ืœื•ืง ืงื•ื“ื ื›ืœ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืชืงืŸ ื•ืœื™ืฉื‘ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืืœื”ื™ื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ื ื•ืื—\"ื› ื™ืขืฉื” ืžื” ืฉืœื‘ื• ื—ืคืฅ ื‘ื• ืื™ืŸ ืœืฉื•ื ื ื• ืขื˜ ื‘ืจื–ืœ ืœื—ืงื•' ื‘ืฉื›ืœื• ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืฆื•ื ื• ืœืงื‘ืœ ื—\"ื• ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ื›ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืžืจ ืงื‘ืœ ื“ืขืชื ื• ื›ื™ ื”ื•ื ืจืฉืื™ ื•ืœื ืื ื• ืœื”ืคื™ืง ื”ืืžืช ืœืื•ืจื” ื™ื—ื–ื•ืจ ืขืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืคืขื ื•ืคืขืžื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ื•ื™ื”ืคืš ื‘ื–ื›ื•ืชื ื•ืื ืขืฉื” ื›ืŸ ื™ืชืœื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืžื ืฉื›ื— ืื™ื–ื” ืฆื“ ืžืฆื“ื“ื™ ื”ื“ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื‘ื• ื”ื•ื ื ื›ืฉืœ ื•ื ืขืœื ืžืžื ื• ื•ืื—\"ื› ืื ื™ื’ืข ื•ืœื ืžืฆื ื“ื‘ืจื™' ื›ื”ื•ื™ื™ืชืŸ ืžื” ื˜ื•ื‘ ื•ืžื” ื ืขื™ื ื›ื™ ื™ื’ื™ื“ ืชืขืœื•ืž' ื—ื›ืžื” ื›ื™ ื™ื“ืขื ื• ื›ื™ ื›ืคืœื™ื ืœืชื•ืฉื™ื” ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื‘ื ื™ ื’ื™ืœื ื• ื›ื™ ืฆืขื™ืจื™ื ืื ื• ืœื™ืžื™ื ื•ืขื•ื“ ืฉื‘ืขื ื• ื‘ื•ื– ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ืžื›ืœ ื”ื ืขืจื™ื ืืฉืจ ื‘ื“ื•ืจื ื• ื›ื™ ื™ื“ ื”' ื ื˜ื•ื™ื” ืขืœื™ื ื• ื•ืจืฆื•ืขื•ืช ื”ืขื ื™ื•ืช ืชืœื•ื™ื•ืช ื›ื›ื•ืชืœื™ ื‘ื™ืชื™ื ื•. ื›ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื›ืœ ื‘ืื™ ืฉืขืจื ื• ื•ืขืœ ื”ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ื•ื”ืจื—ื™ื ื”ืชืœื•ื™ื™ื ื‘ืฆื•ืืจื ื•. ื”ืชืขื•ื ื• ื•ืœื ื™ื›ื—ื“ ืžืžื ื• ื”ื™ื•ืช ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื—ืœืง ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ืื ืคืจืฆื ื• ื’ื“ืจ ืœื™ื›ื ืก ื‘ืชื•ืš ื—ืœืงื• ื”ืืœ ื™ื›ืคืจ ื•ื”ื•ื ื™ื’ื™ื“ื ื• ื•ืขื˜ืจื•ืช ืœืจืืฉื• ืœืขื ื“ื ื•, ื•ืžืฉืžืจ' ื™ื”ื™ื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืขืžื ื• ืœื‘ืœืชื™ ืกื•ืจ ืžืŸ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืืฉืจ ื™ื’ื™ื“ื ื• ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืฉืžืืœ.",
380
+ "<b>ืขื•ื“ ื–ืืช</b> ื ื“ืจืฉ ืœืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื‘ื ื‘ื›ืœ ืขืช ืืœ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืขื“ ื™ื˜ื”ืจ ืžื—ืฉื‘ื•ืชื™ื• ืžื”ื‘ืœื™ ื”ื–ืžืŸ ื•ืชื—ื‘ื•ืœื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื™ื ืงื” ืจืืฉื• ืžื”ื’ืื•ื” ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื ืงืœื™ืคื” ื”ืžื•ื ืขืช ืœื‘ืขืœื” ืžืœื™ื›ื ืก ืœื—ื–ื•ืช ื‘ื ื•ืขื ื”' ื•ืžืœื‘ืงืจ ื‘ื”ื™ื›ืœ ื”ื—ื›ืžื” ื”ื–ืืช ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืฉืคื™ืœ ืขืฆืžื• ื›ืขืคืจ ืœืคื ื™ ื›ืœ ืื“ื ื•ื™ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ืž' ื—ืจืคืชื• ื•ืฉืžื— ื‘ื™ืกื•ืจื™ืŸ ื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืขืกืงื• ื‘ื—ื›ืžืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืœื”ืชื’ืื•ืช ื•ืžื” ื’ื ืœื™ืžื•ื“ ื”ื—ื›ืžื” ื”ื–ืืช ื›ื™ ืื ื”ื•ื ืขื“ ืื‘ื“ื•ืŸ ืชืื›ืœ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจื–\"ืœ ืข\"ื” ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ื‘\"ืจ ืจ' ื”ื•ื ื ื‘ืฉื ื‘ืจ ืงืคืจื ืคืชื— ืชืืœืžื ื” ืฉืคืชื™ ืฉืงืจ ื•ื’ื•' ื™ืชืคืจื›ื•ืŸ ื™ืชื—ืจืฉืŸ ื™ืฉืชืงืงืŸ ื™ืชืคืจื›ืŸ ื™ืชื—ืจืฉืŸ ื›ื“\"ื ืื• ืžื™ ื™ืฉื•ื ืืœื ืื• ื—ืจืฉ ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื”ื ื” ืื ื—ื ื• ืžืืœืžื™ื ืืœื•ืžื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืฉื“ื” ื™ืฉืชืชืงืŸ ื›ืžืฉืžืขื• ื”ื“ื•ื‘ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ืฆื“ื™ืง ื—ื™ ื”ืขื•ืœืžื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ืขืชื™ืง ืžื‘ืจื™ื•ืชื™ื• ื‘ื’ืื•ื” ืืชืžื”ื ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ืœื”ืชื’ืื•ืช ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ืื ื™ ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช. ื•ื‘ื•ื– ืืชืžื”ื ืžื‘ื–ื” ืขืœ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื“ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื‘ืจ ื—ื ื™ื ื ื›ืœ ื”ืžืชื›ื‘ื“ ื‘ืงืœื•ืŸ ื—ื‘ื™ืจื• ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื—ืœืง ืœืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ืฉืœ ืžืงื•ื ืขืื›\"ื• ื•ื›ื•' ืขื›\"ืœ: ืœื›ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืชื ื”ื’ ื‘ืฉืคืœื•ืช ื–ืžืŸ ืขื“ ืืฉืจ ื™ืจืื” ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ื•ืื– ื™ื›ื ืก ืืœ ืžืงื“ืฉ ื”'. ื•ืจืื•ื™ ืœื›ืœ ื”ื‘ื ื‘ืฉืขืจื™ ื”ื’ืŸ ื’ืŸ ื”ื—ื›ืžื” ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืชืคืœืชื• ืœื ื™ื™ืฉืจ ืฆืขื“ื™ื• ื•ื™ื™ื˜ื™ื‘ ืœื›ืชื• ืœื‘ืœ ื™ื›ืฉืœ ื•ืœื‘ืœ ื™ืžื•ื˜ ืžืŸ ื”ืืžืช ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื•ืฉืžืืœ.",
381
+ "ื•ื–ืืช ืชืคืœื” ื ืื” ืœื›ืœ ื”ื‘ื ืœื™ื›ื ืก ืืœ ื”ื™ื›ืœ ืงื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื ืคื ื™ืžื™ ื‘ืก\"ื“: ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื”ืžืจื•ืžื™ื ื•ื›ื•'",
382
+ "<small>ื‘ืงืฉื” ื–ื• ืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ื”ื—ืกื™ื“ ืื™ืฉ ื”ืืœื”ื™ ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ ืœืžืขื™ื™ืŸ ืœืื•ืžืจื” ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ื›ื ืก ื‘ืคืจื“ืก ื›ืžื• ืฉื–ื›ืจ ื‘ื”ืงื“ืžืชื• ื•ื–ื• ื”ื™ื ื”ืชืคืœื”</small>",
383
+ "<b>ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื”ืžืจื•ืžื™ื ื•ืžืฉื’ื™ื— ื”ืชื—ืชื•ื ื™ื</b> ืื“ื•ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ื”ื ืืฆืœื™ื ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืžื™ื•ื—ื“ ืื—ื“ ืžืœืš ื ืื“ืจ ืž\"ืืฆื™ืœ ื›ืœ ื ืืฆืœ. ื‘\"ื•ืจื ื›ืœ ื ื‘ืจื, ื™ื•ืฆ\"ืจ ื›ืœ ื ื•ืฆืจ, ืข\"ื•ืฉื” ื›ืœ ื ืขืฉื”. ืžื™ ื™ื’ื™ืข ืœื”ืฉื™ื’ ืื—ื“ ืžืืœืฃ ืืœืคื™ื ื•ืจื™ื‘ื™ ืจื‘ื‘ื•ืช ื’ื•ื“ืœ ืžืขืœืช ืจื•ื ื”ืกืชืจ ืกืชืจื™ ืžืขืฉ\"ื™ืš ื›\"ืฉ ื’ื•ื“ืœ ื™ืฆื™ืจ\"ื•ืชื™ืš. ื•ืžื™ ื™ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืœื“ืขืช ืื—ื“ ืžืืœืคื™ ืืœืคื™ื ื•ืจื™ื‘ื™ ืจื‘ื‘ื•ืช ืกืชืจื™ ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ืฆืคื•ื ื™ื ื‘ื‘ืจื™ื\"ืชืš. ื›\"ืฉ ื•ืง\"ื• ืœื”ืฉื™ื’ ืงืฆืช ืžืŸ ื”ืงืฆืช ืžื—ืœืง ืžืŸ ื”ื—ืœืง ืฉืœ ืืœืฃ ืืœืคื™ ืืœืคื™ื ื•ืจื™ื‘ื™ ืจื‘ื‘ื•ืช ืžื ื\"ืฆืœืš. ืฉืื“ื•ืŸ ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™ ืžืชื™ื™ื—ื“ ืขืžื”ื ื™ื™ื—ื•ื“ ื’ืžื•ืจ. ืœื›ืŸ ื”' ืืœื”ื™ ื’ืœ ืขื™ื ื™ ื•ืื‘ื™ื˜ื” ื ืคืœืื•ืช ืžืชื•ืจืชืš ื•ืžื—ื•ืœ ื•ืกืœื— ื•ื”ืขื‘ืจ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื™ ื•ืขื•ื ื•ืชื™ ื•ืคืฉืขื™ ืฉื—ื˜ืืชื™ ื•ืฉืขื•ื™ืชื™ ื•ืฉืคืฉืขืชื™ ืœืคื ื™ืš ืžื™ื•ื ื”ื™ื•ืชื™ ืขืœ ื”ืื“ืžื” ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื ื”ื–ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื™ ืขื– ืคื ื™ื ื•ืงืฉื” ืขื•ืจืฃ ืœื•ืžืจ ืœืคื ื™ ื”' ืืœื”ื™ ื•ืืœื”ื™ ืื‘ื•ืชื™ ืฆื“ื™ืง ืื ื™ ื•ืœื ื—ื˜ืืชื™ ืื‘ืœ ื—ื˜ืืชื™ ืขื•ื™ืชื™ ืคืฉืขืชื™ ืื ื™ ื•ื›ืœ ืžืืชื™ื ื•ืืจื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืžื•ื  ืื‘ืจื™ ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื•ืฉืฉื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉื” ืขื•ืจืงื™ ื•ื’ื™ื“ื™ ื•ื ืคืฉื™ ื•ืจื•ื—ื™ ื•ื ืฉืžืชื™ ื•ื”ื’ืœื•ื™ื ืขืžื™ ื›ืœื ื• ื›ืฆืืŸ ื‘ืœื™ ืจื•ืขื” ืชืขื™ื ื• ื•ืงืœืงืœื ื• ืืช ืืฉืจ ืœื ื ื•ื›ืœ ืœืชืงืŸ ืื ืœื ื‘ืฉืคืข ื”ืจื‘ ื”ื‘ื ืžืœืžืขืœื” ืžืจื•ื ืžืขืœืช ืกื“ืจ ื”ืฆื ื•ืจื•ืช. ื”ื™ื•ื“ืข ืžืขื•ื•ืชื™ ืชืงืŸ ืืช ืืฉืจ ืฉื—ืชืชื™ ื•ื–ื›ื ื™ ื‘ืื•ืจ ืชื•ืจืชืš ื•ื—ืฉื‘ื ื™ ืžืฉื’ื™ืื•ืช ื•ืจื•ื— ื ื“ื™ื‘ื” ืชืกืžื›ื ื™ ื•ืืœืžื“ื” ืคื•ืฉืขื™ื ื“ืจื›ื™ืš ื•ืื‘ื™ื ื” ื ื•ืขื ืจื–ื™ ืชื•ืจืชื™ืš ืœืœืžื•ื“ ื•ืœืœืžื“ ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ื•ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืืžืŸ ื•ืืžืŸ ืกืœื” ื•ืขื“. ื™ื”ื™ื• ืœืจืฆื•ืŸ ืืžืจื™ ืคื™ ื•ื”ื’ื™ื•ืŸ ืœื‘ื™ ืœืคื ื™ืš ื”' ืฆื•ืจื™ ื•ื’ื•ืืœื™. ืขื“ ื›ืืŸ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืชืคืœื” "
384
+ ],
385
+ "": []
386
+ },
387
+ "schema": {
388
+ "heTitle": "ืคืจื“ืก ืจืžื•ื ื™ื",
389
+ "enTitle": "Pardes Rimonim",
390
+ "key": "Pardes Rimonim",
391
+ "nodes": [
392
+ {
393
+ "heTitle": "ื”ืงื“ืžืช ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ",
394
+ "enTitle": "Author's Introduction"
395
+ },
396
+ {
397
+ "heTitle": "ืกื™ืžื ื™ ื”ืกืคืจ",
398
+ "enTitle": "Index"
399
+ },
400
+ {
401
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืงืฉื”",
402
+ "enTitle": "A Prayer"
403
+ },
404
+ {
405
+ "heTitle": "",
406
+ "enTitle": ""
407
+ }
408
+ ]
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+ }
410
+ }
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json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/Ritva's Commentary -- Wikisource.json ADDED
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1
+ {
2
+ "language": "he",
3
+ "title": "Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "versionSource": "https://he.wikisource.org/wiki/%D7%94%D7%92%D7%93%D7%94_%D7%A9%D7%9C_%D7%A4%D7%A1%D7%97_%D7%A8%D7%99%D7%98%D7%91%22%D7%90",
5
+ "versionTitle": "Ritva's Commentary -- Wikisource",
6
+ "status": "locked",
7
+ "license": "Public Domain",
8
+ "versionTitleInHebrew": "ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื— ืจื™ื˜ื‘\"ื -- ื•ื™ืงื™ื˜ืงืกื˜",
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+ "actualLanguage": "he",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "hebrew",
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+ "isBaseText": true,
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+ "isSource": true,
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+ "isPrimary": true,
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+ "direction": "rtl",
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืจื™ื˜ื‘\"ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
16
+ "categories": [
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+ "Liturgy",
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+ "Haggadah",
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+ "Commentary"
20
+ ],
21
+ "text": {
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+ "Magid": {
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+ "Ha Lachma Anya": [
24
+ [],
25
+ [
26
+ "<b>ื•ืืชื—ื™ืœ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื‘ืฉื ื”' ืืœ ืขื•ืœื.</b>",
27
+ "ื•ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ืืžืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืžืกืœืงื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงืขืจื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืจืื• ื”ืชื™ื ื•ืงื•ืช ื•ื™ืฉืืœื•. ื•ื‘ืขื•ื“ ื”ืงืขืจื” ืžืกื•ืœืงืช ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ื•ื›ื•'.\n"
28
+ ],
29
+ [
30
+ "<b>ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžื” ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื›ื ืกื• ื”ืฉื“ื™ื ืืฆืœื ื• ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื ืžื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืจื’ื•ื, ื•ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื–ื” ืื™ื ื• ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ืžืฉื ื” ืืœื ืžืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ื”ืืžื•ืจืื™ื, ืชื™ืงื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืœื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื”ื›ืœ, ื›ื™ ื‘ื–ื” ื”ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•.",
31
+ "ื•ืœืžื” ื ืงืจื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื, ื•ื”ืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืžืฆื” ืฉืœ ืฉืœืžื” ื”ื™ื ืžื•ืชืจืช. ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื™ืกืช ืคืกื— ื”ื™ื ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืขื™ืกืช ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื” (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืž\"ื— ื'), ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื ื™ ื”ื‘ื ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช, ื•ื–ื” ืœืคื™ ื“ืขืชื™ ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ืŸ, ื›ื™ ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ืืฆืœ ืžืฆืช ืžืฆื•ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืื“ืจื‘ื” ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ื”ื•ื ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืžื‘ื•ืจืš (ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืค\"ื’ ื‘'), ืื‘ืœ ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื“ื ืงืจื ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืžืฆื” ืžืชืงื‘ืฆืช ื•ืžืชื—ืกืจืช ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžืฆืœื—ืช ื›ืžื• ื”ื—ืžืฅ, ื›ื™ ืžืขื•ื’ื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ืขื™ืกื” ืจื‘ื•ื›ื” ืชืืคื” ืขื•ื’ืช ื—ืžืฅ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืขื“ ืžืื“, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื ืงืจืืช ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื ืืคื” ื‘ื—ืคื–ื•ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืกืคื™ืง ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืฅ.",
32
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ื›ืคื™ืŸ ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ื™ื›ื•ืœ. </b>ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ื• ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืจืขื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืคืกื— ื›ื“ื™ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ืœืชืื‘ื•ืŸ, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืฆ\"ื˜ ื‘' ืง\"ื– ื‘'). ",
33
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ืฆืจื™ืš ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ืคืกื— .</b> ืฉืื ืื™ืŸ ืœื•, ืจืื•ื™ ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื“ืงื” ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืจ' ืขืงื™ื‘ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื™\"ื‘ ื') ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื—. ื•ื™ืฉ ืขื•ื“ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ื›ืฉื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืœื ื• ืœื—ื ืฆืจ ื•ืžื™ื ืœื—ืฅ ื‘ืžื“ื” ื‘ืžืฉืงืœ ื•ื‘ืžืฉื•ืจื”, ื•ืขืชื” ื™ืฉ ืœื ื• ืื›ื•ืœ ื•ืฉื‘ื•ืข ื•ื”ื•ืชืจ ืœื—ื ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ื—ื™ืจื•ืช.",
34
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื›ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื•ื›ืคืœ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืœื—ื–ืง ื•ืœืงื™ื™ื ื”ืขื ื™ืŸ, ื•ื’ื ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื›ื ืื ื• ืžืงื™ื™ืžื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืœืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื‘ืืจืขื ื“ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื ืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื›ืœ ื—ืงื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื›ื›ืœ ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื•, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืœื›ืš ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื›ื™ืจื• ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื•ื™ืงื˜ืจื’ื• ืขืœื™ื ื• ืฉืื ื• ืžืชืคืืจื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื–ื” ื•ื™ื–ื›ื™ืจื• ืขื•ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ื›ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœื™ื’ืืœ.\n"
35
+ ]
36
+ ],
37
+ "Four Questions": [
38
+ [
39
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ื•ื™ื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืกื—. ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื•ื›ื•'."
40
+ ],
41
+ [
42
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื•ืช ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืžืจื•ืจ.</b> ืงืฉื™ื ืœืจืฉ\"ื™ ื•ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ื”ื•ื ื–\"ืœ ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืžืชื•ืงื™ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื™ื ืžืจื•ืจ ืœื ื• ื–ื›ืจ ืœื•ื™ืžืจืจื• ืืช ื—ื™ื™ื”ื ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืงืฉื”, ื•ืžื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืืจ ืœื™ืœื•ืช ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืจื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ืžืชื•ืง, ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ืŸ, ืืœื ื›ืš ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื•ืช ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื ื• ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืžืชื•ืงื™ื ืฉืžื›ืฉื™ืจื™ื ื”ืื“ื ืœืื›ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืื ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื ื• ืžืจื•ืจ."
43
+ ]
44
+ ],
45
+ "We Were Slaves in Egypt": [
46
+ [],
47
+ [
48
+ "<b>ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื–ื”ื• ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืืžืจื• (ืงื˜\"ื– ื') ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ื•ืžืกื™ื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ื—, ืœืชืช ืฉื‘ื— ื•ื”ื•ื“ืื” ืœืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ืืฉืจ ืžืืฉืคื•ืช ื™ืจื™ื ืื‘ื™ื•ืŸ, ื•ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืžื•ืจืื™ ืžืื™ ื’ื ื•ืช, ืจื‘ ืืžืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืจื‘ื ืืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื”, ื•ืื™ืคืกื™ืงื ื”ืœื›ืชื ื›ื•ืชื™ื” ื“ืจื‘ื ื“ื”ื•ื ื‘ืชืจืื”, ื•ืจื‘ ื ื—ืžืŸ ืขื‘ื“ ื›ื•ืชื™ื” ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื“ื ื“ื“ืจื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื” (ืฉื), ื•ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืœื ื‘ืื™ื–ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื™ืŸ, ื“ืจื‘ ืกื‘ืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ืžืขืฉื”, ื•ืจื‘ื ืืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืชื•ืงืคื• ืฉืœ ื ืก ื•ืื—\"ื› ืžืชื—ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ืข\"ื–, ื•ืœืคื™ ื–ื” ืžื ื”ื’ื™ื ื• ื›ืจื‘ื. ื“ืื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืœื’ืžืจื™, ื ื”ื™ื’ื ื ื“ืœื ื›ื—ื“.",
49
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืงืฉื™ื ื•ื”ื™ืืš ืืคืฉืจ ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืฉื‘ืข ื”ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื”ื–ืžืŸ, ื•ื‘ืœื ืชื ืื™ ื”ื™ืชื”, ื•ื ืจืื” ื“ื›ืš ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืฉืื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืฉื‘ืข ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื‘ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื•, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื“ื•ืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ืจืื•ื™ ืœื™ื’ืืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœืžื“ื• ืžืขืฉื” ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืชืขืจื‘ื™ื ื‘ื”ื ืžืฉื ื•ืื™ืœืš ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื ื’ืืœื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื—ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืขืฆืžื ื• ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ื’ืืœื ื• ืžืื•ืชื• ืขื‘ื“ื•ืช ืื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ื•, ื•ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ื•ื›ื•', ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืฆื™ื•ื ื• ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื ืก ื–ื”, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ื•ืœื ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื•ื ื‘ื•ื ื™ื ื•ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืื ื• ืžืฆื•ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื–ื” ื‘ืฉืžื—ื” ื•ื‘ื”ื•ื“ืื•ืช, ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืจื‘ื” ืœืกืคืจ ื™ื•ืชืจ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืžืฉื•ื‘ื—, ื•ืื ื• ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืจืื™ื” ืœื–ื” ืžืžืขืฉื”."
50
+ ]
51
+ ],
52
+ "Story of the Five Rabbis": [
53
+ [
54
+ "<b> ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื•ืกืคืจื• ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื• ื”ืœื™ืœื”, ื•ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ืืžืจื• ืจ\"ื ืื•ืžืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœืขืกื•ืง ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืกื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื–ืžืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื”ื”ืœืœ ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช ืฉื ื’ืืœื•, ื•ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืœื ื ืจืื” ืœื• ื›ืŸ, ืืœื ื›ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืขื“ ืขืœื•ืช ื”ืฉื—ืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื”, ื•ืืข\"ืค ื›ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ, ื•ืกืชื ื”ืชื ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื•ืื• ืœืงืฆืจ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื—ืฉืฉ ืฉื™ืืžืจื• ืฉืžื ื›ื‘ืจ ื”ื’ื™ืข ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื”ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืกื™ื™ืžื• ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืืจื™ื›ื• ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื."
55
+ ],
56
+ [
57
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื” ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ืžืฉื ื” ื”ื™ื ื‘ืค\"ืง ื“ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช (ื™\"ื‘ ื‘'), ื•ื”ื ื“ืงืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืื ื™ ื›ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืฉื ื” ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืคืจืง ืชืคืœืช ื”ืฉื—ืจ (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื›\"ื— ื') ืขื‘ื™ื“ื• ืœื™ื” ืฉื™ืชืกืจื™ ื“ืจื™ ื—ื™ื•ื•ืจืชื.",
58
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื–ื›ื™ืชื™.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืœื (ื—ืฆืžื•) [ื ืฆื—ืชื™], ื‘ื”ื ื–ื›ื ื”ื• ืœืจื‘ื ืŸ (ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ื™\"ื— ื'), ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ื–\"ืœ ืฉื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื›ืœืœ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืคืจืฉืช ืฆื™ืฆื™ืช ื›ืœืœ ืืœื ืžื“ืœื’ื” ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื“ ื‘') ื“ื‘ืจ ืืœ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื ื™ ื”' ืืœื”ื™ื›ื, ื•ืœื“ืขืชื• ื”ื ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื“ืžืชื ื™' (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื‘ ื‘') ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื•ืช, ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืื‘\"ืข ื ืกืชืžื” ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื•, ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื“ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืœื ืžื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื, ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื›ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืืžืจ ืจื‘ ื ื—ืžืŸ ืœื“ืจื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื” ื‘ืคืกื•ืงื ืงืžื ืฆืขืจืŸ (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื’ ื‘').",
59
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืžืฉื™ื—.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ื’ืžืจื (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื‘ ื‘') ืฉืชื”ื™ื” ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ืขื™ืงืจ ื•ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื˜ืคืœ ืœื”."
60
+ ]
61
+ ],
62
+ "The Four Sons": [
63
+ [
64
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื” ืœืขืžื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ื—ืœื•ืงื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ื ืฉื ืืžืจื• ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ื‘ืขืกืง ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื, ืœื›ืš ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ืืช ื”ืฉื ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืชื•ืจื” ืฉืœื™ืžื”, ื›ื™ ืื—ืจื™ ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจ ืกื™ื ื™ ื›ืžื• ืฉื™ื™ืขื“ื ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื’ืณ:ื™ืดื‘) ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื”ื•ืฆื™ืืš ืืช ื”ืขื ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืชืขื‘ื“ื•ืŸ ืืช ื”ืืœื”ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืจ ื”ื–ื”. ื•ื ืงืจื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืงื•ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืžืงื•ืžื•, ื•ื›ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžืขื•ื ื” ืืœื”ื™ ืงื“ื (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื’:ื›ืดื–) ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ืจื‘ื” (ื‘\"ืจ ืคืจืฉื” ืก\"ื—), ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืืžืจ ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื“ ืฉืœื ื ืชืŸ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืชื•ืจื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื ื”ื•ื ื•ืœื ื—ื›ืžืชื•, ืืœื ื›ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื’ื ื•ื– ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื ืกืชืจ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืจืื”, ื•ื›ืฉื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื– ื”ื•ืคื™ืข ืื•ืจื• ืœื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื, ื•ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืืžืช ื–ื” ื›ืžื• ื”ื ื” ืžืงื•ื ืืชื™ (ืฉืžื•ืช ืœืดื’:ื›ืดื), ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ื ื”ื”ืฉื’ื” ืœืืกืคืงืœืจื™ื ื”ืžืื™ืจื” ืžืงื•ื ืชืžื•ื ืช ื”', ื•ืขืœ ืคื ื™ื ื”ืžืื™ืจื™ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื, ื•ื”ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ื.",
65
+ "<b>ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื”.</b> ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืจืฆื” ืœืงื™ื™ื ืขื ื™ืŸ ืกื™ืคื•ืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื–ืจืขื™ื ื•, ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืœื”ื’ื™ื“ ื•ืœืกืคืจ ืœื›ืœ ื‘ืŸ ื•ื‘ืŸ ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื. ื•ืžื” ื”ืŸ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ืื—ื“ ื—ื›ื ื•ื›ื•'. ื•ื›ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ืžืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื•ื“ืจืฉื•ื ื—ื–\"ืœ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื."
66
+ ],
67
+ [
68
+ "<b>ื—ื›ื ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ .ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื•ืืชื—ื ืŸ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืณ:ื›ืณ) ื›ื™ ื™ืฉืืœืš ื‘ื ืš ืžื—ืจ ืœืืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืžืฉืืœืชื• ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื“ืงื“ืง ื‘ื›ืœ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ ื”ืคืกื— ื ื™ื›ืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื›ื, ืฉื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ืขื“ื•ืช ื—ืงื™ื ื•ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื, ื•ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื”ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื˜ืขื ืฉื”ื ืขื“ื•ืช ืขืœ ื’ืื•ืœืช ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ, ืฉื”ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ื•ืœื•ื™ืžืจืจื• ืืช ื—ื™ื™ื”ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืกื—, ื–ื›ืจ ืฉืคืกื— ื”ืžืงื•ื ืขืœ ื‘ืชื™ ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื‘ื˜ืœื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื–ืœื ื•ืืœื”ื™ื”ื ืขืฉื” ื”' ืฉืคื˜ื™ื.",
69
+ " <b>ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉืื™ืŸ ื ืจืื” ื‘ื”ื ื˜ืขื ืžื•ืกื‘ืจ ื›ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ืขืฆื ืœื ืชืฉื‘ืจื• ื‘ื• ื•ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ืื—ืช. ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉื˜ืขืžื• ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืงื‘ืœื” ื›ื™ ืืข\"ืค ืฉืื›ืœื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ืฉื™ื‘ืจื• ืืช ืขืฆืžื•ืชื ื•ืœื ื›ื™ืœื• ืื•ืชื ื•ื›ื™ ืชืžื™ื“ ื”ื™ื• ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ืžื™ื˜ื‘ ื”ืืจืฅ. ",
70
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื.</b> ื›ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจืœ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื• ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืืจ ื“ื™ื ื™ ื—ืžืฅ ื•ืžืฆื” ื•ื“ืงื“ื•ืงื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื [ืฉ]ื‘ื”ื, ืจืฆื” ืœื“ืขืช ืขื™ืงืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื.",
71
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืš ื”ื’ื™ืจืกื ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื ื•ืกื—ืื•ืช ืฉืœื ื•, ื•ืงืฉื” ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื–ื• ืœืฉืืœื” ื–ื•, ื•ืจืฉ\"ื™ ื–\"ืœ ืคื™ืจืฉ ื“ืฉืืœืช ื”ื—ื›ื ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื›ื•' ื›ืœืœ ื‘ื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื™ืงืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื”ื•ื ื”ืคืกื— ืœืžื” ืื ื• ืžืงื“ื™ืžื™ืŸ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ืžืฉื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื• ื›ื™ ืื ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ื–ื” ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื—, ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื•ื‘ืข, ื•ื’ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจื™ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืืจ ื˜ืขืžื• ื‘ืคื™ื ื•, ื•ืžืชื•ืš ื”ื˜ืขื ื ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื˜ืขืžื™ ื”ืžืฆื•ื” ื•ื ืกืคืจ ื‘ื” ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ืืžืจื• ืืฃ ืืชื” ืคืชื— ืœื• ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ืคืœื™ื’ ืœื“ืงื“ืง ื•ืœืฉืื•ืœ ื•ื’ื ืืชื” ืชืŸ ืœื—ื›ื ื•ื™ื—ื›ื ืขื•ื“ ื•ื”ืฉื™ื‘ื”ื• ื›ืœ ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืืคื™' ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื ืชืงื ืช ื—ื–\"ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืฉื•ื ืกืžืš ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื” ืฉืชื™ืงื ื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืœืคื™ ื’ื™ืจืกืชื™ื ื• ื›ืš ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ืฉืืจ ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื”ืคื˜ืจื” ื–ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื•ืกื™ื•ื ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื‘ื• ื ืคื˜ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืคื™ืจืฉื•ื”ื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื, ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ืค\"ื™ ื”\"ื“) ื”ื’ื™ืจืกื ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ืื‘ืœ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืฉื™ื ื•ื™ ื›ื™ ืฉื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื”ื–ื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื˜ืคืฉ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ, ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืœื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืฉื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ื‘ื™ืŸ, ื•ืขืœ ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ื”ื‘ืŸ ื—ื›ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ื–ืง ื™ื“ ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื”' ืžืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืชืžื”ื ื™ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืฉืืœื” ื”ื–ืืช ื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ืืžืจื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ื›ื ื’ื“ื” (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืณ:ื›ืดื“) ื•ืืžืจืช ืœื‘ื ืš ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ืฆื•ื ื• ื”' ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืืช ื›ืœ ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื›ื•'. ื•ืœืคื™ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื›ืชื‘ื ื• ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื‘ื›ืœืœ, ื›ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื—, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืฃ ืืชื” ื•ื›ื•'."
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ "<b>ืจืฉืข ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืค๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืจืฉื• ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ืค\"ื™ ื”\"ื“) ืžื” ื”ื˜ื•ืจื— ืฉืืชื ืžื˜ืจื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื‘ื–ื” ืœืขื›ื‘ ืืช ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœืขืจื‘ื‘ ืฉืžื—ืช ื”ื—ื’, ื›ื™ ืจืฉืข ื›ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืืคื• ื‘ืœ ื™ื“ืจื•ืฉ (ืชื”ื™ืœื™ื ื™ืณ:ื“ืณ), ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืœื›ื, ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ื•ื›ืคืจ ื‘ืขื™ืงืจ (ื›ื™) [ื›ืื™ืœื•] ื”ื•ื ืœื ื ืฆื˜ื•ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ. ืืฃ ืืชื” ื”ืงื”ื” ืืช ืฉื™ื ื™ื•. ื”ืจื•ืฆื™ื ืœืœืขื•ืก ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ. ื•ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืฆืืชื™ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื•.",
75
+ "ื•ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ื”ื•ื ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื ืขืœ ืคืจืขื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื›ืดื•) ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื, ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ืžื—ืจ, ืจืžื– ืขืœ ื‘ื ื™ื”ื ืžืžืฉ ืฉื ื•ืœื“ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืชืจื‘ื•ืช ืื ืฉื™ื ื—ื˜ืื™ื ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืœื›ื ื•ืœื ืœื•, ื•ืž\"ืž ืชืžื”ื ื™ ืฉืื ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืชืฉื•ื‘ืชื• ืฉื‘ืฆื“ื” ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืฉืชืฉื•ื‘ืชื• ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื”ื™ื (ืฉื) ื•ืืžืจืชื ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”'. ื•ื ืจืื” ืœื™ ื›ื™ ื”ื“ืจืฉื ื‘ื–ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื›ืืŸ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ื ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ ื•ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืืžืจื• ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื‘ืฉื•ืจื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื ืชื‘ืฉืจื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื ืขืชื™ื“ื™ื ืœืจืื•ืช ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืงื•ื“ ื”ืขื ื•ื™ืฉืชื—ื•ื•, ื•ืœื‘ื ื™ื [ื \"ื: ื•ืืžื ื] ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื”ื–ืžืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืืฉื™ืžื ื›ืœ ื›ืš, ื›ื™ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื•ื ืืฆืœื ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืกื•ืจื ืจืข, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœืคื™ื™ืกื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ืœื”ื ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”', <small>]ื\"ื”, ื ืจืื” ืฉื—ืกืจ ื›ืืŸ, ืฉืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืžืฉ\"ื› ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืœื”ืœืŸ ื”ื ื’\"ื› ืฉื ื™ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื ื›ื•' ื ืจืื” ืฉื—ืกืจ, ืฉืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉ ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ.[</small> ื•ื‘ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ืคืกื— ืขืœ ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืืช ื‘ืชื™ื ื• ื”ืฆื™ืœ ื”ื ื’\"ื› ืฉื ื™ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื, ื›ื™ ืขืœ ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืจืžื– ืขืœ ื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ื›ื™ ืขืœ ืื•ืชื ืฉื”ืืžื™ื ื• ื‘ื”' ื•ื”ื™ื• ืžื–ืจืข ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืคืกื—, ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื• ืฉืœื ืกืžื›ื• ื‘ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ื›ื™ ื›ื•ืœื ืžืชื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ืืคื™ืœื”, ื•ืœื ืขื•ื“ ืืœื ืฉื›ืœืœ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื–ื• ื‘ืื•ืžืจื• ืืฃ ืืชื” ื”ืงื”ื” ืืช ืฉื™ื ื™ื•, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ืฉื›ืคืจ ื‘ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื‘ืŸ ื ื›ืจ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื• ื•ืฉื™ื ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื” ืชืงื”ื ื” ืฉืจื•ืื” ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืฉืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ, ื›ื™ ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”' ืœืื•ืชื ืฉืคืกื— ืขืœื™ื”ื ืฉื”ื ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื•, ื•ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ืขื•ื ืฉื• ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื•, ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืงื“ืง ื”ืจืฉืข ื‘ืžืœืช ืœื›ื ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ืื ื• ื’ื ื›ืŸ ืžื”ืคื›ื™ืŸ ื•ื“ื•ืจืฉื™ืŸ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ, ืœื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื–ื” ืžืฉืžืขื• ืฉืœ ืžืงืจื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืฃ ืœืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืื ื• ืžืฉื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ.",
76
+ "ื•ื”ื—ื›ื ืฉืืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื›ื•' ืืฉืจ ืฆื•ื” ื”' ืืœื”ื™ื ื• ืืชื›ื, ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ื• ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืืชื›ื, ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืืœื”ื™ื ื•. ื•ืžื”ื• ืืชื›ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืืชื ืฉื™ืฆืืชื ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืืœื™ื›ื. [<small>ื‘ื’ืœื™ื•ืŸ ื”ื›ืช\"ื™ ื›ืชื•ื‘</small>: ื•ื›\"ื› ื”ืชื•ืก' ื‘ืคื™' ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื•ื–\"ืœ ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ืืชื›ื ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื›ืžื• ืœื›ื ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžื”ื›ืœืœ ื•ื”ื ื“ืงืืžืจ ืืชื›ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืฉืขื” ืฉืฆื•ื” ื”' ืื•ืชื” ืžืฆื•ื”, <small>ืขื›\"ืœ</small>]."
77
+ ],
78
+ [
79
+ "<b>ืชื.</b> ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื›ื ื•ืœื ืจืฉืข ื ืงืจื ืชื. ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื” ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื’:ื™ืดื“) ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืฉืืœืš ื‘ื ืš ืžื—ืจ ืœืืžืจ ืžื” ื–ืืช, ื•ืืžืจืช ืืœื™ื• ื‘ื—ื–ืง ื™ื“ ื›ื•'. ื•ื”ื•ื ื›ื•ื— ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ."
80
+ ],
81
+ [
82
+ "<b> ื•ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืืช ืคืชื— ืœื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื™ ืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ืฉืืœืช ืฉื•ื ื‘ืŸ, ืืœื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืžืขืฆืžืš. ื•ื›ืžื“ื•ืžื” ืœื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื™ื ื• ืžื›ืœ ื–ื”, ื›ื™ ืืข\"ืค ืฉืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืœืคืจืฉ ืœื ืฉื™ื ื•ืœืงื˜ื ื™ื ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื.",
83
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจ\"ื— ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ืคื™' ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ, ืืœื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืชืคืก ื”ืชื ื ื”ืžืงืจื ื“ื•ืจืฉ ืื•ืชื•. ื•ืœื–ื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืื™ืžืชื™ ื”ื•ื ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช. ื•ืืžืจ ืื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืกืชื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื”ื™ื™ืชื™ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ื›ื™ ืฉืžื ืžืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ืื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ื–ื”, ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื“ืจืฉ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืœืžืขืœื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื’:ื”ืณ) ื•ืขื‘ื“ืช ืืช ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ื‘ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื–ื”, ืœื›ืš ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื‘ืขื™ืฆื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ื™ืชื™ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื ืชื—ื™ืœ ืœื”ื’ื™ื“ ื›ืŸ ืžื‘ืขื•ื“ ื™ื•ื, ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ื™\"ื“, ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื• ืžืชื—ืœืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื• ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœืดื’:ื’ืณ) ืžืžื—ืจืช ื”ืคืกื— ื™ืฆืื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ื™ื“ ืจืžื”, ืฉืจ\"ืœ ืžืžื—ืจืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜\"ื• ื™ืฆืื•, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ ื›ืืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžื‘ืขื•ื“ ื™ื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื’ื“ื”, ืช\"ืœ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื”, ืœื ืืžืจืชื™ ืœืš ืœืกืคืจ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืฉืชื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืื•ืชื ื‘ืืฆื‘ืข ืฉืืชื” ืื•ืžืจ ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ืžืจื•ืจ ื–ื”, ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉืกื™ื™ื ื”ืชื ื ืกื“ืจ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื—ื–ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ื•ื›ื•'."
84
+ ]
85
+ ],
86
+ "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers": [
87
+ [
88
+ "<b>ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืกื™ื•ื ื”ื’ื ื•ืช (ืขื™' ืœืขื™ืœ ื“\"ื” ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•), ื•ืื•ืœื™ ื”ื•ื ื’\"ื› ืžื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœืคืจืฉ ืœืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ื”ืจืฉืข ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ. ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืจืื™ื” ืžื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืฉืกื™ืคืจ ื’\"ื› ืœืื ืฉื™ ื“ื•ืจื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืขื ื•ื›ื•'.",
89
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืขื‘ื“ื• ืืœื”ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื.</b> ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืขืœ ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื”ื ื–ื›ืจื™ื ืชืจื— ื•ื ื—ื•ืจ, ืœื ืขืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื, ื›ื™ ืžืงื˜ื ื•ืชื• ื”ื›ื™ืจ ืืช ื‘ื•ืจืื• ื•ืžืืก ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›ื™ื“ื•ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื–\"ืœ ื•ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชื™ื™ื, ื•ืžืขืฆืžื• ืขืฉื” ื•ืœื ืžืชืจื‘ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื•, ื•ืžืื‘ ื•ืื ืื—ื“ ื™ืฆืื• ื”ื•ื ื•ื ื—ื•ืจ, ื–ื” ื”ืœืš ืœืข\"ื– ื•ื–ื” ืขื‘ื“ ืืช ื”ืฉื, ื•ืžืืก ื‘ื›ืœ ื–ืจืข ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืงืจื ื”' ืื—ื“, ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉื ื‘ื“ืœ ื”ื•ื ืžื›ืœ ื”ืื•ืžื•ืช ืœืงืจื•ื ื‘ืฉื ื”' ืื—ื“ ื›ืš ื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœื• ื”' ื•ืœืงื—ื• ื”ื•ื ื•ื–ืจืขื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืœื• ืœื’ื•ื™ ืื—ื“ ื‘ืืจืฅ, ืžื“ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžื“ื”, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืืงื— ืืช ืื‘ื™ื›ื ืืช ืื‘ืจื”ื ืžืขื‘ืจ ื”ื ื”ืจ, ื›ืคืฉื•ื˜ื•, ื•ื’ื ืžื•ืจื” ื‘ื“ืจืš ื”ืืžืช ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืžืื•ืชื ืฉืฉื•ื›ื ื™ื ื‘ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื ื”ืจ ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืขื“ืŸ, ืฉืคื™ืจืฉื• ืžืŸ ื”ืขื™ืงืจ."
90
+ ],
91
+ [
92
+ "<b>ื•ืื•ืœืš ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืœ ืืจืฅ ื›ื ืขืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื™ืดื’:ื™ืดื–) ืงื•ื ื”ืชื”ืœืš ื‘ืืจืฅ ืœืืจื›ื” ื•ืœืจื—ื‘ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื”ื ื ื•ื—ื” ืœื™ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœื‘ื ื™ื•, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืง ื™ืฉ ื ื•ื—ืœื™ืŸ (ื‘\"ื‘ ืง' ื'), ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืชื”ื ืžืชื ื” ืžื•ื—ื–ืงืช ืžืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืฉืœื ืชืชื‘ื˜ืœ ื‘ืฉื•ื ืขื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ื–ืจืขื•, ื•ื’ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ื˜ืขื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื ื‘ื” ืฉืœื ื™ืืžืจื• ืฉื‘ืื™ื ืœื’ื–ื•ืœ ืžื”ื, ืฉื™ืฉื™ื‘ื• ืœื”ื ืื“ืจื‘ื” ืื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ื—ื–ื™ืง ื‘ื” ื•ืืชื ื‘ืื™ื ืœื’ื–ื•ืœ ืื•ืชื” ืžืžื ื• ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืชืžืœืื” ืกืืชื ื•ื–ืžืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคื™ืจื•ืชื™ื”ื, ื›ื™ ื ื™ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ืœืคื™ืจื•ืช ืื•ืœื™ ื™ื—ื–ืจื• ืœืืžื•ื ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื”ื›ื ืขื ื™ ืื– ื‘ืืจืฅ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื•ืณ) ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืœื ืฉืœื ืขื•ืŸ ื”ืืžื•ืจื™ ืขื“ ื”ื ื” (ืฉื ื˜\"ื•).",
93
+ "<b>ื•ืืจื‘ื” ืืช ื–ืจืขื•. </b>ืืžืจื• ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ืค\"ื™ ื”\"ื”) ืืžืจ ืจื‘ ืื—ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืืจื‘ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื—ืกืจ, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ื–\"ืœ, ื•ืืจื™ื‘ ืขื ื–ืจืขื•, ื‘ื ื™ ืงื˜ื•ืจื”, ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืžืฉืžื•ืชืŸ ืืชื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื™ื“ืข ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื ืงืจืื• ืขืœ ืฉื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” (ืคืจืฉื” ืก\"ื), ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ืืš ื™ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื‘ื ื™ ืงื˜ื•ืจื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœื™ืฆื—ืง ืฉื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืชื—ืœื”, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื™ืฉ ืœืคืจืฉ ื”ืจื‘ื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืฉื™ืชื™ ืขืžื• ื•ื”ืจื‘ื” ื ืกื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื ืชืชื™ ืœื• ืืช ื™ืฆื—ืง, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื ืกื•ืชื•, ื“ื‘ืจื™ื‘ื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื•ื‘ืงื•ืฉื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื ืœื• ื”ื–ืจืข.",
94
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœื• ืืช ื™ืฆื—ืง.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื–ืจืขื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื›ืดื:ื™ืดื‘) ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืฆื—ืง ื™ืงืจื ืœืš ื–ืจืข. ื•ื›ืœืœ ื‘ืžืœืช ื•ืืชืŸ, ืฉื ืชื ื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžืขืจื›ื•ืช ื”ื›ื•ื›ื‘ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื˜ืดื•:ื”ืณ) ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ืื•ืชื• ื”ื—ื•ืฆื”, ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืื‘ืจื”ื ืจื•ืื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืขืžื™ื“ ืฉื•ื ื–ืจืข ืžืฉืจื” ื”ืฆื“ืงืช, ื›ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื• ืฉืœ ืชืจื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืข\"ื– ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืฆืืช ื›ืœ ื–ืจืขื• ื›ืฉืจ ื•ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื• ื ื•ื‘ืœื•ืช ืคืจื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื ืชื—ืœืง ื–ืจืขื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื—ืง.",
95
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœื™ืฆื—ืง ืืช ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื™ ืจื‘ืงื” ื’\"ื› ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืงืจื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ืื™ืžื”ื•ืช, ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ื˜ืขืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืžื›ืœืœื ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืžื–ืœ ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื•ื“ืข ื‘ืืžืช, ื›ื™ ืœื›ืš ื™ืฆื ืขืฉื• ื”ืจืฉืข ืชืื•ื ืขื ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ื‘ื‘ื˜ืŸ ืื—ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื• ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื ื›ื™ ืฆื“ืงืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืžืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืื” ืœื• ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืขืจื›ืช ืžื–ืœ ื•ืœื ื‘ื˜ื‘ืข ืื‘ ื•ืื ื•ืœื ืžื›ืจื™ื— ืื—ืจ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ื‘ื˜ืŸ ืื—ืช ื ื•ืœื“ื• ื”ื•ื ื•ืขืฉื•, ื•ืขืฉื• ื™ืฆื ืœืชืจื‘ื•ืช ืจืขื” ื•ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืœืš ื‘ื“ืจืš ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื.",
96
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœืขืฉื• ืืช ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ืžืคื ื™ ื–ื›ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื—ืง, ื•ืฆื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืฉืœื ื™ืชื’ืจื• ื‘ื• ืžืœื—ืžื” ื›ืœืœ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืณ:ื”ืณ) ื›ื™ ื™ืจื•ืฉื” ืœืขืฉื• ื ืชืชื™ ืืช ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ, ืจืžื– ืขืœ ืกื•ืจื• ื•ืขื ื™ื™ื ื•, ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืฉ ืฉืขื™ืจ, ื•ืžืงื•ืžื• ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ, ื•ื—ืœืงื• ื”ืฉืขื™ืจื™ื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืขืชื™ื“ ืœืงื‘ืœ ืขื•ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ ื•ื’ื–ืจื•ืชื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืขืชื™ื“ ืœื‘ื ื›ื™ ืื— ืœืฆืจื” ื™ื•ืœื“ (ืžืฉืœื™ ื™ืดื–:ื™ืดื–), ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืœื›ืœ ื›ื™ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ื•ื ื–ืจืขื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื—ืง ื•ืฉืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื‘ื• ืžืชืงื™ื™ืžืช ื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื›ื™ ื’ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ื–ืจืขืš ื•ื›ื•', ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื‘ื ื™ื• ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื™ืจื“ื• ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉืงื™ื™ื ืœื”ื ื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื”ื’ืœื•ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื•ื›ืฉ\"ื› ืฉื™ืงื™ื™ื ืœื”ื ื’ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช, ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื’ื ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื•ื“ื• ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™, ืฉื“ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ืžื™ื“ืชื ื‘ื ื’ืขื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ื‘ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื—:ื™ืดื) ื›ื™ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืืฉืจ ื–ื“ื• ืขืœื™ื”ื ื›ืž\"ืฉ ื”ืžืชืจื’ื (ืื•ื ืงืœื•ืก ืฉื), ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ืกื™ื“ืจ ื”ืžืกื“ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ื•'."
97
+ ],
98
+ [
99
+ "<b> ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื”ื™ื ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืช ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™ ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ื™ืฆืื• ื‘ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื•ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืฆื•ื” ื–ื• ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื˜ืดื•:ื™ืดื“) ื”ืขื ืง ืชืขื ื™ืง ืœื• ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืฉืœื›ืš ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืืช ื”' ื‘ื™ืจื™ื“ืช ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืฆืจื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืฉื ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืš ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืจืขื”. ืฉื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ. ืžื™ื•ื ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉื’ื–ืจ."
100
+ ],
101
+ [],
102
+ [
103
+ "<b>ื•</b>ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ื” <b>ื”ื™ื ืฉืขืžื“ื” ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœื ื•,</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ื‘ืจื™ืช ืฉื›ืจืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ื›ืฉื ืคืœื” ืขืœื™ื• ืื™ืžื” ื—ืฉื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉื”ืจืื”ื• ืืจื‘ืขื” ื’ืœื™ื•ืช ื•ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื• ืฉื™ืžืœื˜ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžื”ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื• ื’\"ื› ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉืืžืจ ืœื• ืงื—ื” ืœื™ ืขื’ืœื” ืžืฉื•ืœืฉืช ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ (ื‘\"ืจ ืคืจืฉื” ืž\"ื“), ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจ ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื›ืœื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืฆื™ืœื ื• ืžื™ื“ื ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ื‘ื”ืฆืœื—ื” ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืฆื ื•ืœืžื“ ื•ื›ื•'."
104
+ ]
105
+ ],
106
+ "First Fruits Declaration": [
107
+ [],
108
+ [
109
+ "<b>ืฆื ื•ืœืžื“ ืžื” ื‘ืงืฉ ืœื‘ืŸ ื›ื•'.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื—ื™ื ื• ื‘ืฉืจื ื• ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื™ืขืงื‘ ืื‘ื™ื ื•.",
110
+ "<b>ืฉืคืจืขื” ืœื ื’ื–ืจ ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื–ื›ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืืžืจื• ืœื• ืืฆื˜ื’ื ื™ื ื™ื• ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ืœื”ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืฉื™ืข ืืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื›ืž\"ืฉ ืจื–\"ืœ.",
111
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™.</b> ืจืฆื” ืœืื‘ื“ ืืช ืื‘ื™ ื›ืž\"ืฉ ื”ืžืชืจื’ื ืœื‘ืŸ ืืจืžืื” ื‘ืขื ืœืื•ื‘ื“ื ื™ืช ืื‘ื ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืชืœื” ืœื• ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื™ื‘ื“. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ื‘ื™ื˜ืœ ืขืฆืชื• ื•ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ืžืงื ื” ืœืจื•ื‘ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืœืณ:ืžืดื’) ื•ื™ืคืจื•ืฅ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžืื“ ืžืื“, ื•ื›ืœืœ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืืœื” ื”ื•ื ืžื” ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ืœื™ืืจืข ืœื‘ื ื™ื, ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ืœ ืกื™ืžืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ื, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ."
112
+ ],
113
+ [
114
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจื“ ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืชื™ืžื” ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ืจื“ ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ืืฆืœ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™. ื•ื™\"ืœ ืฉื‘ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœืคืจืฉ ืฉื›ืœ ื–ื” ื ื—ืฉื‘ ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืจื•ืช ื•ืžื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ืื—ืจ ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ื”ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืฆืขืจ ื•ื‘ื ืกื™ื•ื ื•ืช ื•ืœื ืจืื• ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘ื”. ",
115
+ "ื•ืืžืจื• <b>ืื ื•ืก ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ื“ื™ื‘ื•ืจ</b>, ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื•ืืขืค\"ื› ืœื ืฉื‘ ืœืื—ื•ืจ.",
116
+ "ื•ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืžืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™ ื•ื›ื•' ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ื’ื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืคืจืฉื” ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื˜\"ื– ื'), ื•ื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืจืฉื• ื›ืž\"ืฉ ื‘ืกืคืจื™.",
117
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื’ืจ ืฉื.</b> ืฉืžื ืชืืžืจ ืฉื ื˜ืœ ื›ืชืจ ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ืช\"ืœ ื•ื™ื’ืจ ืฉื, ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ื›ื’ืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื“.",
118
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœ ืคืจืขื” ืœื’ื•ืจ ื‘ืืจืฅ ื‘ืื ื• ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžืจืขื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืžืจืขื”."
119
+ ],
120
+ [
121
+ "ื•ืฉืžื ืชืืžืจ ื‘ืื•ื›ืœื•ืกื™ืŸ ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืช\"ืœ <b>ื‘ืžืชื™ ืžืขื˜</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื ืคืฉ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืกืคืจื™."
122
+ ],
123
+ [],
124
+ [
125
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื‘ื” ื›ืฆืžื— ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืš ืงื‘ืœื ื•, ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉื• ืœืฉื ื™ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ืจื‘ ื›ืจื‘ื‘ื” ื•ื›ืฆืžื— ื”ืฉื“ื”, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื’ื•ื–ื–ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื ืฆื•ืžื—ื™ื ื™ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืฆื•ืžื—ื™ื ื‘ืœื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืจื‘ื” ืืœื ืžืื™ืœื™ื”ื, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื›ืœ ื–ื” ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื ืจื‘ ืขื ื™ื•ืฆืจื•. ",
126
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืขืจื•ื ื•ืขืจื™ื”.</b> ืขืจื•ืžื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืื‘ื•ืช, ื•ืžื”ื• ืขืจื™ื”, ื›ืžื” ื“ืชื™ืžื (ื—ื‘ืงื•ืง ื’ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ืขืจื™ื” ืชืขื•ืจ ืงืฉืชืš, ืฉืœื ืงื™ื™ืžื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžื™ืœื” ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื (ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื) ื”ื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ืžืชื™ื ื‘ืŸ ื—ืจืฉ ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ื˜ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ืืขื‘ื•ืจ ืขืœื™ืš ื•ืืจืืš ื•ื”ื ื” ืขืชืš ืขืช ื“ื•ื“ื™ื, ื”ื’ื™ืขื” ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืฉื‘ืข ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื’ื•ืืœ ืืช ื‘ื ื™ื• ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ืฉื™ืชืขืกืงื• ื‘ื”ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืฉื“ื™ื ื ื›ื•ื ื• ื•ืฉืขืจืš ืฆืžื—, ืžื”ื• ืฉื“ื™ื ื ื›ื•ื ื•, ื–ื” ืžืฉื” ื•ืื”ืจืŸ, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ื“ืณ:ื”ืณ) ืฉื ื™ ืฉื“ื™ืš ื›ืฉื ื™ ืขืคืจื™ื ื•ื’ื•', ื•ืฉืขืจืš ืฆืžื—, ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืงืฅ ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”, ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืฉืชื™ ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ืฉื™ืชืขืกืงื• ื‘ื”ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ืคืกื— ื•ืžืฆื•ืช ืžื™ืœื”, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ืฉื) ื•ืืขื‘ื•ืจ ืขืœื™ืš ื•ืืจืืš ืžืชื‘ื•ืกืกืช ื•ืื•ืžืจ ืœืš ื‘ื“ืžื™ื™ืš ื—ื™ื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ ื“ืžื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ืžืดื—) ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจืœ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื•, ื•ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ืžืœ ืื•ืชื, ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื‘ื™ื˜ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžื™ืœื” ื‘ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉื‘ื˜ ืœื•ื™ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื’:ื˜ืณ) ื•ื‘ืจื™ืชืš ื™ื ืฆื•ืจื•, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืืฃ ืฉื‘ื˜ื• ืฉืœ ืœื•ื™ ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื”ื˜ื™ืฃ ืžื”ื ื“ื ื‘ืจื™ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื›ื ืกื• ืชื—ืช ื›ื ืคื™ ื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื”, ื•ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื•ื ื‘ื™ื“ื, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžื™ืคืงื“ื™ ืืžื™ืœื”, ืžื™ืœืชื ืกื’ื™' ืœื”ื•, ื•ืœื ื“ืžื™ ืœืขืจื‘ื™ ืžื”ื•ืœ, ื“ื”ื”ื•ื ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื ืžื”ื™ืœื™ ื“ืžื™ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืข\"ื– ื‘ืคืจืง ืื™ืŸ ืžืขืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ (ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›\"ื– ื')."
127
+ ],
128
+ [
129
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจืขื• ืื•ืชื ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืจืื• ืฉื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืคืจื™ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœืขื ื•ืชื™ื ื•, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืืžืจ ืืœ ืขืžื• ื”ื ื” ืขื ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืจื‘ ื•ืขืฆื•ื ืžืžื ื• ื”ื‘ื” ื ืชื—ื›ืžื” ืœื• ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืจืื™ื” ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืœื ืขื™ื ื• ืื•ืชื ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืืœื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื”ื ื•ืœื”ืชื ืคืœ ื•ืœื”ืชื’ื•ืœืœ ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ื ื›ืœืžื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืœืฉืœื•ื— ื‘ื”ื ื™ื“ ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ืื• ื‘ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื ื•ื ืชื™ื™ืฉื‘ื• ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืžืฆื•ืชื ื•ื–ื” ื ืงืจื ื‘ื’ื™ื“ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”, ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืกื•ื˜ื” (ื™\"ื ื') ืœื”ื ืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ืœื•, ื ืชื—ื›ื ืขืœ ืžื•ืฉื™ืขืŸ ืœื“ื•ื ื ื‘ืžื™ื, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืฉื‘ืข ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžื‘ื•ืœ ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ื”ื ืœื ื™ื“ืขื• ื›ื™ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืขืœ ืื•ืžื” ืื—ืช ืžื‘ื™ื, ื•ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ืืžืจื• (ื•ื™ืง\"ืจ ืค' ื›\"ื–) ื ืชื—ื›ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœืคื ื™ื ื•, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื‘ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื”ื ืจืข ื‘ืคืจื”ืกื™ื ืืœื”ื™ื”ื ืžื•ืฉื™ืข ืื•ืชื ื›ืžื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื•ืขืฉื•, ื•ืœื ื ืขืฉื” ื›ืขืฉื• ืฉืืžืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ื• ื™ืžื™ ืื‘ืœ ืื‘ื™ ื•ืื”ืจื’ื” ืืช ื™ืขืงื‘ ืื—ื™ ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ื“ืข ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืš ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืš ื™ื•ืœื™ื“ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ื ื™ื, ืืœื ื”ื‘ื” ื ืชื—ื›ืžื” ืœื”ื ืžื™ื“ ืœื’ื–ื•ืจ ืžื™ืชื” ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ื”ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืœื•ื“ ื”ื™ืื•ืจื” ืชืฉืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื•."
130
+ ],
131
+ [
132
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืขื ื•ื ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืฉื™ืžื• ืขืœื™ื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื”ื›ืœ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขื ื•ืชื ื•ืœืžืขื˜ื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ื ื™ื™ื ื™ื ื—ื–ืงื™ื ืœืžืœืš ื•ืืžืจื• ืฉื™ืกื™ื™ืขื•ื”ื•, ื•ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืกื•ื˜ื” ื™\"ื ื') ืฉืชืœื• ืœื• ืžืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืฆื•ืืจื• ืฉืœ ืžืœืš, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ื”ืžืœืš ื”ื™ื” ืžืกื™ื™ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ, ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืžืœืš ื ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ืชื ื• ืขืœื™ื”ื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืงืฉื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืš, ื›ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืžืขื˜ ืžืขื˜ ื”ื™ื• ืžืชื’ื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืžืฉืœื• ืœืžืจื•ืจ ืฉืชื—ื™ืœืชื• ืจืš ื•ืกื•ืคื• ืงืฉื”."
133
+ ],
134
+ [
135
+ "<b>ื‘ืคืจืš</b> ืžืชืจื’ืžื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงืฉื™ื•, ื•ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืืžืจื• ืœื”ื ื›ื™ ื”ืžืœืื›ื” ื ื—ื•ืฆื” ื•ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืœื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ืขืฉื• ืจืฆื•ืŸ ื”ืžืœืš ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชืจืฆื” ืœื›ื, ื›ื™ ื”ื˜ื™ื‘ ืœื›ื ื•ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื, ื•ื”ื ื”ืชื—ื–ืงื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืื—\"ื› ืฉืžื• ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœื—ืง ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืื•ืชื• ื”ืกืš ื™ื•ื ื™ื•ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืคืจืš ื‘ืคื” ืจืš."
136
+ ],
137
+ [],
138
+ [],
139
+ [
140
+ "<b>ื•ื ืฆืขืง ืืœ ื”' ื•ื›ื•' ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื™ืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื›ื™ ืžืขื˜ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื•ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉืœ ืฆืขืจ ื ืงืจืื• ืจื‘ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜\"ื•) ื•ืืฉื” ื›ื™ ื™ื–ื•ื‘ ื–ื•ื‘ ื“ืžื” ื™ืžื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื ืืœื ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื.",
141
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืžืช ืžืœืš ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื™ืื ื—ื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื–\"ืœ ืžืคื™ ื”ืฉืžื•ืขื”, ืฉื ืฆื˜ืจืข ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ื”ื™ืœื“ื™ื ืœืจื—ื•ืฅ ื‘ื“ืžื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื™ื–ืขืงื• ื›ืžื• ืžืขื™ืจ ืžืชื™ื ื™ื–ืขืงื• (ืขื™' ืื™ื•ื‘ ื›ืดื“:ื™ืดื‘), ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื–\"ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืขื‘ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืœืš ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืขื‘ื™ื“ืŸ ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืžืคื ื™ ื—ื™ื‘ืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืกืฃ ืื‘ืœ ื–ื” ื”ืžืœืš ื—ื™ื“ืฉ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื’ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื›ืจื™ื—ื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”."
142
+ ],
143
+ [
144
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืฉืžืข ื”' ืืช ืงื•ืœื ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ื–ื›ื•ืจ ืืœื”ื™ื ืืช ื‘ืจื™ืชื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื™ ืืข\"ืค ืฉื‘ื–ื›ื•ืชื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืื•ื™ื ืœื™ื’ืืœ, ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืจื™ืช ื”ืื‘ื•ืช, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื“ื ืคืกื— (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ื”ื’ืขืชื ืืœ ื”ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื•ืืœ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช, ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื–ื” ืื‘ืจื”ื ื•ืฉืชื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช ืืœื• ื™ืฆื—ืง ื•ื™ืขืงื‘."
145
+ ],
146
+ [
147
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจื ืืช ืขื ื™ื ื• ื–ื• ืคืจื™ืฉื•ืช ื“ืจืš ืืจืฅ.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืœ\"ื) ืื ืชืขื ื” ืืช ื‘ื ื•ืชื™ ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ (ื™ื•ืžื ืข\"ื– ื‘') ืœืžื ื•ืข ืžื”ื ืชืฉืžื™ืฉ ื”ืžื˜ื”, ื•ืœื›ืŸ ื ืงืจืืช ืขื•ื ื”, ืฉืžืขื ื” ืื•ืชื” ื›ืฉื ืžื ืข ืžืžื ื”.",
148
+ "<b>ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืจื ืืœื”ื™ื ืืช ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื“ื“ื™ื™ืง ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื“ืข ืืœื”ื™ื, ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืขื• ืืœื ื”ืงื‘\"ื”, ื›ื™ ืžืจื•ื‘ ื”ืขื™ื ื•ื™ ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉืžืฉื™ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื•ืจื™ื ื›ื—ืฅ ื•ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ื•ืžืชืžืขื˜ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื”ืฉืžื™ื ื‘ื™ื ื™ ืœื‘ื™ื ืš (ื ื“ืจื™ื ืฆ' ื‘'), ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื“ื“ื™ื™ืง ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื“ืข ืืœื”ื™ื ื›ืžื• ื•ื™ื“ืข ืื“ื ืขื•ื“ ืืช ืืฉืชื• (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื“'), ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืืžืจื ื• ื›ื™ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื›ื ื” ืœืชืฉืžื™ืฉ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื“ืขืช ืœืขื•ืจืจ ืœืื“ื ืฉืœื ื™ืขืฉื” ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื”ื•ื ืœืชืื•ื” ื•ื”ื ืื” ื˜ื‘ืขื™ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื›ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ื“ืขืช, ืืœื ืฉื™ืขืฉื” ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ื“ืขืช ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืคืจื™ื” ื•ืจื‘ื™ื” ื•ืœืงื™ื•ื ื”ื’ื•ืฃ, ื•ื’ื ื›ื™ ื”ืฉื›ื‘ืช ื–ืจืข ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื™ืฆื™ืจืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื— ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ื ื”ื“ืขืช, ื•ืขืฉื” ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืขื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืื“ื ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื™ืขืฉื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื›ืœ ื•ื‘ืฆื ืขื”, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœืงื“ืฉ ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ืชืฉืžื™ืฉ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื”ื•ืฉืข ื™\"ื) ื‘ืงืจื‘ืš ืงื“ื•ืฉ, ื•ื‘ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื“') ื•ื™ื“ืข ืื“ื ืขื•ื“, ื•ื—ื›ื™ื ืื“ื ืขื•ื“, ื•ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ (ืฉืžื•\"ืจ ื') ื•ื™ืจื ืืœื”ื™ื ืืช ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื–ื” ืžืขืฉื” ื”ืขื’ืœ ืฉืขืชื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื•ืžื“ืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืงื˜ืจื’ืช ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื•ื™ื“ืข ืืœื”ื™ื, ืฉืขืชื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืœื•ืžืจ ื ืขืฉื” ื•ื ืฉืžืข ื•ืจื™ื—ื ืขืœื™ื”ื."
149
+ ],
150
+ [
151
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืขืžืœื ื• ืืœื• ื”ื‘ื ื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื ืขืžืœ ื”ืื“ื ื›ื™ ื›ืžื” ื”ืื“ื ื™ื’ืข ืœื’ื“ืœื ื•ืœืœืžื“ื ื“ืจืš ืืจืฅ ื•ืชื•ืจื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื™ื’ืข ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ื ื™ื— ืœื”ื ืžืžื•ืŸ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืชื•. ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืืžืจื• ื‘ืขื•ืŸ ื ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ื ื™ื ืžืชื™ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ืืœ ืชืชืŸ ืืช ืคื™ืš ืœื—ื˜ื™ื ืืช ื‘ืฉืจืš ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืฉื‘ืช (ืœ\"ื‘ ื‘').",
152
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืœื•ื“ ื”ื™ืื•ืจื” ืชืฉืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื•.</b> ื•ืืžืจื• ื‘ืคืจืงื™ ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ (ืคืจืง ืž\"ื‘) ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื™ืื•ืจ ื‘ื•ืœืขื ืืœื ืคื•ืœื˜ื ืœืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ื–ืŸ ืื•ืชื ืฉื ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืกืœืข ื‘ืคื™ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื ื™ืงื• ื“ื‘ืฉ ื•ื—ืœื‘ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื‘:ื™ืดื’) ื•ื™ื ื™ืงื”ื• ื“ื‘ืฉ ืžืกืœืข ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื›ืœ ื–ื” ื ืงืœ ื”ื•ื ื ื’ื“ ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš, ื•ื›ืฉื‘ืื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื™ื ืจืื•ื”ื• ื•ื”ื›ื™ืจื•ื”ื•, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื˜ืดื•:ื‘ืณ) ื–ื” ืืœื™ ื•ืื ื•ื”ื•, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื›ื™ืจื• ื›ื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืฉื” ืœื”ื ืืช ื”ื ืก ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.",
153
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ืช ืชื—ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ืœื–ื™ืžื”, ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืฉืžื•\"ืจ ื')."
154
+ ],
155
+ [
156
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืœื—ืฆื ื• ื–ื” ื”ื“ื—ืง.</b> ืคื™' ื›ื™ ื›ืฉืจืื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœื›ืœื•ืชื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœื“ื—ื•ืง ืื•ืชื ืฉื™ื—ื–ื™ืจื•ื ืœืืžื•ื ืชื ื•ื™ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื‘ื”ื, ื•ื“ื—ืง ื–ื” ืฉืž๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื’ื ืจืื™ืชื™ ืืช ื”ืœื—ืฅ, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื’ืื•ืœ ืื•ืชื ืžื”ืจื”, ื›ื™ ื™ืจื ืื ื›ื™ ืฉืžื ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœื• ืœืขืžื•ื“ ื‘ื ืกื™ื•ืŸ, ื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœื”ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื”ื ืงืฆืช ื•ืœื‘ื˜ืœ ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžื™ืœื” ื•ืœืœื›ืช ืื—ืจื™ ื”ื›ื•ื—ื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื ื•ื”ื›ืฉืคื™ื."
157
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื”' ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืœืืš ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืฉืจืฃ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžื›ืืŸ ืจืื™ื” ื›ื™ ืžืœืืš ื•ืฉืจืฃ ืฉื ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ื, ื”ืฉืจืคื™ื ื”ื ืžืœืื›ื™ ืืฉ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ื›ืกื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ื‘ื ื”ืจ ืฉืœ ืืฉ ื”ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ืกื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ื•ืณ:ื‘ืณ) ืฉืจืคื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืžืžืขืœ ืœื•, ื•ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื”ื ืœืžื˜ื” ืžื”ื ื”ืžืชื—ืœืคื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ื•ืžืชืœื‘ืฉื™ื ื’ื•ืคื•ืช, ื•ื”ื ืฉื ื‘ืจืื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ื“ื•ืข ื”ืžืœืืš ื”ื’ื•ืืœ ื–ื” ืžื˜ื˜ืจื•\"ืŸ, ื•ืฉืžื• ืžื•ืจื” ืขืœื™ื•, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื”ืฉื•ืžืจ ืื•ืชื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืœืžืฉื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื’:ื›ืณ) ื”ื ื” ืื ื›ื™ ืฉื•ืœื— ืžืœืืš ืœืคื ื™ืš, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืจ ืฆื‘ื ื”' ืฉื‘ื ืœื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื•ืขืœื™ื• ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ ืœ\"ื— ื‘') ื“ืืคื™' ื‘ืคืจื•ื•ื ืงื ืœื ืงื‘ืœื™ื” ืžืฉื”, ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ ื•ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื›ืณ:ื˜ืดื–) ื•ื™ืฉืœื— ืžืœืืš ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื™\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืฉื‘ ืœื‘ื•ืจื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื“ืณ:ืœืดื–) ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืืš ื‘ืคื ื™ื• ื‘ื›ื•ื—ื• ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื”ืžืœืืš ืฉืืžืจ, ื•ื™ืฉืœื— ืžืœืืš, ืขืœ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื”, ืื• ืฉืœื™ื— ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืฉืœื— ืžืœืืš ื”ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžืœืืš ืคื ื™ื• ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ื—ื•.",
161
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืขื‘ืจืชื™ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื‘ื›ืœ ืืœื”ื™ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืืขืฉื” ืฉืคื˜ื™ื.</b> ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ืื ืฉืœ ืขืฅ ื ืจืงื‘ืช [ื•ื›ื•'], ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ืกืจ ืฆื™ืœื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ืŸ ืžืขืœื™ื”ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ืŸ, ื•ืžื™ื“ ื ื™ืชืš ื•ื ืจืงื‘, ื•ื‘ื–ื” ื ื•ื“ืข ื›ื™ ืžื›ืช ืืœื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื, ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื›ื— ืžื•ืฉืœ ืขืœ ื›ื— ืื—ืจ ืœื‘ื˜ืœื• ืืœื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœื‘ื“ื•."
162
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื–ื• ื”ื“ื‘ืจ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ื™ื“ ื”', ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืืžืจ ื›ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื—ื•ื–ืง ืžืžืฉ, ื›ื™ ืœื ื”ืจืื” ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ื”ื—ื•ื–ืง ืจืง ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืฉืœื ื”ื•ื ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช, ื•ื›ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ื•ืœื›ืœ ื”ื™ื“ ื”ื—ื–ืงื” (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื“:ื™ืดื‘) ื–ื• ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื•ืณ:ืืณ) ื•ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื™ื’ืจืฉื ืžืืจืฆื•, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื–ื” ืืœื ื”ื ื” ื™ื“ ื”' ื”ื•ื™ื”."
166
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื–ืจื•ืข ื ื˜ื•ื™ื” ื–ื• ื”ื—ืจื‘.</b> ื–ื”ื• ื›ื™ื ื•ื™ ืœื ืงืžื” ืฉืขืฉื” ื”' ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืจื‘ ื ื•ืงืžืช ื ืงื ื‘ืจื™ืช, ืจ\"ืœ ื‘ืจื™ืชื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื•ื—ืจื‘ื• ืฉืœื•ืคื” ื‘ื™ื“ื• (ื“ื”\"ื™ ื' ื›\"ื) ืœื”ื ืงื ืžื”ืคื•ืฉืขื™ื ื•ื”ืžื•ืจื“ื™ื."
169
+ ],
170
+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื–ื” ื’ื™ืœื•ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื”.</b> ืฉื ื’ืœื™ืช ืœื”ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืœืื” ื’ืœื•ืœื™ื ื•ืืจืฅ ื˜ืžืื”, ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ืœื™ืขืงื‘ ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืžืดื•:ื“ืณ) ื•ืื ื›ื™ ืืขืœืš ื’ื ืขืœื”, ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื ืชืŸ ื‘ื• ืชื•ืจื” ื•ืืžืจ ืื ื›ื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื’ืณ:ื•ืณ) ืื ื›ื™ ืืœื”ื™ ืื‘ื™ืš, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” (ืฉื) ืžื™ ืื ื›ื™ ื›ื™ ืืœืš ืืœ ืคืจืขื” ื•ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ืžืฉืœ ืœืžืœืš ืฉืฉืœื— ืฉืœื•ื—ื• ืœืืจื™ืกื• ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืฉืžื•ืช ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืื™ืžืชื™ ื ื’ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื‘' ืคืขืžื™ื, ืื—ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ืืณ-ื‘ืณ) ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื”' ืืœ ืžืฉื” ื•ืืœ ืื”ืจืŸ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ืœื›ื, ื•ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ืฉื”ืงื•ืœ ื ืฉืžืข ื‘ื›ืœ ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”, ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืจืื•ื”ื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ื•ื™ืจืื• ืžืื“ ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื“:ืœืดื) ื•ื™ืจืื• ื”ืขื ืืช ื”', ื•ื ืงืจื ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื›ื™ ื”ืจื•ืื” ืคื ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ื™ืจื ืžืื“ ื•ื ืจืชืข ื•ื ื‘ื”ืœ ื•ื ื•ืคืœ ืขืœ ืคื ื™ื•, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืื• ื”ื ืกื” ืืœื”ื™ื ืœื‘ื•ื ืœืงื—ืช ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื”ืจืื™ื” ืžืŸ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืœืขื™ื ื™ืš, ื•ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื•ืœื›ืœ ื”ืžื•ืจื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื“:ื™ืดื‘) ื–ื• ืงืจื™ืขืช ื™ื ืกื•ืฃ, ื›ื™ ืฉื ืจืื• ืคื ื™ ื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ื•ืืžืจื• ื–ื” ืืœื™ ื•ืื ื•ื”ื•."
172
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื•ืชื•ืช ื–ื” ื”ืžื˜ื”.</b> ื™ื™ื—ื“ื• ื”ืื•ืชื•ืช ืืœ ื”ืžื˜ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจื• ื–\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืžื˜ื” ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืขื“\"ืฉ ื‘ืื—\"ื‘, ื•ื›ืŸ ืฆื™ืจื•ืฃ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”ื ื ื‘ืจืื• ืฉืžื™ื ื•ืืจืฅ, ื›ื™ ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื ืขืฉื” ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืื‘ื•ืช (ืค\"ื” ืž\"ื•) ืขืฉืจื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื ื‘ืจืื• ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช, [<small>ื‘ื \"ื ื ื•ืกืฃ:</small> ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืชื ื” ื”' ืขื ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช], ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ื”ื ื—ืŸ ืœืฉื•ืžืขื™ื”ื, ื•ืœื›ืŸ ื ืงืจื ืžื˜ื” ืืœื”ื™ื, ื•ื ื–ื“ืžืŸ ืœื• ืœืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ื‘ื”ืจ ื—ื•ืจื‘ ืฉื™ืจื“ ืฉื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืžื™ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืืช ื”ืžื˜ื” ื”ื–ื” ืชืงื— ื‘ื™ื“ืš, ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ืื“ื ื”ื–ื” ืืœื ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื• ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœื—ื‘ื™ืจื•."
175
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ื–ื” ื”ื“ื.</b> ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉืžื›ืช ื”ื“ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืื—ืช ืงื•ืจื ืื•ืชื” ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื ืขืฉื• ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื, ื›ื™ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฆืœื•ืœื™ื ืžื›ืœ ืžื™ืžื•ืช ืฉื‘ืขื•ืœื ื ื”ืคื›ื• ืœื“ื ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื“ื ืฉืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืžืฆืจื™ ืฉื•ืชื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืื—ื“, ืœืฆื“ ื”ืžืฆืจื™ ื“ื ื•ืœืฆื“ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžื™ื, ื•ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉื• ืฉืœ ืจืฉื‘\"ื™, ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ืขืฉื™ื ื›ืืฉ ืฉื•ืจืฃ ื•ืžืชืžืœื ื›ืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืขืฉืŸ ืžื”ื [<small>ื \"ื:</small> ื‘ืคื™ื”ื] ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื“ื ื•ืืฉ ื•ืชืžืจื•ืช ืขืฉืŸ."
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+ ]
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+ ],
180
+ "The Ten Plagues": [
181
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ืฉืชื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ื• ื“ื ืคืงื ืœืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ื ืฉืชื™ ืžืœื•ืช, ื•ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืืžืช ืžื“ืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืช ืจื—ืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืชืคื™ื ื‘ื™ื—ื“ ื–ื• ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื ืงืžื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื•ื–ื• ืœื”ืฆื™ืœ ืืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืœื ืชื‘ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ื”ืžื›ื”, ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื”ืขืฉืจื” ื ืกื™ื ืฉื ืขืฉื• ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืื‘ื•ืช ืค\"ื” (ืž\"ื“), ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืžื›ืช ื›ื ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ื’ืžืจื ื•ื‘ื ื‘ืงื‘ืœื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ื‘ื”ื ืืœื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžืฆืขืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื, ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื‘ื”ื ืืžืจื• ื”ื—ืจื˜ื•ืžื™ื ืืฆื‘ืข ืืœื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื›ื” ื›ื•ืœืœืช, ื›ื™ ื”ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžืฆืขืจื™ื ืื•ืชื. ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื•ื™ื—ื–ืง ืœื‘ ืคืจืขื”. <br>ื•ืื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื•ื‘ืžืœื—ืžื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื•ืชื” ืžืœื—ืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืœื”ืคื™ืœ ืฉืจ ืฉืœื”ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื•ื‘ืžืกื•ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืœืœื™ ืฉืœ ื ืกื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชืจื” ื‘ื”ื ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉืขื” ื•ืฉืขื”, ื•ืœื ื™ืจื“ื” ืžื›ื” ื‘ืขืœื™ืœื•ืช ืืœื ื‘ื”ืชืจืื”, ื•ืจื–\"ืœ ืืžืจื• ืฉื”ื”ืชืจืื” ืฉืœื™ืฉ ื›ืœ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ื—ื“ืฉ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื.\n"
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
200
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžื ื™ื ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืขื“\"ืฉ ื‘ืื—\"ื‘.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืฉืœื ืชืืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืงื“ื ื•ืžืื•ื—ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ืžื ืืŸ ื“ื•ื“ ื‘ืกืคืจ ืชื”ืœื™ื (ืคืจืง ืง\"ื”) ืขืœ ื”ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื”, ื•ื‘ืฉื•ื—ืจ ื˜ื•ื‘ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื” ื”ื™ื• ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืžื˜ื” ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืืช ื”ืžื˜ื” ื”ื–ื” ื•ื›ื•' ืืฉืจ ืชืขืฉื” ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ืื•ืชื•ืช ืืช ื”ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช, ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ืœืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืกื™ืžื ื™ื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืคื™\"ื (ืž\"ื“) ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื•ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื–ื“\"ื“ ื™ื”\"ื–, ื•ืœื›ืœ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ื›ืžื” ื ืคืœืื” ื‘ืกื•ื“ ื”ืงื‘ืœื”, ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ื”ื ื—ืŸ ืœืฉื•ืžืขื™ื”ื."
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+ ],
202
+ [
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื’ืœื™ืœื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ื•' ืืžื•ืจ ืžืขืชื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืœืงื• ืขืฉืจ ืžื›ื•ืช ื•ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืœืงื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืžื›ื•ืช. </b>ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื“ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช, ื•ื›ืœ ืืฆื‘ืข ืขืฉืจ, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ื•ืจืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื, ื•ืžื—ืœื•ืงืชืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื. ื•ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืชืžื” ืื ื™ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืฆื‘ืข ืืœื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื ืขืœ ืžื›ืช ื›ื ื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื ืืžืจ, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืžืจื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื–ื• ื”ื“ื‘ืจ, ืงื•ืจื ืœืžื›ื” ืื—ืช ื™ื“, ื•ืขื™ืงืจืŸ ืฉืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ื™ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื›ืืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืกืžืš ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื”ืงื‘ืœื” ืขื™ืงืจ, ื•ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืืฆื‘ืข ืงื˜ื ื” ืฉื‘ื™ื“, ื•ื”ื•ื ื’\"ื› ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ืื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื“ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื ื”, ื•ื–ื” ืกื•ื“, ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉ ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืžื›ื•ืช, ื‘ื“ืจืš ื”ืคืฉื˜ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœืงื• ื‘ื” ื“' ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช, ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉ ืฉืœ ื—ืžืฉ ืžื›ื•ืช, ืžื•ื ื” ืžื›ืช ื”ื”ื™ื•ืœื™ ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ื›ื•ืœืœ, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืœืงื” ื”ืฉืจ ืฉืœื”ื ื‘ืฉืžื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ื—ืฉื‘ื•ื ื ืฉืœ ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืคืฉื•ื˜ ื”ื•ื, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžื•ื ื” ืื•ืชื ื›ืื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืืฆื‘๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ, ื•ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืžืฉ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช, ื ืžืฆืื• ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื ื—ืžืฉ ืคืขืžื™ื ืžืžื›ื•ืช ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ื›ื™ ื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืจืฉ ืืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ืœืœ ื•ืคืจื˜ ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ื›ืœืœ ื•ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจื˜."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Dayenu": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื›ืžื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืขืฉื” ืขืœื™ื ื• ื•ืฉื ื‘ื ื•, ื•ื”ื ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™\"ื” ืฆื•ืจ ืขื•ืœืžื™ื ื”ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ื›ืกื ืขืœ ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืงื™ ื”ื›ืœื•ืช, ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ื‘ืžืฉื›ืŸ ื˜\"ื• ืงืœืขื™ื ืœื›ืชืฃ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืืžืจ ื“ื•ื“ ื”ืžืœืš ืข\"ื” ื‘ืกืคืจ ืชื”ื™ืœื™ื ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช, ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ืขืฉื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืžื“ื•ืช (ืค\"ื‘ ืž\"ื”)."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืขืœ ืื—ืช ื›ืžื” ื•ื›ืžื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืขืชื” ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ืืœื• ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช, ืขืœ ืื—ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืจืื•ื™ื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ืื—ืช, ื›ืžื” ื•ื›ืžื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืคื•ืœื” ื•ืžื›ื•ืคืœืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•, ืฉืขืฉื” ืขืžื ื• ื›ืœ ื–ื”, ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.",
229
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื ื” ืœื ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ื—ื™ืจื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื ืงืจื ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ื—ื™ืจื” ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื‘ื—ืจ ื‘ื• ื”ืงื‘\"ื”, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื‘:ื”ืณ), ื›ื™ ืื ืืœ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืฉืจ ื™ื‘ื—ืจ ื”' ืืœืงื™ื›ื ื›ื•'."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžืฉื ื” ื”ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื˜\"ื– ื'), ื”ืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ืžืฉื ื”, ืžืฉื ืช ืืžืจ ืจืื‘\"ืข ื”ืจื™ ืื ื™ ื›ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืกื™ื™ื ื‘ื”, ื•ื ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ื‘ืจื™ื™ืชื•ืช ืฉื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื‘ืืžืฆืข.",
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+ "ื•ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ <b>ืœื ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื•</b>, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืœื ืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืชื• ื›ืจืื•ื™. ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืฆื™ื ื• ืฉื”ืงืคื™ื“ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืืžื™ืจื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื ื–ื›ื•ืจ ื ืคืœืื•ืช ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื‘ืคื™ื ื• ืœืžื” ื”ื ื‘ืื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื•ื ืฉืœื ื”ืกืคื™ืง ื‘ืฆื™ืงื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืš ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื, ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ืœืžื“ื ื• ื›ื™ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ืžืฅ, ืจ\"ืœ ื›ื™ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฅ ื›ืฉื™ืฆืื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื›ืฉื”ื’ื™ืขื• ืœืจืคื™ื“ื™ื ื—ืžืฅ ื”ื™ื”, ืืœื ืฉื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื—ืžืฅ ื•ืžืฆื” ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉื ื™ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืฆ\"ื” ื'), ื›ื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ืžืฅ ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืžื™ืœ, ืœื“ืขืช ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ ื‘ืฉื”ื™ื”, ื•ืœื“ืขืชื™ื ื• (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืž\"ื• ื‘') ืฉืœื ื‘ืฉื”ื™ื™ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื• ื‘ื“ืจืš ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื• ื‘ืฉืžืฉ ืื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ืžืขื•ื ืŸ, ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืž\"ื‘ ื') ืืฉื” ืœื ืชืœื•ืฉ ืœื ื‘ื—ืžื” ื•ืœื ื›ื•', ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื™ื•ืžื (ื›\"ื— ื‘') ื”ืื™ ื™ื•ืžื ื“ืขื™ื‘ื ื›ื•ืœื™ื” ืฉืžืฉื, ื›ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื—ืžืฅ ื ืขืฉื” ืžืขื˜ ืžืขื˜ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื™ื›ืจ, ื—ืฉืฉื• ืœื›ืœ ื–ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืกืคืง ื›ืจืช ืขื“ ืฉื—ืฉืฉื• ืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ื, ื•ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืฉื ืฉืื‘ื• ืื—ืจ ื‘ื ื”ืฉืžืฉ ื•ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช, ืฉืœื ืœื ื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื—ืžื” ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื•ืžืขื™ื™ื ื•ืช ืจื•ืชื—ื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืกื—ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ืžื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื˜ืžื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืฆ\"ื“ ื‘'), ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉืฉื”ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืžื” ื™ืžื™ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืš ื›ืœื•ื, ื’ื ืžื” ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื™ืจื— ืฉื•ืœื˜ ืฉื, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื–ื” ืฉื•ื ืขื™ืงืจ ื‘ืขื•ืœื.",
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+ "<b>ื•ื’ื ืฆื“ื” ืœื ืขืฉื• ืœื”ื.</b> ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืžื›ื™ืœืชื) ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉื‘ื—ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืœื ืืžืจื• ืœืžืฉื” ื”ื™ืืš ื ืฆื ืœืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืœื ื ื•ืœื™ืš ืขืžื ื• ืฆื“ื” ืœื“ืจืš ืืœื ื‘ื˜ื—ื• ื‘ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš.",
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+ "ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ <b>ืžืฆื” ื–ื•, ืžืจื•ืจ ื–ื”</b>, ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืคืกื— ื–ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ื”ื‘ืฉืจ, ืฉืœื ื™ืจืื” ื›ืื•ื›ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ื’ื ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ื›ืœ ื”ืงืขืจื” ื‘ื™ื—ื“ ื›ืžื• ืฉืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื•ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืจืื” ืขืฆืžื• ื›ืื™ืœื• ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ื” ืขื‘ื“ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื™ืฆื ืœื—ืจื•ืช, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืฆืืชื™ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื‘ืจ ื“ืจืฉื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื•, ืžื›ืœืœ ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ื”ืื•ืžืจื• ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืคื™ื•."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "First Half of Hallel": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื—ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืืžืจื• ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื•ืืžืจืชื ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”', ื‘ื ืœืœืžื“ืš ืฉื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉืฉื•ืžืข ื”ื ืกื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืฉื‘ื— ืœืคืืจ ื•ืœืจื•ืžื ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื”ืืœื• ืฉืœ ืฉื‘ื— ื”ื ื‘ืคืจืงื™ ื”ื™ื›ืœื•ืช, ืขื“ ื•ืœืขืœื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืœืงืœืก, ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื•ืคืœ ื‘ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื’ื ืื™ ื›ืžื• ืœืขื’ ื•ืงืœืก. ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืœ ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ืฉื‘ื— ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื“ ืจืžื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื“:ื—ืณ-ื˜ืณ) ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืžื—ืจืคื™ืŸ ื•ืžื’ื“ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ ื’ื™ื“ื•ืคื™ืŸ ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืจื•ืžืžื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ ืฉื‘ื—, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ืืณ:ื’ืณ) ืœืจื™ื— ืฉืžื ื™ืš ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื, ื\"ืจ ื™ื ืื™ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื ืจื™ื— ืฉืžื ื™ื ืืžืจื• ืœืš ืื‘ืœ ืื ื• ื›ืฉื‘ืื ื• ืœื™ื ืœื ื”ื ื—ื ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื— ืฉืœื ืงืœืกื ื• ืœืš ื•ืฉื‘ื—ื ื•ืš ื‘ื•."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื”ืœืœื•ื™ื” ื”ืœืœื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ ื”' ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžื›ืืŸ ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื”ื”ืœืœ, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืจืื•ื™ ืœื‘ืจืš ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื—ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื”ืœืœ, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ืœืณ:ื›ืดื˜) ื”ืฉื™ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื›ื ื›ืœื™ืœ ื”ืชืงื“ืฉ ื—ื’ ื•ื’ื•', ื•ืžื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื•ื ื” ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ (ื™' ื'), ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื•ื ื” ืฉื ืืœื ื”ืœืœ ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ืœืœ ื–ื” ืฉืœ ืœื™ืœื”, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืคืฉื•ื˜ ื”ื•ื, ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ ื‘ื‘ืจื™ื™ืชื (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื˜' ื') ื”ืœืœ ืฉื‘ืœื™ืœื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืœื” ืขืžื•ื“ ื”ืฉื—ืจ, ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื•ื‘ืชื•ืกืคืชื ืžื•ื ื” ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ืœื™ืœื” ืื—ืช ื•ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืฉืชื™ ืœื™ืœื•ืช, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืฉื ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื ืขื™ืžื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”, ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื ืจืื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื”ื’ื™ื ืœืงืจื•ืชื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ืช, ื•ืžืคื ื™ ื–ื” ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืื“ื ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื”ืœืœ ืฉืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื•, ื•ื”ืžื ื”ื’ ืฉืœื ืœื‘ืจืš, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœืฉื ื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืจืื•ื™ ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืงืจื•ืช ืคืขื ืื—ืจืช ื”ืœืœ ื’ืžื•ืจ, ื›ื™ ืžื” ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืกืขื•ื“ื” ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ื“ืจืš ืฉื™ืจื”, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื•ืžืฉื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื•ืฉื•ืชื™ื ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื."
257
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืœืžื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื.</b> ื›ืš ืื ื• ื’ื•ืจืกื™ืŸ, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฆื™ื•ืŸ ืžืื•ืกืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืฉืœื ื ืคืจื“ื• ื‘ืขืจื™ื ื•ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ื ืจืื™ืŸ ืœื’ื•ื™ ืื—ื“, ื•ื“ื™ื™ืง ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœื’ื•ื™, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื“ืื™ ื ืก ืžื”' ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื–ืจื™ื ื–ื” ืœื–ื”, ื›ื™ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ื“ ืกื™ื‘ืช ื”ื’ืœื•ืช. ื•ืืฃ ื‘ื’ืœื•ืช ื”ื–ื” ื”ื—ืžื•ืจ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืขื™ืงืจ ื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื”ื’ืœื•ืช. <br>ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ ืงื•ืžื” ื‘ืขืœื™ ืคืจืฆื•ืฃ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื™ืฉ ื’ื•ืจืกื™ืŸ ืžืกื•ื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ ืฉื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื ื ื™ื›ืจื™ื ื‘ืžืœื‘ื•ืฉื™ื”ื ื•ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื”ื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฆื™ืฆื™ืช ื‘ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื•, ื•ื“ื™ื™ืงื™ ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื›ื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื›ืžื” ื“ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื•ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื, ืืคื™ืœื• ืจื‘ื• ืžืื“ ื”ื™ืืš ื™ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ืืœื ื•ื“ืื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ืื• ืžืกื•ื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ื˜ื›ืกื™ืกื™ื”ื ื•ื›ืœ ืจื•ืื™ื”ื ื™ื›ื™ืจื•ื ื›ื™ ื”ื ื–ืจืข ืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื•. <br>ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื–ื”, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ื‘ื ื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืœื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืฉื” ื‘ื›ืจืก ืื—ื“ ืžื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืœื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจ, ืฉื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื’ื ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ืœื ื”ื•ืจื’ืœื• ื‘ื›ืš ื‘ืืจืฅ ื›ื ืขืŸ. ื•ื–ื” ืžืจื—ืžื™ื• ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉืœื ืขื–ื‘ ืื•ืชื ื‘ื’ืœื•ืชื. ื•ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ืชืžื”ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” (ืคืจืฉื” ืž\"ื“) ื\"ืจ ื™ืฆื—ืง ื—ื–ื™ืจืชื ืจืขื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื” ื•ืื™ืžืจืชื ื•ืœื ื‘ื—ื“ ื›ืœ ืื™ืœื™ืŸ ืืžืจ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื“ื™ื”ื™ื‘ ืœื™ื” ืืช ื”ืงื™ื ื™ ื•ืืช ื”ืงื ื™ื–ื™ ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืจื” ืืฉืช ืื‘ืจื”ื ืœื ื™ืœื“ื” ืœื•. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืจืื™ื” ื”ืžืกื“ืจ ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืคืจื• ื•ื™ืฉืจืฆื• ื•ื™ืจื‘ื• ื•ื›ื•'."
261
+ ]
262
+ ],
263
+ "Second Cup of Wine": [
264
+ [
265
+ "ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื”ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื™ื“ื•, ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืจื›ืช ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื•, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ, ื•ืื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ, ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืชื—ืœื”, ื›ืžื• ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉ, ื“ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืื™ื›ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืง\"ื• ื'), ื•ื ื”ื’ื• ื›ื•ืœื ืœืื•ืžืจื• ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ืขืช ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉ ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ืื—ืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช, ื•ืื ื“ืขืชื• ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ืื—ืจื™ื•, ื•ื”ื—ืชื™ืžื” ืขืœ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ."
266
+ ]
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+ ]
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+ },
269
+ "Maror": [
270
+ [],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ืœืขื•ืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ ืฆืจื™ืš ื˜ื™ื‘ื•ืœ ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช. ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ื›ื–ื™ืช. "
273
+ ]
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+ ],
275
+ "Tzafun": [
276
+ [],
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+ [
278
+ "ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื”ืœืœ ืงื•ื“ื ื—ืฆื•ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืื‘\"ืข ื“ืกืชื ืœืŸ ืชื ื ื›ื•ื•ืชื™ื” ื‘ืค\"ืง ื“ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช (ื‘' ื') ื•ื‘ืคืจืง ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืžืงื•ืžืŸ (ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื \"ื• ื‘') ื“ืชื ืŸ ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืืœื ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ืืข\"ื’ ื“ื‘ืค\"ื‘ ื“ืžื’ื™ืœื” (ื›\"ื ื') ืกืชื ื›ืจ\"ืข ื“ืก\"ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืœื” ืขืžื•ื“ ื”ืฉื—ืจ, ื”ื›ื ืชืจืชื™ ื•ื”ืชื ื—ื“ื, ื•ืืข\"ื’ ื“ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื™ื‘ืžื•ืช (ืง\"ื ื‘') ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืžื” ืœื™ ื—ื“ื ืกืชืžื ืžื” ืœื™ ืชืจืชื™ ืกืชืžื™, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื™ื“ืขื™ื ืŸ ื”ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ืชืจื™ื™ืชื ื ืงื˜ื™ื ืŸ ืœื—ื•ืžืจื, ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ื• ื”ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ื–\"ืœ ืคื•ืกืงื™ื ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื• ืžื—ื‘ื™ืจื•, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืกืชื ืœืŸ ืชื ื ื‘ื”ื“ื™ ื”ื™ืœื›ืชื ืคืกื™ืงืชื ื‘ืค\"ื‘ ื“ืžื’ื™ืœื”, ื•ืืขืค\"ื› ืจืื•ื™ ืœื—ื•ืฉ, ื“ื‘ืคืจืง ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืžืงื•ืžืŸ (ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื \"ื– ื‘') ืžืฉืžืข ื“ืžื•ื“ื” ืจ' ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืืœื ืงื•ื“ื ื—ืฆื•ืช ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืง\"ื› ื‘') ื“ืžืฆื” ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ื›ืžื• ืคืกื— ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœืจืื‘\"ืข ืœื ื™ืฆื ืื—ืจ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ ื’\"ื› ืฉื—ื•ืฉืฉ ืœื• ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื•ื’ื ื‘ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ื”ื—ืžื™ืจื• ื‘ื• ื‘ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช, ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ืžื•ืจ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืงืจื™ืืช ืฉืžืข ืœืจื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ื“ืคืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื•ื•ืชื™ื” (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื—' ื‘'), ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžื—ืฆื•ืช ื•ืื™ืœืš ื”ื™ื”, ืืขืค\"ื› ืจืื•ื™ ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื™ืงืจ."
279
+ ]
280
+ ],
281
+ "Barech": {
282
+ "Third Cup of Wine": [
283
+ [],
284
+ [
285
+ "ื•ืืžืจื• ื–\"ืœ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื™\"ื– ื‘') ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืืคื™' ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื•ืชื”, ื•ืื ื”ื•ื ื ืžืœืš, ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื•, ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ืฉืชื”, ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื™ื™ืŸ, ืฉืžื ื™ืฉืชื›ืจ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืื• ื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ืžืฆื” ืžืคื™ื•, ืื‘ืœ ืžื™ื ืื• ืฉืืจ ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ื™ืฉืชื”, ื•ืื—ืจ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ืจืื” ืฉืžื•ืชืจ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืืคื™' ื™ื™ืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ื–\"ืœ ืืžืจื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ืชื™ื ืืœื ืžื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื™ื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ืžืฆื” ืžืคื™ื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืžื ื“ื‘ืจ.",
286
+ "ื•ืžื” ืฉืชื™ืงื ื• ืœื•ืžืจ ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืคืกื•ืง ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš ืขืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื, ื”ื•ื ืžืคื ื™ ื›ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื™ื™ืžื ื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœื”ืฉืงื•ืช ืœืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื, ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ื”ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืฉื™ื’ื™ืข ืื•ืชื• ื”ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื™ืฉืงื” ืื•ืชื ื”' ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžืชื• ื”ื•ื ื›ื•ืก ื”ืชืจืขืœื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืื™ื›ื” ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื) ืฉื™ืฉื™ ื•ืฉืžื—ื™ ื‘ืช ืื“ื•ื ื•ื›ื•' ื’ื ืขืœื™ืš ืชืขื‘ื•ืจ ื›ื•ืก, ื•ืœื ืขื•ื“ ืืœื ืฉืขื™ืงืจ ื’ืื•ืœืชื™ื ื• ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื—ื•ืจื‘ืŸ ืงืจืŸ ืžืœื›ื•ืชื ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” (ืคืจืฉื” ื›\"ื) ืขื“ ืขืจื‘ ื‘ื•ืงืจ ืืœืคื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื•ื ืฆื“ืง ืงื“ืฉ (ื“ื ื™ืืœ ื—ืณ:ื™ืดื“), ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ืฆื—ืง ื›ืฉื™ืขืฉื” ืขืจื‘ ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืฉืœ ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื ืื– ื•ื ืฆื“ืง ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื ื‘ื™ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ืกืณ:ื‘ืณ) ื›ื™ ื”ื ื” ื”ื—ืฉืš ื™ื›ืกื” ืืจืฅ ื•ืขืจืคืœ ืœืื•ืžื™ื ื•ืขืœื™ืš ื™ื–ืจื— ื”' ื•ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ืขืœื™ืš ื™ืจืื” ื‘ืžื”ืจื” ื‘ื™ืžื™ื ื• ืื›ื™\"ืจ."
287
+ ]
288
+ ]
289
+ }
290
+ },
291
+ "schema": {
292
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืจื™ื˜ื‘\"ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
293
+ "enTitle": "Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah",
294
+ "key": "Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah",
295
+ "nodes": [
296
+ {
297
+ "heTitle": "ืžื’ื™ื“",
298
+ "enTitle": "Magid",
299
+ "nodes": [
300
+ {
301
+ "heTitle": "ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื",
302
+ "enTitle": "Ha Lachma Anya"
303
+ },
304
+ {
305
+ "heTitle": "ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”",
306
+ "enTitle": "Four Questions"
307
+ },
308
+ {
309
+ "heTitle": "ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•",
310
+ "enTitle": "We Were Slaves in Egypt"
311
+ },
312
+ {
313
+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง",
314
+ "enTitle": "Story of the Five Rabbis"
315
+ },
316
+ {
317
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื",
318
+ "enTitle": "The Four Sons"
319
+ },
320
+ {
321
+ "heTitle": "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•",
322
+ "enTitle": "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers"
323
+ },
324
+ {
325
+ "heTitle": "ืืจืžื™ ืื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™",
326
+ "enTitle": "First Fruits Declaration"
327
+ },
328
+ {
329
+ "heTitle": "ืขืฉืจ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช",
330
+ "enTitle": "The Ten Plagues"
331
+ },
332
+ {
333
+ "heTitle": "ื“ื™ื™ื ื•",
334
+ "enTitle": "Dayenu"
335
+ },
336
+ {
337
+ "heTitle": "ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ",
338
+ "enTitle": "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things"
339
+ },
340
+ {
341
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœืœ",
342
+ "enTitle": "First Half of Hallel"
343
+ },
344
+ {
345
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ื”",
346
+ "enTitle": "Second Cup of Wine"
347
+ }
348
+ ]
349
+ },
350
+ {
351
+ "heTitle": "ืžืจื•ืจ",
352
+ "enTitle": "Maror"
353
+ },
354
+ {
355
+ "heTitle": "ืฆืคื•ืŸ",
356
+ "enTitle": "Tzafun"
357
+ },
358
+ {
359
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจืš",
360
+ "enTitle": "Barech",
361
+ "nodes": [
362
+ {
363
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช",
364
+ "enTitle": "Third Cup of Wine"
365
+ }
366
+ ]
367
+ }
368
+ ]
369
+ }
370
+ }
json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,367 @@
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1
+ {
2
+ "title": "Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah",
3
+ "language": "he",
4
+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Commentary_of_Ritva_on_Pesach_Haggadah",
6
+ "text": {
7
+ "Magid": {
8
+ "Ha Lachma Anya": [
9
+ [],
10
+ [
11
+ "<b>ื•ืืชื—ื™ืœ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื‘ืฉื ื”' ืืœ ืขื•ืœื.</b>",
12
+ "ื•ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื™ืืžืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืžืกืœืงื™ืŸ ืืช ื”ืงืขืจื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืจืื• ื”ืชื™ื ื•ืงื•ืช ื•ื™ืฉืืœื•. ื•ื‘ืขื•ื“ ื”ืงืขืจื” ืžืกื•ืœืงืช ืื•ืžืจ ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ื•ื›ื•'.\n"
13
+ ],
14
+ [
15
+ "<b>ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžื” ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื›ื ืกื• ื”ืฉื“ื™ื ืืฆืœื ื• ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื ืžื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืชืจื’ื•ื, ื•ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื–ื” ืื™ื ื• ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ืžืฉื ื” ืืœื ืžืชื™ืงื•ืŸ ื”ืืžื•ืจืื™ื, ืชื™ืงื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืœื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื”ื›ืœ, ื›ื™ ื‘ื–ื” ื”ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื•.",
16
+ "ื•ืœืžื” ื ืงืจื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื, ื•ื”ืœื ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืžืฆื” ืฉืœ ืฉืœืžื” ื”ื™ื ืžื•ืชืจืช. ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื™ืกืช ืคืกื— ื”ื™ื ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืขื™ืกืช ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืื™ืคื” (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืž\"ื— ื'), ื•ื”ื•ื ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื ื™ ื”ื‘ื ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช, ื•ื–ื” ืœืคื™ ื“ืขืชื™ ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ืŸ, ื›ื™ ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ืืฆืœ ืžืฆืช ืžืฆื•ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืื“ืจื‘ื” ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ื”ื•ื ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืžื‘ื•ืจืš (ืขื™ืจื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืค\"ื’ ื‘'), ืื‘ืœ ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื“ื ืงืจื ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืžืฆื” ืžืชืงื‘ืฆืช ื•ืžืชื—ืกืจืช ื•ืื™ื ื” ืžืฆืœื—ืช ื›ืžื• ื”ื—ืžืฅ, ื›ื™ ืžืขื•ื’ื” ืื—ืช ืฉืœ ืขื™ืกื” ืจื‘ื•ื›ื” ืชืืคื” ืขื•ื’ืช ื—ืžืฅ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืขื“ ืžืื“, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื ืงืจืืช ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื ืืคื” ื‘ื—ืคื–ื•ืŸ ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžืกืคื™ืง ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืฅ.",
17
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ื›ืคื™ืŸ ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ื™ื›ื•ืœ. </b>ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ื• ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืจืขื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืคืกื— ื›ื“ื™ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ืœืชืื‘ื•ืŸ, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืฆ\"ื˜ ื‘' ืง\"ื– ื‘'). ",
18
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ืฆืจื™ืš ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ืคืกื— .</b> ืฉืื ืื™ืŸ ืœื•, ืจืื•ื™ ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืŸ ื”ืฆื“ืงื” ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืœืจ' ืขืงื™ื‘ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื™\"ื‘ ื') ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื—. ื•ื™ืฉ ืขื•ื“ ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ื›ืฉื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ื™ื” ืœื ื• ืœื—ื ืฆืจ ื•ืžื™ื ืœื—ืฅ ื‘ืžื“ื” ื‘ืžืฉืงืœ ื•ื‘ืžืฉื•ืจื”, ื•ืขืชื” ื™ืฉ ืœื ื• ืื›ื•ืœ ื•ืฉื‘ื•ืข ื•ื”ื•ืชืจ ืœื—ื ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ื—ื™ืจื•ืช.",
19
+ "<b>ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื›ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื•ื›ืคืœ ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืœื—ื–ืง ื•ืœืงื™ื™ื ื”ืขื ื™ืŸ, ื•ื’ื ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืฉืชื ื”ื›ื ืื ื• ืžืงื™ื™ืžื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ื‘ืœื‘ื“, ืœืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื‘ืืจืขื ื“ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื ืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื›ืœ ื—ืงื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื›ื›ืœ ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื•, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืœื›ืš ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื›ื™ืจื• ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื•ื™ืงื˜ืจื’ื• ืขืœื™ื ื• ืฉืื ื• ืžืชืคืืจื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื–ื” ื•ื™ื–ื›ื™ืจื• ืขื•ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ื›ื“ืื™ืŸ ืœื™ื’ืืœ.\n"
20
+ ]
21
+ ],
22
+ "Four Questions": [
23
+ [
24
+ "ื•ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ ืขื“ ืฉื™ื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ื•ื™ื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืกื—. ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื•ื›ื•'."
25
+ ],
26
+ [
27
+ "<b>ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื•ืช ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืžืจื•ืจ.</b> ืงืฉื™ื ืœืจืฉ\"ื™ ื•ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ื”ื•ื ื–\"ืœ ื“ื”ื›ื™ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืืคื™ืœื• ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืžืชื•ืงื™ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื™ื ืžืจื•ืจ ืœื ื• ื–ื›ืจ ืœื•ื™ืžืจืจื• ืืช ื—ื™ื™ื”ื ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืงืฉื”, ื•ืžื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉืืจ ืœื™ืœื•ืช ืืคื™ืœื• ืžืจื•ืจ ื”ื•ื ืžืชื•ืง, ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ืŸ, ืืœื ื›ืš ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื•ืช ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื ื• ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืžืชื•ืงื™ื ืฉืžื›ืฉื™ืจื™ื ื”ืื“ื ืœืื›ื™ืœื”, ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืื ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืชื—ื™ืœืช ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื ื• ืžืจื•ืจ."
28
+ ]
29
+ ],
30
+ "We Were Slaves in Egypt": [
31
+ [],
32
+ [
33
+ "<b>ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื–ื”ื• ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืืžืจื• (ืงื˜\"ื– ื') ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ื•ืžืกื™ื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ื—, ืœืชืช ืฉื‘ื— ื•ื”ื•ื“ืื” ืœืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ืืฉืจ ืžืืฉืคื•ืช ื™ืจื™ื ืื‘ื™ื•ืŸ, ื•ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืžื•ืจืื™ ืžืื™ ื’ื ื•ืช, ืจื‘ ืืžืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืจื‘ื ืืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื”, ื•ืื™ืคืกื™ืงื ื”ืœื›ืชื ื›ื•ืชื™ื” ื“ืจื‘ื ื“ื”ื•ื ื‘ืชืจืื”, ื•ืจื‘ ื ื—ืžืŸ ืขื‘ื“ ื›ื•ืชื™ื” ื‘ืขื•ื‘ื“ื ื“ื“ืจื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื” (ืฉื), ื•ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืœื ื‘ืื™ื–ื” ืžืชื—ื™ืœื™ืŸ, ื“ืจื‘ ืกื‘ืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ืžืขืฉื”, ื•ืจื‘ื ืืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืชื•ืงืคื• ืฉืœ ื ืก ื•ืื—\"ื› ืžืชื—ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ืข\"ื–, ื•ืœืคื™ ื–ื” ืžื ื”ื’ื™ื ื• ื›ืจื‘ื. ื“ืื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™ ืœื’ืžืจื™, ื ื”ื™ื’ื ื ื“ืœื ื›ื—ื“.",
34
+ "<b>ื•ืื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืงืฉื™ื ื•ื”ื™ืืš ืืคืฉืจ ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืฉื‘ืข ื”ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื‘ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ืฉื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื”ื–ืžืŸ, ื•ื‘ืœื ืชื ืื™ ื”ื™ืชื”, ื•ื ืจืื” ื“ื›ืš ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืฉืื™ืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืฉื‘ืข ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื‘ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื•, ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื“ื•ืจ ื”ื”ื•ื ืจืื•ื™ ืœื™ื’ืืœ, ืœืคื™ ืฉืœืžื“ื• ืžืขืฉื” ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ืฉื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืชืขืจื‘ื™ื ื‘ื”ื ืžืฉื ื•ืื™ืœืš ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื ื’ืืœื™ื ืœืขื•ืœื ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื—ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืขืฆืžื ื• ื›ืื™ืœื• ื ื’ืืœื ื• ืžืื•ืชื• ืขื‘ื“ื•ืช ืื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ื•, ื•ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœืงืžืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ื•ื›ื•', ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืฆื™ื•ื ื• ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื ืก ื–ื”, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ื•ืœื ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื•ื ื‘ื•ื ื™ื ื•ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืื ื• ืžืฆื•ื•ื™ืŸ ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื–ื” ื‘ืฉืžื—ื” ื•ื‘ื”ื•ื“ืื•ืช, ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืจื‘ื” ืœืกืคืจ ื™ื•ืชืจ ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืžืฉื•ื‘ื—, ื•ืื ื• ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืจืื™ื” ืœื–ื” ืžืžืขืฉื”."
35
+ ]
36
+ ],
37
+ "Story of the Five Rabbis": [
38
+ [
39
+ "<b> ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื•ืกืคืจื• ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ืœ ืื•ืชื• ื”ืœื™ืœื”, ื•ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ืืžืจื• ืจ\"ื ืื•ืžืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœืขืกื•ืง ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืกื•ื‘ืจ ืฉื–ืžืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื”ื”ืœืœ ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช ืฉื ื’ืืœื•, ื•ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืœื ื ืจืื” ืœื• ื›ืŸ, ืืœื ื›ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ืืžืจื™ ืขื“ ืขืœื•ืช ื”ืฉื—ืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื”, ื•ืืข\"ืค ื›ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื•ื ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ, ื•ืกืชื ื”ืชื ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื•ืื• ืœืงืฆืจ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื—ืฉืฉ ืฉื™ืืžืจื• ืฉืžื ื›ื‘ืจ ื”ื’ื™ืข ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื”ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืกื™ื™ืžื• ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืืจื™ื›ื• ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื."
40
+ ],
41
+ [
42
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื” ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ืžืฉื ื” ื”ื™ื ื‘ืค\"ืง ื“ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช (ื™\"ื‘ ื‘'), ื•ื”ื ื“ืงืืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืื ื™ ื›ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืฉื ื” ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืคืจืง ืชืคืœืช ื”ืฉื—ืจ (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื›\"ื— ื') ืขื‘ื™ื“ื• ืœื™ื” ืฉื™ืชืกืจื™ ื“ืจื™ ื—ื™ื•ื•ืจืชื.",
43
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื–ื›ื™ืชื™.</b> ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืœื (ื—ืฆืžื•) [ื ืฆื—ืชื™], ื‘ื”ื ื–ื›ื ื”ื• ืœืจื‘ื ืŸ (ืงื“ื•ืฉื™ืŸ ื™\"ื— ื'), ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ื–\"ืœ ืฉื—ื›ืžื™ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื›ืœืœ, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืคืจืฉืช ืฆื™ืฆื™ืช ื›ืœืœ ืืœื ืžื“ืœื’ื” ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ ื‘ืžืขืจื‘ื (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื“ ื‘') ื“ื‘ืจ ืืœ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื ื™ ื”' ืืœื”ื™ื›ื, ื•ืœื“ืขืชื• ื”ื ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื“ืžืชื ื™' (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื‘ ื‘') ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื•ืช, ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืื‘\"ืข ื ืกืชืžื” ืžืฉื ื” ื–ื•, ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื“ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื›ืœ ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื•ืช ื•ืœื ื ื—ืœืงื• ืืœื ืžื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื, ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื›ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืืžืจ ืจื‘ ื ื—ืžืŸ ืœื“ืจื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ื” ื‘ืคืกื•ืงื ืงืžื ืฆืขืจืŸ (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื’ ื‘').",
44
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ืš ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ืœื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืžืฉื™ื—.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ื’ืžืจื (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื™\"ื‘ ื‘') ืฉืชื”ื™ื” ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ืขื™ืงืจ ื•ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื˜ืคืœ ืœื”."
45
+ ]
46
+ ],
47
+ "The Four Sons": [
48
+ [
49
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ืžืงื•ื ืฉื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื” ืœืขืžื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ื—ืœื•ืงื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ื ืฉื ืืžืจื• ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ื‘ืขืกืง ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื, ืœื›ืš ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ืืช ื”ืฉื ืฉื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืชื•ืจื” ืฉืœื™ืžื”, ื›ื™ ืื—ืจื™ ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจ ืกื™ื ื™ ื›ืžื• ืฉื™ื™ืขื“ื ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื’ืณ:ื™ืดื‘) ื‘ื”ื•ืฆื™ืืš ืืช ื”ืขื ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืชืขื‘ื“ื•ืŸ ืืช ื”ืืœื”ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื”ืจ ื”ื–ื”. ื•ื ืงืจื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืงื•ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืžืงื•ืžื•, ื•ื›ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžืขื•ื ื” ืืœื”ื™ ืงื“ื (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื’:ื›ืดื–) ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ืจื‘ื” (ื‘\"ืจ ืคืจืฉื” ืก\"ื—), ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืืžืจ ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื“ ืฉืœื ื ืชืŸ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืชื•ืจื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ื“ืข ืœื ื”ื•ื ื•ืœื ื—ื›ืžืชื•, ืืœื ื›ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื’ื ื•ื– ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื ืกืชืจ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืจืื”, ื•ื›ืฉื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื– ื”ื•ืคื™ืข ืื•ืจื• ืœื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื, ื•ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืืžืช ื–ื” ื›ืžื• ื”ื ื” ืžืงื•ื ืืชื™ (ืฉืžื•ืช ืœืดื’:ื›ืดื), ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ื ื”ื”ืฉื’ื” ืœืืกืคืงืœืจื™ื ื”ืžืื™ืจื” ืžืงื•ื ืชืžื•ื ืช ื”', ื•ืขืœ ืคื ื™ื ื”ืžืื™ืจื™ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื, ื•ื”ืžื‘ื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื•ื.",
50
+ "<b>ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื”.</b> ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืจืฆื” ืœืงื™ื™ื ืขื ื™ืŸ ืกื™ืคื•ืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื–ืจืขื™ื ื•, ืฉื”ืคืจื™ืฉ ืœื”ื’ื™ื“ ื•ืœืกืคืจ ืœื›ืœ ื‘ืŸ ื•ื‘ืŸ ื›ืคื™ ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื. ื•ืžื” ื”ืŸ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ืื—ื“ ื—ื›ื ื•ื›ื•'. ื•ื›ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ืคืกื•ืงื™ื ืžืคื•ืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื–ื” ื•ื“ืจืฉื•ื ื—ื–\"ืœ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื."
51
+ ],
52
+ [
53
+ "<b>ื—ื›ื ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ .ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื•ืืชื—ื ืŸ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืณ:ื›ืณ) ื›ื™ ื™ืฉืืœืš ื‘ื ืš ืžื—ืจ ืœืืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืžืฉืืœืชื• ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื“ืงื“ืง ื‘ื›ืœ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ ื”ืคืกื— ื ื™ื›ืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื›ื, ืฉื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ืขื“ื•ืช ื—ืงื™ื ื•ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื, ื•ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื”ื ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื˜ืขื ืฉื”ื ืขื“ื•ืช ืขืœ ื’ืื•ืœืช ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ, ืฉื”ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ื•ืœื•ื™ืžืจืจื• ืืช ื—ื™ื™ื”ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืกื—, ื–ื›ืจ ืฉืคืกื— ื”ืžืงื•ื ืขืœ ื‘ืชื™ ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื‘ื˜ืœื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื–ืœื ื•ืืœื”ื™ื”ื ืขืฉื” ื”' ืฉืคื˜ื™ื.",
54
+ " <b>ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื.</b> ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉืื™ืŸ ื ืจืื” ื‘ื”ื ื˜ืขื ืžื•ืกื‘ืจ ื›ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ืขืฆื ืœื ืชืฉื‘ืจื• ื‘ื• ื•ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ืื—ืช. ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉื˜ืขืžื• ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืงื‘ืœื” ื›ื™ ืืข\"ืค ืฉืื›ืœื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ืฉื™ื‘ืจื• ืืช ืขืฆืžื•ืชื ื•ืœื ื›ื™ืœื• ืื•ืชื ื•ื›ื™ ืชืžื™ื“ ื”ื™ื• ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ืžื™ื˜ื‘ ื”ืืจืฅ. ",
55
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื.</b> ื›ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจืœ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื• ื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืืจ ื“ื™ื ื™ ื—ืžืฅ ื•ืžืฆื” ื•ื“ืงื“ื•ืงื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื [ืฉ]ื‘ื”ื, ืจืฆื” ืœื“ืขืช ืขื™ืงืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื.",
56
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืš ื”ื’ื™ืจืกื ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื ื•ืกื—ืื•ืช ืฉืœื ื•, ื•ืงืฉื” ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื–ื• ืœืฉืืœื” ื–ื•, ื•ืจืฉ\"ื™ ื–\"ืœ ืคื™ืจืฉ ื“ืฉืืœืช ื”ื—ื›ื ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื›ื•' ื›ืœืœ ื‘ื” ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืขื™ืงืจ ื”ื™ื•ื ื”ื•ื ื”ืคืกื— ืœืžื” ืื ื• ืžืงื“ื™ืžื™ืŸ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ืžืฉื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื• ื›ื™ ืื ื• ืขื•ืฉื™ื ื–ื” ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื—, ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื•ื‘ืข, ื•ื’ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืฉื•ื ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจื™ื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืืจ ื˜ืขืžื• ื‘ืคื™ื ื•, ื•ืžืชื•ืš ื”ื˜ืขื ื ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื˜ืขืžื™ ื”ืžืฆื•ื” ื•ื ืกืคืจ ื‘ื” ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ืืžืจื• ืืฃ ืืชื” ืคืชื— ืœื• ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ืคืœื™ื’ ืœื“ืงื“ืง ื•ืœืฉืื•ืœ ื•ื’ื ืืชื” ืชืŸ ืœื—ื›ื ื•ื™ื—ื›ื ืขื•ื“ ื•ื”ืฉื™ื‘ื”ื• ื›ืœ ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืืคื™' ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉื”ื ืชืงื ืช ื—ื–\"ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ืฉื•ื ืกืžืš ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื” ืฉืชื™ืงื ื• ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืœืคื™ ื’ื™ืจืกืชื™ื ื• ื›ืš ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ืฉืืจ ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื”ืคื˜ืจื” ื–ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื•ืกื™ื•ื ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื‘ื• ื ืคื˜ืจื™ืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืคื™ืจืฉื•ื”ื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื, ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ืค\"ื™ ื”\"ื“) ื”ื’ื™ืจืกื ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•', ืื‘ืœ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืฉื™ื ื•ื™ ื›ื™ ืฉื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื”ื–ื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื˜ืคืฉ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ, ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืœื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืงืœื™ื ืฉื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ื‘ื™ืŸ, ื•ืขืœ ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ื”ื‘ืŸ ื—ื›ื ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ื–ืง ื™ื“ ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื”' ืžืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืชืžื”ื ื™ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืฉืืœื” ื”ื–ืืช ื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉื ืืžืจื” ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ื›ื ื’ื“ื” (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืณ:ื›ืดื“) ื•ืืžืจืช ืœื‘ื ืš ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ืฆื•ื ื• ื”' ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืืช ื›ืœ ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื›ื•'. ื•ืœืคื™ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื›ืชื‘ื ื• ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ื‘ื›ืœืœ, ื›ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื—, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืฃ ืืชื” ื•ื›ื•'."
57
+ ],
58
+ [
59
+ "<b>ืจืฉืข ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ืค\"ื™ ื”\"ื“) ืžื” ื”ื˜ื•ืจื— ืฉืืชื ืžื˜ืจื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ื‘ื–ื” ืœืขื›ื‘ ืืช ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœืขืจื‘ื‘ ืฉืžื—ืช ื”ื—ื’, ื›ื™ ืจืฉืข ื›ื’ื•ื‘ื” ืืคื• ื‘ืœ ื™ื“ืจื•ืฉ (ืชื”ื™ืœื™ื ื™ืณ:ื“ืณ), ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืœื›ื, ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ื•ื›ืคืจ ื‘ืขื™ืงืจ (ื›ื™) [ื›ืื™ืœื•] ื”ื•ื ืœื ื ืฆื˜ื•ื” ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ. ืืฃ ืืชื” ื”ืงื”ื” ืืช ืฉื™ื ื™ื•. ื”ืจื•ืฆื™ื ืœืœืขื•ืก ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ. ื•ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืฆืืชื™ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื•.",
60
+ "ื•ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ื”ื•ื ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื ืขืœ ืคืจืขื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื›ืดื•) ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื, ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ืžื—ืจ, ืจืžื– ืขืœ ื‘ื ื™ื”ื ืžืžืฉ ืฉื ื•ืœื“ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืชืจื‘ื•ืช ืื ืฉื™ื ื—ื˜ืื™ื ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืœื›ื ื•ืœื ืœื•, ื•ืž\"ืž ืชืžื”ื ื™ ืฉืื ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื–ื• ืชืฉื•ื‘ืชื• ืฉื‘ืฆื“ื” ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืฉืชืฉื•ื‘ืชื• ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื”ื™ื (ืฉื) ื•ืืžืจืชื ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”'. ื•ื ืจืื” ืœื™ ื›ื™ ื”ื“ืจืฉื ื‘ื–ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื›ืืŸ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืจื‘ื™ื ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ ื•ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืืžืจื• ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื‘ืฉื•ืจื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื ืชื‘ืฉืจื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื ืขืชื™ื“ื™ื ืœืจืื•ืช ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืงื•ื“ ื”ืขื ื•ื™ืฉืชื—ื•ื•, ื•ืœื‘ื ื™ื [ื \"ื: ื•ืืžื ื] ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื”ื–ืžืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ืืฉื™ืžื ื›ืœ ื›ืš, ื›ื™ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื•ื ืืฆืœื ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืกื•ืจื ืจืข, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœืคื™ื™ืกื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ืœื”ื ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”', <small>]ื\"ื”, ื ืจืื” ืฉื—ืกืจ ื›ืืŸ, ืฉืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉ ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืžืฉ\"ื› ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืœื”ืœืŸ ื”ื ื’\"ื› ืฉื ื™ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื ื›ื•' ื ืจืื” ืฉื—ืกืจ, ืฉืœื ื ืชืคืจืฉ ืฉื ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืœ ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ.[</small> ื•ื‘ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ืคืกื— ืขืœ ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืืžืจ ื•ืืช ื‘ืชื™ื ื• ื”ืฆื™ืœ ื”ื ื’\"ื› ืฉื ื™ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื, ื›ื™ ืขืœ ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืจืžื– ืขืœ ื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื–ืžืŸ, ื›ื™ ืขืœ ืื•ืชื ืฉื”ืืžื™ื ื• ื‘ื”' ื•ื”ื™ื• ืžื–ืจืข ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืคืกื—, ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื• ืฉืœื ืกืžื›ื• ื‘ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ื›ื™ ื›ื•ืœื ืžืชื• ื‘ืฉืœืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ืืคื™ืœื”, ื•ืœื ืขื•ื“ ืืœื ืฉื›ืœืœ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื–ื• ื‘ืื•ืžืจื• ืืฃ ืืชื” ื”ืงื”ื” ืืช ืฉื™ื ื™ื•, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ืฉื›ืคืจ ื‘ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื‘ืŸ ื ื›ืจ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื• ื•ืฉื™ื ื™ื• ืฉืœ ื–ื” ืชืงื”ื ื” ืฉืจื•ืื” ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืฉืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ, ื›ื™ ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”' ืœืื•ืชื ืฉืคืกื— ืขืœื™ื”ื ืฉื”ื ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื•, ื•ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ืขื•ื ืฉื• ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœื• ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื•, ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืงื“ืง ื”ืจืฉืข ื‘ืžืœืช ืœื›ื ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ืื ื• ื’ื ื›ืŸ ืžื”ืคื›ื™ืŸ ื•ื“ื•ืจืฉื™ืŸ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ, ืœื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื–ื” ืžืฉืžืขื• ืฉืœ ืžืงืจื, ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืฃ ืœืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืื ื• ืžืฉื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ.",
61
+ "ื•ื”ื—ื›ื ืฉืืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื›ื•' ืืฉืจ ืฆื•ื” ื”' ืืœื”ื™ื ื• ืืชื›ื, ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ื• ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืืชื›ื, ื“ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืืœื”ื™ื ื•. ื•ืžื”ื• ืืชื›ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืืชื ืฉื™ืฆืืชื ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืืœื™ื›ื. [<small>ื‘ื’ืœื™ื•ืŸ ื”ื›ืช\"ื™ ื›ืชื•ื‘</small>: ื•ื›\"ื› ื”ืชื•ืก' ื‘ืคื™' ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื•ื–\"ืœ ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ืืชื›ื ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื›ืžื• ืœื›ื ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžื”ื›ืœืœ ื•ื”ื ื“ืงืืžืจ ืืชื›ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืœื ื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืื•ืชื” ืฉืขื” ืฉืฆื•ื” ื”' ืื•ืชื” ืžืฆื•ื”, <small>ืขื›\"ืœ</small>]."
62
+ ],
63
+ [
64
+ "<b>ืชื.</b> ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื›ื ื•ืœื ืจืฉืข ื ืงืจื ืชื. ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื” ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื’:ื™ืดื“) ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืฉืืœืš ื‘ื ืš ืžื—ืจ ืœืืžืจ ืžื” ื–ืืช, ื•ืืžืจืช ืืœื™ื• ื‘ื—ื–ืง ื™ื“ ื›ื•'. ื•ื”ื•ื ื›ื•ื— ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ."
65
+ ],
66
+ [
67
+ "<b> ื•ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืืช ืคืชื— ืœื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื™ ืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ืฉืืœืช ืฉื•ื ื‘ืŸ, ืืœื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืžืขืฆืžืš. ื•ื›ืžื“ื•ืžื” ืœื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื™ื ื• ืžื›ืœ ื–ื”, ื›ื™ ืืข\"ืค ืฉืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืœืคืจืฉ ืœื ืฉื™ื ื•ืœืงื˜ื ื™ื ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื.",
68
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจ\"ื— ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ืคื™' ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ, ืืœื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืชืคืก ื”ืชื ื ื”ืžืงืจื ื“ื•ืจืฉ ืื•ืชื•. ื•ืœื–ื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื”ื–ื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืื™ืžืชื™ ื”ื•ื ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช. ื•ืืžืจ ืื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืกืชื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ื™ืชื™ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ื›ื™ ืฉืžื ืžืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ืื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ื–ื”, ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื“ืจืฉ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ ืœืžืขืœื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื’:ื”ืณ) ื•ืขื‘ื“ืช ืืช ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ื‘ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื–ื”, ืœื›ืš ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื“ืžืฉืžืข ื‘ืขื™ืฆื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ื™ื•ื, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ื™ืชื™ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื ืชื—ื™ืœ ืœื”ื’ื™ื“ ื›ืŸ ืžื‘ืขื•ื“ ื™ื•ื, ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ื™\"ื“, ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื• ืžืชื—ืœืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืชื• ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœืดื’:ื’ืณ) ืžืžื—ืจืช ื”ืคืกื— ื™ืฆืื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ื™ื“ ืจืžื”, ืฉืจ\"ืœ ืžืžื—ืจืช ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜\"ื• ื™ืฆืื•, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ ื›ืืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžื‘ืขื•ื“ ื™ื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื•ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื—ื™ื˜ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื”ื’ื“ื”, ืช\"ืœ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื”, ืœื ืืžืจืชื™ ืœืš ืœืกืคืจ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืฉืชื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืื•ืชื ื‘ืืฆื‘ืข ืฉืืชื” ืื•ืžืจ ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ืžืจื•ืจ ื–ื”, ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉืกื™ื™ื ื”ืชื ื ืกื“ืจ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื—ื–ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ื•ื›ื•'."
69
+ ]
70
+ ],
71
+ "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers": [
72
+ [
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+ "<b>ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ืกื™ื•ื ื”ื’ื ื•ืช (ืขื™' ืœืขื™ืœ ื“\"ื” ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•), ื•ืื•ืœื™ ื”ื•ื ื’\"ื› ืžื”ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœืคืจืฉ ืœืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืกืžื•ืš ืœืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ื”ืจืฉืข ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ. ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืจืื™ื” ืžื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืฉืกื™ืคืจ ื’\"ื› ืœืื ืฉื™ ื“ื•ืจื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ืืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืขื ื•ื›ื•'.",
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ืขื‘ื“ื• ืืœื”ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื.</b> ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืขืœ ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื”ื ื–ื›ืจื™ื ืชืจื— ื•ื ื—ื•ืจ, ืœื ืขืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื, ื›ื™ ืžืงื˜ื ื•ืชื• ื”ื›ื™ืจ ืืช ื‘ื•ืจืื• ื•ืžืืก ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›ื™ื“ื•ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื–\"ืœ ื•ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ื”ื›ื•ืชื™ื™ื, ื•ืžืขืฆืžื• ืขืฉื” ื•ืœื ืžืชืจื‘ื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื•, ื•ืžืื‘ ื•ืื ืื—ื“ ื™ืฆืื• ื”ื•ื ื•ื ื—ื•ืจ, ื–ื” ื”ืœืš ืœืข\"ื– ื•ื–ื” ืขื‘ื“ ืืช ื”ืฉื, ื•ืžืืก ื‘ื›ืœ ื–ืจืข ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืงืจื ื”' ืื—ื“, ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉื ื‘ื“ืœ ื”ื•ื ืžื›ืœ ื”ืื•ืžื•ืช ืœืงืจื•ื ื‘ืฉื ื”' ืื—ื“ ื›ืš ื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœื• ื”' ื•ืœืงื—ื• ื”ื•ื ื•ื–ืจืขื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืœื• ืœื’ื•ื™ ืื—ื“ ื‘ืืจืฅ, ืžื“ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžื“ื”, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืืงื— ืืช ืื‘ื™ื›ื ืืช ืื‘ืจื”ื ืžืขื‘ืจ ื”ื ื”ืจ, ื›ืคืฉื•ื˜ื•, ื•ื’ื ืžื•ืจื” ื‘ื“ืจืš ื”ืืžืช ืฉืœืงื—ื• ืžืื•ืชื ืฉืฉื•ื›ื ื™ื ื‘ืขื‘ืจ ื”ื ื”ืจ ื”ื™ื•ืฆื ืžืขื“ืŸ, ืฉืคื™ืจืฉื• ืžืŸ ื”ืขื™ืงืจ."
75
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืื•ืœืš ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืœ ืืจืฅ ื›ื ืขืŸ.</b> ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื™ืดื’:ื™ืดื–) ืงื•ื ื”ืชื”ืœืš ื‘ืืจืฅ ืœืืจื›ื” ื•ืœืจื—ื‘ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชื”ื ื ื•ื—ื” ืœื™ื›ื‘ืฉ ืœื‘ื ื™ื•, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืง ื™ืฉ ื ื•ื—ืœื™ืŸ (ื‘\"ื‘ ืง' ื'), ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืชื”ื ืžืชื ื” ืžื•ื—ื–ืงืช ืžืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืฉืœื ืชืชื‘ื˜ืœ ื‘ืฉื•ื ืขื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ื–ืจืขื•, ื•ื’ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ื˜ืขื ื” ืขืœ ื”ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื ื‘ื” ืฉืœื ื™ืืžืจื• ืฉื‘ืื™ื ืœื’ื–ื•ืœ ืžื”ื, ืฉื™ืฉื™ื‘ื• ืœื”ื ืื“ืจื‘ื” ืื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ื—ื–ื™ืง ื‘ื” ื•ืืชื ื‘ืื™ื ืœื’ื–ื•ืœ ืื•ืชื” ืžืžื ื• ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืชืžืœืื” ืกืืชื ื•ื–ืžืŸ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืคื™ืจื•ืชื™ื”ื, ื›ื™ ื ื™ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ืœืคื™ืจื•ืช ืื•ืœื™ ื™ื—ื–ืจื• ืœืืžื•ื ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื”ื›ื ืขื ื™ ืื– ื‘ืืจืฅ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื•ืณ) ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืœื ืฉืœื ืขื•ืŸ ื”ืืžื•ืจื™ ืขื“ ื”ื ื” (ืฉื ื˜\"ื•).",
78
+ "<b>ื•ืืจื‘ื” ืืช ื–ืจืขื•. </b>ืืžืจื• ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ืค\"ื™ ื”\"ื”) ืืžืจ ืจื‘ ืื—ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืืจื‘ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื—ืกืจ, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ื–\"ืœ, ื•ืืจื™ื‘ ืขื ื–ืจืขื•, ื‘ื ื™ ืงื˜ื•ืจื”, ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ืžืฉืžื•ืชืŸ ืืชื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื™ื“ืข ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื ืงืจืื• ืขืœ ืฉื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” (ืคืจืฉื” ืก\"ื), ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ื™ืืš ื™ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื‘ื ื™ ืงื˜ื•ืจื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœื™ืฆื—ืง ืฉื ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืชื—ืœื”, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื™ืฉ ืœืคืจืฉ ื”ืจื‘ื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ื ืขืฉื™ืชื™ ืขืžื• ื•ื”ืจื‘ื” ื ืกื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื ืชืชื™ ืœื• ืืช ื™ืฆื—ืง, ื›ื“ื™ ืœื ืกื•ืชื•, ื“ื‘ืจื™ื‘ื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื•ื‘ืงื•ืฉื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ื ืœื• ื”ื–ืจืข.",
79
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœื• ืืช ื™ืฆื—ืง.</b> ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื•ื ื–ืจืขื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื›ืดื:ื™ืดื‘) ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืฆื—ืง ื™ืงืจื ืœืš ื–ืจืข. ื•ื›ืœืœ ื‘ืžืœืช ื•ืืชืŸ, ืฉื ืชื ื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ืžืขืจื›ื•ืช ื”ื›ื•ื›ื‘ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื˜ืดื•:ื”ืณ) ื•ื™ื•ืฆื ืื•ืชื• ื”ื—ื•ืฆื”, ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื” ืื‘ืจื”ื ืจื•ืื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืขืžื™ื“ ืฉื•ื ื–ืจืข ืžืฉืจื” ื”ืฆื“ืงืช, ื›ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื• ืฉืœ ืชืจื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ ืข\"ื– ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืฆืืช ื›ืœ ื–ืจืขื• ื›ืฉืจ ื•ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื• ื ื•ื‘ืœื•ืช ืคืจื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื ืชื—ืœืง ื–ืจืขื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื—ืง.",
80
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœื™ืฆื—ืง ืืช ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื™ ืจื‘ืงื” ื’\"ื› ื”ื™ืชื” ืขืงืจื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ืื™ืžื”ื•ืช, ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ื˜ืขืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืžื›ืœืœื ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืžื–ืœ ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื•ื“ืข ื‘ืืžืช, ื›ื™ ืœื›ืš ื™ืฆื ืขืฉื• ื”ืจืฉืข ืชืื•ื ืขื ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ื‘ื‘ื˜ืŸ ืื—ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื• ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื ื›ื™ ืฆื“ืงืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืžืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืื” ืœื• ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืขืจื›ืช ืžื–ืœ ื•ืœื ื‘ื˜ื‘ืข ืื‘ ื•ืื ื•ืœื ืžื›ืจื™ื— ืื—ืจ, ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ื‘ื˜ืŸ ืื—ืช ื ื•ืœื“ื• ื”ื•ื ื•ืขืฉื•, ื•ืขืฉื• ื™ืฆื ืœืชืจื‘ื•ืช ืจืขื” ื•ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืœืš ื‘ื“ืจืš ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื.",
81
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœืขืฉื• ืืช ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ืžืคื ื™ ื–ื›ื•ืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื—ืง, ื•ืฆื•ื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืฉืœื ื™ืชื’ืจื• ื‘ื• ืžืœื—ืžื” ื›ืœืœ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืณ:ื”ืณ) ื›ื™ ื™ืจื•ืฉื” ืœืขืฉื• ื ืชืชื™ ืืช ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ, ืจืžื– ืขืœ ืกื•ืจื• ื•ืขื ื™ื™ื ื•, ืฉื”ื•ื ืื™ืฉ ืฉืขื™ืจ, ื•ืžืงื•ืžื• ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ, ื•ื—ืœืงื• ื”ืฉืขื™ืจื™ื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืขืชื™ื“ ืœืงื‘ืœ ืขื•ื•ื ื•ืชื™ื”ืŸ ื•ื’ื–ืจื•ืชื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœืขืชื™ื“ ืœื‘ื ื›ื™ ืื— ืœืฆืจื” ื™ื•ืœื“ (ืžืฉืœื™ ื™ืดื–:ื™ืดื–), ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืœื›ืœ ื›ื™ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ื•ื ื–ืจืขื• ืฉืœ ื™ืฆื—ืง ื•ืฉืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื‘ื• ืžืชืงื™ื™ืžืช ื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื›ื™ ื’ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ื–ืจืขืš ื•ื›ื•', ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื‘ื ื™ื• ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื™ืจื“ื• ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉืงื™ื™ื ืœื”ื ื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื”ื’ืœื•ืช ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื•ื›ืฉ\"ื› ืฉื™ืงื™ื™ื ืœื”ื ื’ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช, ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื’ื ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื•ื“ื• ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™, ืฉื“ืŸ ืื•ืชืŸ ื›ืžื™ื“ืชื ื‘ื ื’ืขื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ื‘ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื—:ื™ืดื) ื›ื™ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืืฉืจ ื–ื“ื• ืขืœื™ื”ื ื›ืž\"ืฉ ื”ืžืชืจื’ื (ืื•ื ืงืœื•ืก ืฉื), ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ืกื™ื“ืจ ื”ืžืกื“ืจ ื•ืืžืจ ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ื•'."
82
+ ],
83
+ [
84
+ "<b> ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื”ื™ื ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืช ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™ ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ื™ืฆืื• ื‘ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื•ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืฆื•ื” ื–ื• ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื“ื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ ืขื‘ืจื™ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื˜ืดื•:ื™ืดื“) ื”ืขื ืง ืชืขื ื™ืง ืœื• ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืฉืœื›ืš ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืืช ื”' ื‘ื™ืจื™ื“ืช ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืฆืจื™ื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืฉื ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืš ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืจืขื”. ืฉื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ. ืžื™ื•ื ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉื’ื–ืจ."
85
+ ],
86
+ [],
87
+ [
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+ "<b>ื•</b>ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ื” <b>ื”ื™ื ืฉืขืžื“ื” ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœื ื•,</b> ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ื‘ืจื™ืช ืฉื›ืจืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ื›ืฉื ืคืœื” ืขืœื™ื• ืื™ืžื” ื—ืฉื›ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉื”ืจืื”ื• ืืจื‘ืขื” ื’ืœื™ื•ืช ื•ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื• ืฉื™ืžืœื˜ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžื”ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื• ื’\"ื› ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืฉืืžืจ ืœื• ืงื—ื” ืœื™ ืขื’ืœื” ืžืฉื•ืœืฉืช ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ (ื‘\"ืจ ืคืจืฉื” ืž\"ื“), ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจ ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื›ืœื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืฆื™ืœื ื• ืžื™ื“ื ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ื‘ื”ืฆืœื—ื” ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื”ืฆื“ื™ืง ืฆื ื•ืœืžื“ ื•ื›ื•'."
89
+ ]
90
+ ],
91
+ "First Fruits Declaration": [
92
+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืฆื ื•ืœืžื“ ืžื” ื‘ืงืฉ ืœื‘ืŸ ื›ื•'.</b> ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื—ื™ื ื• ื‘ืฉืจื ื• ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื™ืขืงื‘ ืื‘ื™ื ื•.",
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+ "<b>ืฉืคืจืขื” ืœื ื’ื–ืจ ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื–ื›ืจื™ื.</b> ืฉืืžืจื• ืœื• ืืฆื˜ื’ื ื™ื ื™ื• ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ืœื”ื•ืœื“ ื‘ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืฉื™ืข ืืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื›ืž\"ืฉ ืจื–\"ืœ.",
96
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™.</b> ืจืฆื” ืœืื‘ื“ ืืช ืื‘ื™ ื›ืž\"ืฉ ื”ืžืชืจื’ื ืœื‘ืŸ ืืจืžืื” ื‘ืขื ืœืื•ื‘ื“ื ื™ืช ืื‘ื ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืชืœื” ืœื• ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ืื™ืœื• ืื™ื‘ื“. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ื‘ื™ื˜ืœ ืขืฆืชื• ื•ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ืžืงื ื” ืœืจื•ื‘ ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืœืณ:ืžืดื’) ื•ื™ืคืจื•ืฅ ื”ืื™ืฉ ืžืื“ ืžืื“, ื•ื›ืœืœ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืืœื” ื”ื•ื ืžื” ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ืœื™ืืจืข ืœื‘ื ื™ื, ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ื›ืœ ืกื™ืžืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ื, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ."
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+ ],
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+ [
99
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจื“ ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืชื™ืžื” ืžื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ืจื“ ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ืืฆืœ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™. ื•ื™\"ืœ ืฉื‘ื ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืœืคืจืฉ ืฉื›ืœ ื–ื” ื ื—ืฉื‘ ืžืŸ ื”ืฆืจื•ืช ื•ืžื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ืื—ืจ ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ื”ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืฆืขืจ ื•ื‘ื ืกื™ื•ื ื•ืช ื•ืœื ืจืื• ื‘ื˜ื•ื‘ื”. ",
100
+ "ื•ืืžืจื• <b>ืื ื•ืก ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ื“ื™ื‘ื•ืจ</b>, ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื•ืืขืค\"ื› ืœื ืฉื‘ ืœืื—ื•ืจ.",
101
+ "ื•ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืžืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™ ื•ื›ื•' ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ื’ื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื”ืคืจืฉื” ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื˜\"ื– ื'), ื•ื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืจืฉื• ื›ืž\"ืฉ ื‘ืกืคืจื™.",
102
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื’ืจ ืฉื.</b> ืฉืžื ืชืืžืจ ืฉื ื˜ืœ ื›ืชืจ ืžืœื›ื•ืช, ืช\"ืœ ื•ื™ื’ืจ ืฉื, ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ื›ื’ืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื“.",
103
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœ ืคืจืขื” ืœื’ื•ืจ ื‘ืืจืฅ ื‘ืื ื• ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืžืจืขื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืื‘ืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืคื ื™ ื”ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืžืจืขื”."
104
+ ],
105
+ [
106
+ "ื•ืฉืžื ืชืืžืจ ื‘ืื•ื›ืœื•ืกื™ืŸ ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืช\"ืœ <b>ื‘ืžืชื™ ืžืขื˜</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื ืคืฉ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืกืคืจื™."
107
+ ],
108
+ [],
109
+ [
110
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื‘ื” ื›ืฆืžื— ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืš ืงื‘ืœื ื•, ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉื• ืœืฉื ื™ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ืจื‘ ื›ืจื‘ื‘ื” ื•ื›ืฆืžื— ื”ืฉื“ื”, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื’ื•ื–๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื ืฆื•ืžื—ื™ื ื™ื•ืชืจ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืฆื•ืžื—ื™ื ื‘ืœื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืจื‘ื” ืืœื ืžืื™ืœื™ื”ื, ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืฉื›ืœ ื–ื” ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื™ื” ืขื ืจื‘ ืขื ื™ื•ืฆืจื•. ",
111
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืขืจื•ื ื•ืขืจื™ื”.</b> ืขืจื•ืžื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืื‘ื•ืช, ื•ืžื”ื• ืขืจื™ื”, ื›ืžื” ื“ืชื™ืžื (ื—ื‘ืงื•ืง ื’ืณ:ื˜ืณ) ืขืจื™ื” ืชืขื•ืจ ืงืฉืชืš, ืฉืœื ืงื™ื™ืžื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžื™ืœื” ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื (ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื) ื”ื™ื” ืจื‘ื™ ืžืชื™ื ื‘ืŸ ื—ืจืฉ ืื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ื˜ืดื–:ื—ืณ) ื•ืืขื‘ื•ืจ ืขืœื™ืš ื•ืืจืืš ื•ื”ื ื” ืขืชืš ืขืช ื“ื•ื“ื™ื, ื”ื’ื™ืขื” ืฉืขื” ืฉื ืฉื‘ืข ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืฉื”ื•ื ื’ื•ืืœ ืืช ื‘ื ื™ื• ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ืฉื™ืชืขืกืงื• ื‘ื”ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืฉื“ื™ื ื ื›ื•ื ื• ื•ืฉืขืจืš ืฆืžื—, ืžื”ื• ืฉื“ื™ื ื ื›ื•ื ื•, ื–ื” ืžืฉื” ื•ืื”ืจืŸ, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ื“ืณ:ื”ืณ) ืฉื ื™ ืฉื“ื™ืš ื›ืฉื ื™ ืขืคืจื™ื ื•ื’ื•', ื•ืฉืขืจืš ืฆืžื—, ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ืงืฅ ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”, ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืฉืชื™ ืžืฆื•ื•ืช ืฉื™ืชืขืกืงื• ื‘ื”ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื’ืืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ืคืกื— ื•ืžืฆื•ืช ืžื™ืœื”, ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ืฉื) ื•ืืขื‘ื•ืจ ืขืœื™ืš ื•ืืจืืš ืžืชื‘ื•ืกืกืช ื•ืื•ืžืจ ืœืš ื‘ื“ืžื™ื™ืš ื—ื™ื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ ื“ืžื™ืœื” ื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ืžืดื—) ื•ื›ืœ ืขืจืœ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื•, ื•ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ืžืœ ืื•ืชื, ืฉื›ื•ืœื ื‘ื™ื˜ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžื™ืœื” ื‘ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉื‘ื˜ ืœื•ื™ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื’:ื˜ืณ) ื•ื‘ืจื™ืชืš ื™ื ืฆื•ืจื•, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืืฃ ืฉื‘ื˜ื• ืฉืœ ืœื•ื™ ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื”ื˜ื™ืฃ ืžื”ื ื“ื ื‘ืจื™ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื›ื ืกื• ืชื—ืช ื›ื ืคื™ ื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื”, ื•ื˜ืขื•ืช ื”ื•ื ื‘ื™ื“ื, ื“ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืžื™ืคืงื“ื™ ืืžื™ืœื”, ืžื™ืœืชื ืกื’ื™' ืœื”ื•, ื•ืœื ื“ืžื™ ืœืขืจื‘ื™ ืžื”ื•ืœ, ื“ื”ื”ื•ื ื›ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื ืžื”ื™ืœื™ ื“ืžื™ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืข\"ื– ื‘ืคืจืง ืื™ืŸ ืžืขืžื™ื“ื™ืŸ (ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›\"ื– ื')."
112
+ ],
113
+ [
114
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจืขื• ืื•ืชื ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื›ื•'. </b>ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืจืื• ืฉื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืคืจื™ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœืขื ื•ืชื™ื ื•, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืืžืจ ืืœ ืขืžื• ื”ื ื” ืขื ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืจื‘ ื•ืขืฆื•ื ืžืžื ื• ื”ื‘ื” ื ืชื—ื›ืžื” ืœื• ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืจืื™ื” ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืœื ืขื™ื ื• ืื•ืชื ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืืœื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื”ื ื•ืœื”ืชื ืคืœ ื•ืœื”ืชื’ื•ืœืœ ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ื ื›ืœืžื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืœืฉืœื•ื— ื‘ื”ื ื™ื“ ืœื’ืžืจื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ืื• ื‘ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื ื•ื ืชื™ื™ืฉื‘ื• ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ื ื‘ืžืฆื•ืชื ื•ื–ื” ื ืงืจื ื‘ื’ื™ื“ื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”, ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืกื•ื˜ื” (ื™\"ื ื') ืœื”ื ืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ืœื•, ื ืชื—ื›ื ืขืœ ืžื•ืฉื™ืขืŸ ืœื“ื•ื ื ื‘ืžื™ื, ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื ืฉื‘ืข ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื™ื ืžื‘ื•ืœ ืœืขื•ืœื, ื•ื”ื ืœื ื™ื“ืขื• ื›ื™ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืขืœ ืื•ืžื” ืื—ืช ืžื‘ื™ื, ื•ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ืืžืจื• (ื•ื™ืง\"ืจ ืค' ื›\"ื–) ื ืชื—ื›ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืžื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ืœืคื ื™ื ื•, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉื‘ื ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื”ื ืจืข ื‘ืคืจื”ืกื™ื ืืœื”ื™ื”ื ืžื•ืฉื™ืข ืื•ืชื ื›ืžื• ืœื‘ืŸ ื•ืขืฉื•, ื•ืœื ื ืขืฉื” ื›ืขืฉื• ืฉืืžืจ ื™ืงืจื‘ื• ื™ืžื™ ืื‘ืœ ืื‘ื™ ื•ืื”ืจื’ื” ืืช ื™ืขืงื‘ ืื—ื™ ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื•ื“ืข ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืš ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืš ื™ื•ืœื™ื“ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ื ื™ื, ืืœื ื”ื‘ื” ื ืชื—ื›ืžื” ืœื”ื ืžื™ื“ ืœื’ื–ื•ืจ ืžื™ืชื” ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ื”ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืœื•ื“ ื”ื™ืื•ืจื” ืชืฉืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื•."
115
+ ],
116
+ [
117
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืขื ื•ื ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืฉื™ืžื• ืขืœื™ื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื”ื›ืœ ื›ื“ื™ ืœืขื ื•ืชื ื•ืœืžืขื˜ื, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ื ื™ื™ื ื™ื ื—ื–ืงื™ื ืœืžืœืš ื•ืืžืจื• ืฉื™ืกื™ื™ืขื•ื”ื•, ื•ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืกื•ื˜ื” ื™\"ื ื') ืฉืชืœื• ืœื• ืžืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืฆื•ืืจื• ืฉืœ ืžืœืš, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ื”ืžืœืš ื”ื™ื” ืžืกื™ื™ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ, ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืžืœืš ื ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื ืชื ื• ืขืœื™ื”ื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ืงืฉื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืš, ื›ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ืžืขื˜ ืžืขื˜ ื”ื™ื• ืžืชื’ื‘ืจื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืžืฉืœื• ืœืžืจื•ืจ ืฉืชื—ื™ืœืชื• ืจืš ื•ืกื•ืคื• ืงืฉื”."
118
+ ],
119
+ [
120
+ "<b>ื‘ืคืจืš</b> ืžืชืจื’ืžื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงืฉื™ื•, ื•ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื‘ืชื—ื™ืœื” ืืžืจื• ืœื”ื ื›ื™ ื”ืžืœืื›ื” ื ื—ื•ืฆื” ื•ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืœื™ื•ื ืื—ื“, ืขืฉื• ืจืฆื•ืŸ ื”ืžืœืš ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชืจืฆื” ืœื›ื, ื›ื™ ื”ื˜ื™ื‘ ืœื›ื ื•ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื›ื ืขื“ ื”ื™ื•ื, ื•ื”ื ื”ืชื—ื–ืงื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ, ื•ืื—\"ื› ืฉืžื• ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœื—ืง ืฉื™ืขืฉื• ืื•ืชื• ื”ืกืš ื™ื•ื ื™ื•ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉื™ื ื‘ืคืจืš ื‘ืคื” ืจืš."
121
+ ],
122
+ [],
123
+ [],
124
+ [
125
+ "<b>ื•ื ืฆืขืง ืืœ ื”' ื•ื›ื•' ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื™ืžื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื›ื™ ืžืขื˜ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื•ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉืœ ืฆืขืจ ื ืงืจืื• ืจื‘ื™ื, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื•ื™ืงืจื ื˜\"ื•) ื•ืืฉื” ื›ื™ ื™ื–ื•ื‘ ื–ื•ื‘ ื“ืžื” ื™ืžื™๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ืจื‘ื™ื ื•ืื™ื ื ืืœื ืฉืœืฉื” ื™ืžื™ื.",
126
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืžืช ืžืœืš ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื™ืื ื—ื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ.</b> ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื–\"ืœ ืžืคื™ ื”ืฉืžื•ืขื”, ืฉื ืฆื˜ืจืข ื•ื”ื™ื” ืฉื•ื—ื˜ ื”ื™ืœื“ื™ื ืœืจื—ื•ืฅ ื‘ื“ืžื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื™ื–ืขืงื• ื›ืžื• ืžืขื™ืจ ืžืชื™ื ื™ื–ืขืงื• (ืขื™' ืื™ื•ื‘ ื›ืดื“:ื™ืดื‘), ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืจืฉื• ืจื–\"ืœ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืขื‘ื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืœืš ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืžืขื‘ื™ื“ืŸ ื›ืœ ื›ืš ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืžืคื ื™ ื—ื™ื‘ืชื• ืฉืœ ื™ื•ืกืฃ ืื‘ืœ ื–ื” ื”ืžืœืš ื—ื™ื“ืฉ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื’ื–ื™ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื›ืจื™ื—ื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื”."
127
+ ],
128
+ [
129
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืฉืžืข ื”' ืืช ืงื•ืœื ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ื–ื›ื•ืจ ืืœื”ื™ื ืืช ื‘ืจื™ืชื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื™ ืืข\"ืค ืฉื‘ื–ื›ื•ืชื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืื•ื™ื ืœื™ื’ืืœ, ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ืจื™ืช ื”ืื‘ื•ืช, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื“ื ืคืกื— (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ื›ืดื‘) ื•ื”ื’ืขืชื ืืœ ื”ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื•ืืœ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช, ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื–ื” ืื‘ืจื”ื ื•ืฉืชื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช ืืœื• ื™ืฆื—ืง ื•ื™ืขืงื‘."
130
+ ],
131
+ [
132
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจื ืืช ืขื ื™ื ื• ื–ื• ืคืจื™ืฉื•ืช ื“ืจืš ืืจืฅ.</b> ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืœ\"ื) ืื ืชืขื ื” ืืช ื‘ื ื•ืชื™ ื•ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ (ื™ื•ืžื ืข\"ื– ื‘') ืœืžื ื•ืข ืžื”ื ืชืฉืžื™ืฉ ื”ืžื˜ื”, ื•ืœื›ืŸ ื ืงืจืืช ืขื•ื ื”, ืฉืžืขื ื” ืื•ืชื” ื›ืฉื ืžื ืข ืžืžื ื”.",
133
+ "<b>ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืจื ืืœื”ื™ื ืืช ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื“ื“ื™ื™ืง ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื“ืข ืืœื”ื™ื, ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืขื• ืืœื ื”ืงื‘\"ื”, ื›ื™ ืžืจื•ื‘ ื”ืขื™ื ื•ื™ ืืคื™ืœื• ื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉืžืฉื™ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื•ืจื™ื ื›ื—ืฅ ื•ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ืŸ ื•ืžืชืžืขื˜ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื”ืฉืžื™ื ื‘ื™ื ื™ ืœื‘ื™ื ืš (ื ื“ืจื™ื ืฆ' ื‘'), ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื“ื“ื™ื™ืง ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื“ืข ืืœื”ื™ื ื›ืžื• ื•ื™ื“ืข ืื“ื ืขื•ื“ ืืช ืืฉืชื• (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื“'), ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืืžืจื ื• ื›ื™ ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืฉื”ื™ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ืžื›ื ื” ืœืชืฉืžื™ืฉ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื“ืขืช ืœืขื•ืจืจ ืœืื“ื ืฉืœื ื™ืขืฉื” ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื”ื•ื ืœืชืื•ื” ื•ื”ื ืื” ื˜ื‘ืขื™ืช ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื›ื‘ื”ืžื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื ื“ืขืช, ืืœื ืฉื™ืขืฉื” ื‘ื—ื›ืžื” ื•ื‘ื“ืขืช ืœื”ืฉืœื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืคืจื™ื” ื•ืจื‘ื™ื” ื•ืœืงื™ื•ื ื”ื’ื•ืฃ, ื•ื’ื ื›ื™ ื”ืฉื›ื‘ืช ื–ืจืข ืชื—ื™ืœืช ื™ืฆื™ืจืชื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื— ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ื ื”ื“ืขืช, ื•ืขืฉื” ื›ืŸ ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืขื™ื™ืŸ ื”ืื“ื ื‘ื–ื” ื•ื™ืขืฉื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ืฉื›ืœ ื•ื‘ืฆื ืขื”, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœืงื“ืฉ ืืช ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืฉืขืช ืชืฉืžื™ืฉ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื”ื•ืฉืข ื™\"ื) ื‘ืงืจื‘ืš ืงื“ื•ืฉ, ื•ื‘ืชืจื’ื•ื ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื“') ื•ื™ื“ืข ืื“ื ืขื•ื“, ื•ื—ื›ื™ื ืื“ื ืขื•ื“, ื•ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ (ืฉืžื•\"ืจ ื') ื•ื™ืจื ืืœื”ื™ื ืืช ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื–ื” ืžืขืฉื” ื”ืขื’ืœ ืฉืขืชื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื•ืžื“ืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืงื˜ืจื’ืช ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื•ื™ื“ืข ืืœื”ื™ื, ืฉืขืชื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื ืœื•ืžืจ ื ืขืฉื” ื•ื ืฉืžืข ื•ืจื™ื—ื ืขืœื™ื”ื."
134
+ ],
135
+ [
136
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืขืžืœื ื• ืืœื• ื”ื‘ื ื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื ืขืžืœ ื”ืื“ื ื›ื™ ื›ืžื” ื”ืื“ื ื™ื’ืข ืœื’ื“ืœื ื•ืœืœืžื“ื ื“ืจืš ืืจืฅ ื•ืชื•ืจื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื™ื’ืข ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื•ื›ืœ ืœื”ื ื™ื— ืœื”ื ืžืžื•ืŸ ืื—ืจ ืžื•ืชื•. ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืืžืจื• ื‘ืขื•ืŸ ื ื“ืจื™ื ื‘ื ื™ื ืžืชื™ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ืืœ ืชืชืŸ ืืช ืคื™ืš ืœื—ื˜ื™ื ืืช ื‘ืฉืจืš ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืฉื‘ืช (ืœ\"ื‘ ื‘').",
137
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืœื•ื“ ื”ื™ืื•ืจื” ืชืฉืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื•.</b> ื•ืืžืจื• ื‘ืคืจืงื™ ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ (ืคืจืง ืž\"ื‘) ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื”ื™ืื•ืจ ื‘ื•ืœืขื ืืœื ืคื•ืœื˜ื ืœืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ื–ืŸ ืื•ืชื ืฉื ื•ืžื‘ื™ื ืกืœืข ื‘ืคื™ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื ื™ืงื• ื“ื‘ืฉ ื•ื—ืœื‘ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื‘:ื™ืดื’) ื•ื™ื ื™ืงื”ื• ื“ื‘ืฉ ืžืกืœืข ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื›ืœ ื–ื” ื ืงืœ ื”ื•ื ื ื’ื“ ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš, ื•ื›ืฉื‘ืื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื™ื ืจืื•ื”ื• ื•ื”ื›ื™ืจื•ื”ื•, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื˜ืดื•:ื‘ืณ) ื–ื” ืืœื™ ื•ืื ื•ื”ื•, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ื›ื™ืจื• ื›ื™ ื”ื•ื ืฉืขืฉื” ืœื”ื ืืช ื”ื ืก ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ.",
138
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืœ ื”ื‘ืช ืชื—ื™ื•ืŸ.</b> ืœื–ื™ืžื”, ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืฉืžื•\"ืจ ื')."
139
+ ],
140
+ [
141
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืœื—ืฆื ื• ื–ื” ื”ื“ื—ืง.</b> ืคื™' ื›ื™ ื›ืฉืจืื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืœื›ืœื•ืชื ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœื“ื—ื•ืง ืื•ืชื ืฉื™ื—ื–ื™ืจื•ื ืœืืžื•ื ืชื ื•ื™ืชืขืจื‘ื• ื‘ื”ื, ื•ื“ื—ืง ื–ื” ืฉืžื“, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื’ื ืจืื™ืชื™ ืืช ื”ืœื—ืฅ, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื’ืื•ืœ ืื•ืชื ืžื”ืจื”, ื›ื™ ื™ืจื ืื ื›ื™ ืฉืžื ืœื ื™ื•ื›ืœื• ืœืขืžื•ื“ ื‘ื ืกื™ื•ืŸ, ื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื”ืชื—ื™ืœื• ืœื”ืชืขืจื‘ ื‘ื”ื ืงืฆืช ื•ืœื‘ื˜ืœ ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžื™ืœื” ื•ืœืœื›ืช ืื—ืจื™ ื”ื›ื•ื—ื•ืช ื”ืขืœื™ื•ื ื™ื ื•ื”ื›ืฉืคื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ื”' ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืœืืš ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืฉืจืฃ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžื›ืืŸ ืจืื™ื” ื›ื™ ืžืœืืš ื•ืฉืจืฃ ืฉื ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ื, ื”ืฉืจืคื™ื ื”ื ืžืœืื›ื™ ืืฉ ื”ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืชื—ืช ื”ื›ืกื ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ื‘ื ื”ืจ ืฉืœ ืืฉ ื”ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืคื ื™ ื”ื›ืกื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ื•ืณ:ื‘ืณ) ืฉืจืคื™ื ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืžืžืขืœ ืœื•, ื•ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ื”ื ืœืžื˜ื” ืžื”ื ื”ืžืชื—ืœืคื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื ื•ืžืชืœื‘ืฉื™ื ื’ื•ืคื•ืช, ื•ื”ื ืฉื ื‘ืจืื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™, ื•ื”ืฉืœื™ื— ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ื“ื•ืข ื”ืžืœืืš ื”ื’ื•ืืœ ื–ื” ืžื˜ื˜ืจื•\"ืŸ, ื•ืฉืžื• ืžื•ืจื” ืขืœื™ื•, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืจ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื”ืฉื•ืžืจ ืื•ืชื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืœืžืฉื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื›ืดื’:ื›ืณ) ื”ื ื” ืื ื›ื™ ืฉื•ืœื— ืžืœืืš ืœืคื ื™ืš, ื•ื”ื•ื ืฉืจ ืฆื‘ื ื”' ืฉื‘ื ืœื™ื”ื•ืฉืข, ื•ืขืœื™ื• ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืกื ื”ื“ืจื™ืŸ ืœ\"ื— ื‘') ื“ืืคื™' ื‘ืคืจื•ื•ื ืงื ืœื ืงื‘ืœื™ื” ืžืฉื”, ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ ื•ื”ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื‘ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื›ืณ:ื˜ืดื–) ื•ื™ืฉืœื— ืžืœืืš ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื™\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืฉื‘ ืœื‘ื•ืจื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš, ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื“ืณ:ืœืดื–) ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืืš ื‘ืคื ื™ื• ื‘ื›ื•ื—ื• ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื”ืžืœืืš ืฉืืžืจ, ื•ื™ืฉืœื— ืžืœืืš, ืขืœ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื”, ืื• ืฉืœื™ื— ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉืฉืœื— ืžืœืืš ื”ื‘ืจื™ืช ืžืœืืš ืคื ื™ื• ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ื—ื•.",
146
+ "<b>ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืขื‘ืจืชื™ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื‘ื›ืœ ืืœื”ื™ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืืขืฉื” ืฉืคื˜ื™ื.</b> ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ืื ืฉืœ ืขืฅ ื ืจืงื‘ืช [ื•ื›ื•'], ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ืกืจ ืฆื™ืœื ื”ืขืœื™ื•ืŸ ืžืขืœื™ื”ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืขืžื™ื“ืŸ, ื•ืžื™ื“ ื ื™ืชืš ื•ื ืจืงื‘, ื•ื‘ื–ื” ื ื•ื“ืข ื›ื™ ืžื›ืช ืืœื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื, ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ื›ื— ืžื•ืฉืœ ืขืœ ื›ื— ืื—ืจ ืœื‘ื˜ืœื• ืืœื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœื‘ื“ื•."
147
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื–ื• ื”ื“ื‘ืจ.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื ืขืฉื™ืช ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื”, ืฉื”ื™ื ื™ื“ ื”', ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืืžืจ ื›ืŸ, ื•ืœื ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื—ื•ื–ืง ืžืžืฉ, ื›ื™ ืœื ื”ืจืื” ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ื”ื—ื•ื–ืง ืจืง ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืฉืœื ื”ื•ื ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช, ื•ื›ื“ืืžืจ ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ื•ืœื›ืœ ื”ื™ื“ ื”ื—ื–ืงื” (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื“:ื™ืดื‘) ื–ื• ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื•ืณ:ืืณ) ื•ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื™ื’ืจืฉื ืžืืจืฆื•, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื–ื” ืืœื ื”ื ื” ื™ื“ ื”' ื”ื•ื™ื”."
151
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื–ืจื•ืข ื ื˜ื•ื™ื” ื–ื• ื”ื—ืจื‘.</b> ื–ื”ื• ื›ื™ื ื•ื™ ืœื ืงืžื” ืฉืขืฉื” ื”' ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื, ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื—ืจื‘ ื ื•ืงืžืช ื ืงื ื‘ืจื™ืช, ืจ\"ืœ ื‘ืจื™ืชื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื•ื—ืจื‘ื• ืฉืœื•ืคื” ื‘ื™ื“ื• (ื“ื”\"ื™ ื' ื›\"ื) ืœื”ื ืงื ืžื”ืคื•ืฉืขื™ื ื•ื”ืžื•ืจื“ื™ื."
154
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื–ื” ื’ื™ืœื•ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื”.</b> ืฉื ื’ืœื™ืช ืœื”ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืœืื” ื’ืœื•ืœื™ื ื•ืืจืฅ ื˜ืžืื”, ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ืœื™ืขืงื‘ ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” (ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืžืดื•:ื“ืณ) ื•ืื ื›ื™ ืืขืœืš ื’ื ืขืœื”, ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื ืชืŸ ื‘ื• ืชื•ืจื” ื•ืืžืจ ืื ื›ื™, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื’ืณ:ื•ืณ) ืื ื›ื™ ืืœื”ื™ ืื‘ื™ืš, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” (ืฉื) ืžื™ ืื ื›ื™ ื›ื™ ืืœืš ืืœ ืคืจืขื” ื•ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ืžืฉืœ ืœืžืœืš ืฉืฉืœื— ืฉืœื•ื—ื• ืœืืจื™ืกื• ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืฉืžื•ืช ืจื‘ื”, ื•ืื™ืžืชื™ ื ื’ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ื, ื‘' ืคืขืžื™ื, ืื—ืช ื‘ื™ื•ื ืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื‘:ืืณ-ื‘ืณ) ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื”' ืืœ ืžืฉื” ื•ืืœ ืื”ืจืŸ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ืœื›ื, ื•ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ืฉื”ืงื•ืœ ื ืฉืžืข ื‘ื›ืœ ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”, ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืจืื•ื”ื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ื•ื™ืจืื• ืžืื“ ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื“:ืœืดื) ื•ื™ืจืื• ื”ืขื ืืช ื”', ื•ื ืงืจื ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื›ื™ ื”ืจื•ืื” ืคื ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ื™ืจื ืžืื“ ื•ื ืจืชืข ื•ื ื‘ื”ืœ ื•ื ื•ืคืœ ืขืœ ืคื ื™ื•, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืื• ื”ื ืกื” ืืœื”ื™ื ืœื‘ื•ื ืœืงื—ืช ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื”ืจืื™ื” ืžืŸ ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืœืขื™ื ื™ืš, ื•ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ ื•ืœื›ืœ ื”ืžื•ืจื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืœืดื“:ื™ืดื‘) ื–ื• ืงืจื™ืขืช ื™ื ืกื•ืฃ, ื›ื™ ืฉื ืจืื• ืคื ื™ ื”ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ื•ืืžืจื• ื–ื” ืืœื™ ื•ืื ื•ื”ื•."
157
+ ],
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+ [
159
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืื•ืชื•ืช ื–ื” ื”ืžื˜ื”.</b> ื™ื™ื—ื“ื• ื”ืื•ืชื•ืช ืืœ ื”ืžื˜ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจื• ื–\"ืœ ื›ื™ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ืฉื ื‘ืžื˜ื” ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืขื“\"ืฉ ื‘ืื—\"ื‘, ื•ื›ืŸ ืฆื™ืจื•ืฃ ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช ืฉืœ ื”ืฉืžื•ืช ืฉื‘ื”ื ื ื‘ืจืื• ืฉืžื™ื ื•ืืจืฅ, ื›ื™ ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ื ืขืฉื” ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืื‘ื•ืช (ืค\"ื” ืž\"ื•) ืขืฉืจื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื ื‘ืจืื• ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉืžืฉื•ืช, [<small>ื‘ื \"ื ื ื•ืกืฃ:</small> ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืชื ื” ื”' ืขื ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช], ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ื”ื ื—ืŸ ืœืฉื•ืžืขื™ื”ื, ื•ืœื›ืŸ ื ืงืจื ืžื˜ื” ืืœื”ื™ื, ื•ื ื–ื“ืžืŸ ืœื• ืœืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืข\"ื” ื‘ื”ืจ ื—ื•ืจื‘ ืฉื™ืจื“ ืฉื ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืžื™ื, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืืช ื”ืžื˜ื” ื”ื–ื” ืชืงื— ื‘ื™ื“ืš, ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ืื“ื ื”ื–ื” ืืœื ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉื‘ื™ื“ื• ืฉื ื•ืชืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœื—ื‘ื™ืจื•."
160
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ื–ื” ื”ื“ื.</b> ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉืžื›ืช ื”ื“ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืื—ืช ืงื•ืจื ืื•ืชื” ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื ืขืฉื• ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ื• ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื, ื›ื™ ื”ืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฆืœื•ืœื™ื ืžื›ืœ ืžื™ืžื•ืช ืฉื‘ืขื•ืœื ื ื”ืคื›ื• ืœื“ื ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื“ื ืฉืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืžืฆืจื™ ืฉื•ืชื™ื ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืื—ื“, ืœืฆื“ ื”ืžืฆืจื™ ื“ื ื•ืœืฆื“ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžื™ื, ื•ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉื• ืฉืœ ืจืฉื‘\"ื™, ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ืขืฉื™ื ื›ืืฉ ืฉื•ืจืฃ ื•ืžืชืžืœื ื›ืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืขืฉืŸ ืžื”ื [<small>ื \"ื:</small> ื‘ืคื™ื”ื] ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื“ื ื•ืืฉ ื•ืชืžืจื•ืช ืขืฉืŸ."
163
+ ]
164
+ ],
165
+ "The Ten Plagues": [
166
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ืฉืชื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉื• ื‘ื• ื“ื ืคืงื ืœืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœ ืื—ืช ืžื”ื ืฉืชื™ ืžืœื•ืช, ื•ืขืœ ื“ืจืš ื”ืืžืช ืžื“ืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ื•ืžื“ืช ืจื—ืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืชืคื™ื ื‘ื™ื—ื“ ื–ื• ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื ืงืžื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื•ื–ื• ืœื”ืฆื™ืœ ืืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืœื ืชื‘ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ื”ืžื›ื”, ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื”ืขืฉืจื” ื ืกื™ื ืฉื ืขืฉื• ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืื‘ื•ืช ืค\"ื” (ืž\"ื“), ื•ื›ื•ืœืŸ ืžืคื•ืจืฉื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืžื›ืช ื›ื ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื ื’ืžืจื ื•ื‘ื ื‘ืงื‘ืœื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ื‘ื”ื ืืœื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžืฆืขืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื, ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื‘ื”ื ืืžืจื• ื”ื—ืจื˜ื•ืžื™ื ืืฆื‘ืข ืืœื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื›ื” ื›ื•ืœืœืช, ื›ื™ ื”ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžืฆืขืจื™ื ืื•ืชื. ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื•ื™ื—ื–ืง ืœื‘ ืคืจืขื”. <br>ื•ืื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื•ื‘ืžืœื—ืžื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื•ืชื” ืžืœื—ืžื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืœืžืขืœื” ืœื”ืคื™ืœ ืฉืจ ืฉืœื”ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื•ื‘ืžืกื•ืช, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื›ืœืœื™ ืฉืœ ื ืกื™ื•ื ื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืชืจื” ื‘ื”ื ื‘ื›ืœ ืฉืขื” ื•ืฉืขื”, ื•ืœื ื™ืจื“ื” ืžื›ื” ื‘ืขืœื™ืœื•ืช ืืœื ื‘ื”ืชืจืื”, ื•ืจื–\"ืœ ืืžืจื• ืฉื”ื”ืชืจืื” ืฉืœื™ืฉ ื›ืœ ื—ื“ืฉ ื•ื—ื“ืฉ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื.\n"
171
+ ],
172
+ [],
173
+ [],
174
+ [],
175
+ [],
176
+ [],
177
+ [],
178
+ [],
179
+ [],
180
+ [],
181
+ [],
182
+ [],
183
+ [],
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+ [
185
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžื ื™ื ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืขื“\"ืฉ ื‘ืื—\"ื‘.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืฉืœื ืชืืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืžื•ืงื“ื ื•ืžืื•ื—ืจ ื‘ืชื•ืจื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ืžื ืืŸ ื“ื•ื“ ื‘ืกืคืจ ืชื”ืœื™ื (ืคืจืง ืง\"ื”) ืขืœ ื”ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื”, ื•ื‘ืฉื•ื—ืจ ื˜ื•ื‘ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ื›ืกื“ืจ ื”ื–ื” ื”ื™ื• ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ื‘ืžื˜ื” ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืืช ื”ืžื˜ื” ื”ื–ื” ื•ื›ื•' ืืฉืจ ืชืขืฉื” ื‘ื• ืืช ื”ืื•ืชื•ืช ืืช ื”ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช, ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ืœืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืขื•ืฉื” ืกื™ืžื ื™ื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืžื ื—ื•ืช ืคื™\"ื (ืž\"ื“) ืœืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืœื—ื ื•ืœื—ื ื”ืคื ื™ื ื–ื“\"ื“ ื™ื”\"ื–, ื•ืœื›ืœ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ื›ืžื” ื ืคืœืื” ื‘ืกื•ื“ ื”ืงื‘ืœื”, ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ื”ื ื—ืŸ ืœืฉื•ืžืขื™ื”ื."
186
+ ],
187
+ [
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื’ืœื™ืœื™ ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ื•' ืืžื•ืจ ืžืขืชื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืœืงื• ืขืฉืจ ืžื›ื•ืช ื•ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืœืงื• ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืžื›ื•ืช. </b>ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื“ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื—ืžืฉ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช, ื•ื›ืœ ืืฆื‘ืข ืขืฉืจ, ื”ืจื™ ื—ืžืฉื™ื, ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ื•ืจืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื, ื•ืžื—ืœื•ืงืชืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื. ื•ืžื›ืœ ืžืงื•ื ืชืžื” ืื ื™ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืฆื‘ืข ืืœื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื ืขืœ ืžื›ืช ื›ื ื™ื ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื ืืžืจ, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืฉื”ืจื™ ืืžืจื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื–ื• ื”ื“ื‘ืจ, ืงื•ืจื ืœืžื›ื” ืื—ืช ื™ื“, ื•ืขื™ืงืจืŸ ืฉืœ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื›ื™ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื›ืืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืกืžืš ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื•ื”ืงื‘ืœื” ืขื™ืงืจ, ื•ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ื™ื“ื•ืข ืฉืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืืฆื‘ืข ืงื˜ื ื” ืฉื‘ื™ื“, ื•ื”ื•ื ื’\"ื› ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ืื‘ืœ ื”ื™ื“ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ื—ืžืฉ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช ืฉืœ ืงื˜ื ื”, ื•ื–ื” ืกื•ื“, ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉ ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืžื›ื•ืช, ื‘ื“ืจืš ื”ืคืฉื˜ ื”ื•ื ืฉืœืงื• ื‘ื” ื“' ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช, ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉ ืฉืœ ื—ืžืฉ ืžื›ื•ืช, ืžื•ื ื” ืžื›ืช ื”ื”ื™ื•ืœื™ ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื”ื›ื•ืœืœ, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืœืงื” ื”ืฉืจ ืฉืœื”ื ื‘ืฉืžื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ื—ืฉื‘ื•ื ื ืฉืœ ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืคืฉื•ื˜ ื”ื•ื, ื›ื™ ื›ืœ ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžื•ื ื” ืื•ืชื ื›ืื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืืฆื‘ืข, ื•ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ืžืฉ ืืฆื‘ืขื•ืช, ื ืžืฆืื• ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื ื—ืžืฉ ืคืขืžื™ื ืžืžื›ื•ืช ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื™ื ื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ื›ื™ ื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืจืฉ ืืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ืœืœ ื•ืคืจื˜ ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ื›ืœืœ ื•ืื™ื“ืš ืคืจื˜."
192
+ ]
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+ ],
194
+ "Dayenu": [
195
+ [
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+ "<b>ื›ืžื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืขืฉื” ืขืœื™ื ื• ื•ืฉื ื‘ื ื•, ื•ื”ื ื—ืžืฉ ืขืฉืจื” ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื™\"ื” ืฆื•ืจ ืขื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืžื™ื ื”ืขื•ืžื“ ืขืœ ื”ื›ืกื ืขืœ ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช, ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืจืงื™ ื”ื›ืœื•ืช, ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ื‘ืžืฉื›ืŸ ื˜\"ื• ืงืœืขื™ื ืœื›ืชืฃ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืืžืจ ื“ื•ื“ ื”ืžืœืš ืข\"ื” ื‘ืกืคืจ ืชื”ื™ืœื™ื ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช, ื•ื›ื ื’ื“ืŸ ืขืฉื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืžื“ื•ืช (ืค\"ื‘ ืž\"ื”)."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืขืœ ืื—ืช ื›ืžื” ื•ื›ืžื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืขืชื” ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ืืœื• ื˜\"ื• ืžืขืœื•ืช, ืขืœ ืื—ืช, ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืจืื•ื™ื™ื ืœืžืขืœื” ืื—ืช, ื›ืžื” ื•ื›ืžื” ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืคื•ืœื” ื•ืžื›ื•ืคืœืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•, ืฉืขืฉื” ืขืžื ื• ื›ืœ ื–ื”, ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.",
214
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื ื” ืœื ื• ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ื—ื™ืจื”.</b> ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื ืงืจื ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ื—ื™ืจื” ืขืœ ืฉื ืฉื‘ื—ืจ ื‘ื• ื”ืงื‘\"ื”, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื™ืดื‘:ื”ืณ), ื›ื™ ืื ืืœ ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืฉืจ ื™ื‘ื—ืจ ื”' ืืœืงื™ื›ื ื›ื•'."
215
+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžืฉื ื” ื”ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื˜\"ื– ื'), ื”ืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ืžืฉื ื”, ืžืฉื ืช ืืžืจ ืจืื‘\"ืข ื”ืจื™ ืื ื™ ื›ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ืฉื ื” ื•ื›ื•', ื•ืกื™ื™ื ื‘ื”, ื•ื ืชืŸ ืืช ื”ื‘ืจื™ื™ืชื•ืช ืฉื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื‘ืืžืฆืข.",
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+ "ื•ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ <b>ืœื ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื•</b>, ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉืœื ืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืชื• ื›ืจืื•ื™. ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืฆื™ื ื• ืฉื”ืงืคื™ื“ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืืžื™ืจื”, ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื ื–ื›ื•ืจ ื ืคืœืื•ืช ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ืžืชื•ืš ืฉื ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื‘ืคื™ื ื• ืœืžื” ื”ื ื‘ืื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื•ื ืฉืœื ื”ืกืคื™ืง ื‘ืฆื™ืงื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืš ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื, ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ืœืžื“ื ื• ื›ื™ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ืžืฅ, ืจ\"ืœ ื›ื™ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื—ืžืฅ ื›ืฉื™ืฆืื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ืื‘ืœ ื›ืฉื”ื’ื™ืขื• ืœืจืคื™ื“ื™ื ื—ืžืฅ ื”ื™ื”, ืืœื ืฉื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื—ืžืฅ ื•ืžืฆื” ืขืžื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉื ื™ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืฆ\"ื” ื'), ื›ื™ ืฉื™ืขื•ืจ ื—ืžืฅ ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ืžื™ืœ, ืœื“ืขืช ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ ื‘ืฉื”ื™ื”, ื•ืœื“ืขืชื™ื ื• (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืž\"ื• ื‘') ืฉืœื ื‘ืฉื”ื™ื™ื”, ื•ืขื•ื“ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื• ื‘ื“ืจืš ื•ื”ื•ืœื™ื›ื•ื”ื• ื‘ืฉืžืฉ ืื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ืžืขื•ื ืŸ, ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืž\"ื‘ ื') ืืฉื” ืœื ืชืœื•ืฉ ืœื ื‘ื—ืžื” ื•ืœื ื›ื•', ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื ืžื™ ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื™ื•ืžื (ื›\"ื— ื‘') ื”ืื™ ื™ื•ืžื ื“ืขื™ื‘ื ื›ื•ืœื™ื” ืฉืžืฉื, ื›ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื—ืžืฅ ื ืขืฉื” ืžืขื˜ ืžืขื˜ ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ื™ื›ืจ, ื—ืฉืฉื• ืœื›ืœ ื–ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืกืคืง ื›ืจืช ืขื“ ืฉื—ืฉืฉื• ืœืžื™ื ืœื ื™ื, ื•ืคื™ืจื•ืฉื• ืฉื ืฉืื‘ื• ืื—ืจ ื‘ื ื”ืฉืžืฉ ื•ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช, ืฉืœื ืœื ื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืžื—ื•ื‘ืจ, ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื—ืžื” ืžื”ืœื›ืช ืชื—ืช ื”ืงืจืงืข ื•ืžืขื™ื™ื ื•ืช ืจื•ืชื—ื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ืคืกื—ื™ื ื‘ืคืจืง ืžื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ื˜ืžื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืฆ\"ื“ ื‘'), ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉืฉื”ื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื›ืžื” ื™ืžื™ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืš ื›ืœื•ื, ื’ื ืžื” ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื™ืจื— ืฉื•ืœื˜ ืฉื, ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื–ื” ืฉื•ื ืขื™ืงืจ ื‘ืขื•ืœื.",
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+ "<b>ื•ื’ื ืฆื“ื” ืœื ืขืฉื• ืœื”ื.</b> ืืžืจื• ืจื–\"ืœ (ืžื›ื™ืœืชื) ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉื‘ื—ืŸ ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉืœื ืืžืจื• ืœืžืฉื” ื”ื™ืืš ื ืฆื ืœืžื“ื‘ืจ ื•ืœื ื ื•ืœื™ืš ืขืžื ื• ืฆื“ื” ืœื“ืจืš ืืœื ื‘ื˜ื—ื• ื‘ืฉื ื™ืชื‘ืจืš.",
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+ "ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ <b>ืžืฆื” ื–ื•, ืžืจื•ืจ ื–ื”</b>, ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“. ืื‘ืœ ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืคืกื— ื–ื”, ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ื”ื‘ืฉืจ, ืฉืœื ื™ืจืื” ื›ืื•ื›ืœ ืงื“ืฉื™ื ื‘ื—ื•ืฅ, ื•ื’ื ืื™ืŸ ืœื”ื’ื‘ื™ื” ื›ืœ ื”ืงืขืจื” ื‘ื™ื—ื“ ื›ืžื• ืฉืจื’ื™ืœื™ื ืจื‘ื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ื™ื—ื™ื“ ื•ื™ื—ื™ื“ ืฆืจื™ืš ืฉื™ืจืื” ืขืฆืžื• ื›ืื™ืœื• ื”ื•ื ื”ื™ื” ืขื‘ื“ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื™ืฆื ืœื—ืจื•ืช, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืฆืืชื™ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื, ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื“ืจืฉื• ืœืžืขืœื” ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื•, ืžื›ืœืœ ื“ื“ืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ื”ืื•ืžืจื• ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื‘ืคื™ื•."
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+ ]
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+ ],
235
+ "First Half of Hallel": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื—ื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ืŸ ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืืžืจื• ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื•ืืžืจืชื ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืœื”', ื‘ื ืœืœืžื“ืš ืฉื›ืœ ืžื™ ืฉืฉื•ืžืข ื”ื ืกื™ื ื”ืœืœื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืฉื‘ื— ืœืคืืจ ื•ืœืจื•ืžื ื•ื›ื•', ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื”ืืœื• ืฉืœ ืฉื‘ื— ื”ื ื‘ืคืจืงื™ ื”ื™ื›ืœื•ืช, ืขื“ ื•ืœืขืœื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืœืงืœืก, ืœืคื™ ืฉื ื•ืคืœ ื‘ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื’ื ืื™ ื›ืžื• ืœืขื’ ื•ืงืœืก. ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืœ ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืฉืœ ืฉื‘ื— ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื›ื™ืœืชื ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ื•ืฆืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ื“ ืจืžื” (ืฉืžื•ืช ื™ืดื“:ื—ืณ-ื˜ืณ) ืฉื”ื™ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืžื—ืจืคื™ืŸ ื•ืžื’ื“ืคื™ืŸ ื‘ื›ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ ื’ื™ื“ื•ืคื™ืŸ ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืจื•ืžืžื™ื ื‘ื›ืœ ืžื™ื ื™ ืฉื‘ื—, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ (ืฉื™ืจ ื”ืฉื™ืจื™ื ืืณ:ื’ืณ) ืœืจื™ื— ืฉืžื ื™ืš ื˜ื•ื‘ื™ื, ื\"ืจ ื™ื ืื™ ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื™ื ืจื™ื— ืฉืžื ื™ื ืืžืจื• ืœืš ืื‘ืœ ืื ื• ื›ืฉื‘ืื ื• ืœื™ื ืœื ื”ื ื—ื ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื‘ื— ืฉืœื ืงืœืกื ื• ืœืš ื•ืฉื‘ื—ื ื•ืš ื‘ื•."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื”ืœืœื•ื™ื” ื”ืœืœื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ ื”' ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืžื›ืืŸ ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื”ื”ืœืœ, ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืจืื•ื™ ืœื‘ืจืš ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ื‘ืžืงื•ื ื—ื•ื‘ืช ื”ื”ืœืœ, ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ืœืณ:ื›ืดื˜) ื”ืฉื™ืจ ื™ื”ื™ื” ืœื›ื ื›ืœื™ืœ ื”ืชืงื“ืฉ ื—ื’ ื•ื’ื•', ื•ืžื” ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื•ื ื” ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ืขืจื›ื™ืŸ (ื™' ื'), ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื•ื ื” ืฉื ืืœื ื”ืœืœ ืฉืœ ื™ืžื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ืœืœ ื–ื” ืฉืœ ืœื™ืœื”, ื›ื™ ื–ื” ื“ื‘ืจ ืคืฉื•ื˜ ื”ื•ื, ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืืžืจ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ ื‘ื‘ืจื™ื™ืชื (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื˜' ื') ื”ืœืœ ืฉื‘ืœื™ืœื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืœื” ืขืžื•ื“ ื”ืฉื—ืจ, ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื•ื‘ืชื•ืกืคืชื ืžื•ื ื” ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ืœื™ืœื” ืื—ืช ื•ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืฉืชื™ ืœื™ืœื•ืช, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืฉื ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ื ืขื™ืžื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื”, ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื ืจืื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ื ื•ื”ื’ื™ื ืœืงืจื•ืชื• ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ื‘ืขืจื‘ื™ืช, ื•ืžืคื ื™ ื–ื” ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืื“ื ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื”ืœืœ ืฉืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื•, ื•ื”ืžื ื”ื’ ืฉืœื ืœื‘ืจืš, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœืฉื ื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ื”ืจืื•ื™ ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืœืงืจื•ืช ืคืขื ืื—ืจืช ื”ืœืœ ื’ืžื•ืจ, ื›ื™ ืžื” ืฉืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืกืขื•ื“ื” ืื™ื ื• ืืœื ื“ืจืš ืฉื™ืจื”, ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื•ืžืฉื™ื—ื™ืŸ ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื•ืฉื•ืชื™ื ื‘ื™ื ืชื™ื."
242
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืœืžื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื.</b> ื›ืš ืื ื• ื’ื•ืจืกื™ืŸ, ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉ\"ื™ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฆื™ื•ืŸ ืžืื•ืกืคื™ืŸ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ืฉืœื ื ืคืจื“ื• ื‘ืขืจื™ื ื•ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ื ืจืื™ืŸ ืœื’ื•ื™ ืื—ื“, ื•ื“ื™ื™ืง ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœื’ื•ื™, ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื“ืื™ ื ืก ืžื”' ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื–ืจื™ื ื–ื” ืœื–ื”, ื›ื™ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ื“ ืกื™ื‘ืช ื”ื’ืœื•ืช. ื•ืืฃ ื‘ื’ืœื•ืช ื”ื–ื” ื”ื—ืžื•ืจ ื”ืคื™ืจื•ื“ ื”ื™ื” ืขื™ืงืจ ื’ื–ื™ืจืช ื”ื’ืœื•ืช. <br>ื•ืื™ืช ื“ืžืคืจืฉื™ ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืขืœื™ ืงื•ืžื” ื‘ืขืœื™ ืคืจืฆื•ืฃ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื”, ื•ื›ืŸ ื™ืฉ ื’ื•ืจืกื™ืŸ ืžืกื•ื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ ืฉื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื ื ื™ื›ืจื™ื ื‘ืžืœื‘ื•ืฉื™ื”ื ื•ื‘ืขื ื™ื™ื ื™ื”ื ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืฆื™ืฆื™ืช ื‘ื‘ื’ื“ื™ื”ื ื•ื›ื™ื•ืฆื ื‘ื•, ื•ื“ื™ื™ืงื™ ืœื” ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ, ื›ื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื›ืžื” ื“ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืฉื ื•ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืœื”ื, ืืคื™ืœื• ืจื‘ื• ืžืื“ ื”ื™ืืš ื™ื”ื™ื• ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ืืœื ื•ื“ืื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ืื• ืžืกื•ื™ื™ืžื™ืŸ ื‘ื˜ื›ืกื™ืกื™ื”ื ื•ื›ืœ ืจื•ืื™ื”ื ื™ื›ื™ืจื•ื ื›ื™ ื”ื ื–ืจืข ืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื•. <br>ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื”ื–ื”, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ืœื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ื‘ื ื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื”, ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืœื™ื“ื™ืŸ ืฉืฉื” ื‘ื›ืจืก ืื—ื“ ืžื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืžื•ืœื™ื“ื™ืŸ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ, ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉืืžืจ, ืฉื, ืœืคื™ ืฉื’ื ื”ืื‘ื•ืช ืœื ื”ื•ืจื’ืœื• ื‘ื›ืš ื‘ืืจืฅ ื›ื ืขืŸ. ื•ื–ื” ืžืจื—ืžื™ื• ื™ืชื‘ืจืš ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ืฉืœื ืขื–ื‘ ืื•ืชื ื‘ื’ืœื•ืชื. ื•ืœื›ืš ื”ื™ื• ืชืžื”ื™ื ืขืœื™ื”ื ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” (ืคืจืฉื” ืž\"ื“) ื\"ืจ ื™ืฆื—ืง ื—ื–ื™ืจืชื ืจืขื™ื ื‘ืขืฉืจื” ื•ืื™ืžืจืชื ื•ืœื ื‘ื—ื“ ื›ืœ ืื™ืœื™ืŸ ืืžืจ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื“ื™ื”ื™ื‘ ืœื™ื” ืืช ื”ืงื™ื ื™ ื•ืืช ื”ืงื ื™ื–ื™ ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืจื” ืืฉืช ืื‘ืจื”ื ืœื ื™ืœื“ื” ืœื•. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ืจืื™ื” ื”ืžืกื“ืจ ืžื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืคืจื• ื•ื™ืฉืจืฆื• ื•ื™ืจื‘ื• ื•ื›ื•'."
246
+ ]
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+ ],
248
+ "Second Cup of Wine": [
249
+ [
250
+ "ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื”ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื™ื“ื•, ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืจื›ืช ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื•, ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ, ื•ืื™ืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ื ื”ื ื™ืŸ, ื”ื™ื” ื‘ืชื—ืœื”, ื›ืžื• ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉ, ื“ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื›ื ื“ืื™ื›ื ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืื™ื›ื ื‘ืจื™ืฉื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืง\"ื• ื'), ื•ื ื”ื’ื• ื›ื•ืœื ืœืื•ืžืจื• ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ืขืช ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ื‘ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ืงื™ื“ื•ืฉ ื•ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ, ื•ื›ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ืื—ืจ ื›ืœ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช, ื•ืื ื“ืขืชื• ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ืื—ืจื™ื•, ื•ื”ื—ืชื™ืžื” ืขืœ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ."
251
+ ]
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ "Maror": [
255
+ [],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ืœืขื•ืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ ืฆืจื™ืš ื˜ื™ื‘ื•ืœ ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช. ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžื›ืœ ื“ื‘ืจ ื›ื–ื™ืช. "
258
+ ]
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+ ],
260
+ "Tzafun": [
261
+ [],
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+ [
263
+ "ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ื”ื”ืœืœ ืงื•ื“ื ื—ืฆื•ืช ืžืฉื•ื ื“ื—ื™ื™ืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืจืื‘\"ืข ื“ืกืชื ืœืŸ ืชื ื ื›ื•ื•ืชื™ื” ื‘ืค\"ืง ื“ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช (ื‘' ื') ื•ื‘ืคืจืง ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืžืงื•ืžืŸ (ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื \"ื• ื‘') ื“ืชื ืŸ ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืืœื ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ืืข\"ื’ ื“ื‘ืค\"ื‘ ื“ืžื’ื™ืœื” (ื›\"ื ื') ืกืชื ื›ืจ\"ืข ื“ืก\"ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืœื” ืขืžื•ื“ ื”ืฉื—ืจ, ื”ื›ื ืชืจืชื™ ื•ื”ืชื ื—ื“ื, ื•ืืข\"ื’ ื“ื‘ืžืกื›ืช ื™ื‘ืžื•ืช (ืง\"ื ื‘') ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืžื” ืœื™ ื—ื“ื ืกืชืžื ืžื” ืœื™ ืชืจืชื™ ืกืชืžื™, ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืœื ื™ื“ืขื™ื ืŸ ื”ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ื™ื”ื• ื‘ืชืจื™ื™ืชื ื ืงื˜ื™ื ืŸ ืœื—ื•ืžืจื, ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ื• ื”ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ื–\"ืœ ืคื•ืกืงื™ื ื›ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื”ืœื›ื” ื›ืžื•ืชื• ืžื—ื‘ื™ืจื•, ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืกืชื ืœืŸ ืชื ื ื‘ื”ื“ื™ ื”ื™ืœื›ืชื ืคืกื™ืงืชื ื‘ืค\"ื‘ ื“ืžื’ื™ืœื”, ื•ืืขืค\"ื› ืจืื•ื™ ืœื—ื•ืฉ, ื“ื‘ืคืจืง ืื™ื–ื”ื• ืžืงื•ืžืŸ (ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื \"ื– ื‘') ืžืฉืžืข ื“ืžื•ื“ื” ืจ' ืขืงื™ื‘ื ื“ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ื ื• ื ืื›ืœ ืืœื ืงื•ื“ื ื—ืฆื•ืช ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™ื (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืง\"ื› ื‘') ื“ืžืฆื” ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ื›ืžื• ืคืกื— ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ื•ืœืจืื‘\"ืข ืœื ื™ืฆื ืื—ืจ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ ื’\"ื› ืฉื—ื•ืฉืฉ ืœื• ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ, ื•ื’ื ื‘ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ื”ื—ืžื™ืจื• ื‘ื• ื‘ืชื•ืกืคื•ืช, ื•ืืข\"ืค ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ืžื•ืจ ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืงืจื™ืืช ืฉืžืข ืœืจื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ื“ืคืกืงื™ื ืŸ ื›ื•ื•ืชื™ื” (ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื—' ื‘'), ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžื—ืฆื•ืช ื•ืื™ืœืš ื”ื™ื”, ืืขืค\"ื› ืจืื•ื™ ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืจ ืœื›ืชื—ื™ืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช, ื•ื›ืŸ ืขื™ืงืจ."
264
+ ]
265
+ ],
266
+ "Barech": {
267
+ "Third Cup of Wine": [
268
+ [],
269
+ [
270
+ "ื•ืืžืจื• ื–\"ืœ (ืคืกื—ื™ื ืงื™\"ื– ื‘') ื›ื™ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืืคื™' ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื•ืชื”, ื•ืื ื”ื•ื ื ืžืœืš, ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื•, ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ืฉืชื”, ื•ื“ื•ืงื ื™ื™ืŸ, ืฉืžื ื™ืฉืชื›ืจ ื›ื“ืื™ืชื ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืื• ื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ืžืฆื” ืžืคื™ื•, ืื‘ืœ ืžื™ื ืื• ืฉืืจ ืžืฉืงื™ืŸ ื™ืฉืชื”, ื•ืื—ืจ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ืจืื” ืฉืžื•ืชืจ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืืคื™' ื™ื™ืŸ, ืื‘ืœ ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ื–\"ืœ ืืžืจื• ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ืชื™ื ืืœื ืžื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื™ื™ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ืžืฆื” ืžืคื™ื•, ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืžื ื“ื‘ืจ.",
271
+ "ื•ืžื” ืฉืชื™ืงื ื• ืœื•ืžืจ ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืคืกื•ืง ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš ืขืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื, ื”ื•ื ืžืคื ื™ ื›ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉืงื™ื™ืžื ื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœื”ืฉืงื•ืช ืœืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื, ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ื”ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืฉื™ื’ื™ืข ืื•ืชื• ื”ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื™ืฉืงื” ืื•ืชื ื”' ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžืชื• ื”ื•ื ื›ื•ืก ื”ืชืจืขืœื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ (ืื™ื›ื” ื“ืณ:ื›ืดื) ืฉื™ืฉื™ ื•ืฉืžื—ื™ ื‘ืช ืื“ื•ื ื•ื›ื•' ื’ื ืขืœื™ืš ืชืขื‘ื•ืจ ื›ื•ืก, ื•ืœื ืขื•ื“ ืืœื ืฉืขื™ืงืจ ื’ืื•ืœืชื™ื ื• ืชืœื•ื™ื” ื‘ื—ื•ืจื‘ืŸ ืงืจืŸ ืžืœื›ื•ืชื ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” (ืคืจืฉื” ื›\"ื) ืขื“ ืขืจื‘ ื‘ื•ืงืจ ืืœืคื™ื ื•ืฉืœืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื•ื ืฆื“ืง ืงื“ืฉ (ื“ื ื™ืืœ ื—ืณ:ื™ืดื“), ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ืฆื—ืง ื›ืฉื™ืขืฉื” ืขืจื‘ ื‘ืงืจืŸ ืฉืœ ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื ืื– ื•ื ืฆื“ืง ืงื“ืฉ, ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื ื‘ื™ื ืื•ืžืจ (ื™ืฉืขื™ื”ื• ืกืณ:ื‘ืณ) ื›ื™ ื”ื ื” ื”ื—ืฉืš ื™ื›ืกื” ืืจืฅ ื•ืขืจืคืœ ืœืื•ืžื™ื ื•ืขืœื™ืš ื™ื–ืจื— ื”' ื•ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ืขืœื™ืš ื™ืจืื” ื‘ืžื”ืจื” ื‘ื™ืžื™ื ื• ืื›ื™\"ืจ."
272
+ ]
273
+ ]
274
+ }
275
+ },
276
+ "versions": [
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+ [
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+ "Ritva's Commentary -- Wikisource",
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+ "https://he.wikisource.org/wiki/%D7%94%D7%92%D7%93%D7%94_%D7%A9%D7%9C_%D7%A4%D7%A1%D7%97_%D7%A8%D7%99%D7%98%D7%91%22%D7%90"
280
+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืจื™ื˜ื‘\"ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
283
+ "categories": [
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+ "Liturgy",
285
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286
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ื™ืื•ืจ ื”ืจื™ื˜ื‘\"ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
290
+ "enTitle": "Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "key": "Commentary of Ritva on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
294
+ "heTitle": "ืžื’ื™ื“",
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+ "enTitle": "Magid",
296
+ "nodes": [
297
+ {
298
+ "heTitle": "ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื",
299
+ "enTitle": "Ha Lachma Anya"
300
+ },
301
+ {
302
+ "heTitle": "ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”",
303
+ "enTitle": "Four Questions"
304
+ },
305
+ {
306
+ "heTitle": "ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•",
307
+ "enTitle": "We Were Slaves in Egypt"
308
+ },
309
+ {
310
+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง",
311
+ "enTitle": "Story of the Five Rabbis"
312
+ },
313
+ {
314
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื",
315
+ "enTitle": "The Four Sons"
316
+ },
317
+ {
318
+ "heTitle": "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•",
319
+ "enTitle": "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers"
320
+ },
321
+ {
322
+ "heTitle": "ืืจืžื™ ืื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™",
323
+ "enTitle": "First Fruits Declaration"
324
+ },
325
+ {
326
+ "heTitle": "ืขืฉืจ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช",
327
+ "enTitle": "The Ten Plagues"
328
+ },
329
+ {
330
+ "heTitle": "ื“ื™ื™ื ื•",
331
+ "enTitle": "Dayenu"
332
+ },
333
+ {
334
+ "heTitle": "ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ",
335
+ "enTitle": "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things"
336
+ },
337
+ {
338
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœืœ",
339
+ "enTitle": "First Half of Hallel"
340
+ },
341
+ {
342
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ื”",
343
+ "enTitle": "Second Cup of Wine"
344
+ }
345
+ ]
346
+ },
347
+ {
348
+ "heTitle": "ืžืจื•ืจ",
349
+ "enTitle": "Maror"
350
+ },
351
+ {
352
+ "heTitle": "ืฆืคื•ืŸ",
353
+ "enTitle": "Tzafun"
354
+ },
355
+ {
356
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจืš",
357
+ "enTitle": "Barech",
358
+ "nodes": [
359
+ {
360
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช",
361
+ "enTitle": "Third Cup of Wine"
362
+ }
363
+ ]
364
+ }
365
+ ]
366
+ }
367
+ }
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+ "title": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "<b>Upon returning from synagogue</b> one should arrange one's table in the manner of freedom as we shall explain. One should not sit down at the table until after dark so that one can be certain that it is the time when one is permitted to eat matzah, as it is written, \"In the evening you shall eat matzot.\"<br>Even the poor should not drink less than four cups of wine; they should eat and drink while reclining. Scripture alludes to this in the verse: \"When Pharaoh let the people goโ€ฆSo God led <i>(vayasev)</i> the people round aboutโ€ฆ\" When they were redeemed they ate in the \"round-about\" fashion.<br>The optimal way to fulfill the mitzvah of drinking wine is to drink red wine as a reminder of the blood they placed on their lintel and doorposts in Egypt. If their hands are cleaned they may sit at the table and recite Kiddush. Most people have the custom of checking their hands beforehand and then washing them. But if their hands were already clean, there is no reason to wash them and recite al netilat yadaim, the blessing for washing. For this recitation of the blessing is not for eating but for drinking after Kiddush. We have a tradition that one who performs the ritual of \"washing\" before fruit is being presumptuous.<br>There are many reasons given for the four cups of wine at the Seder. The four cups are said to allude to the four terms of redemption mentioned in Parshat Va-era (Exodus 6:6): \"Say, therefore, to the children of Israel: I am the Lord. I will free you from the labors of the Egyptians and deliver you from their bondage. I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and through extraordinary chastisements. I will take you to be my people and I will be your God.\" The four cups are alluded to in the words: hotzeiti (I will free you), hitzalti (I will deliver you), ga'alti (I will redeem you) and lakahti (I will take you).\"<br>There are those who say that the four cups refer to the butler's dream regarding to Pharaoh: \"Pharaoh's cup was in my hand;\" \"I pressed them into Pharaoh's cup;\" \"placed the cup in Pharaoh's hand;\" \"you shall place Pharaoh's cup in his hand.\" (Genesis 40:9-13)<br>Some say that the four cups stand for the four kingdoms, and others, four cups of vengeance which God will pour out on the nations, \"Thus said the Lord, the God of Israel, to me: Take from My hand this cup of wine - of wrath - and make all the nations to whom I send you drink it. Let them drink and retch and act crazy because of the sword that I am sending among them.\" (Jer. 25:15-16) \"Babylon was a golden cup in the Lords hand. It made the whole earth drunkโ€ฆ\" (Jer. 51:7) \"There is a cup in the Lord's hand with foaming wine fully mixed from this He pours. All the nations of the earth drink, draining it to the very dregs.\" (Psalms 75:9) \"He will rain down upon the wicked blazing coals and sulfur, a scorching wind shall be their lot (kosam).\" (Psalm 11:6)<br>They also allude to four cups of consolation: \"The Lord is my allotted share and portion (kosi); You control my fate.\" (Psalm 16:5) \"You shall anoint my head with oil; My cup overflows. (Psalm 23:5) \"I will raise the cup of deliverances and invoke the name of the Lord.\" (Psalm 116:13) This last verse speaks of two cups: one for the coming of the Messiah and the other for the resurrection.<br>There are those who wonder why we donโ€™t recite a blessing for the mitzvah of the four cups just as we recite for maror. We only recite a blessing over a mitzvah that is performed at one time, and without interruption. Since the drinking of the four cups of wine are one commandment which is performed on four occasions with interruptions between them, we do not recite a blessing for this mitzvah. Natronai Gaon writes that the four cups of Seder night are a single mitzvah; if one does not drink all of them, one has not fulfilled his obligation and he deserves lashes, according to the sages.<br>The statement, \"Even the poor must not eat until he does so leaning,\" is a reference to a poor person who normally does not lean leisurely when he eats. Certainly the same applies to a wealthy person who usually leans on a fine couch. One must lean on the left side. Leaning on the right side is not considered 'leaning,' lest his throat become closed . A woman does not need to lean because she lives under the authority of her husband. But if she is a woman of high status, she should lean. Similarly, a widow or a divorcee who does not live under the authority of another should lean.<br>A son who lives in his father's house, even if his father is also his teacher, should lean. A student at the table of his master teacher does not lean unless his teacher gives him permission. The reason that he may lean at his father's table, but not at his teacher's table, is that his father would forgo the honor nor would he be harsh with him while a teacher should not forgo the honor due to him. A servant at his master's table should lean. The Avi Ezri writes that in our time when it is not the custom to lean at the table, it is not necessary to lean during the Seder either.",
26
+ "We prepare a plate for the Seder containing two cooked foods, three matzot, a variety of vegetables, and <i>haroset</i>. The two cooked foods: one of them should be roasted as a reminder of the Passover offering and one should be cooked as a reminder of the hagigah, the festive offering, which was consumed before the Passover offering so that the Passover offering would be consumed when one already had sufficient to eat. The following verse: \"You shall not break a bone of it,\" (Ex. 12:46) is interpreted to mean that if he was ravenously hungry when he ate the Passover offering, he might be suspected of breaking the bones of the offering.<br>This is how the commandment was fulfilled in the time of the Holy Temple: first they would break the Passover offering, reciting over it, 'Praised are you Adonai our Godโ€ฆwho command us concerning the eating of the Passover offering.' Each person would then eat at least an olive's amount of the meat from it. Afterwards they would bring the Festive offering, reciting the blessing, \"who commanded us regarding the eating of the offering.\" When they completed eating the Festive offering, they would bring the Passover offering back and eat it after having satisfied themselves (with the other offering).<br>When the Fourteenth of Nisan fell on a Shabbat, it was only necessary to eat the Passover offering and not the cooked offering for the Festive offering, since the Festive offering does not take precedence over the observance of the Sabbath. The Jerusalem Talmud adds that the two portions (for the Seder plate) should be the shoulder and an egg. The egg symbolizes compassion for the redemption that God provides, and the shoulder, symbolizes, 'God provides redemption through God's exalted hand.<br>Customarily there are two vegetables on the Seder plate. One is karpas. When one inverts the letters of karpas, it spells samekh parekh. The letter samekh refers to the sixty tens of thousands of Israelites who were enslaved. And the word parekh means oppressed. The other vegetable is hazeret which is also called <i>hasa</i>. <i>Hasa</i> is an allusion to the Holy One who has mercy (has) upon us. According to the sages, the haroset is a reminder of the clay from which they made the bricks when the Egyptians enslaved the Israelites. It is made from different types of sweet and tart fruits as well as spices that look like the straw used in the making of bricks. We put apples in as a reminder of the verse in scripture, \"beneath an apple tree I aroused you.\" (Song of Songs 8:5) Nuts are a reminder of the verse, \"I went down to the garden of nuts.\" (Song 6:11) Figs are an allusion of the verse, \"The fig tree puts forth her green figs.\" (Song 2:13) Dates are an allusion to the verse, \"your stature is like a palm tree\" (Song 7:8). Spices like cinnamon are a reminder of the straw used in the making of bricks.",
27
+ "The Rif asks: How does a person conduct Seder in two or three different households? He begins in his own house by reciting the blessings and the Haggadah up to the meal. He should then eat the meal, concluding with the Birkat HaMazon. He can then to each household, reciting Kiddush and a letting the members of the household drink the wine. He then recites the Haggadah. They may eat the karpas and the matzah (when he says the blessing) but he does not eat with the members of the household since he has already concluded his meal with the Afikomen. They recite the Birkat HaMazon, and then he goes on to the next household. He does this at each house he visits.<br>Even though the rule is that a person should not recite a blessing for food for someone if he is not also eating the food, the blessing over the matzah and the Kiddush are different. He can recite these blessings without eating or drinking because these foods are obligatory on Seder night. Therefore, he can recite the blessing for someone else even though he is not benefiting from the blessing. However the Birkat HaMazon is different since he has not tasted any of the food. Once he has eaten the Afikomen and recited the Birkat HaMazon in his own house, he cannot eat anything else so they must recite the grace after meals for themselves. This is based on the principle, Ayn maftirin ha-Pesah Afikomen, \"one may not partake of any deserts after the Pesah offering.\" (Mishnah Pesahim) After leading the Seder in the other households, he should return to his own house and complete the evening by reciting Hallel and drinking the fourth cup of wine.<br>If he prefers, he may go to the other households first, recite the blessings without eating or drinking with them, and then return to his house and begin all over again with the Kiddush. It is up to him to do as he wishes. He is not permitted to begin in his own household and recite the Seder up to ga'al yisrael (before the meal), recite the blessing over the matzah, and then go to the other households, returning to his own home to have his meal.<br>It is prohibited to leave one's meal to go to another home, even if one leaves an elderly or a sick person at home. One can only leave one's household on Seder night to perform a commandment such as rejoicing with a newly married couple. It goes without saying that helping those who are illiterate to fulfill the commandments of Seder night is also a commandment. The difference is that rejoicing with the bride and groom is a transient commandment. Therefore it permissible to leave the Seder table to participate in this mitzvah by greeting them. Helping the illiterate to fulfill the commandments of Seder night, on the other hand, is not transient; he can finish his own meal or go earlier help these families fulfill the commandments of this evening.<br>The Baal HaItur comments that he may not recite the blessing over the vegetables (karpas) since he cannot eat with them. He can only recite the blessing over the matzah and the maror. However, he may follow the approach of Rav Hisda, who would take hazeret (which can also be used for maror), recite the blessing over vegetables as well as the blessing for the maror at the beginning of the Seder, and when he reached the place in the Seder when one eats the maror, he would do so without reciting the blessing again.<br>The Rosh disagreed with this approach and argued that since the sages decreed that we should eat the karpas so that children would notice it and ask questions, it is to be considered no different than the blessing for the matzah and it can be recited by the Seder leader even if he is not eating the greens.<br>The Ri'af's statement that \"the participants must recite the Birkat HaMazon by themselves\" is a law for those who can recite the Birkat HaMazon. If there is no one who can lead it, Rabbi Amram Gaon writes that there is no decree that the leader must lead them so that they can fulfill their obligation. If he were to do so, he could no longer drink the fourth cup of wine in his house.<br>The Rosh writes that if even if the participants at the Seder do not know how to recite the Birkat HaMazon, the leader should lead them in it, having them repeat it word for word after him like a child who repeats Hallel and repeats it after the leader. This is not considered as if he recited God's name unnecessarily.<br>Rabbi Yaakov, son of the Rosh writes that it is possible that the leader can also recite the Birkat HaMazon for the participants and thereby fulfill their obligation. Since it is an obligation to eat matzah and so the leader can recite the blessing and have the participants answer Amen, so too, the Grace after meal can be recited on their behalf and thereby fulfill their obligation. After all, the sages decreed the obligation of four cups of wine, one of them at the end of the Birkat HaMazon, so they have a special obligation to recite the Birkat HaMazon so that they can drink the fourth cup of wine.<br>It seems to me that Rabbi Yaakov son of the Rosh is incorrect, since we learn in the Jerusalem Talmud (Berachot): \"Even if a person is exempt from a commandment, he may fulfill another person's obligation except in the case of the Birkat HaMazon.\" The Talmud then asks, donโ€™t we say that one who is exempt from a commandment cannot help fulfill another person's obligation. Rather the statement in the Talmud should have been if he is obligated to perform this commandment but has already fulfilled his obligation, he can still help others fulfill their obligation except in the case of the Birkat HaMazon, as it is written: You shall eat, and be satisfied and bless.\" This means that one who ate should recite the Birkat HaMazon (and not one who didnโ€™t eat). It seems to me, therefore, that the Rosh is correct in this matter.<br>When everything is prepared, he should pour the first cup of wine for each participant, reciting the blessing for the wine first, then the blessing sanctifying the day, and then the sheheyanu, for having reached this day. We do not say a blessing, \"Who performed miracles for our ancestors,\" because the last blessing of the Maggid, \"Who redeemed us and our ancestors from Egyptโ€ฆBlessed are you Adonai, who has redeemed Israel\" serves as a blessing for giving thanks for the miracles of Passover. This blessing is more appropriate because it more specific in referring to the Exodus. Then everyone drinks the cup of wine while leaning.",
28
+ "If Passover falls on Shabbat, one says Vayekhulu first, (Genesis 2:1-3) then the blessing over the wine, followed by the blessing sanctifying the day. In the second blessing, on Shabbat we say \"You have caused us to inherit the Sabbath and your holy festivals with love and favor.\" The commandment to rejoice on the festival is explicitly stated. The commandment to rejoice is alluded to in the verse: \"On your joyous occasions and your festivals.\" (Numbers 10:10) the Midrash says that \"your joyous occasions,\" is a reference to the Sabbaths. We find the language of inheritance in connection with the Sabbath, as it is written, \"The people of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, observing the Sabbath day throughout the generations as a covenant for all times.\" (Exodus 31:16) That is why we say, \"You cause us to inherit.\" Finally one concludes the blessing by saying, \"Praised are you who sanctifies the Sabbath, Israel and the sacred seasons. Then one recites the she-heheyanu and one drinks the wine.",
29
+ "If Passover falls at the conclusion of the Sabbath, we recite the blessings which are referred to in the acrostic, YKNH\"Z, yayin (wine), kiddush (sanctifying the day), ner (candle, or the blessing for fire), havdalah (the blessing marking the separation between Shabbat and the following day), z'man (she-heheyanu or the blessing marking the specialness of the moment). In the havdalah blessing we say \"between the holiness of the Sabbath and the holiness of the festival.\" There is separation between the 'heavy' and 'light' holiness, similar to what we find in scripture: \"the curtain (parokhet) shall serve as a partition between the holy and the holy of holies.\" (Exodus 26:33) Rabbi Ephraim asks why we say, \"Between the seventh day and the six days of creation You have made a separation and You have sanctified, You have sanctified Your people, Israel, with Your holiness, \" in the havdalah blessing. We say this after we have already mentioned, \"Between the holiness of the Sabbath to the holiness of the festival You have made a separation.\" The phrase is neither an introduction nor is it a summary of the blessing. Rabbeinu Tam answers this question: we are taught in chapter 10 of the Talmud Pesahim, that one who abbreviates the havdalah blessing should not have less than three havdalot (expressions of separation) and one should not add more than seven. The sages wanted to mention seven havdalot so they added Yom Tov, the festival, after Shabbat since this is the main theme of the passage.<br>These are the seven separations: (1) between the sacred and the profane; (2) between light and darkness; (3) between Israel and the gentiles; (4) between the Sabbath and the six days of creation. This counts as four, however, the fourth is not included in the number since we have already mentioned between the sacred and the profane which is a more general way of saying the same thing as, \"between the Sabbath and the six days of creation.\" Therefore, there are only three havdalot up to here!\" (4) Between the holiness of the Sabbath and the holiness of the festival; since preparation of food is allowed on the festival there is a distinction between it and the Sabbath; (5) Between the seventh day and the other six days of creation - this is a reference to the last day of the festival which is separate from the intermediate days of the festival; (6) you have separated (7) and you have sanctified your people Israel through your holiness; this refers to the two separations that make up the people of Israel: between the Kohanim and the Levites, and between the Levites the people of Israel. The blessing then ends with a brief conclusion: \"who distinguishes the holy from the holy.\"<br>One then recites the sh-heheyanu. One does not smell spices as one normally does during the havdalah service since the leisure (menuchah) of the festival brings leisure to the soul in place of the spices which one smells at the conclusion of the Sabbath."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Urchatz": [
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+ [
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+ "<i>Hands are washed in preparation to the handling of food. The Talmud states that when a food is dipped in liquid, hands are to be washed first as a sign of ritual purity (Pesahim 115a). There are different customs regarding who should wash their hands before partaking of the greens. In some homes the person conducting the Seder washes before handing out the greens while in other homes all the participants wash their hands before handling the greens. In the Ashkenazic tradition no blessing is recited. The blessing for washing hands is said only before eating bread.</i> <br>Following Kiddush, one washes one's hands in preparation for karpas, vegetables dipped in liquid, even though one is not about to eat unleavened bread. Whenever one eats something that is dipped in liquid, one must was one's hands since one's hands may become moist and one might inadvertently touch something and contract impurity. We have explained that it is good to find a reason for washing one's hands prior to this. It need not be after Kiddush since we are not careful regarding impurity today. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Karpas": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "One takes the karpas and dips it in vinegar or in the haroset in order to kill the worms that are sometimes found in the vegetables. One then recites the blessing borei peri ha-adamah. Rabbeinu Tam and Rashbam instructed their students to do the first dipping in vinegar. This was based on the statement in the Mishnah, \"They then set it before him. He dips the lettuce before he has reached the after course of bread. They set before him matzah, lettuce (hazeret) and haroset, and two side dishes, even though haroset is not compulsory.\" (Mishnah Pesahim 10:2) The Mishnah does not mention haroset until the second dipping, proving that we do not dip in the haroset for the first dipping. Rabbeinu Yona explains that the first dipping is not considered obligatory. Rather it is performed as a way of calling attention to the Seder. Since we do not dip vegetables in haroset all year long, the reason for this practice cannot be to prevent kafa. Therefore it is not our custom to eat the lettuce (hazeret) without haroset, as we do all year long. Since the second dipping is regarded as a mitzvah, the sages were more careful in its performance. <br>Hai Gaon explains that kafa is Aramaic from the word kafui (coagulation); it refers to a gaseousness which strikes the intestines from certain types of food. Haroset is a type of medicine which prevents the gaseousness.<br>We do not recite a blessing for haroset even though it is considered a commandment, because haroset is secondary to the primary food, the lettuce or the maror. We learn, \"Any time we have two foods, we recite the blessing on the primary food and not the secondary food. We recite al achilat maror and not borai peri ha-adamah for the second dipping since we already recited this blessing earlier in the Seder and the reading of the Haggadah is not considered to be an interruption between the two acts. ",
42
+ "However it is necessary to recite the blessing for the washing of the hands again because it is considered an interruption for the washing and his hands may have inadvertently touched something impure. <br>It is not necessary to recite the concluding blessing borei nefashot for the karpas since the reading of the Haggadah is not considered an interruption. It is also not necessary after eating the maror to recite this blessing since the commandment is to eat the matzah and the maror together, as scripture, \"Matzah and maror they shall eat it.\" It is considered to be part of the meal, and it is not necessary to recite borei peri ha-adamah again during the meal. The vegetables which we dip at the beginning of the Seder are meant to make the children curious since we normally donโ€™t dip vegetables prior to the meal.<br> If one does not have other vegetables - and only has maror - should begin the Seder by reciting two blessings, al achilat maror and borei peri ha-adamah when he eats and dips the maror in place of the karpas. He should then dip it in the haroset and eat an olives size of it. When he completes the reading of the Haggadah and recites the blessing over the matzah, he should eat the maror again, this time without a blessing."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Yachatz": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<br>After eating the karpas, one breaks one of the three matzot, placing half between the two whole matzot and wrapping half of it in a cloth, as a reminder of the verse: \"So the people took the dough before it was leavened, their kneading bowls wrapped in their cloaks upon their shoulders.\" (Exodus 12:34) It is used for the Afikomen which is eaten later as a reminder of the Passover offering, which must be consumed when we are already sated by the meal. Why do we break the matzah before the reading of the Haggadah? So that when we make the declaration, \"This is the bread of affliction,\" we can do so over a broken piece of matzah. The Talmud Pesahim states, \"Just as it is the way of the poor to break bread and put some away for later, so too here, we break the matzah and put away a piece for later.\"",
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+ "The Rif asks, What should one who only has an olives-worth of guarded matzah (shmurah matzah) do? He should first eat regular matzah first when he recites the motzi and afterwards, at the end of the meal (when he eats the Afikomen) should eat the olives-worth of guarded matzah, reciting the blessing \"for the commandment of eating matzah\" (al akhilat matzah). One then makes a sandwich with the maror and the matzah without a blessing.<br>The Rif's explanation surprised the Rosh, who wonders, if we wait until the end of the seder to say al akhilat matzah over the guarded matzah, how could one then eat the sandwich with a regular piece of matzah since it would remove the taste of the guarded (shmurah) matzah from one's mouth? According to the Rif's explanation it would have made more sense to simply omit the sandwich since it is only a remembrance of the Passover offering which was eaten together with matzah and maror.<br>This is what the Rambam and Rabbeinu Yona suggest: one should recite the blessing for the eating of matzah at the end of the meal, and one should not eat anything after it. The Ittur suggests that one should recite both blessings, hamotzi and al akhilat matzah, and then eat the regular (non-guarded) matzah, and then eat the shmurah matzah at the end of the meal as the Afikomen without a blessing.<br>The Rosh suggests that one should begin with the shmurah matzah, after reciting both blessings, so that one eats the shmurah matzah 'with an appetite' and that one need not worry about eating non-guarded matzah after it."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Magid": {
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+ "Ha Lachma Anya": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>One begins the reading of the Haggadah.</b> The Rif wonders why one doesnโ€™t recite a blessing for the reading of the Haggadah just as one recites a blessing for the reading of the Megillah. Surely the telling of the story of Passover is a positive commandment as we learn: \"You shall tell your child on that day etc.\" (Exodus 12:8)<br>He explains that a blessing for telling the story is unnecessary since by saying in the Kiddush, \"A remembrance for the exodus from Egypt,\" he fulfills his obligation of saying a special blessing. The Rashba offers another explanation for why a special blessing is not said for the telling of the Passover story. One does not need to say a blessing for a mitzvah for which there is no minimum in its performance. A simple statement (\"God took us out of Egypt\") would suffice in the telling of the story of the Exodus, though we do say \"whoever tells the story at length is praiseworthy.\"<br>This text is called the Haggadah because of the verse, \"You shall tell (v'higadita) your child on that day etc.\" (Exodus 12:8). Some say that the name comes from the Hebrew word for drawing the heart, or inspiring, and this seems correct to me, as in the verse, \"O Lord, open up my lips; that my mouth may declare (yagid) your praise.\" (Ps. 51:17) The sages interpreted yagid to mean, \"my mouth shall draw your praise.\" That is, everything derives from the intention of the heart. In human books, wonders and awesome acts arise from the natural order of the world, inspiring love, joy and spiritual pleasure. Yet who has heard such things as the Exodus without trembling? The author of the Kuzari writes:<br>\"The facts are yet more startling! The Israelites lived in Egypt as slaves, 600,000 men above the age of twenty, the descendents of the twelve tribes. Not one of them had separated or emigrated to another country, nor was there a stranger among them. They looked forward to the promise given to their ancestors, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, that the land of Israel should be their inheritance. At that time it was in the power of seven mighty and prosperous nations, while the Israelites groaned in the depths of misery under the bondage of Pharaoh, who caused the Israelites to be put to death, lest they should increase in number. But God sent Moses and Aaron, two weak men, and they advanced before the mighty Pharaoh, with signs and miracles and changed the course of nature. Pharaoh did not get away from them, nor harm them, neither could he protect himself from the ten plagues which befell the Egyptians, affecting the streams, land, air, plants, animals, bodies and even their souls; for in one moment at midnight, died the most precious and most beloved members of their houses, the first-born males. There was no dwelling without dead, except the houses of the Israelites. All these plagues were preceded by warnings and menaces, and their cessation was signaled in the same manner, proving that they were ordained by God, who does what He wills and when He wills it, and they were not ordinary natural phenomena, nor were they wrought by constellations or accidents. The Israelites left the country of Pharaoh's bondage by the command of God, the same night at the same moment as the first born diedโ€ฆ\"<br>Whoever allows such matters to enter their heart with full intentionality will be inspired, not like someone who reads ordinary history books, which have no intention of bringing us closer to the Creator. This is the meaning of the word Haggadah, it is that which draws the heart of those who hear these matters to complete faith. ",
58
+ "When the Seder leader recites Ha lachma anya, he lifts the platter containing the three matzot and the other ritual foods in order to delight the children. They remove it from the table in order to cause the children to ask Mah Nishtana, \"why is this night different?\" On all other nights we eat whatever is placed before on us on the plate but tonight the plate has been removed from the table! As we find in the Talmud Ketubot (chapter 5): 'Abaye was sitting in the presence of Rabbah. When he saw that they lifted the table , he asked \"How can we eat what has been taken away?\" Rabbah said, \"We have been exempted from saying Mah Nishtana\"' The Rashbam explains that their tables were small (more like trays) and could easily be removed while our tables are large and not easily movable. Instead, we remove a platter or a plate containing three matzot, the maror, and the two cooked foods can be food; this considered to be sufficient. ",
59
+ "<b><i>Ha lachma anya</i>:</b> Our ancestors ate bread like this in Egypt. Did our ancestors eat matzah in Egypt? Doesnโ€™t scripture state, \"And they baked unleavened cakes of the dough that they had taken out of Egypt for it was not leavened since they were driven out of Egypt and could not delay; nor had they prepared provisions for themselves.\" (Exodus 12:39) So they did not have unleavened bread until after they left Egypt, Isaac Abarbanel explains in his commentary, that when the Israelites were enslaved in Egypt toiling with hard labor, the Egyptians gave them matzah to eat which was hard to digest, just as employers often give their employees food that will not be digested quickly today. ",
60
+ "Why is matzah called lechem oni? It is bread about which we have much to say (onim) such as the reading of the Haggadah and Hallel. Another explanation, just as the poor person only eats a portion of his bread, putting away part for later, so too do we recite the motzi on a broken piece of matzah. ",
61
+ "Another explanation: Just as a poor person kneads and bakes his own dough because he does not have servants to do this for him; he kneads the dough and his wife does the baking, so too, even the rich are meticulous in personally preparing matzah; he kneads the dough and his wife bakes it so that it does not become leavened. Finally matzah is called lechem oni because one should not knead more dough than the amount of a poor person's offering, that is an omer or a tenth of an eifah which is even brought by the poorest of the poor.",
62
+ "<b>All who are hungry come and eat:</b> One makes this declaration because everyone is obligated to eat matzah on the first night of Passover, as it is written, \"On that night they shall eat matzot.\" Scripture sets this obligation on everyone, therefore one invites anyone who doesnโ€™t have matzah on Passover night to join the Seder. There are those who explain this statement differently. We say, \"All who are hungry,\" because we donโ€™t eat prior to the Seder so that we eat the first matzah with gusto and everyone at the table is hungry. ",
63
+ "<b>All who are in need come join in the Passover:</b> There are those who suggest that we should not make this statement since we no longer have a Passover offering today. However, it makes good sense that we should continue to make this statement. V'yifsach (with a chet) is similar in meaning to the word, v'yifsa (with an ayin), as in, \"come this way and join me in a meal.\" Also, since we place the obligatory foods on a platter including the two cooked foods as a reminder of the sacrifices, therefore we can say this just as we did in the time of the Temple: we eat the Afikomen and the other foods as a reminder of the Passover offering. ",
64
+ "<b>Now we are here:</b> Having mentioned the Passover offering, we may have caused some sadness among those who have gathered around the table, since we have mentioned the destruction of the Temple and the sacrifice that is no longer offered. Therefore, we say the leader of the Seder comforts the members of his household and tells them: this year we are here and unable to fulfill all our obligations such as offering the Passover sacrifice; next year we will be in Jerusalem! At the very least, this year we are still slaves here but next year we may be free. This is a type of prayer: 'May it be God,s will that the Holy one fulfill His promise and oath to redeem us from our exile so that we will merit the privilege of offering the Passover sacrifice in Jerusalem next year!' This passage is recited in Aramaic because this was the language of our ancestors in Babylonia where it was composed. It was recited in Aramaic so that the women, children and those who were illiterate would understand it. There are those who say that in Jerusalem it was also recited in Aramaic because Aramaic was a language associated with joyous occasions."
65
+ ]
66
+ ],
67
+ "Four Questions": [
68
+ [],
69
+ [
70
+ "<b>How different is this night from all other nights:</b> This was included in the Haggadah for those who did not have a child to ask questions, as it says in Talmud Pesahim (116a), \"If his son was knowledgeable, he should ask; if not let his wife ask him. If she is unable let him ask himself. Even two who are knowledgeable in the laws of Passover should ask one another.\"",
71
+ "<b>We do not dip even once:</b> The eating of vegetables at the beginning of the Seder is called dipping since it is the practice to dip the vegetables in vinegar or in haroset.",
72
+ "<b>This night we do so twice:</b> There is the first and the second dipping. The first dipping is not obligatory but is meant to make children ask, \"Why do we eat vegetables before the meal and on other nights we do so during the meal.",
73
+ "<b>On this night everyone leans:</b> Even the servant must lean; so too, a son may lean before his father and a woman of important status, since this is a sign of freedom and authority. "
74
+ ]
75
+ ],
76
+ "We Were Slaves in Egypt": [
77
+ [],
78
+ [
79
+ "<b>We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt:</b> This is an answer to last of the questions about leaning; but it serves an answer for the other questions as well. This night is different from other nights; we eat matzah and maror. If one were to respond, \"Whatever happened, happened; why do we have to bother telling what happened,\" we would say to him, \"If the Holy One had not taken our ancestors out of Egypt, we and our children and our children's children would still be subjugated in Egypt.\" ",
80
+ "<b>Even if we were all wise:</b> As was quoted earlier, \"Even two who are knowledgeable in the laws of Passover should ask one another,\" in order to fulfil the obligations of telling the story of the Exodus, as the Haggadah goes on to illustrate."
81
+ ]
82
+ ],
83
+ "Story of the Five Rabbis": [
84
+ [
85
+ "<b>Rabbi Eliezer, Rabbi Joshua, Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah, and Rabbi Akiva were dining together in B'nai Brak:</b> Abarbanel asks many questions regarding this passage. Why did the sages uproot themselves from their homes to be together on Seder night when people usually go to great trouble to be with their own household on Passover. Why were they in a place called B'nai Brak? It was not a well known location; it is not even mentioned among the towns of the land of Israel or Babylonia. Abarbanel understands b'nai b'rak not as a name but as a description of the items they used on Seder night; he suggests that each of them was in his own home leaning on the finest pillows and couches which were like b'nai b'rak , 'shining items.' Abarbanel suggests that the if the sages were together, they were in the home of Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah, who was a rich man and also the head of the Sanhedrin.<br>Literally, however, B'nai B'rak is the name of a place. ",
86
+ "<b>Our teachers, the time of the morning Sh'ma has arrived: </b>This comes to teach us that if they hadnโ€™t feared missing out on the time in which the Sh'ma was to be recited they would not have stopped discussing the Exodus from Egypt."
87
+ ],
88
+ [
89
+ "<b>Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah said: I was like a man of seventy:</b> He was not really seventy years old but as the Talmud explains, his hair grew white on the night after he was chosen to be the head of the Sanhedrin so that he looked was like a man of seventy. It was not fitting for such a young looking man to sit over the head court.",
90
+ "<b>And I did not merit to teach that Exodus should be mentioned at night:</b> I did not merit (<i>lo zakhiti</i>) is another way of saying \"I did not succeed.\" I did not best the sages until I learned Ben Zoma's teaching. Some say that Rabbi Elazar was convinced that it was not appropriate to mention the Exodus (in the third paragraph of the Sh'ma) at night until he heard the teaching of Ben Zoma. From then on he decreed that the Exodus passage should be read both in the daytime and at night. It was read in the daytime before emet v'yatziv, and at night before emet v'emunah. Before he learned Ben Zoma's teaching, Rabbi Elazar would skip the entire passage, because it says, \"You shall see them,\" which implies only during the day. Upon hearing Ben Zoma's interpretation, he made it an obligation to mention the Exodus, which is in the last part of this passage, during the day and at night. The sages, however, took exception with Ben Zoma and said \"the days of your life\" refers this world, and \"All the days of your life,\" refers to the world to come (the messianic era). The sages said that the Exodus would remain part of the liturgy but it would be secondary to Israel's final redemption, from subjugation to the nations."
91
+ ]
92
+ ],
93
+ "The Four Sons": [
94
+ [
95
+ "<b>Blessed is the \"Place;\" Blessed is He:</b> The Holy One is called Ha-Makom because God is the place of the world but the world is not God's place. Similarly, we interpret the verse, \"See there is a place near Me; station yourself on the rockโ€ฆ\" (Ex 33:22) The verse does not say \"I am in the place,\" but \"The place is near me.\" It is a Dwelling Place, and the Place is without a place. Further, you will find that the word Makom has the same numerical value of God's name if one squares each of the letters of the divine name: yud (10) times yud (100), hay (5) times hay (25), vav (6) times vav 36), and hay (5) times hay (25) is 186, the same as Makom. ",
96
+ "<b>Blessed is the one who gave the Torah:</b> The commandment to tell the story of the exodus to our children is written in four verses in the Torah. Since we are about to interpret these verses, we begin by reciting a blessing for the Torah and then offering interpretations.",
97
+ "<b>The Torah speaks of four types of children:</b> The commandment of Haggadah, of telling the story of the Exodus, is written in four places. Since the Torah appears to repeat itself, we understand the four as referring to four types of children. They are not necessarily children but they are lacking knowledge, like children."
98
+ ],
99
+ [
100
+ "<b>What does the wise child ask? What are these testimonies, statutes and judgments which the Lord our God commanded us:</b> This passage is found in Parshat Va-etchanan (Deut. 6:20) It continues: \"You shall say to your children: 'We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt and the Lord freed us from Egypt with a mighty hand. The Lord performed before our eyes marvelous and awesome signs and portents in Egypt against Pharaoh and all his household.'\" (Deut. 6: 21-22) This was the answer to the wise child. There is no doubt that a wise person is praised for his intellect, and his choice of words are a reflection of his intellect. In the words of Proverbs, 25:11: \"A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in a setting of silver.\" This means that the wise person, when he asks a question or makes a statement does not repeat himself; each word deals with a separate matter and he chooses his words wisely.<br>This is the intent of the wise child's question. When he asks about \"these testimonies, statutes and judgments,\" he understands that there are different types of commandments regarding the Festival and Passover offering. For instance, we learn that the offering must be a male lamb; only those appointed to the offering were allowed to eat it; it had to be roasted; and it had to be consumed by midnight, as Scripture says, \"This is the law of Passover.\" (Ex. 12:43) The wise child knows that these details are testimonies that teach us important matters about the reason for the offering. They testify to the events of the Exodus from Egypt. But he also asks regarding the statutes and judgments relating to the Passover offering; for example, \"do not break the bones of the offering\" and other details. One of the central statutes is the commandment to eat the Passover offering when one is already satiated from the festive meal, at the end of the meal, rather than when one normally eats one's favorite dish at the beginning of the meal. What purpose is there in eating delicacies on a full stomach and he is no longer able to eat any more? So you should explain to him, \"You shall instruct himโ€ฆno dessert (Afikomen) ought to be set before him after the Passover offering.\" That is, do not say, afiku mahn, \"bring out the sweets\" after the meal in order to remove the taste of meat from his mouth at the conclusion of the meal. That is why the Afikomen is delayed to the end of the meal. We can now explain the wise child's insightful question. We now eat an olives-size of sh'murah matzah at the end of the meal as a reminder of the Passover offering.<br>We now understand why the wise child asks this question the way he does. He sees that members of his household and those appointed to eat their Passover offering sitting together. Each is given only a bit to eat of the offering at the end of the meal. He also sees that they are meticulous about eating it, something that they do not normally do at other times. He asks, \"What are these testimonies and statutesโ€ฆ\" That is, generally it is the custom when people gather to celebrate an occasion with the members of their household, they leave their house afterwards to visit their friends' houses. If it is because of the preciousness of the Passover offering that they gathered, then why donโ€™t they send portions to their neighbors as we do on other occasions. The wise child does not remove himself from the gathering; rather, he says \"which the Lord our God commanded you.\" He says \"you\" because he knows that the commandment was not given to him because he is still a minor. Yet he has already accepted upon himself the yoke of the commandments which is why he says, \"the Lord our God.\"",
101
+ "<b>So you should explain to him all the laws of Passover, including, \"You shall instruct himโ€ฆno dessert (Afikomen) ought to be set before him after the Passover offering.\"</b> This answer implies that we are obligated to eat the Passover offering in one gathering and not with others. He will see that since we were appointed to this gathering, we cannot say \"give me my cloak as I wish to go out from here,\" (afiku minai); we cannot go out from the house as on other festivals. Thus we explain why people donโ€™t eat in their own homes as we do on other festivals but gather in groups to eat the Passover offering.",
102
+ "<b><i>Ayn maftirin</i></b>, comes from the same word as haftarah (from the liturgy) and has the meaning of 'finish' or 'complete.' When we recite the haftarah on Shabbat morning, we complete the Shacharit service. Another explanation of the word matftirin is 'to express' or 'to express intent.'<br>The word Afikomen is Greek. According to the first interpretation of the word, 'finish,' this word means 'bring out the sweets,' as in 'We do not finish the meal with sweets.' According to the second interpretation, 'to express,' the word, Afikomen means, 'go out from here.' As in, \"We do not say 'Let us go out from here.'\""
103
+ ],
104
+ [
105
+ "<b>What does the wicked child say:</b> This verse comes from Parshat Bo: \"When your children ask you, 'What is this rite (avodah) to you?'\" (Ex. 12:26) This verse is speaking about the wicked child who says <i>lakhem</i>, \"to you,\" implying that the rite is for you and not for him. Speaking in the manner of a wicked person, he uses the word avodah, implying something that is a burden and troublesome. The wicked child says, \"What is all the trouble with which you bother yourself all year?\" He calls the service of God avodah, labor. Even though we find this word used for the sacrificial rites, we should presume that the wicked child has bad intentions since he removes himself from the community. Therefore you should \"blunt his teeth.\" This means weaken his teeth as in the verse, \"In those days they shall say no more, the fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the childrenโ€™s teeth are set on edge.\" (Jer. 31:28) This means that he sees others eating and he is not able to eat the food. Tell him: \"The Torah was speaking of you when it said, 'It is because of what the Lord did for me,' God did it for me and not for you!\" If an evil person like you had been in Egypt, he would not have been redeemed.<br> Why do we apply this verse to the wicked child when it is the verse that is applied to the one who does not know to ask? The reason is that the one who does not know to ask is not so different from the wicked child. The wicked child does not delve into the deeper meaning in his questions or try to understand the commandments of the God; rather he sees them as something that a person simply does without explanation. "
106
+ ],
107
+ [
108
+ "<b>The simple child, what does he say:</b> The one who does not know how to ask calls the simple child 'wise,' for he knows how to form his connection and to ask about ethics and wisdom. The simple child is not wicked; he simply asks question, 'what is this,' without intention of mocking the tradition."
109
+ ],
110
+ [
111
+ "<b>The one who doesnโ€™t know to ask, you open it for him:</b> As in \"Open your mouth for the mute\" (Prov. 31:8). This verse is written in Parshat Bo, \"You shall tell it to your child on that day, saying, 'It is because of what the Lord did for me when I went free from Egypt.'\" (Ex. 13:8) Since there is no question in this verse and only the command, \"You shall tell it,\" it is addressed to the one who doesnโ€™t know how to interpret the verses in the Haggadah and publicize the miracle of Passover."
112
+ ]
113
+ ],
114
+ "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh": [
115
+ [
116
+ "<b>You shall tell it to your child. One might have thought that one should do so from Rosh Hodesh:</b> This passage is not a continuation of the previous one. The father is not addressing his son who doesnโ€™t know how to ask here. Rather the author of the Haggadah offers another explanation for Exodus 13:8. It is an explication of when we are obligated 'to expand on' the story of the Exodus. We might presume that one is obligated to expound on the teachings of Passover from the beginning of Nisan, since God told Moses, \"This month shall be unto you the beginning of monthsโ€ฆ.\" Just as Moses began warning the people of the coming observance on Rosh Hodesh, so too, we might think we should begin explaining the Exodus from Rosh Hodesh. Therefore the verse adds \"on that day,\" to teach us that it applies not on Rosh Hodesh but from the day when Israel was redeemed from slavery. We might also presume that one is obligated to expound on the teachings of Passover from the day before Passover when the sacrifice was slaughtered since it says 'On that DAY.' The phrase adds, \"Because of this,\" teaching us that we only expound when the offering is brought before us; that is, when he can point at the matzah and the maror, identifying them with the word \"This.\"<br>It was necessary to teach this because previously Scripture states: \"Seven days you shall eat matzot\" (Ex. 13:7) and \"on the evening you shall eat matzot.\" (Ex. 12:18). Since the end of the verse is, \"God did this for me when I went forth from Egypt,\" (Ex. 13:8) it was necessary to clarify when we are to tell the story since we eat matzah all week.",
117
+ "Another explanation: <b>\"Because of this (zeh) which the Lord did for meโ€ฆ\"</b> The Gematria of the word zeh is twelve because a person performs twelve mitzvot on Seder night. They are: four cups of wine, haroset, karpas, washing ones hands twice, motzi, matzah, maror and the sandwich. In the time of the Temple when the Passover offering, the matzah and the maror were brought, they would point at them and say, \"Because of this which the Lord did for me.\" "
118
+ ]
119
+ ],
120
+ "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers": [
121
+ [
122
+ "<b>Originally our ancestors worshipped idols:</b> This is in accord with what we are taught: \"Begin with disgrace and end with exaltation.\" The Talmud asks: What is disgrace? According to Rav, \"Originally our ancestors worshiped idols.\" According to Samuel, \"We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt.\" We include both interpretations in the Haggadah\" (BT Pesachim 116a). Rav's interpretation appears here following the explication of \"Because of this (zeh) which the Lord did for meโ€ฆ\" (Ex. 13:8) because the sages taught that one who has abandoned his faith for idolatry is not allowed to partake of the Passover meal, as it is written, \"A stranger may not partake of it.\" Therefore we begin by speaking of the disgrace, that our ancestors worshipped idols, and only when they came closer to their true faith and were circumcised before they left Egypt, only then were they fit to offer the sacrifice and to come close to the service of God. We say it here in order that the children will hear this and will learn a lesson and not allow their hearts to go astray after vanity, and thus be exiled from the table of their Father in Heaven.<br>It is fitting to mention how their ascent into slavery came about and how they learned the ways of other nations as a result of being dispersed among them as well as their Exodus from Egypt, along with the miracles and wonders God performed there. It was because of God's great love that He chose our ancestors and their children after them. Abraham had two sons but God only chose Isaac, the precious child and the pure offering. So too, Isaac had two sons but God chose Jacob. God decreed subjugation to the nations of the world in this world so that they would merit reward in the world to come."
123
+ ],
124
+ [
125
+ "<b>And I gave Mount Seir to Esau:</b> Onkeles, the Aramaic translation, interprets Har Seir as the Har Sheidin, a Mountain of Demons, based on the verse, \"And there shall satyrs dance.\" (Is. 13:21) Mount Seir is the portion of Samael, who has a mighty storm (saar) in his heart, as it is written, \"My Lord shall sound the ram's horn and advance in a stormy tempest.\" (Zach. 9:14) He is from the side of redness (evil) and therefore Esau is called Edom. Jacob, on the other hand, was smooth, the opposite of a man of Seir (hairy). He is stands apart and separated from the tempest and the bonds (of Seir). Therefore his image is on the throne of glory. He and his offspring went down to Egypt to pay the debt that was decreed at the Covenant of the Pieces (Gen. 15)."
126
+ ],
127
+ [
128
+ "<b>Praised is the One who kept His promise to Israelโ€™s ancestors, Praised is He:</b> This statement is a kind of berachah, a blessing. Some commentaries explain that one must recite a blessing immediately before one recalls the subjugation of the Israelites. โ€œJust as one recites a blessing upon hearing good news, so one recites a blessing upon hearing bad newsโ€ (BT Berachot). One offers comfort upon telling the story of this and other exiles, โ€œPraised is the One who keeps His promise regarding the redemption of Israel which He promised us. Praised is the One who constantly calculates when the end time will arrive, when the time of peace and redemption will arrive. As it is written, โ€œThen God said to Avramโ€ฆyour offspring shall be strangers in a land not their own (in Babylonia) and they shall serve (in Assyria) and they shall be afflicted (in Greece), and those that judged you I shall judge (in Edom).โ€ (Genesis 15) One concludes: โ€œAnd afterwards, they shall go forth with great wealth.โ€ This verse is a promise of redemption from all the nations.<br>One should explain the meaning of โ€œthe Holy One calculates the end.โ€ Since the Holy One desired to bring the end (keitz) sooner, he subtracted 190 years (the gemartria of keitz) from the Covenant of the Pieces until the Israelites went forth from Egypt, which was said to be 400 years. The Israelites were only in Egypt 210 years โ€“ they skipped the extra 190 years. The literal meaning is โ€œit was if they were subjugated all these years.\""
129
+ ],
130
+ [],
131
+ [
132
+ "<b>It stood for our ancestors and for us:</b> This refers to the redemption which the Holy One promised to our forefather Abraham at the Covenant of the Pieces when God revealed to him the subjugation and the redemption. But that same promise was also made for us with regard to Babylonia, Assyria and Greece. It continues to hold fast with Edom. As is explained in Bereshit Rabbah, โ€œTerror (Babylonia), and great (Greece) darkness (Assyria) fell upon Abram (Edom).โ€ (Genesis 15:12) But God also showed Abram the redemption, โ€œThey went forth with great wealth.โ€",
133
+ "<b>It was not just one who rose up against us: </b>That is, it was not just the Egyptians who rose up against us to harm and destroy us. Rather there were those in every generation who rose up against us to harm us though the strength of this decree of exile which was made at the time of the โ€œCovenant of the Pieces. The Holy One, however, saved us just as He had promised."
134
+ ]
135
+ ],
136
+ "First Fruits Declaration": [
137
+ [],
138
+ [
139
+ "<b>Come and see what Laban the Aramean sought to do to Jacob: </b>(Laban was also among those included in God's promise). Pharaoh made a decree against the males while Laban sought to uproot them all: Laban said, โ€œIt is within my power to do with you evil,\" (Gen. 31:29) if it weren't for the dream as has been explained, โ€œBut the God of your father hadnโ€™t said to me yesterday, beware of speaking against Jacob.โ€ It should have said, โ€œOf acting.โ€ However, Laban was a great wizard so that even his words, the things he mentions, and his oaths to demons could have swallowed up Jacob, harming him and his offspring. That Torah literally says, An Aramean destroys my father. Laban came with absolute certainty he could destroy Jacob had God not taken his strength from him. Why does it say that he \"destroys?\" The Holy One made his thought as serious as an action, therefore, the Torah says, An Aramean destroys my father. After God saved Jacob and his family from Laban another misfortune took place, as it says, He went down to Egypt, compelled by Divine decree. We find this explanation in Talmud Shabbat: It was fitting for our father Jacob to go down into Egypt in iron chains, but his merit saved him, for it is written, \"I drew them with the cords of a man, with bands of love; and I was to them as they that take off the yoke on their jaws, and I laid meat before them.\" "
140
+ ],
141
+ [
142
+ "<b>He sojourned there, this teaches that they did not go down to Egypt to settle there:</b> They did not go down to Egypt to establish a permanent settlement and dwell as citizens, but rather to sojourn there as strangers and outsiders."
143
+ ],
144
+ [],
145
+ [
146
+ "<b>And there he became a great nation, they were distinguishable: </b>They had the signs of being a great nation, recognizable, and well known, gathered together in one place and not scattered about throughout the land. Even though they were few in numbers, they were recognized as a nation unto themselves. "
147
+ ],
148
+ [
149
+ "<b>And numerous, as thus growth of the field:</b> Just as the growth of the field, when they are cut down grow back even more numerous, so too, Israel the more they were oppressed the more they increased ant became fertile. Thus it is states, \"The more they were oppressed, the more they increased and spread out.\" (Exodus 1:12)",
150
+ "<b>But you were naked and bare:</b> Naked and lacking in commandments so that when the end of the subjugation came, they did not have any commandments to their credit. Therefore God gave them the Passover offering and the commandment to circumcise all the males on the fourteenth day of Nisan. This is hinted at in the verse: \"When I passed by you and saw you wallowing in blood, I said to you: \"live in spite of your blood; yea, live in spite of your blood\" (Ezekiel 16:7). The verse refers to the blood of circumcision and the blood of the offering. "
151
+ ],
152
+ [
153
+ "<b>They dealt with us in an evil manner:</b> The Egyptians schemed to do us harm, saying, 'Esau was a fool for waiting until his father died to kill Jacob because by then his sons had grown up. Similarly, Laban was a fool for following a dream. We will be more shrewd in uprooting all of them!'"
154
+ ],
155
+ [
156
+ "<b>In order to afflict them with forced labor:</b> There are those who explain that this was the forced labor of idolatry. They subjugated them and forced to worship idols, as is written: \"They hire a metal worker to make it into a godโ€ฆThey must carry it on their back and (<i>yisbiluhu</i>) transport it.\" (Isaiah 46:7) "
157
+ ],
158
+ [
159
+ "<b>With rigor (<i>farekh</i>):</b> At first Pharaoh spoke to them softly (<i>bifeh rakh</i>), carrying bricks on his shoulders to encourage the Israelites to participate in the building of the cities so they could honor the king, but afterwards he subjugated them with rigor (<i>farekh</i>). "
160
+ ],
161
+ [],
162
+ [],
163
+ [],
164
+ [],
165
+ [],
166
+ [
167
+ "<b>Our labor, this refers to the children:</b> who grew up surrounded by hard labor and the difficult work they had to perform."
168
+ ],
169
+ [
170
+ "<b>And our oppression, this refers to the severe pressure:</b> As it is written, \"You must produce your quota.\" (Exodus 5:18) "
171
+ ],
172
+ [],
173
+ [
174
+ "<b>Adonai took us out of Egypt, not by an angel or by a seraf nor by a messenger:</b> Moses was not considered a 'messenger' but rather a spokesman to Pharaoh. He did not have the power to take the people out of Egypt. Rather the Holy One alone could do this. The Hagga`ah therefore states regarding that an angel did not perform the final plague but rather God, and God alone, smote them. That which is written, \"He will not permit a destroyer to enter and smite your homes,\" (Ex. 12:23) refers to the plague of destruction (and not some destroying angel). It should be explained, 'God will not let the destruction enter your homes.' "
175
+ ],
176
+ [],
177
+ [
178
+ "<b>With a mighty hand, this refers to pestilence:</b> In Midrash Tehillim, it is explained that along with each plague that God brought upon the Egyptians, God also added the plague of pestilence, as it is written: \"He gave the beasts over to hail, their cattle to (reshafim) lightning bolts.\" (Ps. 78:48) \"They gave their cattle over to reshafim\" implies the plague of pestilence. From this we learn that the rest of the plagues also included pestilence. "
179
+ ],
180
+ [
181
+ "<b>With an outstretched arm, this is the sword:</b> Which plague in Egypt is referred to as the sword? Pesikta D'Rav Kahanah, states: \"All the first born gathered around their fathers and pleaded with them: \"Now that Moses has said, \"all the first born in the land of Egypt shall die,\" (Ex. 11:5)and all that he has predicted heretofore concerning the Egyptian people has befallen them, we must get those Hebrews out of our midst, or else the Egyptian people will die.' The fathers replied: 'Each of us has ten sons; let one of them die just so that the Hebrews be not permitted to get out!' The first born then said: 'There is but one way to settle this matter: let us go to Pharaoh, since he is a first-born, who may take pity on himself and let these Hebrews get out of our midst.' They went to Pharaoh and said to him: 'Since Moses has said \"All the first-born shall die,\" and since everything he has predicted concerning the Egyptians has befallen them, rise up and get these Hebrews out of our midst, or else the Egyptian people shall die.' But Pharaoh said to his servants: Get going and beat these cowards until they are humpbacked! And to the first born he said: I have sworn: My life or the life of the Hebrews. And you dare speak thus!' At once the first-born went out and slew sixty thousand of their fathers. Of this it is written, \"To Him that smote Egypt with their first born.\" (Ps. 136:10) Scripture does not say here , 'To Him who smote the first born of Egypt.' "
182
+ ],
183
+ [
184
+ "<b>Fearsome acts <i>(mora gadol)</i>, this refers to the appearance of the Divine Presence:</b> This means that the Holy One appeared in all His glory and smote the first born and then took the Israelites out of Egypt, as is written:\"Or has any god ventured to go and take for himself one nation from another by providing prodigious acts, by signs and by portents, by war, by a mighty and an outstretched arm, and awesome power (moraim gedolim).\" (Deut. 4:34) Rabbi Yudan says that if you count the letters in the Hebrew verse from the beginning with the first word, lavo, to the word awesome power, moraim, there are seventy two letters. If you think there are seventy-five, so take out the word goy, nation (which refers to Egypt) The number of letters is equal to the number of letters that make up God's great name. The appearance of the Divine presence is alluded to in the verse, \"This is my God and I shall glorify Him,\" (Ex 15) The people of Israel pointed at God's glory when they made this statement. The expressions mora gadol and moraim gedolim refer to the awesome appearance of the Divine Presence. Even though Egypt was filled with idolatry and filth, even so God's presence appeared in Egypt to fulfill the promise made to Jacob, \"I shall take you up.\" God's presence appeared two times in Egypt: first, on the first day of Nisan when God commanded them to prepare for the Passover, and, second, on the night of the redemption from Egypt. Similarly God appeared to them at the Red Sea, as the sages taught: \"a humble maid in Egypt saw more at the Red sea than the prophet Ezekiel.\" Since one who sees the divine presence trembles and is terrified, it is referred to as mora, awesome. "
185
+ ]
186
+ ],
187
+ "The Ten Plagues": [
188
+ [],
189
+ [],
190
+ [],
191
+ [],
192
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
202
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
205
+ "<b>Rabbi Judah used to abbreviate the plagues:</b> This is most difficult: why do we need this acronym since anyone can take the first letter of each word and combine them! Rabbi Yehudah, however, only brought this acronym to teach us about the number of plagues at the Red Sea. Rabbi Yossi said there were fifty plagues; Rabbi Eliezer said there were two hundred plagues, and Rabbi Akiva said there were two hundred and fifty plagues at the sea. Together they add up to five hundred plagues. Rabbi Yehudah's acronym adds up to five hundred and one; in matters of gematriah we donโ€™t trouble ourselves over differences of just one!<br>Some suggest that the reason that he created this acronym is because of the listing of the plagues in the book of Psalms, which is different from the order in the Torah. Therefore, Rabbi Yehudah created this acronym so that we would know that the order in the Torah is the correct one.<br>Some commentators suggest that this is a reference to the pattern of the plagues: In some plagues, God sends Pharaoh a warning, and in others, there is no warning. The acronym shows us that there is a pattern of three groups of plagues, the first two with a warning and the third in each grouping without a warning. That is why Rabbi Judah groups the plagues together three by three. Pharaoh is warned during the plagues of blood and frogs, while he receives no warning when the plague of lice strikes the land. Wild animals and pestilence contain a warning while boils does not contain a warning. This follows the pattern regarding flogging. When one commits a crime again and again, he is flogged once and twice, each time with a warning. The third time we do not flog him. Rather we put him in a prison, feed him barley bread until his stomach explodes because he is wicked and no longer deserves a warning. Similarly, hail and locust occurred with a warning and darkness without a warning. Since the final plague stands by itself, it has its own acronym.<br>Another explanation of the division into three groups: the first three plagues were carried out by Aaron. In the second group, wild animals and pestilence were not carried out by Moses or Aaron, and boils was carried out by both of them. The third group of plagues was carried out by Moses. And the final plague, the death of the first-born was carried out by the Holy one so it is in a grouping all by itself.",
206
+ "<b>Rabbi Eliezer says ... Every plague which the Holy One brought upon the Egyptians in Egypt was four plagues:</b> How do we understand the controversy of the Tanna'im who argued whether each plague was quadrupled or quintupled. The Rokeach offered a lovely explanation for this controversy. Rabbi Eliezer suggested that the plagues were quadrupled at the Red Sea because each one included all four basic elements of the universe (fire, water, air and earth). According to Rabbi Akiva, each plague was quintupled based on the four elements plus the movement of the heavenly spheres that influenced each plague as well."
207
+ ]
208
+ ],
209
+ "Dayenu": [
210
+ [
211
+ "<b>How many favors the Omnipresent has bestowed upon us: </b>Commentators explain that since the Tanna'im in the previous passages deal with the number of plagues, therefore we now turn our attention to the number of favors which God has bestowed upon us. Just as we can increase the count of curses, we can also increase the number of miracles which God performed out of His great love for us. "
212
+ ],
213
+ [
214
+ "Dayenu begins, <b>If God had taken us out of Egypt but not inflicted judgement</b> โ€ฆ This would have been a great miracle and it would have been sufficient, as is explained regarding the verse in the Torah, \"Has any God ventured to go and take one nation out of another?\" (Deut. 4:34) He took us out of Egypt as a person delivers a fetus from its mother's womb before its time. Israel was not yet worthy of leaving Egypt since they could have been judged as being no better than the Egyptians. These were idolaters, and these were idolaters. These partook of sexually illicit actions and these partook of sexually illicit actions. Even so God doubled our miracle by taking us out of Egypt and passing judgement on the Egyptians for subjugating us. How much more so should we praise the Master of Everything. God could not pass up the judgement of the Egyptians for He had promised Abraham, The nations which they served I will judge. (Gen. 15) Not only that but God passed judgement on all of them and not just some of them!"
215
+ ],
216
+ [],
217
+ [],
218
+ [],
219
+ [
220
+ "<b>Had he not given them their wealth:</b> This refers to the wealth they gathered at the shore of the Red Sea and not booty they took from the Egyptians in Egypt. God had already promised them wealth from the Egyptians. The extra favor was that they gathered up the wealth of the Egyptians that washed up on the shore after they drowned in the Red Sea."
221
+ ],
222
+ [],
223
+ [],
224
+ [],
225
+ [],
226
+ [],
227
+ [],
228
+ [
229
+ "<b>If He had brought us to Mount Sinai:</b> in order to show us His great glory, it would have been enough for us! And not given us the Torah, or, if He had not increased the number of commandments that He commanded us to perform. The seven Noahide Commandments would have been enough. The sages said, \"When the people stood at Sinai, their impurity was removed from them.\" Those non-Jews who did not stand at Sinai were still impure even though they had the Noahide laws. Therefore, being at Sinai would have been enough even without the extra commandments. "
230
+ ]
231
+ ],
232
+ "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things": [
233
+ [
234
+ "<b>Rabban Gamliel said, anyone who did not mention these three things.</b> That is, even if he ate the Passover offering, matzah and the Bitter herbs, he will not have fulfilled his obligation if he did not explain why we eat these three things, since the Torah emphasizes the explanation and the telling."
235
+ ],
236
+ [],
237
+ [],
238
+ [
239
+ "<b>For what reason do we eat this matzah?</b> This must be explained since we had already been commanded to eat the matzah without an explanation of why. Rabbi Kimchi explains that they were commanded to eat matzah in Egypt before they left in anticipation of what was about to happen. God knows all possible futures and He already knew that they would have to leave Egypt in haste. Even they had wanted to do so because they were already commanded to eat unleavened bread for seven days and to eat the Passover offering together with matzah and maror."
240
+ ],
241
+ [],
242
+ [],
243
+ [
244
+ "<b>In every generation each person is obligated to make himself appear as one who went forth from there: </b> This statement is based on what was said at the beginning of the Haggadah, had God not taken our ancestors out of Egypt, we, and our children would still be enslaved; that is, we must say, God took us out from there because we are included in all the miracles. Therefore, we are obligated to give thanks and praise Godโ€ฆ"
245
+ ]
246
+ ],
247
+ "First Half of Hallel": [
248
+ [],
249
+ [
250
+ "<b>Therefore we are obligated to give thanks:</b> Since it is as if we went forth from Egypt, we are obligated to praise and give thanks for what God did for our ancestors.<br>It is customary for each person to take a cup of wine and to recite psalms and songs. The Haggadah should be more than just generic story-telling. One must accompany singing of praise with the drinking of wine, as it is written, \"But has the vine replied, 'Have I stopped yielding my new wine which gladdens God and men that should go and wave among the trees?'\" (Judges 9:13) From this point on in the Seder song must be accompanied by a cup of wine. In this passage we mention seven types of praise: <i>shevah, hodot, hallel, paer, romem, hader, kadesh</i> for the seven firmaments.<br>Even though we are reciting Hallel, we do not begin with a blessing (as we normally do). We find in the responsa of the Geonim, \"One does not recite a blessing over Hallel on the eve of Passover even though we are about to recite the entire Hallel because it is divided in half. Also since we recite it around the dinner table, we do not apply the rules Hallel ; instead we only apply the general rules of song and thanksgiving to it. How can we say the blessing when we stop in the middle?"
251
+ ]
252
+ ],
253
+ "Second Cup of Wine": [
254
+ [],
255
+ [
256
+ "<b>Praised are you Adonai โ€ฆwho redeemed us and redeemed our ancestors:</b> We recite this blessing since we must end the Haggadah with praise. We began by saying, \"Begin with degradation and end with praise.\" That is why we end by speaking not only of our ancestors redemption but ours as well.",
257
+ "<b>Who has allowed (<i>vi-higee-ahnu</i>) us to reach:</b> Even though we already recited the she-he-heyanu along with the Kiddush, we express the same idea again, (that we have reached this occasion), in order to say that we have reached the holiday again. Some suggest that it should say tigi-aynu, You have allowed us to reach, since all blessings should include an expression in the second person. These holidays: this refers to Rosh Hashanah. And Festivals: Passover, Sukkot and Shavuot. Rejoicingโ€ฆand eating there the offerings and the Passover offerings: we refer to the festive offering first since it is consumed before the Passover offering. "
258
+ ],
259
+ [
260
+ "One then recites the blessing over the wine and drinks the wine while leaning along with all those who are participating in the Seder with him. Wash the hands a second time since the reading of the Haggadah and Hallel are an interruption between the first washing and the second washing, and our mind is no longer on the first washing. Since our hands have been busy participating in this rite, it is possible that we have touched something which caused the hands to become impure, one has to wash the hands again since one is about to eat the unleavened bread, and it is impossible to eat bread with filthy hands. However, if one was extra careful to guard ones hands from the time of the first washing and one did not touch anything impure, that he does not have to go back and wash them again. If he decides to do so anyway, then he should do so without a blessing.."
261
+ ]
262
+ ]
263
+ },
264
+ "Rachtzah": [],
265
+ "Motzi Matzah": [],
266
+ "Maror": [],
267
+ "Korech": [
268
+ [],
269
+ [
270
+ "Afterwards, the head of the household takes two matzot that are shemurot, holding the whole and the broken piece together. For the master has taught: Everyone acknowledges that on Passover night one holds the whole piece of matzah and the half piece together. What is the reason? We do so because matzah is called the bread of the needy: just as it is the way of the needy to break the bread (and put some away for later) so one recites blessing holding the broken piece. One holds the broken piece together with a whole piece because of lechem mishneh, the two loaves over which one usually recites the blessing on Shabbat and holidays. One then recites the motzi and breaks the whole piece of matzah and does not yet take from the previously broken piece of matzah since reciting the blessing on a 'whole loaf' is the more common practice. After reciting the blessing al akhilat matzah, one takes a bit of both pieces of matzah and eats them together. One should lean when eating the matzah. Some of the Gaonim are of the opinion that one makes the motzi on the previously broken piece of matzah and al akhilat matzah on the whole piece. Some follow one opinion and others follow the other opinion!",
271
+ "Afterwards, one takes some of the hazeret and recites the blessing al akhilat maror, dipping it in the haroset. This is good because of kafah a type of poisonous substance sometimes found on greens. Others say that kafah is a type of worm and that the haroset keeps it from harming the person who eats it. ",
272
+ "Each person at the table receives at least an olives-worth of hazeret dipped in the haroset. One does not lean when eating it since the Talmud says that maror does not require leaning, since it is an allusion of the verse, \"they embittered them,\" and leaning is a symbol of freedom. One does not have to recite the blessing borei p'ri ha-adamah since the blessing over the matzah exempts us from other blessings on the food. Anything that is now part of the meal no longer requires a separate blessing either before or after it. ",
273
+ "After eating the maror, each person takes part of the third piece of shemurah matzah along with the hazeret and makes a sandwich, eating them as one without leaning since it contains the bitter herbs. One eats it as a reminder of the temple, just as Hillel did, for the verse says, \"You shall eat it with matzah and maror. In the time of the Temple, Hillel would recite the blessing over the matzah and then the blessing over the maror. He would then eat them together since both of them were commandments contained in the Torah and one did not cancel out the other. At this time we recite and eat them separately since matzah is a Torah commandment while maror is only a rabbinic commandment. When there is a Passover offering, maror is a Torah commandment; in a time when there is no Passover commandment, the maror is only a rabbinic commandment. We cannot eat them together after reciting the blessings since the rabbinic commandment would cancel out the Torah commandment. Therefore, we do them separately and only then do we eat them together; since we have already recited the blessing there is no blessing for the Hillel sandwich. Ibn Yarhei writes that the optimal way to perform the commandment is to not have any interruptions between the blessings over the matzah and the making of the Hillel sandwich. In this way the blessing over the matzah and the maror would include the making of the sandwich."
274
+ ]
275
+ ],
276
+ "Shulchan Orech": [
277
+ [],
278
+ [
279
+ "After these blessings, one continues with the meal, eating whatever one wishes. At the end of the meal one should eat an olives-worth of matzah from the piece that was broken at the beginning of the Seder and that was hidden and wrapped in a cloth as a reminder of the dough that was wrapped in a cloth and carried out of Egypt. One eats it as the Afikomen, a reminder of the Passover offering which was consumed when the people were already sated by their meal. One does not eat anything after the Afikomen so that one concludes with the taste of the Afikomen in one's mouth. One should eat this matzah before midnight. If not one does not one fulfill one's obligation on Passover that nothing be consumed after midnight. "
280
+ ]
281
+ ],
282
+ "Tzafun": [
283
+ [
284
+ "If one forgot and did not eat the Afikomen until he had already washed his hands prior to the Birkat haMazon, or until he said the Zimun (Rabbotai Nivarech), or even if he had already recited the Birkat HaMazon but prior to the third cup of wine, the Avi Ezri and the Rosh write that he should wash his hands again, and recite the motzi and eat it. If, however, he already said the blessing over the third cup of wine, he should not eat it since this necessitates that he recite reciting the Birkat HaMazon and then drinking another cup of wine, and it would now appear that he is adding to the four cups of wine. It has also been established that one should not drink between the third and fourth cups of wine. Also, since all our matzah is shemurot, one can consider the last bit of matzah that he ate as the Afikomen.<br>Rabbi Peretz wrote that if he hasnโ€™t recited the Zimun yet, he can still eat the Afikomen without a blessing even though he has already ended the meal. In this situation it is different because the Afikomen is a commandment that God has placed upon him and we depend upon this.<br>After he drinks the cup of wine over which he recited the Birkat HaMazon, he pours the fourth cup and completes Hallel. In Midrash Tehilim, it is written that there should be at least three people reciting psalms so that one can recite and two can respond, hodo l'adonai ki tov.<br>The Rosh writes that if it is impossible for him to have three people present, he his wife and his minor son is sufficient!"
285
+ ]
286
+ ],
287
+ "Barech": {
288
+ "Birkat Hamazon": [
289
+ [],
290
+ [
291
+ "After the Afikomen, one pours the third cup of wine and recites the Birkat HaMazon, drinking it afterwards while leaning. Everyone should lean with the Seder leader. Between these first cups if one wishes to drink more wine, one may do so. Between the third and fourth cup of wine, one may not drink wine. The Jerusalem Talmud explains that one may not drink extra wine at the end of the Seder in order that one not become inebriated and forget to finish Hallel. This is problematic since he might already be drunk! However, wine within the meal does not make one inebriated while after the meal has the effect of making one inebriated. The Halachot Gedolot, the Rif, and the Rambam all forbid drinking after the Afikomen except for the two cups of wine. It should not appear that he is adding to the four cups of wine.<br>Rabbi Yitzchak follows the approach of the Jerusalem Talmud which says that since one should spend the whole night discussing the Exodus, the miracles that the Holy One performed for our ancestors until day break, one should not drink extra wine lest he be overcome by sleep. The Tosefta says that each person is obligated study the laws of Passover and the Exodus all night long, like the sages who dined together in B'nai Brak."
292
+ ]
293
+ ],
294
+ "Third Cup of Wine": [],
295
+ "Pour Out Thy Wrath": [
296
+ [
297
+ "Some permit a fifth cup of wine based on the verse in Exodus, \"I will bring you to the land.\" If one wishes to drink water it is permissible."
298
+ ],
299
+ [
300
+ "<b>Pour out Your wrath:</b> We recite this verse because the four cups of wine are an allusion to the four cups of retribution that the Holy One will pour out in the future on the nations of the world. We recite this prior to the fourth cup since it is with this cup that we complete the commandment of drinking four cups of wine. We now ask God to do what He promised to do to the gentiles who have oppressed us."
301
+ ]
302
+ ]
303
+ },
304
+ "Hallel": {
305
+ "Second Half of Hallel": [
306
+ [],
307
+ [],
308
+ [],
309
+ [],
310
+ [],
311
+ [],
312
+ [],
313
+ [],
314
+ [],
315
+ [
316
+ "After completing Hallel, one says, \"May all Your creations praise You,\" this is a blessing of song; it ends, \"Praised are you Adonai, Sovereign acclaimed with songs of praise.\" One then recites the blessing for the fourth cup of wine. The leader of the Seder and everyone present reclines while drinking the wine. If one wishes to add a fifth cup, one may do so after reciting Hallel HaGadol (Psalm 136), which begins with Hodu la-adonai ki tovโ€ฆhodu leilokei elokim. There are twenty six passages in this psalm equal to the twenty six generations that had not yet receive the Torah before it was given to the people of Israel. Despite this, God in His great mercy, continued to sustain these generations. One then recites Nishmat Kol Hai though the blessing at the end of Yishtabah; so says HaRitz Giat. Rabbi Hayim Kohen suggests that one should not say the blessing at the end of Hallel since it is sufficient for there to be a blessing at the end of Yishtabah. It is not necessary to conclude the passages of song and praise twice. This is also the opinion expressed in the Prayer book of Saadia Gaon."
317
+ ]
318
+ ],
319
+ "Songs of Praise and Thanks": [],
320
+ "Fourth Cup of Wine": [
321
+ [
322
+ "Concerning the blessing after drinking wine, al hagefen v'al p'ri hagefen, there are those among the Gaonim who hold that one must recite a concluding blessing of thanksgiving after each cup of wine. Our teacher Hai Gaon says: \"It is not fitting for us to recite al hagefen after each of the cups of wine since together they constitute one mitzvah and there is no interruption between them so that a blessing at the end should be sufficient. The Rif suggests that we should recite the concluding blessing (al hagefen) after the first two cups of wine and again after the final two cups of wine. The author of Sefer Hahashalamah explains that the Rif's opinion makes sense since the obligation to recite the blessing over the wine before the meal is not canceled by the wine during the meal and the wine after the meal is not exempted from a blessing by the wine during the meal. The reason for this is the purpose of the wine is different. The wine in the meal is for serving (lisharot) while the wine before and after the meal is for the drinking (lishtot). Since the wine lishtot is more important than the wine lisharot, the wine that is drunk during the meal does not divide the first two cups from the second two cups of wine in the Seder, and a blessing can be recited at the end of the Seder for all four cups of wine."
323
+ ]
324
+ ]
325
+ },
326
+ "Nirtzah": {
327
+ "Chasal Siddur Pesach": [],
328
+ "L'Shana HaBaa": [],
329
+ "And It Happened at Midnight": [],
330
+ "Zevach Pesach": [],
331
+ "Ki Lo Na'e": [],
332
+ "Adir Hu": [],
333
+ "Sefirat HaOmer": [],
334
+ "Echad Mi Yodea": [],
335
+ "Chad Gadya": []
336
+ }
337
+ },
338
+ "schema": {
339
+ "heTitle": "ืงืžื—ื ื“ืื‘ื™ืฉื•ื ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
340
+ "enTitle": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
341
+ "key": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
342
+ "nodes": [
343
+ {
344
+ "heTitle": "ืงื“ืฉ",
345
+ "enTitle": "Kadesh"
346
+ },
347
+ {
348
+ "heTitle": "ื•ืจื—ืฅ",
349
+ "enTitle": "Urchatz"
350
+ },
351
+ {
352
+ "heTitle": "ื›ืจืคืก",
353
+ "enTitle": "Karpas"
354
+ },
355
+ {
356
+ "heTitle": "ื™ื—ืฅ",
357
+ "enTitle": "Yachatz"
358
+ },
359
+ {
360
+ "heTitle": "ืžื’ื™ื“",
361
+ "enTitle": "Magid",
362
+ "nodes": [
363
+ {
364
+ "heTitle": "ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื",
365
+ "enTitle": "Ha Lachma Anya"
366
+ },
367
+ {
368
+ "heTitle": "ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”",
369
+ "enTitle": "Four Questions"
370
+ },
371
+ {
372
+ "heTitle": "ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•",
373
+ "enTitle": "We Were Slaves in Egypt"
374
+ },
375
+ {
376
+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง",
377
+ "enTitle": "Story of the Five Rabbis"
378
+ },
379
+ {
380
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื",
381
+ "enTitle": "The Four Sons"
382
+ },
383
+ {
384
+ "heTitle": "ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ",
385
+ "enTitle": "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh"
386
+ },
387
+ {
388
+ "heTitle": "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•",
389
+ "enTitle": "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers"
390
+ },
391
+ {
392
+ "heTitle": "ืืจืžื™ ืื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™",
393
+ "enTitle": "First Fruits Declaration"
394
+ },
395
+ {
396
+ "heTitle": "ืขืฉืจ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช",
397
+ "enTitle": "The Ten Plagues"
398
+ },
399
+ {
400
+ "heTitle": "ื“ื™ื™ื ื•",
401
+ "enTitle": "Dayenu"
402
+ },
403
+ {
404
+ "heTitle": "ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ",
405
+ "enTitle": "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things"
406
+ },
407
+ {
408
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœืœ",
409
+ "enTitle": "First Half of Hallel"
410
+ },
411
+ {
412
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ื”",
413
+ "enTitle": "Second Cup of Wine"
414
+ }
415
+ ]
416
+ },
417
+ {
418
+ "heTitle": "ืจื—ืฆื”",
419
+ "enTitle": "Rachtzah"
420
+ },
421
+ {
422
+ "heTitle": "ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฆื”",
423
+ "enTitle": "Motzi Matzah"
424
+ },
425
+ {
426
+ "heTitle": "ืžืจื•ืจ",
427
+ "enTitle": "Maror"
428
+ },
429
+ {
430
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืจืš",
431
+ "enTitle": "Korech"
432
+ },
433
+ {
434
+ "heTitle": "ืฉื•ืœื—ืŸ ืขื•ืจืš",
435
+ "enTitle": "Shulchan Orech"
436
+ },
437
+ {
438
+ "heTitle": "ืฆืคื•ืŸ",
439
+ "enTitle": "Tzafun"
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+ },
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+ {
442
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจืš",
443
+ "enTitle": "Barech",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ",
447
+ "enTitle": "Birkat Hamazon"
448
+ },
449
+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช",
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+ "enTitle": "Third Cup of Wine"
452
+ },
453
+ {
454
+ "heTitle": "ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš",
455
+ "enTitle": "Pour Out Thy Wrath"
456
+ }
457
+ ]
458
+ },
459
+ {
460
+ "heTitle": "ื”ืœืœ",
461
+ "enTitle": "Hallel",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืกื™ื™ืžื™ื ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ",
465
+ "enTitle": "Second Half of Hallel"
466
+ },
467
+ {
468
+ "heTitle": "ืžื–ืžื•ืจื™ ื”ื•ื“ื™ื”",
469
+ "enTitle": "Songs of Praise and Thanks"
470
+ },
471
+ {
472
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช",
473
+ "enTitle": "Fourth Cup of Wine"
474
+ }
475
+ ]
476
+ },
477
+ {
478
+ "heTitle": "ื ืจืฆื”",
479
+ "enTitle": "Nirtzah",
480
+ "nodes": [
481
+ {
482
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืกืœ ืกื™ื“ื•ืจ ืคืกื—",
483
+ "enTitle": "Chasal Siddur Pesach"
484
+ },
485
+ {
486
+ "heTitle": "ืœืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื”",
487
+ "enTitle": "L'Shana HaBaa"
488
+ },
489
+ {
490
+ "heTitle": "ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœื™ืœื”",
491
+ "enTitle": "And It Happened at Midnight"
492
+ },
493
+ {
494
+ "heTitle": "ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื—",
495
+ "enTitle": "Zevach Pesach"
496
+ },
497
+ {
498
+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื‘ืžืœื•ื›ื”",
499
+ "enTitle": "Ki Lo Na'e"
500
+ },
501
+ {
502
+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื”ื•ื",
503
+ "enTitle": "Adir Hu"
504
+ },
505
+ {
506
+ "heTitle": "ืกืคื™ืจืช ื”ืขื•ืžืจ",
507
+ "enTitle": "Sefirat HaOmer"
508
+ },
509
+ {
510
+ "heTitle": "ืื—ื“ ืžื™ ื™ื•ื“ืข",
511
+ "enTitle": "Echad Mi Yodea"
512
+ },
513
+ {
514
+ "heTitle": "ื—ื“ ื’ื“ื™ื",
515
+ "enTitle": "Chad Gadya"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ }
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+ "title": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "Kadesh": [
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+ [],
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+ [
10
+ "<b>Upon returning from synagogue</b> one should arrange one's table in the manner of freedom as we shall explain. One should not sit down at the table until after dark so that one can be certain that it is the time when one is permitted to eat matzah, as it is written, \"In the evening you shall eat matzot.\"<br>Even the poor should not drink less than four cups of wine; they should eat and drink while reclining. Scripture alludes to this in the verse: \"When Pharaoh let the people goโ€ฆSo God led <i>(vayasev)</i> the people round aboutโ€ฆ\" When they were redeemed they ate in the \"round-about\" fashion.<br>The optimal way to fulfill the mitzvah of drinking wine is to drink red wine as a reminder of the blood they placed on their lintel and doorposts in Egypt. If their hands are cleaned they may sit at the table and recite Kiddush. Most people have the custom of checking their hands beforehand and then washing them. But if their hands were already clean, there is no reason to wash them and recite al netilat yadaim, the blessing for washing. For this recitation of the blessing is not for eating but for drinking after Kiddush. We have a tradition that one who performs the ritual of \"washing\" before fruit is being presumptuous.<br>There are many reasons given for the four cups of wine at the Seder. The four cups are said to allude to the four terms of redemption mentioned in Parshat Va-era (Exodus 6:6): \"Say, therefore, to the children of Israel: I am the Lord. I will free you from the labors of the Egyptians and deliver you from their bondage. I will redeem you with an outstretched arm and through extraordinary chastisements. I will take you to be my people and I will be your God.\" The four cups are alluded to in the words: hotzeiti (I will free you), hitzalti (I will deliver you), ga'alti (I will redeem you) and lakahti (I will take you).\"<br>There are those who say that the four cups refer to the butler's dream regarding to Pharaoh: \"Pharaoh's cup was in my hand;\" \"I pressed them into Pharaoh's cup;\" \"placed the cup in Pharaoh's hand;\" \"you shall place Pharaoh's cup in his hand.\" (Genesis 40:9-13)<br>Some say that the four cups stand for the four kingdoms, and others, four cups of vengeance which God will pour out on the nations, \"Thus said the Lord, the God of Israel, to me: Take from My hand this cup of wine - of wrath - and make all the nations to whom I send you drink it. Let them drink and retch and act crazy because of the sword that I am sending among them.\" (Jer. 25:15-16) \"Babylon was a golden cup in the Lords hand. It made the whole earth drunkโ€ฆ\" (Jer. 51:7) \"There is a cup in the Lord's hand with foaming wine fully mixed from this He pours. All the nations of the earth drink, draining it to the very dregs.\" (Psalms 75:9) \"He will rain down upon the wicked blazing coals and sulfur, a scorching wind shall be their lot (kosam).\" (Psalm 11:6)<br>They also allude to four cups of consolation: \"The Lord is my allotted share and portion (kosi); You control my fate.\" (Psalm 16:5) \"You shall anoint my head with oil; My cup overflows. (Psalm 23:5) \"I will raise the cup of deliverances and invoke the name of the Lord.\" (Psalm 116:13) This last verse speaks of two cups: one for the coming of the Messiah and the other for the resurrection.<br>There are those who wonder why we donโ€™t recite a blessing for the mitzvah of the four cups just as we recite for maror. We only recite a blessing over a mitzvah that is performed at one time, and without interruption. Since the drinking of the four cups of wine are one commandment which is performed on four occasions with interruptions between them, we do not recite a blessing for this mitzvah. Natronai Gaon writes that the four cups of Seder night are a single mitzvah; if one does not drink all of them, one has not fulfilled his obligation and he deserves lashes, according to the sages.<br>The statement, \"Even the poor must not eat until he does so leaning,\" is a reference to a poor person who normally does not lean leisurely when he eats. Certainly the same applies to a wealthy person who usually leans on a fine couch. One must lean on the left side. Leaning on the right side is not considered 'leaning,' lest his throat become closed . A woman does not need to lean because she lives under the authority of her husband. But if she is a woman of high status, she should lean. Similarly, a widow or a divorcee who does not live under the authority of another should lean.<br>A son who lives in his father's house, even if his father is also his teacher, should lean. A student at the table of his master teacher does not lean unless his teacher gives him permission. The reason that he may lean at his father's table, but not at his teacher's table, is that his father would forgo the honor nor would he be harsh with him while a teacher should not forgo the honor due to him. A servant at his master's table should lean. The Avi Ezri writes that in our time when it is not the custom to lean at the table, it is not necessary to lean during the Seder either.",
11
+ "We prepare a plate for the Seder containing two cooked foods, three matzot, a variety of vegetables, and <i>haroset</i>. The two cooked foods: one of them should be roasted as a reminder of the Passover offering and one should be cooked as a reminder of the hagigah, the festive offering, which was consumed before the Passover offering so that the Passover offering would be consumed when one already had sufficient to eat. The following verse: \"You shall not break a bone of it,\" (Ex. 12:46) is interpreted to mean that if he was ravenously hungry when he ate the Passover offering, he might be suspected of breaking the bones of the offering.<br>This is how the commandment was fulfilled in the time of the Holy Temple: first they would break the Passover offering, reciting over it, 'Praised are you Adonai our Godโ€ฆwho command us concerning the eating of the Passover offering.' Each person would then eat at least an olive's amount of the meat from it. Afterwards they would bring the Festive offering, reciting the blessing, \"who commanded us regarding the eating of the offering.\" When they completed eating the Festive offering, they would bring the Passover offering back and eat it after having satisfied themselves (with the other offering).<br>When the Fourteenth of Nisan fell on a Shabbat, it was only necessary to eat the Passover offering and not the cooked offering for the Festive offering, since the Festive offering does not take precedence over the observance of the Sabbath. The Jerusalem Talmud adds that the two portions (for the Seder plate) should be the shoulder and an egg. The egg symbolizes compassion for the redemption that God provides, and the shoulder, symbolizes, 'God provides redemption through God's exalted hand.<br>Customarily there are two vegetables on the Seder plate. One is karpas. When one inverts the letters of karpas, it spells samekh parekh. The letter samekh refers to the sixty tens of thousands of Israelites who were enslaved. And the word parekh means oppressed. The other vegetable is hazeret which is also called <i>hasa</i>. <i>Hasa</i> is an allusion to the Holy One who has mercy (has) upon us. According to the sages, the haroset is a reminder of the clay from which they made the bricks when the Egyptians enslaved the Israelites. It is made from different types of sweet and tart fruits as well as spices that look like the straw used in the making of bricks. We put apples in as a reminder of the verse in scripture, \"beneath an apple tree I aroused you.\" (Song of Songs 8:5) Nuts are a reminder of the verse, \"I went down to the garden of nuts.\" (Song 6:11) Figs are an allusion of the verse, \"The fig tree puts forth her green figs.\" (Song 2:13) Dates are an allusion to the verse, \"your stature is like a palm tree\" (Song 7:8). Spices like cinnamon are a reminder of the straw used in the making of bricks.",
12
+ "The Rif asks: How does a person conduct Seder in two or three different households? He begins in his own house by reciting the blessings and the Haggadah up to the meal. He should then eat the meal, concluding with the Birkat HaMazon. He can then to each household, reciting Kiddush and a letting the members of the household drink the wine. He then recites the Haggadah. They may eat the karpas and the matzah (when he says the blessing) but he does not eat with the members of the household since he has already concluded his meal with the Afikomen. They recite the Birkat HaMazon, and then he goes on to the next household. He does this at each house he visits.<br>Even though the rule is that a person should not recite a blessing for food for someone if he is not also eating the food, the blessing over the matzah and the Kiddush are different. He can recite these blessings without eating or drinking because these foods are obligatory on Seder night. Therefore, he can recite the blessing for someone else even though he is not benefiting from the blessing. However the Birkat HaMazon is different since he has not tasted any of the food. Once he has eaten the Afikomen and recited the Birkat HaMazon in his own house, he cannot eat anything else so they must recite the grace after meals for themselves. This is based on the principle, Ayn maftirin ha-Pesah Afikomen, \"one may not partake of any deserts after the Pesah offering.\" (Mishnah Pesahim) After leading the Seder in the other households, he should return to his own house and complete the evening by reciting Hallel and drinking the fourth cup of wine.<br>If he prefers, he may go to the other households first, recite the blessings without eating or drinking with them, and then return to his house and begin all over again with the Kiddush. It is up to him to do as he wishes. He is not permitted to begin in his own household and recite the Seder up to ga'al yisrael (before the meal), recite the blessing over the matzah, and then go to the other households, returning to his own home to have his meal.<br>It is prohibited to leave one's meal to go to another home, even if one leaves an elderly or a sick person at home. One can only leave one's household on Seder night to perform a commandment such as rejoicing with a newly married couple. It goes without saying that helping those who are illiterate to fulfill the commandments of Seder night is also a commandment. The difference is that rejoicing with the bride and groom is a transient commandment. Therefore it permissible to leave the Seder table to participate in this mitzvah by greeting them. Helping the illiterate to fulfill the commandments of Seder night, on the other hand, is not transient; he can finish his own meal or go earlier help these families fulfill the commandments of this evening.<br>The Baal HaItur comments that he may not recite the blessing over the vegetables (karpas) since he cannot eat with them. He can only recite the blessing over the matzah and the maror. However, he may follow the approach of Rav Hisda, who would take hazeret (which can also be used for maror), recite the blessing over vegetables as well as the blessing for the maror at the beginning of the Seder, and when he reached the place in the Seder when one eats the maror, he would do so without reciting the blessing again.<br>The Rosh disagreed with this approach and argued that since the sages decreed that we should eat the karpas so that children would notice it and ask questions, it is to be considered no different than the blessing for the matzah and it can be recited by the Seder leader even if he is not eating the greens.<br>The Ri'af's statement that \"the participants must recite the Birkat HaMazon by themselves\" is a law for those who can recite the Birkat HaMazon. If there is no one who can lead it, Rabbi Amram Gaon writes that there is no decree that the leader must lead them so that they can fulfill their obligation. If he were to do so, he could no longer drink the fourth cup of wine in his house.<br>The Rosh writes that if even if the participants at the Seder do not know how to recite the Birkat HaMazon, the leader should lead them in it, having them repeat it word for word after him like a child who repeats Hallel and repeats it after the leader. This is not considered as if he recited God's name unnecessarily.<br>Rabbi Yaakov, son of the Rosh writes that it is possible that the leader can also recite the Birkat HaMazon for the participants and thereby fulfill their obligation. Since it is an obligation to eat matzah and so the leader can recite the blessing and have the participants answer Amen, so too, the Grace after meal can be recited on their behalf and thereby fulfill their obligation. After all, the sages decreed the obligation of four cups of wine, one of them at the end of the Birkat HaMazon, so they have a special obligation to recite the Birkat HaMazon so that they can drink the fourth cup of wine.<br>It seems to me that Rabbi Yaakov son of the Rosh is incorrect, since we learn in the Jerusalem Talmud (Berachot): \"Even if a person is exempt from a commandment, he may fulfill another person's obligation except in the case of the Birkat HaMazon.\" The Talmud then asks, donโ€™t we say that one who is exempt from a commandment cannot help fulfill another person's obligation. Rather the statement in the Talmud should have been if he is obligated to perform this commandment but has already fulfilled his obligation, he can still help others fulfill their obligation except in the case of the Birkat HaMazon, as it is written: You shall eat, and be satisfied and bless.\" This means that one who ate should recite the Birkat HaMazon (and not one who didnโ€™t eat). It seems to me, therefore, that the Rosh is correct in this matter.<br>When everything is prepared, he should pour the first cup of wine for each participant, reciting the blessing for the wine first, then the blessing sanctifying the day, and then the sheheyanu, for having reached this day. We do not say a blessing, \"Who performed miracles for our ancestors,\" because the last blessing of the Maggid, \"Who redeemed us and our ancestors from Egyptโ€ฆBlessed are you Adonai, who has redeemed Israel\" serves as a blessing for giving thanks for the miracles of Passover. This blessing is more appropriate because it more specific in referring to the Exodus. Then everyone drinks the cup of wine while leaning.",
13
+ "If Passover falls on Shabbat, one says Vayekhulu first, (Genesis 2:1-3) then the blessing over the wine, followed by the blessing sanctifying the day. In the second blessing, on Shabbat we say \"You have caused us to inherit the Sabbath and your holy festivals with love and favor.\" The commandment to rejoice on the festival is explicitly stated. The commandment to rejoice is alluded to in the verse: \"On your joyous occasions and your festivals.\" (Numbers 10:10) the Midrash says that \"your joyous occasions,\" is a reference to the Sabbaths. We find the language of inheritance in connection with the Sabbath, as it is written, \"The people of Israel shall keep the Sabbath, observing the Sabbath day throughout the generations as a covenant for all times.\" (Exodus 31:16) That is why we say, \"You cause us to inherit.\" Finally one concludes the blessing by saying, \"Praised are you who sanctifies the Sabbath, Israel and the sacred seasons. Then one recites the she-heheyanu and one drinks the wine.",
14
+ "If Passover falls at the conclusion of the Sabbath, we recite the blessings which are referred to in the acrostic, YKNH\"Z, yayin (wine), kiddush (sanctifying the day), ner (candle, or the blessing for fire), havdalah (the blessing marking the separation between Shabbat and the following day), z'man (she-heheyanu or the blessing marking the specialness of the moment). In the havdalah blessing we say \"between the holiness of the Sabbath and the holiness of the festival.\" There is separation between the 'heavy' and 'light' holiness, similar to what we find in scripture: \"the curtain (parokhet) shall serve as a partition between the holy and the holy of holies.\" (Exodus 26:33) Rabbi Ephraim asks why we say, \"Between the seventh day and the six days of creation You have made a separation and You have sanctified, You have sanctified Your people, Israel, with Your holiness, \" in the havdalah blessing. We say this after we have already mentioned, \"Between the holiness of the Sabbath to the holiness of the festival You have made a separation.\" The phrase is neither an introduction nor is it a summary of the blessing. Rabbeinu Tam answers this question: we are taught in chapter 10 of the Talmud Pesahim, that one who abbreviates the havdalah blessing should not have less than three havdalot (expressions of separation) and one should not add more than seven. The sages wanted to mention seven havdalot so they added Yom Tov, the festival, after Shabbat since this is the main theme of the passage.<br>These are the seven separations: (1) between the sacred and the profane; (2) between light and darkness; (3) between Israel and the gentiles; (4) between the Sabbath and the six days of creation. This counts as four, however, the fourth is not included in the number since we have already mentioned between the sacred and the profane which is a more general way of saying the same thing as, \"between the Sabbath and the six days of creation.\" Therefore, there are only three havdalot up to here!\" (4) Between the holiness of the Sabbath and the holiness of the festival; since preparation of food is allowed on the festival there is a distinction between it and the Sabbath; (5) Between the seventh day and the other six days of creation - this is a reference to the last day of the festival which is separate from the intermediate days of the festival; (6) you have separated (7) and you have sanctified your people Israel through your holiness; this refers to the two separations that make up the people of Israel: between the Kohanim and the Levites, and between the Levites the people of Israel. The blessing then ends with a brief conclusion: \"who distinguishes the holy from the holy.\"<br>One then recites the sh-heheyanu. One does not smell spices as one normally does during the havdalah service since the leisure (menuchah) of the festival brings leisure to the soul in place of the spices which one smells at the conclusion of the Sabbath."
15
+ ]
16
+ ],
17
+ "Urchatz": [
18
+ [
19
+ "<i>Hands are washed in preparation to the handling of food. The Talmud states that when a food is dipped in liquid, hands are to be washed first as a sign of ritual purity (Pesahim 115a). There are different customs regarding who should wash their hands before partaking of the greens. In some homes the person conducting the Seder washes before handing out the greens while in other homes all the participants wash their hands before handling the greens. In the Ashkenazic tradition no blessing is recited. The blessing for washing hands is said only before eating bread.</i> <br>Following Kiddush, one washes one's hands in preparation for karpas, vegetables dipped in liquid, even though one is not about to eat unleavened bread. Whenever one eats something that is dipped in liquid, one must was one's hands since one's hands may become moist and one might inadvertently touch something and contract impurity. We have explained that it is good to find a reason for washing one's hands prior to this. It need not be after Kiddush since we are not careful regarding impurity today. "
20
+ ]
21
+ ],
22
+ "Karpas": [
23
+ [],
24
+ [],
25
+ [
26
+ "One takes the karpas and dips it in vinegar or in the haroset in order to kill the worms that are sometimes found in the vegetables. One then recites the blessing borei peri ha-adamah. Rabbeinu Tam and Rashbam instructed their students to do the first dipping in vinegar. This was based on the statement in the Mishnah, \"They then set it before him. He dips the lettuce before he has reached the after course of bread. They set before him matzah, lettuce (hazeret) and haroset, and two side dishes, even though haroset is not compulsory.\" (Mishnah Pesahim 10:2) The Mishnah does not mention haroset until the second dipping, proving that we do not dip in the haroset for the first dipping. Rabbeinu Yona explains that the first dipping is not considered obligatory. Rather it is performed as a way of calling attention to the Seder. Since we do not dip vegetables in haroset all year long, the reason for this practice cannot be to prevent kafa. Therefore it is not our custom to eat the lettuce (hazeret) without haroset, as we do all year long. Since the second dipping is regarded as a mitzvah, the sages were more careful in its performance. <br>Hai Gaon explains that kafa is Aramaic from the word kafui (coagulation); it refers to a gaseousness which strikes the intestines from certain types of food. Haroset is a type of medicine which prevents the gaseousness.<br>We do not recite a blessing for haroset even though it is considered a commandment, because haroset is secondary to the primary food, the lettuce or the maror. We learn, \"Any time we have two foods, we recite the blessing on the primary food and not the secondary food. We recite al achilat maror and not borai peri ha-adamah for the second dipping since we already recited this blessing earlier in the Seder and the reading of the Haggadah is not considered to be an interruption between the two acts. ",
27
+ "However it is necessary to recite the blessing for the washing of the hands again because it is considered an interruption for the washing and his hands may have inadvertently touched something impure. <br>It is not necessary to recite the concluding blessing borei nefashot for the karpas since the reading of the Haggadah is not considered an interruption. It is also not necessary after eating the maror to recite this blessing since the commandment is to eat the matzah and the maror together, as scripture, \"Matzah and maror they shall eat it.\" It is considered to be part of the meal, and it is not necessary to recite borei peri ha-adamah again during the meal. The vegetables which we dip at the beginning of the Seder are meant to make the children curious since we normally donโ€™t dip vegetables prior to the meal.<br> If one does not have other vegetables - and only has maror - should begin the Seder by reciting two blessings, al achilat maror and borei peri ha-adamah when he eats and dips the maror in place of the karpas. He should then dip it in the haroset and eat an olives size of it. When he completes the reading of the Haggadah and recites the blessing over the matzah, he should eat the maror again, this time without a blessing."
28
+ ]
29
+ ],
30
+ "Yachatz": [
31
+ [],
32
+ [
33
+ "<br>After eating the karpas, one breaks one of the three matzot, placing half between the two whole matzot and wrapping half of it in a cloth, as a reminder of the verse: \"So the people took the dough before it was leavened, their kneading bowls wrapped in their cloaks upon their shoulders.\" (Exodus 12:34) It is used for the Afikomen which is eaten later as a reminder of the Passover offering, which must be consumed when we are already sated by the meal. Why do we break the matzah before the reading of the Haggadah? So that when we make the declaration, \"This is the bread of affliction,\" we can do so over a broken piece of matzah. The Talmud Pesahim states, \"Just as it is the way of the poor to break bread and put some away for later, so too here, we break the matzah and put away a piece for later.\"",
34
+ "The Rif asks, What should one who only has an olives-worth of guarded matzah (shmurah matzah) do? He should first eat regular matzah first when he recites the motzi and afterwards, at the end of the meal (when he eats the Afikomen) should eat the olives-worth of guarded matzah, reciting the blessing \"for the commandment of eating matzah\" (al akhilat matzah). One then makes a sandwich with the maror and the matzah without a blessing.<br>The Rif's explanation surprised the Rosh, who wonders, if we wait until the end of the seder to say al akhilat matzah over the guarded matzah, how could one then eat the sandwich with a regular piece of matzah since it would remove the taste of the guarded (shmurah) matzah from one's mouth? According to the Rif's explanation it would have made more sense to simply omit the sandwich since it is only a remembrance of the Passover offering which was eaten together with matzah and maror.<br>This is what the Rambam and Rabbeinu Yona suggest: one should recite the blessing for the eating of matzah at the end of the meal, and one should not eat anything after it. The Ittur suggests that one should recite both blessings, hamotzi and al akhilat matzah, and then eat the regular (non-guarded) matzah, and then eat the shmurah matzah at the end of the meal as the Afikomen without a blessing.<br>The Rosh suggests that one should begin with the shmurah matzah, after reciting both blessings, so that one eats the shmurah matzah 'with an appetite' and that one need not worry about eating non-guarded matzah after it."
35
+ ]
36
+ ],
37
+ "Magid": {
38
+ "Ha Lachma Anya": [
39
+ [],
40
+ [],
41
+ [
42
+ "<b>One begins the reading of the Haggadah.</b> The Rif wonders why one doesnโ€™t recite a blessing for the reading of the Haggadah just as one recites a blessing for the reading of the Megillah. Surely the telling of the story of Passover is a positive commandment as we learn: \"You shall tell your child on that day etc.\" (Exodus 12:8)<br>He explains that a blessing for telling the story is unnecessary since by saying in the Kiddush, \"A remembrance for the exodus from Egypt,\" he fulfills his obligation of saying a special blessing. The Rashba offers another explanation for why a special blessing is not said for the telling of the Passover story. One does not need to say a blessing for a mitzvah for which there is no minimum in its performance. A simple statement (\"God took us out of Egypt\") would suffice in the telling of the story of the Exodus, though we do say \"whoever tells the story at length is praiseworthy.\"<br>This text is called the Haggadah because of the verse, \"You shall tell (v'higadita) your child on that day etc.\" (Exodus 12:8). Some say that the name comes from the Hebrew word for drawing the heart, or inspiring, and this seems correct to me, as in the verse, \"O Lord, open up my lips; that my mouth may declare (yagid) your praise.\" (Ps. 51:17) The sages interpreted yagid to mean, \"my mouth shall draw your praise.\" That is, everything derives from the intention of the heart. In human books, wonders and awesome acts arise from the natural order of the world, inspiring love, joy and spiritual pleasure. Yet who has heard such things as the Exodus without trembling? The author of the Kuzari writes:<br>\"The facts are yet more startling! The Israelites lived in Egypt as slaves, 600,000 men above the age of twenty, the descendents of the twelve tribes. Not one of them had separated or emigrated to another country, nor was there a stranger among them. They looked forward to the promise given to their ancestors, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, that the land of Israel should be their inheritance. At that time it was in the power of seven mighty and prosperous nations, while the Israelites groaned in the depths of misery under the bondage of Pharaoh, who caused the Israelites to be put to death, lest they should increase in number. But God sent Moses and Aaron, two weak men, and they advanced before the mighty Pharaoh, with signs and miracles and changed the course of nature. Pharaoh did not get away from them, nor harm them, neither could he protect himself from the ten plagues which befell the Egyptians, affecting the streams, land, air, plants, animals, bodies and even their souls; for in one moment at midnight, died the most precious and most beloved members of their houses, the first-born males. There was no dwelling without dead, except the houses of the Israelites. All these plagues were preceded by warnings and menaces, and their cessation was signaled in the same manner, proving that they were ordained by God, who does what He wills and when He wills it, and they were not ordinary natural phenomena, nor were they wrought by constellations or accidents. The Israelites left the country of Pharaoh's bondage by the command of God, the same night at the same moment as the first born diedโ€ฆ\"<br>Whoever allows such matters to enter their heart with full intentionality will be inspired, not like someone who reads ordinary history books, which have no intention of bringing us closer to the Creator. This is the meaning of the word Haggadah, it is that which draws the heart of those who hear these matters to complete faith. ",
43
+ "When the Seder leader recites Ha lachma anya, he lifts the platter containing the three matzot and the other ritual foods in order to delight the children. They remove it from the table in order to cause the children to ask Mah Nishtana, \"why is this night different?\" On all other nights we eat whatever is placed before on us on the plate but tonight the plate has been removed from the table! As we find in the Talmud Ketubot (chapter 5): 'Abaye was sitting in the presence of Rabbah. When he saw that they lifted the table , he asked \"How can we eat what has been taken away?\" Rabbah said, \"We have been exempted from saying Mah Nishtana\"' The Rashbam explains that their tables were small (more like trays) and could easily be removed while our tables are large and not easily movable. Instead, we remove a platter or a plate containing three matzot, the maror, and the two cooked foods can be food; this considered to be sufficient. ",
44
+ "<b><i>Ha lachma anya</i>:</b> Our ancestors ate bread like this in Egypt. Did our ancestors eat matzah in Egypt? Doesnโ€™t scripture state, \"And they baked unleavened cakes of the dough that they had taken out of Egypt for it was not leavened since they were driven out of Egypt and could not delay; nor had they prepared provisions for themselves.\" (Exodus 12:39) So they did not have unleavened bread until after they left Egypt, Isaac Abarbanel explains in his commentary, that when the Israelites were enslaved in Egypt toiling with hard labor, the Egyptians gave them matzah to eat which was hard to digest, just as employers often give their employees food that will not be digested quickly today. ",
45
+ "Why is matzah called lechem oni? It is bread about which we have much to say (onim) such as the reading of the Haggadah and Hallel. Another explanation, just as the poor person only eats a portion of his bread, putting away part for later, so too do we recite the motzi on a broken piece of matzah. ",
46
+ "Another explanation: Just as a poor person kneads and bakes his own dough because he does not have servants to do this for him; he kneads the dough and his wife does the baking, so too, even the rich are meticulous in personally preparing matzah; he kneads the dough and his wife bakes it so that it does not become leavened. Finally matzah is called lechem oni because one should not knead more dough than the amount of a poor person's offering, that is an omer or a tenth of an eifah which is even brought by the poorest of the poor.",
47
+ "<b>All who are hungry come and eat:</b> One makes this declaration because everyone is obligated to eat matzah on the first night of Passover, as it is written, \"On that night they shall eat matzot.\" Scripture sets this obligation on everyone, therefore one invites anyone who doesnโ€™t have matzah on Passover night to join the Seder. There are those who explain this statement differently. We say, \"All who are hungry,\" because we donโ€™t eat prior to the Seder so that we eat the first matzah with gusto and everyone at the table is hungry. ",
48
+ "<b>All who are in need come join in the Passover:</b> There are those who suggest that we should not make this statement since we no longer have a Passover offering today. However, it makes good sense that we should continue to make this statement. V'yifsach (with a chet) is similar in meaning to the word, v'yifsa (with an ayin), as in, \"come this way and join me in a meal.\" Also, since we place the obligatory foods on a platter including the two cooked foods as a reminder of the sacrifices, therefore we can say this just as we did in the time of the Temple: we eat the Afikomen and the other foods as a reminder of the Passover offering. ",
49
+ "<b>Now we are here:</b> Having mentioned the Passover offering, we may have caused some sadness among those who have gathered around the table, since we have mentioned the destruction of the Temple and the sacrifice that is no longer offered. Therefore, we say the leader of the Seder comforts the members of his household and tells them: this year we are here and unable to fulfill all our obligations such as offering the Passover sacrifice; next year we will be in Jerusalem! At the very least, this year we are still slaves here but next year we may be free. This is a type of prayer: 'May it be God,s will that the Holy one fulfill His promise and oath to redeem us from our exile so that we will merit the privilege of offering the Passover sacrifice in Jerusalem next year!' This passage is recited in Aramaic because this was the language of our ancestors in Babylonia where it was composed. It was recited in Aramaic so that the women, children and those who were illiterate would understand it. There are those who say that in Jerusalem it was also recited in Aramaic because Aramaic was a language associated with joyous occasions."
50
+ ]
51
+ ],
52
+ "Four Questions": [
53
+ [],
54
+ [
55
+ "<b>How different is this night from all other nights:</b> This was included in the Haggadah for those who did not have a child to ask questions, as it says in Talmud Pesahim (116a), \"If his son was knowledgeable, he should ask; if not let his wife ask him. If she is unable let him ask himself. Even two who are knowledgeable in the laws of Passover should ask one another.\"",
56
+ "<b>We do not dip even once:</b> The eating of vegetables at the beginning of the Seder is called dipping since it is the practice to dip the vegetables in vinegar or in haroset.",
57
+ "<b>This night we do so twice:</b> There is the first and the second dipping. The first dipping is not obligatory but is meant to make children ask, \"Why do we eat vegetables before the meal and on other nights we do so during the meal.",
58
+ "<b>On this night everyone leans:</b> Even the servant must lean; so too, a son may lean before his father and a woman of important status, since this is a sign of freedom and authority. "
59
+ ]
60
+ ],
61
+ "We Were Slaves in Egypt": [
62
+ [],
63
+ [
64
+ "<b>We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt:</b> This is an answer to last of the questions about leaning; but it serves an answer for the other questions as well. This night is different from other nights; we eat matzah and maror. If one were to respond, \"Whatever happened, happened; why do we have to bother telling what happened,\" we would say to him, \"If the Holy One had not taken our ancestors out of Egypt, we and our children and our children's children would still be subjugated in Egypt.\" ",
65
+ "<b>Even if we were all wise:</b> As was quoted earlier, \"Even two who are knowledgeable in the laws of Passover should ask one another,\" in order to fulfil the obligations of telling the story of the Exodus, as the Haggadah goes on to illustrate."
66
+ ]
67
+ ],
68
+ "Story of the Five Rabbis": [
69
+ [
70
+ "<b>Rabbi Eliezer, Rabbi Joshua, Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah, and Rabbi Akiva were dining together in B'nai Brak:</b> Abarbanel asks many questions regarding this passage. Why did the sages uproot themselves from their homes to be together on Seder night when people usually go to great trouble to be with their own household on Passover. Why were they in a place called B'nai Brak? It was not a well known location; it is not even mentioned among the towns of the land of Israel or Babylonia. Abarbanel understands b'nai b'rak not as a name but as a description of the items they used on Seder night; he suggests that each of them was in his own home leaning on the finest pillows and couches which were like b'nai b'rak , 'shining items.' Abarbanel suggests that the if the sages were together, they were in the home of Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah, who was a rich man and also the head of the Sanhedrin.<br>Literally, however, B'nai B'rak is the name of a place. ",
71
+ "<b>Our teachers, the time of the morning Sh'ma has arrived: </b>This comes to teach us that if they hadnโ€™t feared missing out on the time in which the Sh'ma was to be recited they would not have stopped discussing the Exodus from Egypt."
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ "<b>Rabbi Elazar ben Azariah said: I was like a man of seventy:</b> He was not really seventy years old but as the Talmud explains, his hair grew white on the night after he was chosen to be the head of the Sanhedrin so that he looked was like a man of seventy. It was not fitting for such a young looking man to sit over the head court.",
75
+ "<b>And I did not merit to teach that Exodus should be mentioned at night:</b> I did not merit (<i>lo zakhiti</i>) is another way of saying \"I did not succeed.\" I did not best the sages until I learned Ben Zoma's teaching. Some say that Rabbi Elazar was convinced that it was not appropriate to mention the Exodus (in the third paragraph of the Sh'ma) at night until he heard the teaching of Ben Zoma. From then on he decreed that the Exodus passage should be read both in the daytime and at night. It was read in the daytime before emet v'yatziv, and at night before emet v'emunah. Before he learned Ben Zoma's teaching, Rabbi Elazar would skip the entire passage, because it says, \"You shall see them,\" which implies only during the day. Upon hearing Ben Zoma's interpretation, he made it an obligation to mention the Exodus, which is in the last part of this passage, during the day and at night. The sages, however, took exception with Ben Zoma and said \"the days of your life\" refers this world, and \"All the days of your life,\" refers to the world to come (the messianic era). The sages said that the Exodus would remain part of the liturgy but it would be secondary to Israel's final redemption, from subjugation to the nations."
76
+ ]
77
+ ],
78
+ "The Four Sons": [
79
+ [
80
+ "<b>Blessed is the \"Place;\" Blessed is He:</b> The Holy One is called Ha-Makom because God is the place of the world but the world is not God's place. Similarly, we interpret the verse, \"See there is a place near Me; station yourself on the rockโ€ฆ\" (Ex 33:22) The verse does not say \"I am in the place,\" but \"The place is near me.\" It is a Dwelling Place, and the Place is without a place. Further, you will find that the word Makom has the same numerical value of God's name if one squares each of the letters of the divine name: yud (10) times yud (100), hay (5) times hay (25), vav (6) times vav 36), and hay (5) times hay (25) is 186, the same as Makom. ",
81
+ "<b>Blessed is the one who gave the Torah:</b> The commandment to tell the story of the exodus to our children is written in four verses in the Torah. Since we are about to interpret these verses, we begin by reciting a blessing for the Torah and then offering interpretations.",
82
+ "<b>The Torah speaks of four types of children:</b> The commandment of Haggadah, of telling the story of the Exodus, is written in four places. Since the Torah appears to repeat itself, we understand the four as referring to four types of children. They are not necessarily children but they are lacking knowledge, like children."
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ "<b>What does the wise child ask? What are these testimonies, statutes and judgments which the Lord our God commanded us:</b> This passage is found in Parshat Va-etchanan (Deut. 6:20) It continues: \"You shall say to your children: 'We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt and the Lord freed us from Egypt with a mighty hand. The Lord performed before our eyes marvelous and awesome signs and portents in Egypt against Pharaoh and all his household.'\" (Deut. 6: 21-22) This was the answer to the wise child. There is no doubt that a wise person is praised for his intellect, and his choice of words are a reflection of his intellect. In the words of Proverbs, 25:11: \"A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in a setting of silver.\" This means that the wise person, when he asks a question or makes a statement does not repeat himself; each word deals with a separate matter and he chooses his words wisely.<br>This is the intent of the wise child's question. When he asks about \"these testimonies, statutes and judgments,\" he understands that there are different types of commandments regarding the Festival and Passover offering. For instance, we learn that the offering must be a male lamb; only those appointed to the offering were allowed to eat it; it had to be roasted; and it had to be consumed by midnight, as Scripture says, \"This is the law of Passover.\" (Ex. 12:43) The wise child knows that these details are testimonies that teach us important matters about the reason for the offering. They testify to the events of the Exodus from Egypt. But he also asks regarding the statutes and judgments relating to the Passover offering; for example, \"do not break the bones of the offering\" and other details. One of the central statutes is the commandment to eat the Passover offering when one is already satiated from the festive meal, at the end of the meal, rather than when one normally eats one's favorite dish at the beginning of the meal. What purpose is there in eating delicacies on a full stomach and he is no longer able to eat any more? So you should explain to him, \"You shall instruct himโ€ฆno dessert (Afikomen) ought to be set before him after the Passover offering.\" That is, do not say, afiku mahn, \"bring out the sweets\" after the meal in order to remove the taste of meat from his mouth at the conclusion of the meal. That is why the Afikomen is delayed to the end of the meal. We can now explain the wise child's insightful question. We now eat an olives-size of sh'murah matzah at the end of the meal as a reminder of the Passover offering.<br>We now understand why the wise child asks this question the way he does. He sees that members of his household and those appointed to eat their Passover offering sitting together. Each is given only a bit to eat of the offering at the end of the meal. He also sees that they are meticulous about eating it, something that they do not normally do at other times. He asks, \"What are these testimonies and statutesโ€ฆ\" That is, generally it is the custom when people gather to celebrate an occasion with the members of their household, they leave their house afterwards to visit their friends' houses. If it is because of the preciousness of the Passover offering that they gathered, then why donโ€™t they send portions to their neighbors as we do on other occasions. The wise child does not remove himself from the gathering; rather, he says \"which the Lord our God commanded you.\" He says \"you\" because he knows that the commandment was not given to him because he is still a minor. Yet he has already accepted upon himself the yoke of the commandments which is why he says, \"the Lord our God.\"",
86
+ "<b>So you should explain to him all the laws of Passover, including, \"You shall instruct himโ€ฆno dessert (Afikomen) ought to be set before him after the Passover offering.\"</b> This answer implies that we are obligated to eat the Passover offering in one gathering and not with others. He will see that since we were appointed to this gathering, we cannot say \"give me my cloak as I wish to go out from here,\" (afiku minai); we cannot go out from the house as on other festivals. Thus we explain why people donโ€™t eat in their own homes as we do on other festivals but gather in groups to eat the Passover offering.",
87
+ "<b><i>Ayn maftirin</i></b>, comes from the same word as haftarah (from the liturgy) and has the meaning of 'finish' or 'complete.' When we recite the haftarah on Shabbat morning, we complete the Shacharit service. Another explanation of the word matftirin is 'to express' or 'to express intent.'<br>The word Afikomen is Greek. According to the first interpretation of the word, 'finish,' this word means 'bring out the sweets,' as in 'We do not finish the meal with sweets.' According to the second interpretation, 'to express,' the word, Afikomen means, 'go out from here.' As in, \"We do not say 'Let us go out from here.'\""
88
+ ],
89
+ [
90
+ "<b>What does the wicked child say:</b> This verse comes from Parshat Bo: \"When your children ask you, 'What is this rite (avodah) to you?'\" (Ex. 12:26) This verse is speaking about the wicked child who says <i>lakhem</i>, \"to you,\" implying that the rite is for you and not for him. Speaking in the manner of a wicked person, he uses the word avodah, implying something that is a burden and troublesome. The wicked child says, \"What is all the trouble with which you bother yourself all year?\" He calls the service of God avodah, labor. Even though we find this word used for the sacrificial rites, we should presume that the wicked child has bad intentions since he removes himself from the community. Therefore you should \"blunt his teeth.\" This means weaken his teeth as in the verse, \"In those days they shall say no more, the fathers have eaten sour grapes, and the childrenโ€™s teeth are set on edge.\" (Jer. 31:28) This means that he sees others eating and he is not able to eat the food. Tell him: \"The Torah was speaking of you when it said, 'It is because of what the Lord did for me,' God did it for me and not for you!\" If an evil person like you had been in Egypt, he would not have been redeemed.<br> Why do we apply this verse to the wicked child when it is the verse that is applied to the one who does not know to ask? The reason is that the one who does not know to ask is not so different from the wicked child. The wicked child does not delve into the deeper meaning in his questions or try to understand the commandments of the God; rather he sees them as something that a person simply does without explanation. "
91
+ ],
92
+ [
93
+ "<b>The simple child, what does he say:</b> The one who does not know how to ask calls the simple child 'wise,' for he knows how to form his connection and to ask about ethics and wisdom. The simple child is not wicked; he simply asks question, 'what is this,' without intention of mocking the tradition."
94
+ ],
95
+ [
96
+ "<b>The one who doesnโ€™t know to ask, you open it for him:</b> As in \"Open your mouth for the mute\" (Prov. 31:8). This verse is written in Parshat Bo, \"You shall tell it to your child on that day, saying, 'It is because of what the Lord did for me when I went free from Egypt.'\" (Ex. 13:8) Since there is no question in this verse and only the command, \"You shall tell it,\" it is addressed to the one who doesnโ€™t know how to interpret the verses in the Haggadah and publicize the miracle of Passover."
97
+ ]
98
+ ],
99
+ "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh": [
100
+ [
101
+ "<b>You shall tell it to your child. One might have thought that one should do so from Rosh Hodesh:</b> This passage is not a continuation of the previous one. The father is not addressing his son who doesnโ€™t know how to ask here. Rather the author of the Haggadah offers another explanation for Exodus 13:8. It is an explication of when we are obligated 'to expand on' the story of the Exodus. We might presume that one is obligated to expound on the teachings of Passover from the beginning of Nisan, since God told Moses, \"This month shall be unto you the beginning of monthsโ€ฆ.\" Just as Moses began warning the people of the coming observance on Rosh Hodesh, so too, we might think we should begin explaining the Exodus from Rosh Hodesh. Therefore the verse adds \"on that day,\" to teach us that it applies not on Rosh Hodesh but from the day when Israel was redeemed from slavery. We might also presume that one is obligated to expound on the teachings of Passover from the day before Passover when the sacrifice was slaughtered since it says 'On that DAY.' The phrase adds, \"Because of this,\" teaching us that we only expound when the offering is brought before us; that is, when he can point at the matzah and the maror, identifying them with the word \"This.\"<br>It was necessary to teach this because previously Scripture states: \"Seven days you shall eat matzot\" (Ex. 13:7) and \"on the evening you shall eat matzot.\" (Ex. 12:18). Since the end of the verse is, \"God did this for me when I went forth from Egypt,\" (Ex. 13:8) it was necessary to clarify when we are to tell the story since we eat matzah all week.",
102
+ "Another explanation: <b>\"Because of this (zeh) which the Lord did for meโ€ฆ\"</b> The Gematria of the word zeh is twelve because a person performs twelve mitzvot on Seder night. They are: four cups of wine, haroset, karpas, washing ones hands twice, motzi, matzah, maror and the sandwich. In the time of the Temple when the Passover offering, the matzah and the maror were brought, they would point at them and say, \"Because of this which the Lord did for me.\" "
103
+ ]
104
+ ],
105
+ "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers": [
106
+ [
107
+ "<b>Originally our ancestors worshipped idols:</b> This is in accord with what we are taught: \"Begin with disgrace and end with exaltation.\" The Talmud asks: What is disgrace? According to Rav, \"Originally our ancestors worshiped idols.\" According to Samuel, \"We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt.\" We include both interpretations in the Haggadah\" (BT Pesachim 116a). Rav's interpretation appears here following the explication of \"Because of this (zeh) which the Lord did for meโ€ฆ\" (Ex. 13:8) because the sages taught that one who has abandoned his faith for idolatry is not allowed to partake of the Passover meal, as it is written, \"A stranger may not partake of it.\" Therefore we begin by speaking of the disgrace, that our ancestors worshipped idols, and only when they came closer to their true faith and were circumcised before they left Egypt, only then were they fit to offer the sacrifice and to come close to the service of God. We say it here in order that the children will hear this and will learn a lesson and not allow their hearts to go astray after vanity, and thus be exiled from the table of their Father in Heaven.<br>It is fitting to mention how their ascent into slavery came about and how they learned the ways of other nations as a result of being dispersed among them as well as their Exodus from Egypt, along with the miracles and wonders God performed there. It was because of God's great love that He chose our ancestors and their children after them. Abraham had two sons but God only chose Isaac, the precious child and the pure offering. So too, Isaac had two sons but God chose Jacob. God decreed subjugation to the nations of the world in this world so that they would merit reward in the world to come."
108
+ ],
109
+ [
110
+ "<b>And I gave Mount Seir to Esau:</b> Onkeles, the Aramaic translation, interprets Har Seir as the Har Sheidin, a Mountain of Demons, based on the verse, \"And there shall satyrs dance.\" (Is. 13:21) Mount Seir is the portion of Samael, who has a mighty storm (saar) in his heart, as it is written, \"My Lord shall sound the ram's horn and advance in a stormy tempest.\" (Zach. 9:14) He is from the side of redness (evil) and therefore Esau is called Edom. Jacob, on the other hand, was smooth, the opposite of a man of Seir (hairy). He is stands apart and separated from the tempest and the bonds (of Seir). Therefore his image is on the throne of glory. He and his offspring went down to Egypt to pay the debt that was decreed at the Covenant of the Pieces (Gen. 15)."
111
+ ],
112
+ [
113
+ "<b>Praised is the One who kept His promise to Israelโ€™s ancestors, Praised is He:</b> This statement is a kind of berachah, a blessing. Some commentaries explain that one must recite a blessing immediately before one recalls the subjugation of the Israelites. โ€œJust as one recites a blessing upon hearing good news, so one recites a blessing upon hearing bad newsโ€ (BT Berachot). One offers comfort upon telling the story of this and other exiles, โ€œPraised is the One who keeps His promise regarding the redemption of Israel which He promised us. Praised is the One who constantly calculates when the end time will arrive, when the time of peace and redemption will arrive. As it is written, โ€œThen God said to Avramโ€ฆyour offspring shall be strangers in a land not their own (in Babylonia) and they shall serve (in Assyria) and they shall be afflicted (in Greece), and those that judged you I shall judge (in Edom).โ€ (Genesis 15) One concludes: โ€œAnd afterwards, they shall go forth with great wealth.โ€ This verse is a promise of redemption from all the nations.<br>One should explain the meaning of โ€œthe Holy One calculates the end.โ€ Since the Holy One desired to bring the end (keitz) sooner, he subtracted 190 years (the gemartria of keitz) from the Covenant of the Pieces until the Israelites went forth from Egypt, which was said to be 400 years. The Israelites were only in Egypt 210 years โ€“ they skipped the extra 190 years. The literal meaning is โ€œit was if they were subjugated all these years.\""
114
+ ],
115
+ [],
116
+ [
117
+ "<b>It stood for our ancestors and for us:</b> This refers to the redemption which the Holy One promised to our forefather Abraham at the Covenant of the Pieces when God revealed to him the subjugation and the redemption. But that same promise was also made for us with regard to Babylonia, Assyria and Greece. It continues to hold fast with Edom. As is explained in Bereshit Rabbah, โ€œTerror (Babylonia), and great (Greece) darkness (Assyria) fell upon Abram (Edom).โ€ (Genesis 15:12) But God also showed Abram the redemption, โ€œThey went forth with great wealth.โ€",
118
+ "<b>It was not just one who rose up against us: </b>That is, it was not just the Egyptians who rose up against us to harm and destroy us. Rather there were those in every generation who rose up against us to harm us though the strength of this decree of exile which was made at the time of the โ€œCovenant of the Pieces. The Holy One, however, saved us just as He had promised."
119
+ ]
120
+ ],
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+ "First Fruits Declaration": [
122
+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>Come and see what Laban the Aramean sought to do to Jacob: </b>(Laban was also among those included in God's promise). Pharaoh made a decree against the males while Laban sought to uproot them all: Laban said, โ€œIt is within my power to do with you evil,\" (Gen. 31:29) if it weren't for the dream as has been explained, โ€œBut the God of your father hadnโ€™t said to me yesterday, beware of speaking against Jacob.โ€ It should have said, โ€œOf acting.โ€ However, Laban was a great wizard so that even his words, the things he mentions, and his oaths to demons could have swallowed up Jacob, harming him and his offspring. That Torah literally says, An Aramean destroys my father. Laban came with absolute certainty he could destroy Jacob had God not taken his strength from him. Why does it say that he \"destroys?\" The Holy One made his thought as serious as an action, therefore, the Torah says, An Aramean destroys my father. After God saved Jacob and his family from Laban another misfortune took place, as it says, He went down to Egypt, compelled by Divine decree. We find this explanation in Talmud Shabbat: It was fitting for our father Jacob to go down into Egypt in iron chains, but his merit saved him, for it is written, \"I drew them with the cords of a man, with bands of love; and I was to them as they that take off the yoke on their jaws, and I laid meat before them.\" "
125
+ ],
126
+ [
127
+ "<b>He sojourned there, this teaches that they did not go down to Egypt to settle there:</b> They did not go down to Egypt to establish a permanent settlement and dwell as citizens, but rather to sojourn there as strangers and outsiders."
128
+ ],
129
+ [],
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+ [
131
+ "<b>And there he became a great nation, they were distinguishable: </b>They had the signs of being a great nation, recognizable, and well known, gathered together in one place and not scattered about throughout the land. Even though they were few in numbers, they were recognized as a nation unto themselves. "
132
+ ],
133
+ [
134
+ "<b>And numerous, as thus growth of the field:</b> Just as the growth of the field, when they are cut down grow back even more numerous, so too, Israel the more they were oppressed the more they increased ant became fertile. Thus it is states, \"The more they were oppressed, the more they increased and spread out.\" (Exodus 1:12)",
135
+ "<b>But you were naked and bare:</b> Naked and lacking in commandments so that when the end of the subjugation came, they did not have any commandments to their credit. Therefore God gave them the Passover offering and the commandment to circumcise all the males on the fourteenth day of Nisan. This is hinted at in the verse: \"When I passed by you and saw you wallowing in blood, I said to you: \"live in spite of your blood; yea, live in spite of your blood\" (Ezekiel 16:7). The verse refers to the blood of circumcision and the blood of the offering. "
136
+ ],
137
+ [
138
+ "<b>They dealt with us in an evil manner:</b> The Egyptians schemed to do us harm, saying, 'Esau was a fool for waiting until his father died to kill Jacob because by then his sons had grown up. Similarly, Laban was a fool for following a dream. We will be more shrewd in uprooting all of them!'"
139
+ ],
140
+ [
141
+ "<b>In order to afflict them with forced labor:</b> There are those who explain that this was the forced labor of idolatry. They subjugated them and forced to worship idols, as is written: \"They hire a metal worker to make it into a godโ€ฆThey must carry it on their back and (<i>yisbiluhu</i>) transport it.\" (Isaiah 46:7) "
142
+ ],
143
+ [
144
+ "<b>With rigor (<i>farekh</i>):</b> At first Pharaoh spoke to them softly (<i>bifeh rakh</i>), carrying bricks on his shoulders to encourage the Israelites to participate in the building of the cities so they could honor the king, but afterwards he subjugated them with rigor (<i>farekh</i>). "
145
+ ],
146
+ [],
147
+ [],
148
+ [],
149
+ [],
150
+ [],
151
+ [
152
+ "<b>Our labor, this refers to the children:</b> who grew up surrounded by hard labor and the difficult work they had to perform."
153
+ ],
154
+ [
155
+ "<b>And our oppression, this refers to the severe pressure:</b> As it is written, \"You must produce your quota.\" (Exodus 5:18) "
156
+ ],
157
+ [],
158
+ [
159
+ "<b>Adonai took us out of Egypt, not by an angel or by a seraf nor by a messenger:</b> Moses was not considered a 'messenger' but rather a spokesman to Pharaoh. He did not have the power to take the people out of Egypt. Rather the Holy One alone could do this. The Hagga`ah therefore states regarding that an angel did not perform the final plague but rather God, and God alone, smote them. That which is written, \"He will not permit a destroyer to enter and smite your homes,\" (Ex. 12:23) refers to the plague of destruction (and not some destroying angel). It should be explained, 'God will not let the destruction enter your homes.' "
160
+ ],
161
+ [],
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+ [
163
+ "<b>With a mighty hand, this refers to pestilence:</b> In Midrash Tehillim, it is explained that along with each plague that God brought upon the Egyptians, God also added the plague of pestilence, as it is written: \"He gave the beasts over to hail, their cattle to (reshafim) lightning bolts.\" (Ps. 78:48) \"They gave their cattle over to reshafim\" implies the plague of pestilence. From this we learn that the rest of the plagues also included pestilence. "
164
+ ],
165
+ [
166
+ "<b>With an outstretched arm, this is the sword:</b> Which plague in Egypt is referred to as the sword? Pesikta D'Rav Kahanah, states: \"All the first born gathered around their fathers and pleaded with them: \"Now that Moses has said, \"all the first born in the land of Egypt shall die,\" (Ex. 11:5)and all that he has predicted heretofore concerning the Egyptian people has befallen them, we must get those Hebrews out of our midst, or else the Egyptian people will die.' The fathers replied: 'Each of us has ten sons; let one of them die just so that the Hebrews be not permitted to get out!' The first born then said: 'There is but one way to settle this matter: let us go to Pharaoh, since he is a first-born, who may take pity on himself and let these Hebrews get out of our midst.' They went to Pharaoh and said to him: 'Since Moses has said \"All the first-born shall die,\" and since everything he has predicted concerning the Egyptians has befallen them, rise up and get these Hebrews out of our midst, or else the Egyptian people shall die.' But Pharaoh said to his servants: Get going and beat these cowards until they are humpbacked! And to the first born he said: I have sworn: My life or the life of the Hebrews. And you dare speak thus!' At once the first-born went out and slew sixty thousand of their fathers. Of this it is written, \"To Him that smote Egypt with their first born.\" (Ps. 136:10) Scripture does not say here , 'To Him who smote the first born of Egypt.' "
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "<b>Fearsome acts <i>(mora gadol)</i>, this refers to the appearance of the Divine Presence:</b> This means that the Holy One appeared in all His glory and smote the first born and then took the Israelites out of Egypt, as is written:\"Or has any god ventured to go and take for himself one nation from another by providing prodigious acts, by signs and by portents, by war, by a mighty and an outstretched arm, and awesome power (moraim gedolim).\" (Deut. 4:34) Rabbi Yudan says that if you count the letters in the Hebrew verse from the beginning with the first word, lavo, to the word awesome power, moraim, there are seventy two letters. If you think there are seventy-five, so take out the word goy, nation (which refers to Egypt) The number of letters is equal to the number of letters that make up God's great name. The appearance of the Divine presence is alluded to in the verse, \"This is my God and I shall glorify Him,\" (Ex 15) The people of Israel pointed at God's glory when they made this statement. The expressions mora gadol and moraim gedolim refer to the awesome appearance of the Divine Presence. Even though Egypt was filled with idolatry and filth, even so God's presence appeared in Egypt to fulfill the promise made to Jacob, \"I shall take you up.\" God's presence appeared two times in Egypt: first, on the first day of Nisan when God commanded them to prepare for the Passover, and, second, on the night of the redemption from Egypt. Similarly God appeared to them at the Red Sea, as the sages taught: \"a humble maid in Egypt saw more at the Red sea than the prophet Ezekiel.\" Since one who sees the divine presence trembles and is terrified, it is referred to as mora, awesome. "
170
+ ]
171
+ ],
172
+ "The Ten Plagues": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
190
+ "<b>Rabbi Judah used to abbreviate the plagues:</b> This is most difficult: why do we need this acronym since anyone can take the first letter of each word and combine them! Rabbi Yehudah, however, only brought this acronym to teach us about the number of plagues at the Red Sea. Rabbi Yossi said there were fifty plagues; Rabbi Eliezer said there were two hundred plagues, and Rabbi Akiva said there were two hundred and fifty plagues at the sea. Together they add up to five hundred plagues. Rabbi Yehudah's acronym adds up to five hundred and one; in matters of gematriah we donโ€™t trouble ourselves over differences of just one!<br>Some suggest that the reason that he created this acronym is because of the listing of the plagues in the book of Psalms, which is different from the order in the Torah. Therefore, Rabbi Yehudah created this acronym so that we would know that the order in the Torah is the correct one.<br>Some commentators suggest that this is a reference to the pattern of the plagues: In some plagues, God sends Pharaoh a warning, and in others, there is no warning. The acronym shows us that there is a pattern of three groups of plagues, the first two with a warning and the third in each grouping without a warning. That is why Rabbi Judah groups the plagues together three by three. Pharaoh is warned during the plagues of blood and frogs, while he receives no warning when the plague of lice strikes the land. Wild animals and pestilence contain a warning while boils does not contain a warning. This follows the pattern regarding flogging. When one commits a crime again and again, he is flogged once and twice, each time with a warning. The third time we do not flog him. Rather we put him in a prison, feed him barley bread until his stomach explodes because he is wicked and no longer deserves a warning. Similarly, hail and locust occurred with a warning and darkness without a warning. Since the final plague stands by itself, it has its own acronym.<br>Another explanation of the division into three groups: the first three plagues were carried out by Aaron. In the second group, wild animals and pestilence were not carried out by Moses or Aaron, and boils was carried out by both of them. The third group of plagues was carried out by Moses. And the final plague, the death of the first-born was carried out by the Holy one so it is in a grouping all by itself.",
191
+ "<b>Rabbi Eliezer says ... Every plague which the Holy One brought upon the Egyptians in Egypt was four plagues:</b> How do we understand the controversy of the Tanna'im who argued whether each plague was quadrupled or quintupled. The Rokeach offered a lovely explanation for this controversy. Rabbi Eliezer suggested that the plagues were quadrupled at the Red Sea because each one included all four basic elements of the universe (fire, water, air and earth). According to Rabbi Akiva, each plague was quintupled based on the four elements plus the movement of the heavenly spheres that influenced each plague as well."
192
+ ]
193
+ ],
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+ "Dayenu": [
195
+ [
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+ "<b>How many favors the Omnipresent has bestowed upon us: </b>Commentators explain that since the Tanna'im in the previous passages deal with the number of plagues, therefore we now turn our attention to the number of favors which God has bestowed upon us. Just as we can increase the count of curses, we can also increase the number of miracles which God performed out of His great love for us. "
197
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "Dayenu begins, <b>If God had taken us out of Egypt but not inflicted judgement</b> โ€ฆ This would have been a great miracle and it would have been sufficient, as is explained regarding the verse in the Torah, \"Has any God ventured to go and take one nation out of another?\" (Deut. 4:34) He took us out of Egypt as a person delivers a fetus from its mother's womb before its time. Israel was not yet worthy of leaving Egypt since they could have been judged as being no better than the Egyptians. These were idolaters, and these were idolaters. These partook of sexually illicit actions and these partook of sexually illicit actions. Even so God doubled our miracle by taking us out of Egypt and passing judgement on the Egyptians for subjugating us. How much more so should we praise the Master of Everything. God could not pass up the judgement of the Egyptians for He had promised Abraham, The nations which they served I will judge. (Gen. 15) Not only that but God passed judgement on all of them and not just some of them!"
200
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
205
+ "<b>Had he not given them their wealth:</b> This refers to the wealth they gathered at the shore of the Red Sea and not booty they took from the Egyptians in Egypt. God had already promised them wealth from the Egyptians. The extra favor was that they gathered up the wealth of the Egyptians that washed up on the shore after they drowned in the Red Sea."
206
+ ],
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+ [],
208
+ [],
209
+ [],
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+ [],
211
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
214
+ "<b>If He had brought us to Mount Sinai:</b> in order to show us His great glory, it would have been enough for us! And not given us the Torah, or, if He had not increased the number of commandments that He commanded us to perform. The seven Noahide Commandments would have been enough. The sages said, \"When the people stood at Sinai, their impurity was removed from them.\" Those non-Jews who did not stand at Sinai were still impure even though they had the Noahide laws. Therefore, being at Sinai would have been enough even without the extra commandments. "
215
+ ]
216
+ ],
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+ "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things": [
218
+ [
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+ "<b>Rabban Gamliel said, anyone who did not mention these three things.</b> That is, even if he ate the Passover offering, matzah and the Bitter herbs, he will not have fulfilled his obligation if he did not explain why we eat these three things, since the Torah emphasizes the explanation and the telling."
220
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
224
+ "<b>For what reason do we eat this matzah?</b> This must be explained since we had already been commanded to eat the matzah without an explanation of why. Rabbi Kimchi explains that they were commanded to eat matzah in Egypt before they left in anticipation of what was about to happen. God knows all possible futures and He already knew that they would have to leave Egypt in haste. Even they had wanted to do so because they were already commanded to eat unleavened bread for seven days and to eat the Passover offering together with matzah and maror."
225
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
229
+ "<b>In every generation each person is obligated to make himself appear as one who went forth from there: </b> This statement is based on what was said at the beginning of the Haggadah, had God not taken our ancestors out of Egypt, we, and our children would still be enslaved; that is, we must say, God took us out from there because we are included in all the miracles. Therefore, we are obligated to give thanks and praise Godโ€ฆ"
230
+ ]
231
+ ],
232
+ "First Half of Hallel": [
233
+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>Therefore we are obligated to give thanks:</b> Since it is as if we went forth from Egypt, we are obligated to praise and give thanks for what God did for our ancestors.<br>It is customary for each person to take a cup of wine and to recite psalms and songs. The Haggadah should be more than just generic story-telling. One must accompany singing of praise with the drinking of wine, as it is written, \"But has the vine replied, 'Have I stopped yielding my new wine which gladdens God and men that should go and wave among the trees?'\" (Judges 9:13) From this point on in the Seder song must be accompanied by a cup of wine. In this passage we mention seven types of praise: <i>shevah, hodot, hallel, paer, romem, hader, kadesh</i> for the seven firmaments.<br>Even though we are reciting Hallel, we do not begin with a blessing (as we normally do). We find in the responsa of the Geonim, \"One does not recite a blessing over Hallel on the eve of Passover even though we are about to recite the entire Hallel because it is divided in half. Also since we recite it around the dinner table, we do not apply the rules Hallel ; instead we only apply the general rules of song and thanksgiving to it. How can we say the blessing when we stop in the middle?"
236
+ ]
237
+ ],
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+ "Second Cup of Wine": [
239
+ [],
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+ [
241
+ "<b>Praised are you Adonai โ€ฆwho redeemed us and redeemed our ancestors:</b> We recite this blessing since we must end the Haggadah with praise. We began by saying, \"Begin with degradation and end with praise.\" That is why we end by speaking not only of our ancestors redemption but ours as well.",
242
+ "<b>Who has allowed (<i>vi-higee-ahnu</i>) us to reach:</b> Even though we already recited the she-he-heyanu along with the Kiddush, we express the same idea again, (that we have reached this occasion), in order to say that we have reached the holiday again. Some suggest that it should say tigi-aynu, You have allowed us to reach, since all blessings should include an expression in the second person. These holidays: this refers to Rosh Hashanah. And Festivals: Passover, Sukkot and Shavuot. Rejoicingโ€ฆand eating there the offerings and the Passover offerings: we refer to the festive offering first since it is consumed before the Passover offering. "
243
+ ],
244
+ [
245
+ "One then recites the blessing over the wine and drinks the wine while leaning along with all those who are participating in the Seder with him. Wash the hands a second time since the reading of the Haggadah and Hallel are an interruption between the first washing and the second washing, and our mind is no longer on the first washing. Since our hands have been busy participating in this rite, it is possible that we have touched something which caused the hands to become impure, one has to wash the hands again since one is about to eat the unleavened bread, and it is impossible to eat bread with filthy hands. However, if one was extra careful to guard ones hands from the time of the first washing and one did not touch anything impure, that he does not have to go back and wash them again. If he decides to do so anyway, then he should do so without a blessing.."
246
+ ]
247
+ ]
248
+ },
249
+ "Rachtzah": [],
250
+ "Motzi Matzah": [],
251
+ "Maror": [],
252
+ "Korech": [
253
+ [],
254
+ [
255
+ "Afterwards, the head of the household takes two matzot that are shemurot, holding the whole and the broken piece together. For the master has taught: Everyone acknowledges that on Passover night one holds the whole piece of matzah and the half piece together. What is the reason? We do so because matzah is called the bread of the needy: just as it is the way of the needy to break the bread (and put some away for later) so one recites blessing holding the broken piece. One holds the broken piece together with a whole piece because of lechem mishneh, the two loaves over which one usually recites the blessing on Shabbat and holidays. One then recites the motzi and breaks the whole piece of matzah and does not yet take from the previously broken piece of matzah since reciting the blessing on a 'whole loaf' is the more common practice. After reciting the blessing al akhilat matzah, one takes a bit of both pieces of matzah and eats them together. One should lean when eating the matzah. Some of the Gaonim are of the opinion that one makes the motzi on the previously broken piece of matzah and al akhilat matzah on the whole piece. Some follow one opinion and others follow the other opinion!",
256
+ "Afterwards, one takes some of the hazeret and recites the blessing al akhilat maror, dipping it in the haroset. This is good because of kafah a type of poisonous substance sometimes found on greens. Others say that kafah is a type of worm and that the haroset keeps it from harming the person who eats it. ",
257
+ "Each person at the table receives at least an olives-worth of hazeret dipped in the haroset. One does not lean when eating it since the Talmud says that maror does not require leaning, since it is an allusion of the verse, \"they embittered them,\" and leaning is a symbol of freedom. One does not have to recite the blessing borei p'ri ha-adamah since the blessing over the matzah exempts us from other blessings on the food. Anything that is now part of the meal no longer requires a separate blessing either before or after it. ",
258
+ "After eating the maror, each person takes part of the third piece of shemurah matzah along with the hazeret and makes a sandwich, eating them as one without leaning since it contains the bitter herbs. One eats it as a reminder of the temple, just as Hillel did, for the verse says, \"You shall eat it with matzah and maror. In the time of the Temple, Hillel would recite the blessing over the matzah and then the blessing over the maror. He would then eat them together since both of them were commandments contained in the Torah and one did not cancel out the other. At this time we recite and eat them separately since matzah is a Torah commandment while maror is only a rabbinic commandment. When there is a Passover offering, maror is a Torah commandment; in a time when there is no Passover commandment, the maror is only a rabbinic commandment. We cannot eat them together after reciting the blessings since the rabbinic commandment would cancel out the Torah commandment. Therefore, we do them separately and only then do we eat them together; since we have already recited the blessing there is no blessing for the Hillel sandwich. Ibn Yarhei writes that the optimal way to perform the commandment is to not have any interruptions between the blessings over the matzah and the making of the Hillel sandwich. In this way the blessing over the matzah and the maror would include the making of the sandwich."
259
+ ]
260
+ ],
261
+ "Shulchan Orech": [
262
+ [],
263
+ [
264
+ "After these blessings, one continues with the meal, eating whatever one wishes. At the end of the meal one should eat an olives-worth of matzah from the piece that was broken at the beginning of the Seder and that was hidden and wrapped in a cloth as a reminder of the dough that was wrapped in a cloth and carried out of Egypt. One eats it as the Afikomen, a reminder of the Passover offering which was consumed when the people were already sated by their meal. One does not eat anything after the Afikomen so that one concludes with the taste of the Afikomen in one's mouth. One should eat this matzah before midnight. If not one does not one fulfill one's obligation on Passover that nothing be consumed after midnight. "
265
+ ]
266
+ ],
267
+ "Tzafun": [
268
+ [
269
+ "If one forgot and did not eat the Afikomen until he had already washed his hands prior to the Birkat haMazon, or until he said the Zimun (Rabbotai Nivarech), or even if he had already recited the Birkat HaMazon but prior to the third cup of wine, the Avi Ezri and the Rosh write that he should wash his hands again, and recite the motzi and eat it. If, however, he already said the blessing over the third cup of wine, he should not eat it since this necessitates that he recite reciting the Birkat HaMazon and then drinking another cup of wine, and it would now appear that he is adding to the four cups of wine. It has also been established that one should not drink between the third and fourth cups of wine. Also, since all our matzah is shemurot, one can consider the last bit of matzah that he ate as the Afikomen.<br>Rabbi Peretz wrote that if he hasnโ€™t recited the Zimun yet, he can still eat the Afikomen without a blessing even though he has already ended the meal. In this situation it is different because the Afikomen is a commandment that God has placed upon him and we depend upon this.<br>After he drinks the cup of wine over which he recited the Birkat HaMazon, he pours the fourth cup and completes Hallel. In Midrash Tehilim, it is written that there should be at least three people reciting psalms so that one can recite and two can respond, hodo l'adonai ki tov.<br>The Rosh writes that if it is impossible for him to have three people present, he his wife and his minor son is sufficient!"
270
+ ]
271
+ ],
272
+ "Barech": {
273
+ "Birkat Hamazon": [
274
+ [],
275
+ [
276
+ "After the Afikomen, one pours the third cup of wine and recites the Birkat HaMazon, drinking it afterwards while leaning. Everyone should lean with the Seder leader. Between these first cups if one wishes to drink more wine, one may do so. Between the third and fourth cup of wine, one may not drink wine. The Jerusalem Talmud explains that one may not drink extra wine at the end of the Seder in order that one not become inebriated and forget to finish Hallel. This is problematic since he might already be drunk! However, wine within the meal does not make one inebriated while after the meal has the effect of making one inebriated. The Halachot Gedolot, the Rif, and the Rambam all forbid drinking after the Afikomen except for the two cups of wine. It should not appear that he is adding to the four cups of wine.<br>Rabbi Yitzchak follows the approach of the Jerusalem Talmud which says that since one should spend the whole night discussing the Exodus, the miracles that the Holy One performed for our ancestors until day break, one should not drink extra wine lest he be overcome by sleep. The Tosefta says that each person is obligated study the laws of Passover and the Exodus all night long, like the sages who dined together in B'nai Brak."
277
+ ]
278
+ ],
279
+ "Third Cup of Wine": [],
280
+ "Pour Out Thy Wrath": [
281
+ [
282
+ "Some permit a fifth cup of wine based on the verse in Exodus, \"I will bring you to the land.\" If one wishes to drink water it is permissible."
283
+ ],
284
+ [
285
+ "<b>Pour out Your wrath:</b> We recite this verse because the four cups of wine are an allusion to the four cups of retribution that the Holy One will pour out in the future on the nations of the world. We recite this prior to the fourth cup since it is with this cup that we complete the commandment of drinking four cups of wine. We now ask God to do what He promised to do to the gentiles who have oppressed us."
286
+ ]
287
+ ]
288
+ },
289
+ "Hallel": {
290
+ "Second Half of Hallel": [
291
+ [],
292
+ [],
293
+ [],
294
+ [],
295
+ [],
296
+ [],
297
+ [],
298
+ [],
299
+ [],
300
+ [
301
+ "After completing Hallel, one says, \"May all Your creations praise You,\" this is a blessing of song; it ends, \"Praised are you Adonai, Sovereign acclaimed with songs of praise.\" One then recites the blessing for the fourth cup of wine. The leader of the Seder and everyone present reclines while drinking the wine. If one wishes to add a fifth cup, one may do so after reciting Hallel HaGadol (Psalm 136), which begins with Hodu la-adonai ki tovโ€ฆhodu leilokei elokim. There are twenty six passages in this psalm equal to the twenty six generations that had not yet receive the Torah before it was given to the people of Israel. Despite this, God in His great mercy, continued to sustain these generations. One then recites Nishmat Kol Hai though the blessing at the end of Yishtabah; so says HaRitz Giat. Rabbi Hayim Kohen suggests that one should not say the blessing at the end of Hallel since it is sufficient for there to be a blessing at the end of Yishtabah. It is not necessary to conclude the passages of song and praise twice. This is also the opinion expressed in the Prayer book of Saadia Gaon."
302
+ ]
303
+ ],
304
+ "Songs of Praise and Thanks": [],
305
+ "Fourth Cup of Wine": [
306
+ [
307
+ "Concerning the blessing after drinking wine, al hagefen v'al p'ri hagefen, there are those among the Gaonim who hold that one must recite a concluding blessing of thanksgiving after each cup of wine. Our teacher Hai Gaon says: \"It is not fitting for us to recite al hagefen after each of the cups of wine since together they constitute one mitzvah and there is no interruption between them so that a blessing at the end should be sufficient. The Rif suggests that we should recite the concluding blessing (al hagefen) after the first two cups of wine and again after the final two cups of wine. The author of Sefer Hahashalamah explains that the Rif's opinion makes sense since the obligation to recite the blessing over the wine before the meal is not canceled by the wine during the meal and the wine after the meal is not exempted from a blessing by the wine during the meal. The reason for this is the purpose of the wine is different. The wine in the meal is for serving (lisharot) while the wine before and after the meal is for the drinking (lishtot). Since the wine lishtot is more important than the wine lisharot, the wine that is drunk during the meal does not divide the first two cups from the second two cups of wine in the Seder, and a blessing can be recited at the end of the Seder for all four cups of wine."
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+ "Nirtzah": {
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+ "Chasal Siddur Pesach": [],
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+ "L'Shana HaBaa": [],
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+ "And It Happened at Midnight": [],
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+ "Zevach Pesach": [],
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+ "Ki Lo Na'e": [],
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+ "Adir Hu": [],
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+ "Sefirat HaOmer": [],
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+ "Echad Mi Yodea": [],
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+ "Chad Gadya": []
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "heTitle": "ืงื“ืฉ",
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+ "enTitle": "Kadesh"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื•ืจื—ืฅ",
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+ "enTitle": "Urchatz"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ืจืคืก",
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+ "enTitle": "Karpas"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื™ื—ืฅ",
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+ "enTitle": "Yachatz"
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื’ื™ื“",
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+ "enTitle": "Magid",
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Ha Lachma Anya"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Four Questions"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "We Were Slaves in Egypt"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง",
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+ "enTitle": "Story of the Five Rabbis"
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+ },
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "The Four Sons"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ",
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+ "enTitle": "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers"
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+ },
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+ "heTitle": "ืืจืžื™ ืื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™",
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+ "enTitle": "First Fruits Declaration"
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+ "enTitle": "The Ten Plagues"
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+ "heTitle": "ื“ื™ื™ื ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "Dayenu"
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœืœ",
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+ "enTitle": "First Half of Hallel"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Second Cup of Wine"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืจื—ืฆื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Rachtzah"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฆื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Motzi Matzah"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืจื•ืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Maror"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืจืš",
428
+ "enTitle": "Korech"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืฉื•ืœื—ืŸ ืขื•ืจืš",
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+ "enTitle": "Shulchan Orech"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืฆืคื•ืŸ",
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+ "enTitle": "Tzafun"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจืš",
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+ "enTitle": "Barech",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ",
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+ "enTitle": "Birkat Hamazon"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช",
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+ "enTitle": "Third Cup of Wine"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš",
452
+ "enTitle": "Pour Out Thy Wrath"
453
+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื”ืœืœ",
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+ "enTitle": "Hallel",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืกื™ื™ืžื™ื ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ",
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+ "enTitle": "Second Half of Hallel"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื–ืžื•ืจื™ ื”ื•ื“ื™ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Songs of Praise and Thanks"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช",
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+ "enTitle": "Fourth Cup of Wine"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ืจืฆื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Nirtzah",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืกืœ ืกื™ื“ื•ืจ ืคืกื—",
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+ "enTitle": "Chasal Siddur Pesach"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืœืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื”",
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+ "enTitle": "L'Shana HaBaa"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœื™ืœื”",
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+ "enTitle": "And It Happened at Midnight"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื—",
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+ "enTitle": "Zevach Pesach"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื‘ืžืœื•ื›ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Ki Lo Na'e"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื”ื•ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Adir Hu"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืกืคื™ืจืช ื”ืขื•ืžืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Sefirat HaOmer"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื—ื“ ืžื™ ื™ื•ื“ืข",
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+ "enTitle": "Echad Mi Yodea"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ื“ ื’ื“ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Chad Gadya"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ }
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+ [
26
+ "<b>ื‘ื‘ื•ืื</b> ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื™ืขืจืš ืฉืœื—ื ื• ื‘ื“ืจืš ื—ื™ืจื•ืช ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ืืจ. ื•ืœื ื™ืฉื‘ื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉืชื—ืฉืš ื”ื™ื•ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืขืช ืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช. ื•ืืคื™' ืขื ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ื™ืคื—ืชื• ืœื• ืžื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™' ื•ืฉื•ืชื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื•ื ืจืžื– ื‘ืค' ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ืฉืœื— ืคืจืขื” ืืช ื”ืขื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืชืจื™' ื•ื™ืกื‘ ืืœืงื™' ืืช ื”ืขื ื›ื™ ื›ืฉื ื’ืืœื• ืื›ืœื• ื“ืจืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ืžืฆื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื‘ื—ืจ ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืื“ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœื“ื ืฉื”ื–ื• ืขืœ ื”ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื•ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื“ื™ื• ื ืงื™ื•ืช ื™ืฉื‘ ืืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื•ื™ืงื“ืฉ ืืžื ื ืจื•ื‘ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื ื•ื”ื’ื™' ืœื‘ื“ื•ืง ื ืงื‘ื™ื”ื ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ืœื” ื–ื• ืจื•ื—ืฆื™ื ื™ื“ื™ื”ื. ืฉืื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื“ื™ื• ื ืงื™ื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืœืจื—ื•ืฅ ืื•ืช' ื‘ื—ื ื ื•ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื ื˜ื™' ื™ื“ื™ื. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืขืœ ื ื˜ื™ืœื” ื–ื• ืœื ื™ื‘ื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืจืง ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืื—ืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉ. ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื”ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืคืจื•ืช ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืžื’ืกื™ ื”ืจื•ื—. ื•ื˜ืขื ืœืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืืœื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื’ืื•ืœื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืค' ื•ืืจื. ืœื›ืŸ ืืžื•' ืœื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื ื™ ื”' ื•ื”ื•ืฆืืชื™ ืืชื›ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื”ืฆืœืชื™ ืืชื›ื ืžืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื. ื•ื’ืืœืชื™ ืืชื›ื ื‘ื–ืจื•ืข ื ื˜ื•ื™ื”. ื•ืœืงื—ืชื™ ืืชื›ื ืœื™ ืœืขื. ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ื•ื”ื•ืฆืืชื™ ื•ื”ืฆืœืชื™ ื•ื’ืืœืชื™ ื•ืœืงื—ืชื™. ื•ื™\"ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืืžื•ืจื™' ื‘ืคืจืขื”. ื•ื›ื•ืก ืคืจืขื” ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืืฉื—ื˜ ืื•ืชื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืคืจืขื”. ื•ื ืชืช ื›ื•ืก ืคืจืขื” ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืืชืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ื•ืก ืขืœ ื™ื“ ืคืจืขื”. ื•ื™\"ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช. ื•ื™\"ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœื”ืฉืงื•' ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื. ื›ื™ ื‘ื” ืืžืจ ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ืงื— ืืช ื›ื•ืก ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืžื” ื”ื–ืืช ื•ื”ืฉืงื™ืช ืื•ืชื• ืืช ื›ืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื›ื•ืก ื–ื”ื‘ ื‘ื‘ืœ ื‘ื™ื“ ื”' ืžืฉื‘ืจืช ื›ืœ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ื’ื•' ื›ื™ ื›ื•ืก ื‘ื™ื“ ื”' ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื—ืžืจ ืžืœื ืžืกืš. ื™ืžื˜ืจ ืขืœ ืจืฉืขื™ื ืคื—ื™' ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืจื•ื— ื–ืœืขืคื•ืช ืžื ืช ื›ื•ืกื. ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ื ื—ืžื•ืช. ื”' ืžื ืช ื—ืœืงื™ ื•ื›ื•ืกื™ ืชืขืจื•' ืœืคื ื™ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื•ื›ื•' ืจืืฉื™ ื›ื•ืกื™ ืจื•ื™ื”. ื›ื•ืก ื™ืฉื•ืขื•ืช ืืฉื. ืคื™' ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ ืœื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืžืฉื™ื— ื•ื' ืœืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื. ื™ืฉ ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉืชื™ื™ืช ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืจื•ืจ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืœืชืจืฅ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืืœื ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ื” ืฉืขื•ืฉื™' ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืœื ื”ืคืกืง. ืื‘ืœ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•' ืฉืขื•ืฉ' ืžืฆื•ื” ืื—ืช ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื‘ื”ืคืกืง ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื”ื. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ืจื‘ ื ื˜ืจื•ื ืื™ ื’ืื•ืŸ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•' ืฉืœ ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืฉืœื ืœืฉืชื•' ื•ืื ืœื ืฉืชื” ืœื ื™ื‘ื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื•ืชื• ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืœืงื•' ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ. ื•ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ืืคื™' ืขื ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกื‘ ืจ\"ืœ ืืคื™' ืขื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจื’ื™ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืกื‘. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืž' ืœืขืฉื™ืจ ืฉืจื’ื™ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืกื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœื™ ืžืœืช ื•ื›ืจืคืก ื•ืชื›ืœืช. ื•ื”ื”ืกื‘ื” ืฆืจื™ื›' ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขืœ ืฆื“ ืฉืžืืœ. ื•ื”ืกื‘ืช ื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื™ื ื” ื”ืกื‘ื” ืฉืžื ื™ืงื“ื™ื ืงื ื” ืœื•ืฉื˜. ื•ืืฉื” ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ื”ืกื‘ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืืžืช ื‘ืขืœื” ืขืœื™ื”. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื ืืฉื” ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ืืœืžื ื” ื•ื’ืจื•ืฉื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืฉื•ืช ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœื™ื”. ื‘ืŸ ืืฆืœ ืื‘ื™ื• ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื•ื ืจื‘ื• ืžื•ื‘ื”ืง ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ืชืœืžื™ื“ ืืฆืœ ืจื‘ื• ืื™ื ื• ืžืกื‘ ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ืชืŸ ืœื• ืจื‘ื• ืจืฉื•ืช. ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžืกื‘ ืœืคื ื™ ืจื‘ื• ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ืื‘ื™ื• ืจื‘ื• ืžืกื‘ ืœืคื ื™ื•. ืฉื”ืื‘ ืžื•ื—ืœ ืขืœ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ืœื‘ื ื• ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ืก ื‘ื• ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ ื‘ืชืœืžื™ื“ ืœืคื ื™ ืจื‘ื•. ืฉืžืฉ ืœืคื ื™ ืจื‘ื• ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ืื‘ื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื™ ืฉื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจื’ื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ืืจืฆื ื• ืœื”ืกื‘ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื›ื“ืจื›ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืกื‘. ",
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+ "<b>ื•ืžื›ื™ื ื™ืŸ</b> ืงืขืจื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื’' ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื‘' ืžื™ื ื™ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื•ื—ืจื•ืกืช. ื”ื‘' ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืฆืœื™ ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืžื‘ื•ืฉืœ ื–ื›ืจ ืœื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื”ืžื‘ื•ืฉืœืช ื”ื ืื›ืœืช ืงื•ื“ื ืœืคืกื— ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืคืกื— ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข. ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืœื” ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืขืฆื ืœื ืชืฉื‘ืจื• ื‘ื• ื•ืืœื• ื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืจืขื‘ื•ืŸ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืœื—ื•ืฉ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืจืช ืขืฆื. ื•ื›ืš ื”ื™ื ื”ืžืฆื•ื” ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ื\"ื™ ืืงื‘\"ื• ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืืงื‘\"ื• ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื›ืฉื’ืžืจื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™' ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข. ื•ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื—ืœ ื™\"ื“ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื›ื™ ืื ื”ืฆืœื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ื•ืœื ื”ืžื‘ื•ืฉืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื“ื•ื—ื” ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ. ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืฉืœื•ืงื—ื™' ืœื‘' ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™' ื‘ืขื ื•ื“ืจื•ืขื. ื‘ืขื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื ืจื—ืžื ื ืœืžืคืจืง ื™ืชื ื. ื•ื“ืจื•ืขื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ืคืจืง ื™ืชื ื ื‘ื“ืจื•ืขื ืžืจืžืžื. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ ื™ืจืงื•ืช. ื ื”ื’ื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื›ืจืคืก. ื›ื™ ื›ืฉืชื”ืคื•ืš ื›ืจ\"ืค ื™ื”ื™ื” ืคืจ\"ืš ื•ื”ืก' ืจืžื– ืœืฉืฉื™' ืจื‘ื•ื. ื•ื”ืื—ืจ ื”ื—ื–ืจืช ืฉื ืงืจืืช ื—ืกื ืฉื—ืก ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•. ื•ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœื˜ื™ื˜ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื‘ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืขื•ืฉื™' ืื•ืชื” ืžื™ื ื™ ืคืจื•ืช ืžืชื•ืงื™ื ื•ื—ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืžืชื‘ืœื™' ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืชื‘ืœื™' ืœื“ืžื•ืชื” ืœื—ื•ืžืจ ืขื ื”ืชื‘ืŸ ื•ืžืฉื™ืžื™' ื‘ื” ืชืคื•ื—ื™ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืชื—ืช ื”ืชืคื•ื— ืขื•ืจืจืชื™ืš. ื•ืื’ื•ื–ื™' ื–ื›ืจ ืืœ ื’ื ืช ืื’ื•ื– ื™ืจื“ืชื™. ื•ืชืื ื™ื ืœื–ื›ืจ ื”ืชืื ' ื—ื ื˜ื” ืคื’ื™ื”. ืชืžืจื™' ื–ืืช ืงื•ืžืชืš ื“ืžืชื” ืœืชืžืจ. ื•ืชื‘ืœื™ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืงื ื” ื•ืงื ืžื•ืŸ ืฉื“ื•ืžื™ืŸ ืœืชื‘ืŸ.",
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+ "<b>ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ</b> ืžืืŸ ื“ื‘ืขื™ ืœื‘ืจื•ื›ื™ ื‘ืชืจื™ ื•ืชืœืช ืื‘ืชื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ืื›ื™ืœ ื›ืœ ืžืื™ ื“ื‘ืขื™ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ื”ื“ืจ ืžื‘ืจืš ืœื›ืœ ื—ื“ ื•ื—ื“ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ืฉืชื• ืื™ื ื”ื• ื›ืกื ื“ืงื“ื•ืฉื ื•ืื’ื“ืชื ื•ืื›ืœื™ ื™ืจืงื™ ื•ืžืฆื” ื•ืื™ื”ื• ืœื ืื›ื™ืœ ืžื“ื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื”ื• ื•ืฉื‘ื™ืง ืœื”ื• ืœืžื’ืžืจ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื”ื•. ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ ืื ื”ื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ื”ื“ืจ ืื–ื™ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืชื ืื—ืจื™ื ื. ื•ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื›ื™ ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ื‘ื™ืชื ื•ื‘ื™ืชื. ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ื ื”ื ื™ื ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื” ื ื”ื ื” ืขืžื”ื ืฉืื ื™ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืœื—ื ืฉืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื”ื™ื•ื ืฉื”ื ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ืื™ื ื• ื ื”ื ื”. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ืš ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืœื ืœื˜ืขื•ื ืžื“ื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื”ื•. ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ. ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืื–ื™ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ื’ืžืจ ื”ืœื™ืœื ื•ืฉืชื™ ื›ืกื ื“ื”ืœื™ืœื. ื•ืื™ ื‘ืขื™ ืœืืงื“ื•ืžื™ ืœื”ื ื™ื ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ืžื‘ืจืš ืœื™ื” ื•ืœื ืื›ื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื˜ืขื ืžื“ื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื”ื• ื•ื”ื“ืจ ืื–ื™ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ืžืงื“ืฉ ื”ืจืฉื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืœื”ืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ืขื“ ื’ืืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืœื‘ืจืš ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืฉืืจ ื‘ืชื™ื ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืœื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืœืขืงื•ืจ ืžืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ืœืœื›ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื ื™ื— ืฉื ื–ืงืŸ ืื• ื—ื•ืœื” ืืœื ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืžืฆื•ื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืงืจืืช ื—ืชืŸ ืื• ืœืงืจืืช ื›ืœื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื’ื ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื” ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืชื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงื™ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชืŸ. ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืฆื•ืช ื—ืชืŸ ื•ื›ืœื” ื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช. ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืœื• ืœืขืงื•ืจ ื•ืœืœื›ืช ืœืงืจืืชื. ืื‘ืœ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงื™ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื ืื™ื ื” ืžืฆื•ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืื—ืจ ืฉื’ืžืจ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ืื• ืงื•ื“ื. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืขื˜ื•ืจ ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ื“ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ืืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืขื ืขืžื”ื. ืฉืœื ืืžืจื• ืืœื ื‘ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืœื—ื ืฉืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืžืขื‘ื“ ื›ืจื‘ ื—ืกื“ื ื“ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื—ื–ืจืช ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ. ื•ืื›ื™ืœ. ื•ื›ื™ ืžื ื•ื™ ืœืžืจื•ืจ ืื›ื™ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื•ืœื ื ื”ื™ืจื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืชืงื ืช ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ืจื ืœืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื‘ืจื›ืช ืžืฆื” ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื˜ื•ืขื. ื•ืžื” ืฉื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™ื\"ืฃ ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ ืื ื”ื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ืชืงื ื” ืœื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ืื ืื™ื ื ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื›ืชื‘ ืจื‘ ืขืžืจื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืชืงื ื” ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืฉืื ืžื‘ืจืš ืœื”ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืชื• ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืœืžืฉืชื™ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื”. ื•ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื›ืชื‘ ื“ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ืื™ื ื ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื™ืฉ ืชืงื ื” ืœื”ืงืจื•ืชื ืžืœื” ื‘ืžืœื” ื›ืงื˜ืŸ ืฉืžืงืจื ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ืฉืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื™ื• ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืฉื ืฉืžื™ื ืœื‘ื˜ืœื”. ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื‘ื™ื ื• ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ืŸ ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื›ืชื‘ ื•ืืคืฉืจ ื“ืืฃ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืœื—ื ื“ืžืฆื” ืžื•ืฆื™ืื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืชืงื ื• ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื•ืชืงื ื• ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืขืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื ืžื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื ื›ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืขื™ื ื™ ืžื“ืืž' ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืคืจืง ืžื™ ืฉืžืชื• ืชื ื™ื ื›ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉืื“ื ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžื”ืŸ ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ืžืงืฉื” ื•ื”ื ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ื›ืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื—ื•ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชืŸ ื”ื ืื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ื™ื‘ื ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืื ื›ืŸ ืืœื ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื” ื•ืื›ืœืช ื•ืžืฉื‘ืขืช ื•ื‘ืจื›ืช. ืžื™ ืฉืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ืžื‘ืจืš ื•ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื–\"ืœ. ื›ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื›ืœ ื–ื” ืžื•ื›ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ื• ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ืœื• ื›ื•ืก ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืชื—ืœื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื•ื. ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ืจืš ืฉืขืฉื” ื ืกื™ื ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ืจื›ืช ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื• ื”ื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื” ื•ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ื•ืืจืช ืฉืžื–ื›ืจืช ืคืจื˜ ื”ื ืก. ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื›ื•ืกื• ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื“ืจืš ื—ืจื•ืช.",
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+ "<b>ื•ืื</b> ื—ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืื•ืž' ืชื—ืœื” ื•ื™ื›ืœื• ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ืื•ืž' ื‘ื—ืชื™ืžื” ื•ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืžื•ืขื“ื™ ืงื“ืฉืš ื‘ืื”ื‘ื” ื•ื‘ืจืฆื•ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฉืžื—ื” ื•ื‘ืฉืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื ื—ืœืชื ื•. ืฉืžื—ื” ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉืžื—ืชื›ื ื•ืืž' ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ืืœื• ื”ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช. ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžืฆืื ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื ื—ืœื” ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืฉืžืจื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ืœื“ื•ืจื•ืชื. ืœื›ืŸ ืื•ืž' ื”ื ื—ืœืชื ื•. ื•ื—ื•ืชื ื‘ื\"ื™ ืžืงื“ืฉ ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื”ื–ืžื ื™ื. ื•ืื•ืž' ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ืื—\"ื› ืฉื•ืชื”.",
30
+ "<b>ื•ืื</b> ื—ืœ ื‘ืžื•ืฆืื™ ืฉื‘ืช ื”ืกื™ืžืŸ ื™ืงื ื”\"ื– ื™ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื ืจ ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื–ืžืŸ. ื•ืื•ืž' ื‘ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืฉื‘ืช ืœืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื•ืžืฆืื ื• ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ื—ืžื•ืจ ืœืงื“ืฉ ืงืœ ืฉื ' ื•ื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœื” ื”ืคืจื›ืช ืœื›ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ืฉืืœ ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืืคืจื™ื ืœืžื” ื ื”ื’ื• ืœื•ืž' ื•ืืช ื™ื•ื ื–' ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื•ืงื“ืฉืช ื•ืงื“ืฉ' ืืช ืขืžืš ื™ืฉ' ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชืš. ืื—ืจ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืฉื‘ืช ืœืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื™\"ื˜ ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืชื™ืžื” ื•ืœื ืžืขื™ืŸ ื”ืคืชื™ื—ื”. ื•ื”ืฉื™ื‘ ืจ\"ืช ืžืฉื•' ื“ืืž' ื‘ืข' ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™' ื”ืคื•ื—ืช ืœื ื™ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื’' ื”ื‘ื“ืœื•' ื•ื”ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื ื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื–' ืจืฆื• ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื–' ื”ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื•' ื‘ื™\"ื˜ ืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืช ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืขื ื™ืŸ ื™\"ื˜. ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœ. ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืจ ืœื—ืฉืš. ื‘ื™ืŸ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื’ื•ื™' ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื‘ืช ืœื•' ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ื”ืจื™ ืืจื‘ืข. ืืžื ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ืœื•' ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ืื™ื ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœ ืืœื ืื’ื ื“ืืž' ืœื” ื‘ืขืœืžื ืืžืจื™' ืœื™ื” ื”ื›ื. ื”ืจื™ ื’'. ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืฉื‘ืช ืœืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื™\"ื˜ ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื–ื”ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ื ืคืฉ ืฉืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื™\"ื˜ ื•ืœื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช. ื–ืืช ื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ืงื“ืฉืช ื–ื”ื• ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื’ ืฉื—ืœื•ืง ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื—ื•ืœื• ืฉืœ ืžื•ืขื“. ื•ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื•ืงื“ืฉืช ืืช ืขืžืš ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชืš ื”ื ืžื ื™ ื”ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™' ืœืœื•ื™ื™' ื•ืœื•ื™ื™ื ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืžืขื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืชื™ืžื” ื”ืžื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ืœืงื“ืฉ. ื•ืžืฆืื ื• ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™' ืœืœื•ื™ื™' ืฉื ืืž' ื‘ื ื™ ืขืžืจื ืื”ืจืŸ ื•ืžืฉื” ื•ื™ื‘ื“ืœ ืื”ืจืŸ ืœืงื“ืฉื• ืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™' ืขืกื•ืง ื‘ื“\"ืช. ื•ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื™' ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื ' ื‘ืขืช ื”ื”ื™' ื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ืืช ืฉื‘ื˜ ื”ืœื•ื™. ื•ืื•ืž' ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ืื—\"ื› ืฉื•ืชื” ื•ืื™' ืžืจื™ื— ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืฉืžื ื•ื—ืช ื”ื™\"ื˜ ื”ื•ื ืžืฉื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ื ืคืฉ ื•ื”ื•ื ืœื• ื‘ืžืงื•' ื”ืจื—ืช ื”ื‘ืฉืžื™ื. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
33
+ "Urchatz": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืœืื—ืจ</b> ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื”ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœื” ื‘ืžืฉืงื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ืคืช. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจ ื›ืœ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœื• ื‘ืžืฉืงื” ืฆืจื™ืš ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื™ื“ื™ื ื“ืœืžื ื ื’ืข ื‘ืžืฉืงื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืขืกืงื ื™ื•ืช ื”ื. ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื‘ืืจื ื• ืฉื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืžืฆื•ื ืขื™ืœื ื•ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืงื•ื“ื ื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืœื“ื™ื“ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ื ื–ื”ืจื™ืŸ ืžื˜ื•ืžืื”."
36
+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Karpas": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ืœื•ืงื— ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืจืคืก ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฅ ืื• ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืœื”ืžื™ืช ื”ืชื•ืœืขืช ืฉื‘ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื”. ื•ืจ\"ืช ื•ืจืฉื‘\"ื ื”ื ื”ื™ื’ื• ืชืœืžื™ื“ื™ื”ื ืœื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฅ ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืจืื™ื” ืžื“ืชื ืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืœืคื ื™ื• ืžื˜ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืช ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื’ื™ืข ืœืคืจืคืจืช ื”ืคืช ื ืžืฆื ืฉื‘ืžืฉื ื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื–ื›ื™ืจ ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืขื“ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™. ื•ื”ืจ' ื™ื•ื ื” ืคื™' ืœืคื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืืœื ืœื”ื›ืจื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ืฉื ื” ืฉืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื—ื–ืจืช ื‘ืœื ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืฉืฉื™ื ืœืงืคื. ื’ื ืขืชื” ื™ืื›ืœื• ื›ืžื• ื‘ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื” ื‘ืœื ื—ืจื•ืกืช. ืื‘ืœ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื•ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื–ื”ื™ืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™' ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื‘ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืกื›ื ื” ื•ืงื•ืคื ืคืจืฉื• ืฉื”ื•' ืชื•ืœืขืช ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื•' ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืชื•ืœืขืช ืฉื‘ืขื™ืงืจื™ ื”ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ื•ืงื™ืคื ืžื‘ื™ืจืงื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ืื™ ืคื™ืจืฉ ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืงื™ืคื ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ืช ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ืงืคื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืคื™ื—ื” ื•ืจื•ื— ืฉืื•ื—ื–ืช ื‘ืžืขื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืื›ืœื•ืช ื•ื ืงืจื ืงื™ืคื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™' ืžื ืคื—ืช. ื•ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื”ื™ื ืกื ืฉื˜ื•ืจื“ ืื•ืชื• ืจื•ื—. ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื” ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™' ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ื˜ืคืœื” ืœื›ืจืคืก ื•ืชื ืŸ ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืงืจ ื•ืขืžื• ื˜ืคืœื” ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ืขืงืจ ื•ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื”ื˜ืคืœื” ื•ื›ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ืืœื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื›ื™ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืื™ื ื” ื”ืคืฉ' ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœื” ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืžืœืš.",
43
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื ื˜ื™ืœื” ื”ื•ื™ื ื”ืกื— ื”ื“ืขืช ืฉื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืขืกืงื ื™ื•ืช ื”ื. ื•ืžื–ื” ื”ื˜ืขื ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ื ืคืฉื•ืช ืจื‘ื•ืช ืื—ืจ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื”ืคืกืง ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจ' ื‘ื \"ืจ ืœืคื™ ืฉื—ื•ื‘ืช ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ื”ื™ื ืขื ื”ืžืฆื” ืฉื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื™ืื›ืœื•ื”ื• ื•ืื ื›ืŸ ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืื•ืชื• ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ื‘ืื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืœื ืœืคื ื™ื”ื ื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจื™ื”ื ื•ืžื–ื” ื”ื˜ืขื ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื”. ื•ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื‘ืื™ื ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืœื”ื‘ืจื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืืœื• ื”ืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืœื˜ื‘ืœ ื‘ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืช. ื•ืžื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืืœื ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืฉืชื™ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื•ื›ืฉื’ื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ื•ืื•ื›ืœื” ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. "
44
+ ]
45
+ ],
46
+ "Yachatz": [
47
+ [],
48
+ [
49
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ื›ืจืคืก ื‘ื•ืฆืข ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื™ืชืŸ ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืฉืœืžื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืฆื™ื” ื”ืื—ืจ ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืคื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืฉืืจื•ืชื ืฆืจื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ืฉืžืœื•ืชื ืœืžืฆื•ืช ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืฉื ืื›ืœ ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ื ื”ื’ื• ืœืคืจื•ืก ื”ืžืฆื” ืงื•ื“ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืืžืจ ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ืคืจื•ืกื” ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืกื—ื™ื ืžื” ื“ืจื›ื• ืฉืœ ืขื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื” ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื”.",
50
+ "<b>ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ</b> ื–\"ืœ ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืืœื ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืื›ื™ืœ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื“ืœื ืžื ื˜ืจ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื” ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื”. ื•ื”ืœืœ ื›ืจื™ืš ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ืื›ื™ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. ื•ืชืžื” ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ืœืคื™ ืกื‘ืจืชื• ืฉืื•ื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื”ื™ืืš ื™ืขืฉื” ื›ืจื™ื›ื” ืื—ืจ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ื•ื™ืื›ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืจ ืื—ืจื™ื• ื•ื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ืžืฆื”. ื“ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืกืชื‘ืจ ืœืคื™ ืกื‘ืจืชื• ืœื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื›ืจื™ื›ื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืืœื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ืžืžื” ืฉื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื ื•ืขื ื”ืžืฆื” ืฉืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ืžืคื™ื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ืื—ืจื™ื• ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืขื˜ื•ืจ ื›ืชื‘ ืชื™ืื›ืœ ืžื™ื“ ื“ืœื ืžื ื˜ืจ ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ื™ืื›ืœ ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. ื•ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื›ืชื‘ ืฉื•ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ืžืฆื” ืžืฉื•ืžืจืช ืœืชืื‘ื•ืŸ ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืฉืฉ ืื ื™ืื›ืœ ืื—ืจื™ื• ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื“ืœื ืžื ื˜ืจ. "
51
+ ]
52
+ ],
53
+ "Magid": {
54
+ "Ha Lachma Anya": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
58
+ "<b>ื•ืžืชื—ื™ืœ</b> ื”ื”ื’ื“ื”. ื•ื”ืงืฉื” ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืงืจื™ืืชื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ืžื’ืœื” ื•ื”ืœื ืžืฆื•ืช ืขืฉื” ื”ื™ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ื•ืœื™ ื•ืชืจืฅ ื›ื™ ื‘ืžื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื–ื›ืจ ืœื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื™ืฆื. ื•ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ ืชื™ืจืฅ ื˜ืขื ืื—ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ืงืจื™ืืชื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืงืฆื‘ื” ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœืžื ืฉื™ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื™ืฆื ืืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืžืจื‘ื” ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืžืฉื•ื‘ื—. ื•ื ืงืจืืช ื”ื’ื“ื” ืขืœ ืฉื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ืžื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืื’ื“ื” ืฉืžื•ืฉื›ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื• ืฉืœ ืื“ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื ืจืื” ืœื™ ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ ืžื–ื” ื”ืคืจื•ืฉ ื”ื•ื ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื›ืžื• ื”' ืฉืคืชื™ ืชืคืชื— ื•ืคื™ ื™ื’ื™ื“ ืชื”ืœืชืš ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ื• ื™ืžืฉื™ืš ืชื”ืœืชืš ื›ื™ ื”ื›ืœ ื”ื•ืœืš ืื—ืจ ื›ื•ื ืช ื”ืœื‘ ื›ื™ ื‘ืกืคืจ ื”ืื“ื ื ืคืœืื•ืช ื•ื ื•ืจืื•ืช ื™ื•ืฆืื•ืช ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ื˜ื‘ืขื™ ื™ืžืฉืš ืžืžื ื• ืื”ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืžื—ื” ื•ืชืขื ื•ื’ ื ืคืฉื™ื™ ื›ื™ ืžื™ ืฉืžืข ื›ื–ืืช ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื”ื™ืœ ื™ื•ืชืจ ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื›ื•ื–ืจ ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉืฉ ืžืื•ืช ืืœืฃ ืจื’ืœื™ ืžืชื™ื—ืกื™ื ืฉืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืฉื‘ื˜ื™ื ื•ืœื ื ื›ื ืก ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ื ื ื›ืจื™ ืžื™ื—ืœื™ื ื”ืžื•ืขื“ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื“ ืœืื‘ื•ืชื ื•ื‘ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื‘ืชื›ืœื™ืช ื”ืขื ื•ื™ ื•ื”ื“ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ ืคืจืขื” ื”ื•ืจื’ ืืช ื‘ื ื™ื”ื ืฉืœื ื™ืจื‘ื• ืฉืœื— ืžืฉื” ื•ืื”ืจืŸ ืขื ื—ื•ืœืฉืชื ื•ืขืžื“ื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ืคืจืขื” ืขื ื—ื–ืงืชื• ื‘ืื•ืชื•ืช ื•ื‘ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ื•ื‘ืฉื ื•ื™ ื”ืžื ื”ื’ื™ื ื•ืœื ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืกืชืจ ืžื”ื ื•ืœื ืœืžื ื•ืข ืขืฆืžื• ืžื”ืขืฉืจ ืžื›ื•ืช ืืฉืจ ื—ืœื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืžื™ืžื™ื”ื ื•ื‘ืืจืฆื ื•ื‘ืื•ื™ืจื ื•ื‘ืฆืžื—ื™ืชื ื•ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืชื ื•ื‘ื’ื•ืคื ื•ื‘ื ืคืฉื•ืช ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ื”ื ื‘ืจื’ืข ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืฆื•ืช ืœื™ืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ืืฉืจ ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ืžืช ื–ื•ืœืชื™ ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ื‘ืื•ืช ื‘ืื–ื”ืจื” ื•ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ ื•ืžืกืชืœืงื•ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชื‘ืจืจ ื›ื™ ื”ื ื‘ื›ื•ื ื” ืžืืช ืืœื•ืง' ื—ืคืฅ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืขื•ืฉื” ื—ืคืฆื• ื‘ืขืช ืฉื™ื—ืคื•ืฅ ืœื ืžืฆื“ ื”ื˜ื‘ืข ื•ืœื ืžืฆื“ ื”ื›ื›ื‘ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžืฆื“ ื›ืฉืคื™ื ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืงืจื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื™ืฆืื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ื™ืœื” ืžื™ ืฉื™ืงื‘ืข ื‘ืœื‘ื• ืฉืขื•ืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืืœื” ื‘ื›ื•ื ื” ืœื ื‘ืžื™ ืฉืงื•ืจื ื‘ืกืคืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ื‘ืœื™ ื‘ื—ื™ื ื” ื™ืชืงืจื‘ ืืœ ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืกื•ื“ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ื”ืžืฉื›ืช ืœื‘ ื”ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืœืืžื•ื ื” ื”ืฉืœืžื”. ",
59
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืฉืื•ืžืจ</b> ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ืŸ ื”ืกืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืžื”ืžืฆื•ื” ืœืฉืžื— ื”ืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ืžืกื™ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืืœื• ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”. ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืœื•ืช ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืžื” ืฉืœืคื ื™ื ื• ื‘ืงืขืจื” ื•ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื”ื™ื ืžืกื•ืœืงืช ืžืœืคื ื™ื ื•. ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจ' ืืข\"ืค ืื‘ื™ื™ ื”ื•ื” ื™ืชื™ื‘ ืงืžื™ื” ื“ืจื‘ื” ื—ื–ื ื“ืงื ืžื’ื‘ื”ื™ ืคืชื•ืจื ืืž' ื•ืžื™ ืื›ืœื™ื ืŸ ื“ืงื ืขืงืจื™ืชื• ืชื‘ื ืžืงืžืŸ. ืืžืจ ืคื˜ืจืชื™ื ืŸ ืžืœื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉื‘\"ื ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ืœื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ืฉื”ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืื ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื ื• ื”ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืงืœ ืœืกืœืงื ืžืกืœืงื™ื ื”ืกืœ ืื• ื”ืงืขืจื” ืฉื‘ื• ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™' ื•ื“ื™ ืœื ื• ื‘ื›ืš.",
60
+ "<b>ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื.</b> ื›ื•' ื›ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ื”ืœื—ื ืฉืื›ืœื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ ืžื”ื• ื“ื™ ืื›ืœื• ืื‘ื”ืชื ื ื‘ืืจืขื ื“ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื”ืœื ื•ื™ืืคื• ืืช ื”ื‘ืฆืง ื•ื›ื•' ืขื’ื•ืช ืžืฆื•ืช ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ืžืฅ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืœื ืื—ืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืžืชืจืฅ ื”ืื‘ืจื‘ื ื™ืœื• ื‘ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ืฉื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ืคืจืš ื”ื™ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื”ื ืœื—ื ืžืฆื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืงืฉื” ืœืขื›ื•ืœ ื›ืžื• ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ื™ื•ื ืœืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื”ืขืžืœื™ืŸ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืงื˜ื ื™ื•ืช ื”ื‘ืœืชื™ ืžืชืขื›ืœ ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื”ื.",
61
+ "<b> ื•ืœืžื”</b> ื ืงืจืืช ื”ืžืฆื” ืœื—ื ืขื ื™ ืœื—ื ืฉืขื•ื ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื” ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ื”ื”ืœืœ ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืชื•.",
62
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ</b> ืžื” ื“ืจื›ื• ืฉืœ ืขื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ืก' ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ืก' ืฉื‘ื•ืฆืขื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื”. ื“\"ื ืžื” ืขื ื™ ืžืกื™ืง ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืคื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืขื ื™ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื•ืฉืคื—ื•' ื•ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืกื™ืง ื•ืืฉืชื• ืื•ืคื”. ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื–ืจื– ืขืฉื™ื™' ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ื’ื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื™ืจ ืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ื”ื ื•ืžืกื™ืง ื•ืืฉืชื• ืื•ืคื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืชื‘ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ื—ืžื•ืฅ ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™\"ืž ืœืžื” ื ืงืจื ืœื—ื ืขื ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ื›ืฉืขื•' ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื ื™ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืขื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื•' ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืืคื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช.",
63
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ื›ืคื™ืŸ ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ.</b> ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื—ื•ื‘' ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืงื‘ืขื• ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ืžืฉืžื ื™' ืžื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืžืฆื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ื”ืคืกื—. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื›ืœ ื“ื›ืคื™ืŸ ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœ ืื“ื ืžืจืขื™ื‘ ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ืžืฆื” ืœืชืื‘ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืงื•ืจื ืœื‘ื ื™ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื›ืœื ืจืขื‘ื™ื.",
64
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ืฆืจื™ืš ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ืคืกื—.</b> ืื™ื›ื ื“ืืžืจ ื“ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื ื• ืคืกื— ืขืชื”. ื•ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืืžืจื• ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ืœืคืจืฉ ื•ื™ืคืกื— ื›ืžื• ื•ื™ืคืกืข ื›ืœื•' ื™ืขื‘ื•ืจ ืขืœื™ ืœืกืขื•' ืืฆืœื™ ืื• ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืฉื™ืžื™ื ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื‘' ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ื ื' ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื—. ืœื›ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื• ืื•ืž' ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื–ื›ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ื›ืžื• ืฉืื ื• ืื›ืœื™ื ื”ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื•ืฉืืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืœื–ื›ืจ ื”ืคืกื—.",
65
+ "<b>ื”ื ืฉืชื ื”ื›ื.</b> ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื–ื›ืจื ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื–ื” ืขื’ืžืช ื ืคืฉ ืœืžืกื•ื‘ื™' ืืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืžื–ื•ื›ื™' ื—ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื•ื‘ื˜ื•ืœ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื›ืŸ ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื”ื•ื ืžื ื—ื ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ืื•' ื”ืฉื ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืื ื—ื ื• ื›ืืŸ ื•ืœื ื ื•ื›ืœ ืœืขืฉื•' ื—ื•ื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœื”ืงืจื™' ื”ืคืกื—. ื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื•ืื ืœื ื ื–ื›ื” ืœืฉืœืžื•' ื”ืžื›ื•ื•ืŸ. ืœืคื—ื•' ื ื–ื›ื” ืžื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืื ื—ื ื• ืคื” ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื•ื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื™ ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ืื• ื”ื•ื ื›ืžื• ืชืคืœื” ื™ื”ื™ ืจืฆื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืงื™ื™ื ืœื ื• ื”ื‘\"ื” ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ื•ื™ืขื•ื“ื™ื• ืฉื™ืขื“ ืœื’ืืœื™ื ื• ืžื’ืœื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืฉื ื–ื›ื” ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืžื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ื›ืœ ื–ืืช ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ืช. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœืฉื•ื ื ื•ื”ืœืขื– ืฉืœื”ื ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ื‘ื‘ืœ ื ืชืงืŸ ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ื ืกื™ื ื•ื”ืชื™ื ื•ืงื•ืช ื•ืขืžื™ ื”ืืจืฅ ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ืœ ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื. ื•ื™\"ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืกืคืจื™ื ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฉืžื—ื” ืืจืžื™ืช. "
66
+ ]
67
+ ],
68
+ "Four Questions": [
69
+ [],
70
+ [
71
+ "<b>ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื–ื” ื ืชืงืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ืžื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืŸ ื›ื“ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืืขืค\"ื™ ื—ื›ื ื‘ื ื• ืฉื•ืืœื• ื•ืื ืœืื• ืืฉืชื• ืฉื•ืืœืชื•. ื•ืื ืœืื• ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืืœ ืœืขืฆืžื•. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื”ื‘ืงื™ืื™ื ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉื•ืืœื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืืช ื–ื” ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”. ",
72
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืžื˜ื‘ืœื™ืŸ ืืคื™ืœื• ืคืขื ืื—ืช.</b> ืื›ื™ืœืช ื™ืจืง ืงืจื™ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืขืœ ืฉื“ืจื›ื• ืœืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื—ื•ืžืฅ ืื• ื—ืจื•ืกืช.",
73
+ "<b> ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืฉื ื™ ืคืขืžื™ื.</b> ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™ ื•ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืืœื ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ ื”ืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ืฉื™ืฉืืœื• ื•ื™ืืžืจื• ืœืžื” ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื”ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ื•ื‘ืฉืืจ ื”ื™ืœื•ืช ืชื•ืš ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื”.",
74
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื›ืœื ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ื.</b> ืืคื™' ื”ืฉืžืฉ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืกื‘ ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืฉื” ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื” ืืฆืœ ื‘ืขืœื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ืจืš ื—ืจื•ืช ื•ืฉืจืจื”."
75
+ ]
76
+ ],
77
+ "We Were Slaves in Egypt": [
78
+ [],
79
+ [
80
+ "<b>ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ืœืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื‘ืฉืืœืช ื”ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืฉื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื›ืœื ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื›ืœืœ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื–ื• ื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœืคื™ื›' ื ืฉืชื ื” ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ืœื™ืœื•ืช. ื•ืื ืชืืž' ืžืื™ ื“ื”ื•ื” ื”ื•ื” ื•ืžื” ืœื ื• ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ืžื” ืฉืขื‘ืจ ืœื›ืš ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจ' ืฉืืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืื ื—ื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื ื• ืขื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื.",
81
+ "<b>ื•ืืคื™' ื›ืœื ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื“ืืžืจื™' ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉื ื™ ืช\"ื— ื”ื‘ืงื™ืื™ื ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ื–ื” ืืช ื–ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื”. ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืกืคืจ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš."
82
+ ]
83
+ ],
84
+ "Story of the Five Rabbis": [
85
+ [
86
+ "<b>ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ื•' ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง. </b>ื‘ื–ืืช ื”ื‘ื‘ื ืžืงืฉ' ื”ืจื‘ื” ืงื•ืฉื™ื•' ื”ืื‘ืจื‘ื ื™ืœื• ื‘ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ืื™ืš ื™ืชื›ืŸ ืฉื ื–ื“ืžื ื• ื›ืœ ืืœื• ื”ื—ื›ืžื™' ืฉื–ื” ื“ื™ืจืชื• ื‘ืœื•ื“ ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืคืงื™ืขื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืš ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื ืขืชืง ืžืžืงื•ืžื• ืœืœื•ืŸ ื‘ื›ืžื• ื–ื” ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ื—ื’ ื”ืคืกื— ื”ื ื›ื‘ื“ ื”ื–ื” ืืฉืจ ื‘ืจื’ื™ืœื•ืช ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœื”ืขื‘ื™ืจ ืขืฆืžื• ืœืฉืžื•ื— ืขื ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื–ื” ื”ืžืงื•' ื‘ืœืชื™ ืจืฉื•ื ื•ืœื ื ืงืจื ืฉืžื• ืขืœื™ ืื“ืžื•ืช ื•ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืืจืฅ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืœื ื‘ื‘ืœ ืจืง ื‘ื›ืืŸ. ื•ืžืชืจ' ืฉื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขืœ ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืกืชื•ืช ืžืจื•ืงืžื•ืช ื–ื”ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ื–ื”ื‘ ื•ื”ืื‘ื ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืžื‘ื”ื™ืงื•ืช ื›ื‘ืจืงื™ื ืœื”ื•ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ืขื•ืฆื ื–ืจื™ื–ื•ืช ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ื ื›ื‘ื ื™ ืžืœื›ื™ื ืืžื ื ืœืคื™ ื”ืคืฉื˜ ื”ื•ื ืฉื ืžืงื•ื.",
87
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ืง\"ืฉ ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจื™ืช.</b> ื‘ื ืœืœืžื“ ืฉืืœืžืœื ื”ื™ื•ืช ื”ืงืจื™' ืฉืžืข ืžืฆื•ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช ืขื“ื™ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ืžื ืขื™ื ืžืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื."
88
+ ],
89
+ [
90
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืื ื™ ื›ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื.</b> ื•ืœื ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉืื•ืžืจ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ืื“ืจื• ืœื™ื” ืชืžื ื™ ืกืจ ื“ืจื™ ื—ื•ื•ืจืชื ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉื”ื•ืฉื™ื‘ื•ื”ื• ื ืฉื™ื ื•ืงืคืฆื” ืขืœื™ื• ื–ืงื ื” ื•ื ืจืื” ื›ืžื• ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื“ืœืื• ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื ืื” ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื‘ื™ืฉื™ื‘' ืžื–ืงืŸ.",
91
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื–ื›ื™ืชื™ ืฉืชืืžืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ืœื ื–ื›ื™ืชื™ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื•ืžืจ ืœื ื ืฆื—ืชื™ ื›ืžื• ื›ืœ ืžืืŸ ื“ื–ื›ื™ ืœืžืœื›ื. ืœื ื ืฆื—ืชื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉื™ื–ืจื• ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืขื“ ืฉื“ืจืฉื” ื‘ืŸ ื–ื•ืžื. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืžืงื•ื“ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืื ื‘ื™ื•ื ืขื“ ืฉืฉืžืข ื“ืจืฉืช ื‘ืŸ ื–ื•ืžื ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš ืชืงืŸ ืœืืžืจื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ื™ื•ื ืืžืช ื•ื™ืฆื™ื‘ ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ืืžืช ื•ืืžื•ื ื”. ื•ื ืจืื” ืฉืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืžื“ืœื’ ืคืจืฉืช ืฆืฆื™ืช ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืจืื™ืชื ืื•ืชื• ื•ืœื™ืœื” ืœืื• ื–ืžืŸ ืจืื™ื™ื” ื”ื™ื, ืขื“ ืฉืฉืžืข ื“ืจื™ืฉืช ื‘ืŸ ื–ื•ืžื ื•ืงื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื‘ื™ื•ื ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื”. ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื™ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ืš ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ื–ื” ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ืš ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื. ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœื ืฉืชืขืงืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืžืงื•ืžื”. ืืœื ืฉื™ื”ื ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ืขื™ืงืจ ื•ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื˜ืคืœ."
92
+ ]
93
+ ],
94
+ "The Four Sons": [
95
+ [
96
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื.</b> ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื ืงืจื ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืžืงื•ืžื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ื”ื ื” ืžืงื•ื ืืชื™ ื”ื ื” ืื ื™ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ื”ื ื” ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืชื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ืžืขื•ืŸ ื•ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ื–ื•ืœืช ืžืงื•ื. ื•ืขื•ื“ ืชืžืฆื ื›ื™ ืžืงื•ื ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื ื›ื™ ื™' ืคืขืžื™ื ื™' ื”ื ืง' ื•ื”' ืคืขืžื™ื ื”' ื›\"ื”. ื•' ืคืขืžื™ื ื•' ื”ื ืœ\"ื•. ื•ื”' ืคืขืžื™ื ื”' ื›\"ื” ืชื—ื‘ืจื ื›ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืงืค\"ื• ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ืžืงื•ื. ",
97
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื”.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ืžืงืจืื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืข ื‘ื ื™ื ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืชื—ืœื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื“ื•ืจืฉ.",
98
+ "<b>ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื”.</b> ืคืจื•ืฉื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืืจื‘ืข ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื•ืœืคื™ ื”ืžืงืจืื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ืื ื• ืœืžื“ื™ื ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคืจืฉ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืงื•ืจื ืื•ืชื ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืขื“ื™ืŸ ืื™ื ื ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื›ืœื•ื ื›ืžื• ื”ื ืขืจื™ื."
99
+ ],
100
+ [
101
+ "<b>ื—ื›ื ืžื”ื• ืื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืืฉืจ ืฆื•ื” ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ื• ืืชื›ื.</b> ืคืกื•ืง ื–ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื•ืืชื—ื ืŸ ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืชืจื™ื” ื•ืืžืจืช ืœื‘ื ืš ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ืชืŸ ื”' ืื•ืชื•ืช ื•ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ื•ื’ื•'. ื™ืฉ ืœื”ืชื™ืฉื‘ ื‘ืฉืืœืช ื”ื—ื›ื ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืกืคืง ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœื• ื™ื”ื•ืœืœ ืื™ืฉ ื•ื”ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื ืžืฉืš ืื—ืจ ื”ืฉื›ืœ ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืคื™ ื—ื›ื ื—ืŸ ืชืคื•ื—ื™ ื–ื”ื‘ ื‘ืžืฉื›ื™ื•ืช ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืคืœ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื• ื”ื—ื›ื ืจืง ื›ืœ ืชื‘ื” ื•ืชื‘ื” ืžื•ืจื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœืขืฆืžื• ื•ื™ื‘ื—ืจ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืขืจื•ืžื™ื ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื–ื”ื• ืชื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ื ืชื• ื•ืฉืืœืชื• ื”ื™ื ื–ืืช ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื•ืคืกื— ืืฉืจ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื—ืงื™ื ื•ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืฉื” ื–ื›ืจ ืชืžื™ื ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืœืžื ื•ื™ื™ื• ื•ืฆืœื™ ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช. ื›ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื• ื›ื›ืœ ื—ืงืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ื•ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ื—ื›ื ืฉืืœื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ื ืขื“ื•ืช ืžื•ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ืขื ื™ื ื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื ื•ืขื ื•ืขื“ื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืžืขืžื™ืง ืœืฉืืœ ื‘ื”ื™ื•ืช ื›ืœ ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืชืœื•ื™ื™ื ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื•ืขืฆื ืœื ืชืฉื‘ืจื• ื‘ื• ื•ืฉืืจ ื“ืงื“ื•ืงื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ืขืงืจ ืœืžื” ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”. ื•ื“ืจืš ื”ื—ื‘ื™ื‘ ื—ื‘ื™ื‘ ืงื•ื“ื ื‘ืื›ื™ืœื” ื›ื™ ืžื” ื™ื•ืขื™ืœื• ื”ืžืขื“ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ ืžืœื ื›ืจืกื• ื•ืœื ื™ื›ื™ืœ ืขื•ื“ ื˜ื•ื‘ื ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉืœืคื™ื›ืš ืžืงื“ื™ืžื™ื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื™ื ื™ ืžืชื™ืงื” ืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืœื”ืกื™ืจ ื˜ืขื ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืžืคื™ื• ืœืงื™ื ื•ื— ืกืขื•ื“ื”. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืžืื—ืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•. ื•ื–ื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื’ื ืื ื—ื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžืฆื” ืžืฉื•ืžืจืช ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื—. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™\"ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื ืฉืืœืช ื”ื—ื›ื ื”ืžืขืžื™ืง ื›ืฉืจื•ืื” ืฉื‘ื ื™ื• ืขื ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคืกื— ืื—ื“ ื•ืคืขืžื™' ืžื’ื™ืข ืœืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื—ืœืง ืžื•ืขื˜ ื•ื”ืŸ ืžืงืคื™ื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื›ืœื• ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจื’ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•' ื‘ืฉืืจ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ืœื”ืชื—ื‘ืจ ื•ืœื”ืชืืกืฃ ื™ื—ื“ ื‘ืกืขื•ื“ื” ื•ืœื”ืงืคื™ื“ ื‘ื—ืœืง ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ื–ื”. ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืืœ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื›๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ืžืจ ืขืชื” ืฉื“ืจืš ื”ืขื•ืœื ืœื—ื•ื’ ื•ืœืฉืžื•ื— ืขื ืื ืฉื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ื‘ืชื™ื”ื ื•ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ืืฆืœ ื—ื‘ืจื™ื”ื. ื•ืื ืžืคื ื™ ื—ื‘ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืฉืœื•ื— ืžื ื•ืช ืื™ืฉ ืœืจืขื”ื• ื›ืžื• ื‘ืฉืืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ืืžื ื ืฉืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ืฆื•ื” ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ื• ืืชื›ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื“ืข ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ื ื”ืคืกื— ืขืœ ื”ืงื˜ืŸ ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืงื‘ืœ ืขืœื™ื• ืขื•ืœ ืžืœื›ื•ืช ืฉืžื™ื ื‘ืืžืจื• ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ื•. ",
102
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืชื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืืœื” ื–ื• ืชืกื‘ื™ืจ ืœื• ื›ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื–ื” ื‘ื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ืื—ืช ื”ื•ื ื•ืฉื›ื ื™ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืื—ื“ ื™ืื›ืœ ื•ืชืจื’ื•ืžื• ื‘ื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ื—ื“ื ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืžื ื” ืขืœื™ื• ืื™ืŸ ืกื“ืจ ืœื•ืžืจ ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื ืื™ ืžื”ื›ื ืชืฉื ืกืจื‘ืœื™ ืฉืื ื™ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืคื˜ืจ ื•ื–ื• ืชืฉื•ื‘' ืœืขื•ืžืง ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœื™' ืื™ืฉ ืื™ืฉ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื‘ื—ื•ืžื•ืชื™ื• ื›ืฉืืจ ื”ืžื•ืขื“ื™ื.",
103
+ "ื•ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืžืกื™ื™ืžื™' ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืคื˜ืจื” ืฉืžืกื™ื™ืžื™ื ื‘ื” ืชืคืœืช ืฉื—ืจื™ืช. ื•ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื™ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœื ื›ืœื•ื ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ. ืคืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืคืชื™ื—ืช ืคื” ืœื“ื‘ื•ืจ ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื™ืคื˜ื™ืจื• ื‘ืฉืคื”. ื•ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืœืคืจื•ืฉ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื ื•ื˜ืจื™ืงื•ืŸ ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื™ื ื™ ืžืชื™ืงืช ืœืคืจื•ืฉ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื ืื™."
104
+ ],
105
+ [
106
+ "<b>ืจืฉืข ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื ืืœ ืคืจืขื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืœื›ื ื‘ื‘ืŸ ืจืฉืข ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœื›ื ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœื›ื ื•ืœื ืœื• ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืœื›ื ืžืฉืžืข ื’ื ื›ืŸ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื˜ื•ืจื— ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื“ืจืš ืจืฉืข ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื”ื˜ื•ืจื— ื”ื–ื” ืฉืืชื ืžื˜ืจื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ืœืขื›ื‘ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™' ื•ืœืขืจื‘ื‘ ืฉืžื—ืช ื”ื—ื’ ื•ืงื•ืจื ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื”ืžืงื•ื ื˜ื•ืจื— ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื’ื ืฉืžืฆื™ื ื• ืกืชื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืœืขื•ืœื ื™ืฉ ืœื“ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉืข ืœื›ืฃ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ื’ื ื›ืŸ. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืชื” ื”ืงื”ื” ืืช ืฉื ื™ื•, ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื—ื•ืœืฉ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื›ืžื• ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™' ืชืงื”ื ื” ืฉืจื•ืื” ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ื•ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื ื’ื“ืš ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™. ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื• ืฉืจืฉืข ื›ืžื•ืš ืืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื’ืืœ. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ ื”ื™ืืš ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื•ื’ื•' ื”ื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืจืฉืข. ื•ื™\"ืœ ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืื ืื™ื ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืชื ื”ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœืจืฉืข. ื•ื’ื ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืฉื‘ืœื™ ื”ืœืงื˜. ื›ื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืงืจื•ื‘ ืœืžื™ืŸ ื”ืจืฉืข ื›ื™ ืžืชื•ืš ืจืฉืข ื”ื•ื ืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžืขืžื™ืง ืœืฉืื•ืœ ื•ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืชื™ื• ืฉืœ ืžืงื•ื ืจืง ืขื•ืฉื” ืื•ืชื ืžืฆื•ืช ืื ืฉื™ื ืžืœื•ืžื“ื”."
107
+ ],
108
+ [
109
+ "<b>ืชื ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืชื ืงื•ืจื ืœืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื›ื ืฉื™ื“ืข ืœื”ืขืžื™ืง ื•ืœื”ืกื“ื™ืจ ืฉืืœืชื• ื“ืจืš ืžื•ืกืจ ื•ื—ื›ืžื”. ื•ื’ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืจืฉืข ืืœื ืฉื•ืืœ ืกืชื ืžื” ื–ืืช."
110
+ ],
111
+ [
112
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืืช ืคืชื— ืœื•.</b> ื›ืžื• ืคืชื— ืคื™ืš ืœืืœื. ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื. ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื–ื” ื”ืคืกื•ืง ืฉืืœืช ืฉื•ื ื‘ืŸ ืืœื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืกืชื. ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ื“ืจื•ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ืคืจืกื ืœื• ืืช ื”ื ืก."
113
+ ]
114
+ ],
115
+ "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh": [
116
+ [
117
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื“ืฉ.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื•ื“ืขื” ืžื”ืื‘ ืœื‘ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืื•ืœ. ืจืง ืืœื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืจืฉ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื“ืฉ ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืœื• ืœื‘ืŸ ืžืฉื ื›ื ืก ืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื”ื–ื”ื™ืจ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื“ืฉ ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืฉื ื’ืืœื• ื‘ื•. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืœื• ืžื‘ืขื•ื“ ื™ื•ื ื›ืฉืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ ืคืกื—ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืœื ืืžืจืชื™ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ืฉืชื•ื›ืœ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืฉืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš. ื•ืœืžื“ื ื• ื–ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ื ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื™ืื›ืœ ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช. ื•ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืฆืืชื™ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื. ",
118
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ</b> ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื”. ื–ื” ื‘ื’ืžื˜ืจื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉืื“ื ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื›ืจืคืก ืฉืชื™ ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื™ื“ื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฆื” ืžืจื•ืจ ื›ืจื™ื›ื”. ื•ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉืคืกื— ื•ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืฉืžืข ืฉืžื•ืจื” ืœื• ื‘ืืฆื‘ืข."
119
+ ]
120
+ ],
121
+ "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers": [
122
+ [
123
+ "<b>ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ืžื” ืฉืฉื ื™ื ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ื•ืžืกื™ื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ื—. ื•ืืžืจ ืขืœื” ืžืื™ ื’ื ื•ืช ืจื‘ ืืžืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ื•ืฉืžื•ืืœ ืืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ ื›ืชืจื•ื™ื”ื•. ื•ืžืชื—ืœื” ื”ื•ื ืžื•ืกื‘ ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจื ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืœื ืืžืจืชื™ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ื•ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืฉื•ืžื“ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ืœ ื‘ืŸ ื ื›ืจ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื•. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื•ื›ืฉืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื“ืช ื”ืืžืช ื•ื ืžื•ืœื• ื‘ืฆืืชื ืื– ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื• ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื•ืœื”ืชืงืจื‘ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื•. ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืžืขื• ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื™ืœืžื“ื• ื•ื™ืงื—ื• ืžื•ืกืจ ื•ืืœ ื™ื˜ื• ืœื‘ื ืœืœื›ืช ืื—ืจื™ ื”ื”ื‘ืœ ื•ื™ื’ืœื• ืžืขืœ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืื‘ื™ื”ื ืฉื‘ืฉืžื™ื. ื•ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื™ืจื™ื“ืชืŸ ืœืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืื™ืš ื”ื™ื” ื•ืžืขืฉื™ื”ื ืืฉืจ ืœืžื“ื• ื‘ื”ืชืขืจื‘ื ื‘ื’ื•ื™ื ื•ื™ืฆื™ืืชื ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื”ื ืกื™ื ื•ื”ื ืคืœืื•ืช ืฉืขืฉื” ืขืžื ื•. ืžืจื•ื‘ ืื”ื‘ืชื• ืื•ืชื ื• ื•ื™ื‘ื—ืจ ื‘ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื–ืจืขื ืื—ืจื™ื”ื ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื›ืžื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ื‘ื—ืจ ื›ื™ ืื ื‘ื‘ืŸ ืกื’ื•ืœืชื• ื™ืฆื—ืง ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืชืžื™ืžื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื™ืฆื—ืง ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ืขืฉื• ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ื—ืจ ืœื• ื™ื”. ื•ื’ื–ืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืขื•ืœื ื”ื–ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื–ื›ื•ืชื ืœืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื. ื•ืืจื‘ื” ืืช ื–ืจืขื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื•ืืจื‘ื” ื›ืžื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ื ืจื‘ืชื™ ื‘ืขื“ื•."
124
+ ],
125
+ [
126
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœืขืฉื• ืืช ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืชืจื’ืžื™ืŸ ื”ืจ ืฉื™ื™ื“ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื ื•ืฉืขื™ืจื™ื ื™ืจืงื“ื• ืฉื ื›ื™ ื”ื•ื ืžื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ืกืžืืœ ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืกืขืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื• ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ืœืš ื‘ืกืขืจื•ืช ืชื™ืžืŸ ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื—ืœืง ืžืื“ื™ื ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืื“ืžื•ื ื™. ื•ื™ืขืงื‘ ืื™ืฉ ื—ืœืง ื”ืคืš ืžืื™ืฉ ืฉืขื™ืจ ืžืจื•ื—ืง ื•ืžื•ื‘ื“ืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจื•ืช ื•ืžื•ืชืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ืฆื•ืจืชื• ื‘ื›ืกื ื”ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื•ื”ื•ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ื• ื™ืจื“ื• ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ืœืคืจื•ืข ืฉื˜ืจ ื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื ื’ื–ืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืชื›ืฃ ืœืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืฉื›ืฉื ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืš ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืจืขื”. ื•ืื ื• ืžืชื ื—ืžื™ื ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื—ืจื™ ื”ื’ื“ืช ื”ื’ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื’ืœื•' ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ืžืงื•' ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ืœื ื• ื”ื‘ื˜ื—' ืขืœ ื’ืื•ืœื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื ื•. ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ ืชืžื™ื“ ืžืชื™ ื™ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื™ื’ื™ืขื• ื™ืžื™ ื”ืฉืœื•' ื•ืขืช ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”. ืฉื ' ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื•ื’ื•' ื‘ืืจืฅ ืœื ืœื”ื ื‘ื‘ื‘\"ืœ ื•ืขื‘ื“ื•\"ื ื‘ืžื“ื™ ื•ืขื ื• ืื•ืชื ื‘ื™ื•\"ืŸ ื•ื’ื ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื•ื“\"ื• ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™ ื‘ืื“ื•\"ื ื•ื—ืชื ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ื™ื‘ืื• ื‘ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื”ืจื™ ื”ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ื” ืฉืœ ื’ืื•ืœื” ืžื›ืœ ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ื•ื”ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ื™ื. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™ืฉ ืœืคืจืฉ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืงื‘\"ื” ื”ื™ื” ื—ืคืฅ ืœืงืจื‘ ื’ืื•ืœืชื ื—ืฉื‘ ืื•ืชื ืง\"ืฅ ืฉื ื” ืžืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื”ื’ื–ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ืขื“ ืฉืขื” ืฉื™ืฆืื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืช\"ืœ ืฉื ื”. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืื ืจ\"ื™ ืฉื ื™ื ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ืจื“\"ื• ื•ื”ื™ื ื• ืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ ืœื“ืœื’ื• ื•ืœืงืคืฆื• ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ื”ืง\"ืฅ ื›ืžืฉืžืขื• ื•ืคืฉื•ื˜ื• ื›ืืœื• ื ืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื• ืžืžืฉ."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืขืžื“ื” ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœื ื•.</b> ื”ื‘ื˜ื—' ื”ื’ืื•ืœื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘\"ื” ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื• ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ื›ืฉื”ืจืื” ืœื• ื”ืฉืขื‘ื•' ื•ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”. ื”ื™ื ืฉืขืžื“ื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื‘ื‘ื‘ืœ ื•ื™ื•ืŸ ื•ืžื“ื™. ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ืขื•ืžื“ืช ืœื ื• ื‘ืื“ื•ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ื‘\"ืจ ื•ื”ื ื” ืื™ืžื” ื–ื• ื‘ื‘\"ืœ ื—ืฉื™ื›ื” ื–ื• ืžื“\"ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื–ื• ื™ื•ืŸ. ื ื•ืคืœืช ืขืœื™ื• ื–ื• ืื“ื•ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืจืื” ืœื• ื”ื’ืื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ื™ื‘ืื• ื•ื›ื•'. ",
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+ "<b>ืฉืœื ืื—ื“ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืขืžื“ ืขืœื™' ืœื›ืœื•ืชื™ื ื•.</b> ื›ืœื•ืž' ืœื ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืœื‘ื“ื ืขืžื“ื• ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื ื• ื•ืœื›ืœื•ืชื™ื ื• ืืœื ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื ื• ื‘ื›ื— ืื•ืชื” ื”ื’ื–ืจื” ืฉืœ ื”ื’ืœื™ื•ืช ืฉื ื’ื–ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ื•ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืžืฆื™ืœื ื• ืžื™ื“ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื ื•."
135
+ ]
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+ ],
137
+ "First Fruits Declaration": [
138
+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืฆื ื•ืœืžื“ ืžื” ื‘ืงืฉ ืœื‘ืŸ ื”ืืจืžื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื™ืขืงื‘.</b> ืฉื’ื ื”ื•ื ื‘ื ืžื›ื— ืื•ืชื” ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉืคืจืขื” ืœื ื’ื–ืจ ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื•ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืงืฉ ืœืขืงื•ืจ ืืช ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืืžืจ ื™ืฉ ืœืืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืขืžื›ื ืจืข. ืฉืืœืžืœื ื”ื—ืœื•ื ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืืœืงื™ ืื‘ื™ื›ื ืืžืฉ ืืžืจ ืืœื™ ื”ืฉืžืจ ืœืš ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืžืขืฉื•ืช ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื•ืžืจ ืืœื ืฉืœื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืžื›ืฉืฃ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื•ื‘ื”ื–ื›ืจื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื”ืฉื‘ืขื•ืชื™ื• ื”ืฉื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืœื•ืข ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ืœื”ื–ื™ืง ื•ืœื›ืœื•ืช ืืช ื–ืจืขื•. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™ ืฉื‘ื ื‘ื”ืกื›ืžื” ืžื•ื—ืœื˜ืช ืœืื‘ื“ื• ืœื•ืœื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื ื˜ืœ ืœื• ื›ื—ื• ื•ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืฆืจืฃ ืœื• ืžื—ืฉื‘ื” ืจืขื” ืœืžืขืฉื” ืœื›ืŸ ื ืืžืจ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืฆื•ืœ ืžืœื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืกืฃ ืœื• ืคื’ืข ืื—ืจ ื•ื›ื•' ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืจื“ ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ืื ื•ืก ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ื“ื‘ื•ืจ. ื•ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ืคืจืง ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ื™ืขืงื‘ ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืœืจื“ืช ื‘ืฉืœืฉืœืื•ืช ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื–ืœ ืืœื ืฉื–ื›ื•ืชื• ื’ืจื ืœื• ื•ื™ืจื“ ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื—ื‘ืœื™ ืื“ื ืืžืฉื›ื ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืชื•ืช ืื”ื‘ื”. ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื•ื ืจื•ื— ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื. "
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ื’ืจ ืฉื ืžืœืžื“ ืฉืœื ื™ืจื“ ืœื”ืฉืชืงืข.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืœืงื‘ื•ืข ืฉื ื™ืฉื•ื‘ ื•ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื›ืชื•ืฉื‘ ืืœื ืœื’ื•ืจ ืฉื ื›ื’ืจ ื•ืื™ืฉ ื ื›ืจื™."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืœืžื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ื.</b> ืžืกื•ืžื ื™ื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ื™ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื™ื“ื•ืขื™ื ื•ื ืงื‘ืฆื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ื•ืœื ื ืคืจื“ื™ื ื•ืคื–ื•ืจื™ื ื•ืขื ื”ื™ื•ืชื ืื ืฉื™ื ืžืขื˜ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื ื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืื•ืžื” ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื”."
148
+ ],
149
+ [
150
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ ื›ืฆืžื— ื”ืฉื“ื”.</b> ืžื” ืฆืžื— ื”ืฉื“ื” ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื’ื•ื–ื–ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืฆื•ืžื—. ืืฃ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉืžืขื ื™ื ืื•ืชื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืคืจื™ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื›ืŸ ื™ืจื‘ื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื™ืคืจื•ืฅ.",
151
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืขืจื•ื ื•ืขืจื™ื”.</b> ืขืจื•ืžื™ื ื•ืžืฉื•ืœืœื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืงืฅ ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ื“ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ืคืกื— ื•ืžื™ืœื” ืฉื ืžื•ืœื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžืชื‘ื•ืกืกืช ื‘ื“ืžื™ืš. ืฉื ื™ ื“ืžื™ื ื“ื ืžื™ืœื” ื•ื“ื ืคืกื—."
152
+ ],
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+ [
154
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจืขื• ืื•ืชื ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื.</b> ื ืชื—ื›ืžื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื ื• ืืžืจื• ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืžื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ืœื”ืจื•ื’ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืš ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื’ื“ืœืŸ ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื‘ืŸ ืฉื”ืœืš ืื—ืจ ื”ื—ืœื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืžืจ ืœืš ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืขื ื™ืขืงื‘. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื• ื ืชื—ื›ื ืœืขืงื•ืจ ืืช ื›ืœื."
155
+ ],
156
+ [
157
+ "<b>ืœืžืขืŸ ืขื ื•ืชื• ื‘ื‘ืกื‘ืœื•ืชื.</b> ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืกื›ืœื•ืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืื•ืชื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื™ืฉืื•ื”ื• ืขืœ ื›ืชืฃ ื™ืกื‘ืœื•ื”ื•."
158
+ ],
159
+ [
160
+ "<b>ื‘ืคืจืš.</b> ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ื‘ืคื” ืจืš ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ืฉืชืœื” ืคืจืขื” ืœื‘ื ื” ื‘ืฆื•ืืจื• ื•ื ืชื—ื–ืงื• ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ืื•ืžืฅ ืœื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื”ืžืœืš. ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ืฉืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื”ื ื‘ืคืจืš. ื•ื™ืจื ืืช ืขื ื™ื™ื ื•. ื–ื• ืคืจื™ืฉื•ืช ื“ืจืš ืืจืฅ. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืžื• ืื ืชืขื ื” ืืช ื‘ื ื•ืชื™ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื‘ื˜ืœื™ื ืžื”ื ืขื•ื ืช ื ืฉื•ืชื™ื”ื."
161
+ ],
162
+ [],
163
+ [],
164
+ [],
165
+ [],
166
+ [],
167
+ [
168
+ "<b>ืืช ืขืžืœื ื•. ืืœื• ื”ื‘ื ื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื ื’ื“ืœื™ื ืžืขืžืœ ื”ืื“ื ื•ื™ื’ื™ืข ื›ืคื™ื• ื”ื‘ื ืœื”ื."
169
+ ],
170
+ [
171
+ "<b>ืœื—ืฆื ื•. ื–ื• ื”ื“ื—ืง.</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืชื›ืŸ ื”ืœื‘ื ื™ื ืชืชื ื•."
172
+ ],
173
+ [],
174
+ [
175
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืœืืš ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืฉืจืฃ.</b> ื•ืžืฉื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื™ื— ืจืง ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืืœ ืคืจืขื”. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ื“ื• ื›ื— ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืืœื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื‘ืขืฆืžื•. ื•ื ืืžืจ ื–ื” ืขืœ ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘\"ื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืœืืš. ืืœื ื”ื•ื ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ื”ื›ื” ืื•ืชื. ื•ื”ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืœื ื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžืฉื—ื™ืช ืœื‘ื ืืœ ื‘ืชื™ื›ื ืงื•ืจื ื”ืžื›ื” ืžืฉื—ื™ืช ื•ืคืจื•ืฉื• ื•ืœื ื™ืชืŸ ื”ื”ืฉื—ืชื” ืœื‘ื ืืœ ื‘ืชื™ื›ื."
176
+ ],
177
+ [],
178
+ [
179
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื–ื• ื”ื“ื‘ืจ.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉ ื‘ืื’ื“ืช ืชืœื™ื ื›ืœ ืžื›ืช ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืžื›ืช ื“ื‘ืจ ืขื ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืกื’ืจ ืœื‘ืจื“ ื‘ืขื™ืจื ื•ืžืงื ื™ื”ื ืœืจืฉืคื™ื (ืชื”ืœื™ื ืขื—, ืžื—). ืžื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืกืจ ืžืงื ื™ื”ื ืœืจืฉืคื™ื ื‘ืžื›ืช ื‘ืจื“ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื‘ืจ. ืžื–ื” ืื ื• ืœืžื“ื™ื ืœืฉืืจ ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืขืžื”ื."
180
+ ],
181
+ [
182
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื–ืจื•ืข ื ื˜ื•ื™ื” ื–ื• ื”ื—ืจื‘.</b> ืื™ื–ื• ืžื›ืช ื—ืจื‘ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื‘ืคืกื™ืงืชื ื“ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืข' ืฉืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ื•ืžืช ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื ืชื›ื ืกื• ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืืฆืœ ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื”ื. ืืžืจื• ืœื”ื ื‘ื’ื™ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ื•ืžืช ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืœ ืžื” ื“ืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ืขืœ ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืžื ืืชื ืขืœื™ื”ื•ืŸ. ืื™ืชื•ืŸ ื•ื ืคื™ืง ืื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืŸ. ื•ืื™ ืœื ืื™ื ื•ืŸ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ืืžืจื• ืขืฉืจื” ื‘ื ื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ืžืžื ื• ื™ืžื•ืชื•ืŸ ื•ื—ื“ ืžื ื›ื•ืŸ ืœื ื™ืงื•ื ืขืœ ืืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื. ืืžืจื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืฉืžื ื“ืžื™ืœืชื ื ื–ื™ืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืคืจืขื” ื“ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื“ืœืžื ื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™' ืขืœ ื ืคืฉื™ื” ื•ืืคื™ืงืืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืŸ. ื”ืœื›ื• ืืฆืœ ืคืจืขื” ืืžืจื• ืœื• ื‘ื’ื™ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ื•ืžืช ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืœ ืžื” ื“ืืžืจ ืžืคื” ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ืš ืขืžื ืืชื ืขืœื™ื”ื•ืŸ. ืืœื ืงื•ื ื•ืืคื™ืง ืืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ืจื™ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืŸ ื•ืื™ ืœื ื”ืœื™ืš ืขื™ื ื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ืืžืจ ืงื•ืžื• ืฆืื• ืงืคื—ื• ืฉื•ืงื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ืืœื•. ืื ื ืืžืจื™ืช ืื• ื ืคืฉื™ ืื• ื ืคืฉื™ื”ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื ื•ืืชื•ืŸ ืืžืจื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื“ื™ืŸ. ืžื™ื“ ื™ืฆืื• ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•' ื•ื”ืจื’ื• ื‘ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื”ื ืฉืฉื™ื ืจื‘ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื™ ืœืžื›ื” ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ื”ื. ืžื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืจื’ื• ื‘ื”ื ื•ื–ื• ื”ื™ื ืžื›ืช ื”ื—ืจื‘ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื."
183
+ ],
184
+ [
185
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื–ื• ื’ืœื•ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื”.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื ื’ืœื” ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื•ื”ื›ื” ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืชื•ื›ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื ' ืื• ื”ื ืกื” ืืœืงื™' ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ื“ืŸ ืžืœื‘ื•ื ืœืงื—ืช ืœื• ื’ื•ื™ ืขื“ ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจืื™ื ืข\"ื› ืื•ืชื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ. ื•ืื ื™ืืžืจ ืœืš ืข\"ื” ื”ืŸ ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ืฆื ืžื”ืŸ ื’ื•ื™ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช. ืชื“ืข ืฉื›ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื–ื” ืืœื™ ื•ืื ื•ื”ื•. ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืจืื™ื ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื‘ืืฆื‘ืข. ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจืื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ืืœื• ื ื•ืจืื•ืช ืฉืœ ื’ืœื•ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื”. ืืขืค\"ื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืœืื” ื’ืœื•ืœื™ื ื•ื˜ื ื•ืคื™ื ืืขืค\"ื™ ื›ืŸ ื ืจืื” ืœื”ื ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžื” ืฉื ืืž' ืœื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ืื ื›ื™ ืืขืœืš ื’ื ืขืœื”. ื•ื ื’ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ื ื‘' ืคืขืžื™ื ื' ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื ' ื•ื™ื“ื‘ืจ ื”' ืืœ ืžืฉื” ื•ืื”ืจืŸ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืœืืžืจ ื”ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ืœื›ื. ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”. ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืจืื•ื”ื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื. ื›ืžื• ืฉืืž' ืจืืชื” ืฉืคื—ื” ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืžื” ืฉืœื ืจืื” ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ื‘ืŸ ื‘ื•ื–ื™. ื•ื”ืจื•ืื” ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ื ืจืชืข ื•ื ื‘ื”ืœ ื•ื–ื”ื• ืžื•ืจื."
186
+ ]
187
+ ],
188
+ "The Ten Plagues": [
189
+ [],
190
+ [],
191
+ [],
192
+ [],
193
+ [],
194
+ [],
195
+ [],
196
+ [],
197
+ [],
198
+ [],
199
+ [],
200
+ [],
201
+ [],
202
+ [],
203
+ [],
204
+ [],
205
+ [
206
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžื ื™ื.</b> ืงืฉื” ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืกื™ืžืŸ ื•ื”ืœื ื”ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ืŸ ืœืงื—ืช ืื•ืช ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื•ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืกื™ืžืŸ. ืืœื ืœื ื‘ื ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืืœื ืœื™ืชืŸ ืกื™ืžืŸ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉืœืงื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืฉืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืžื›ื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืžืืชื™ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืื•ืžืจ ืžืืชื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉื™ื. ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืœื ืขื•ืœื” ื—ืžืฉ ืžืื•ืช. ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ืฉื ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ืกื™ืžืŸ ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืขื“\"ืฉ ื‘ืื—\"ื‘ ืฉืขื•ืœื” ื—ืžืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื•ื' ื•ื‘ื’ืžื˜ืจื™ื ืœื ืงืคื“ื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื' ื™ื•ืชืจ ืื• ื—ืกืจ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ืกืคืจ ืชื”ืœื™ื ืื™ื ื ืกื“ื•ืจื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ืŸ ืกื“ื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืคืจืฉื”. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžืŸ ื–ื” ืœื”ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื”ืกื“ืจ ืžื”ืคืจืฉื” ื”ื•ื ื”ืขื™ืงืจ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™' ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžื›ื•' ื™ืฉ ืžื”ื ื‘ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžื”ื ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื” ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžื ื™ื ืฉื›ืœื ื”ื•ืœื›ื™' ืฉืœืฉ ืฉืœืฉ. ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืกื“ืจ ื–ื” ื‘' ืขื ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ื”ื’' ื‘ืœื™ ื”ืชืจืื” ื“ื ืฆืคืจื“ืข ื‘ื”ืชืจืื” ื›ื ื™ื ื”ื’' ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื” ืข\"ื“ ื‘ื”ืชืจืื” ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ืœืขื•ืœื ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืœืจืืฉ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืœืงื•' ืžื™ ืฉืœืงื” ื•ืฉื ื”. ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืžืœืงื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืจืง ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™' ืื•ืชื• ืœื›ืคื” ื•ืžืื›ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืœื—ื ืฉืขื•ืจื™' ืขื“ ืฉื›ืจืกื• ื ื‘ืงืขืช ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืจืฉืข ื”ื•ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื™ื•ืชืจ ื”ืชืจืื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืจื“ ืืจื‘ื” ื‘ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ื—ืฉืš ื‘ืœื™ ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื‘' ืžืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื ืฉืืจืช ืœื‘ื“ื” ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื›ื•ืœืœื” ื•ืœืฆืจืคื” ื‘ืชื™ื‘ืช ื‘ืื—\"ื‘. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื˜ืขื ืื—ืจ ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืฉืœืฉืชื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืื”ืจืŸ. ืขื“\"ืฉ ืขืจื•ื‘ ื“ื‘ืจ ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื–ื” ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื–ื”. ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื ื™ื”ื. ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ืงื—ื• ืœื›ื ืžืœื ื—ืคื ื™ื›ื ืคื™ื— ื”ื›ื‘ืฉืŸ. ื‘ื\"ื— ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืฉื”. ื‘' ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื ืžืฆื ื›ืœ ืกื™ืžืŸ ื‘ื’ื“ืจ ืœื‘ื“ื•. ",
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ. ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉื ืืžืจ ื™ืฉืœื— ื‘ื ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ืขื‘ืจื” ื•ื–ืขื ื•ืฆืจื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื™ืฉ ืœื”ืชื‘ื•ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื—ืœื•ืงืช ืืœื• ื”ืชื ืื™ื ืฉืื—ื“ ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ืžืจื•ื‘ืขืช ื•ื”ื' ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืžืฉืช. ื•ื”ืจื•ืงื— ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื–ื” ื˜ืขื ื™ืคื” ื‘ืžืื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™. ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ื›ื•ื ืช ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืฉืื•ืžืจ ืฉื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืืจื‘ืข ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื•ื ื›ื™ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืœื•ืงื™ื ื‘ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžื™ื•ื—ื“. ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื‘ืœื•ืœื” ืžื›ืœ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืฉืื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื—ืžืฉ ืžื›ื•ืช ื›ื•ื ืชื• ื›ื™ ืชื ื•ืขืช ื”ื’ืœื’ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ื”ื’ืฉื ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืžืกื™ื™ืขืช ื‘ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื•ืžื›ื”. ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ื”ื•ื ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื•ื”ืžืกื‘ื‘ ื”ื›ืœ ื‘ืจืฆื•ืŸ ื”ืžื•ืจื” ื•ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ื›ื™ ืžืœื›ื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืฉืœื”."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Dayenu": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื›ืžื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืืœื• ื”ืชื ืื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ ืžืขืœื•ืช ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืขื“ื™ืŸ ื ื•ื›ืœ ืœืฉืคืจ ื•ืœื”ืจื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ื•ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืขืฉื” ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืจื•ื‘ ื—ื‘ืชื• ืืœื™ื ื•."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš <b>ืืœื• ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืœื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื.</b> ื ืก ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื” ื•ื“ื™ ืœื ื•. ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ืื’ื“ื” ืื• ื”ื ืกื” ืืœืงื™' ืœื‘ื ืœืงื—ืช ืœื• ื’ื•ื™ ืžืงืจื‘ ื’ื•ื™ ื›ื–ื” ืฉืžื•ืฉืš ืืช ื”ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืžืžืขื™ ืืžื• ืฉืœื ื‘ื–ืžื ื•. ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืฆืืช ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื“ืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืงื˜ืจื’ืช ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืœื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื•ืืœื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื–. ืืœื• ืžื’ืœื™ ืขืจื™ื•ืช. ื•ืืœื• ืžื’ืœื™ ืขืจื™ื•ืช. ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื›ืคืœ ืœื ื• ืืช ื”ื ืก ื”ื–ื” ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื•. ื•ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืข\"ื™ ืฉื ืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื ื•. ื›\"ืฉ ื™ืฉ ืœื ื• ืœืฉื‘ื— ืœืื“ื•ืŸ ื”ื›ืœ. ื•ืœื ืจ\"ืœ ืฉืœื ื™ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื›ืœืœ ื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื•ื’ื ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื“ื• ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™ ืืœื ืœื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื‘ื›ืœื ืืœื ื‘ืžืงืฆืชื ื“ื™ื™ื ื•."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืืช ืžืžื•ื ื.</b> ื’ื ื–ื” ืื™ืŸ ืจ\"ืœ ืžื›ื•ืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื•ืื—\"ื› ื™ื‘ืื• ื‘ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืืœื ืจ\"ืœ ืžื‘ื–ืช ื”ื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืืœื• ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจ ืกื™ื ื™.</b> ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืœื ื• ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื“ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ืœื ื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืื• ืฉืœื ื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื ื• ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ื›ืœืŸ ืืœื ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืฆื˜ื•ื• ื‘ื ื™ ื ื— ื“ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ืŸ ืืœื• ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจ ืกื ื™ ื•ืœื ื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื“ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืคืกืงื” ืžืžื ื• ื–ื•ื”ืžื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื–\"ืœ ื›ืฉืขืžื“ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืขืœ ื”ืจ ืกื ื™ ืคืกืงื” ื–ื•ื”ืžืชืŸ. ื’ื•ื™ื ืฉืœื ืขืžื“ื• ืขืœ ื”ืจ ืกื ื™ ืœื ืคืกืงื” ื–ื•ื”ืžืชืŸ. ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ืœื ื• ื›ืœ ืืœื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื–ื” ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืฉืœื•. ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ื—ื™ืจื” ื–ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ืฉืœื ืืžืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืœื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืœื•ืž' ืืคื™ืœื• ื™ืื›ืœ ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ. ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื• ืื ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ื’' ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืœื• ืœืžื” ื”ื ื‘ืื™' ืฉืžืฆืื ื• ืฉื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžืงืคื™' ืขืœ ืืžื™ืจ' ื•ื”ื’ื“ื”."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ื•ื’ื•' ืขืœ ืฉื•ื ืฉืœื ื”ืกืคื™ืง.</b> ื•ื™ืฉ ืœืฉืื•ืœ ื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืฆื˜ื•ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื‘ืกืช' ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื˜ืขื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ. ืคืจืฉ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกืฃ ืงืžื—ื™ ืฉืžื” ืฉื ืฆื˜ื•ื• ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื•' ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืขืชื™ื“. ื”ืฉื ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ืขืชื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ื™ื“ืข ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ืœืฆืืช ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืคื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ื”ื™ื• ืจื•ืฆื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืฅ ื‘ืฆืงื ืฆื•ื” ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื”ืคืกื— ืขืœ ืžืฆื•' ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืžืฆื”."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืขืฆืžื• ื›ืืœื• ื”ื•ื ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื.</b> ื–ื” ืžื•ืกื‘ ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจื ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ื”ื‘\"ื” ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืขื“ื™ืŸ ืื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืืžืจื™ ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืื•ืชื ื• ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฉื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืื ื• ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืืœื• ืœื ื™ืฆืื• ื”ื ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื•ื“ื•ืช ืœื”ืœืœ ื•ื›ื•'. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
248
+ "First Half of Hallel": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ืืœื• ืื ื—ื ื• ื™ืฆืื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื”ืœืœ ื•ืœืฉื‘ื— ื•ื›ื•' ื›ืžื• ืฉืขืฉื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•. ื•ื ื”ื’ื• ืฉืžืขืชื” ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื›ืœ ื' ื›ื•ืกื• ื‘ื™ื“ื• ืฉืžื›ืืŸ ืื ื• ืคื•ืชื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจ ืฉื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืื™ื ื” ืืœื ืกืคื•ืจื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื™ืจื” ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื›' ื•ืœืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื”ื—ื“ืœืชื™ ืชืจื•ืฉื™. ื”ืžืฉืžื— ืืœืงื™ื ื•ืื ืฉื™ื. ืื ืื ืฉื™ื ืžืฉืžื— ืืœืงื™ื ื‘ืžื” ืžืฉืžื—. ืืœื ืžื›ืืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื™ืจื” ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ. ื•ืžื–ื›ื™ืจ ื›ืืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืžื™ื ื™ ืฉื‘ื— ืœื”ื•ื“ื•ืช ืœื”ืœืœ ืœืฉื‘ื— ื•ืœืคืืจ ื•ื›ื•' ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืจืงื™ืขื™ื. ื•ื ืืžืจ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื”ืœืœื•ื™ื”. ื”ืœืœื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ ื”'. ื•ืื•ืžืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ืขื“ ื—ืœืžื™ืฉ ืœืžืขื™ื ื• ืžื™ื ื•ืžื ื”ื’ื ื• ืฉืœื ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”. ื›ื™ ื›ืŸ ื ืžืฆื ื‘ืฉื ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™' ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉื’ื•ืžืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœืคื™ ืฉื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืœืฉื ื™ื. ื•ื’ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ื”ืœืœ ืืœื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ื•ื“ืื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื”ื™ืืš ื™ื‘ืจืš ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ื•ื”ื•ื ืคื•ืกืง ื‘ืืžืฆืข. ื”ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ ื”ืžืฉืคื™ืœื™ ืžืงื™ืžื™ ืœื”ื•ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ืžื•ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื”' ื™ื•ื“ื™\"ืŸ ื ื•ืกืคื•ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉืœืงื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืžืžื–ืจื— ืฉืžืฉ ืขื“ ืžื‘ื•ืื• ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื•. ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืžืฉืœื•ืชื™ื• ื‘ืคืชื— ื”ืž\"ื."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Second Cup of Wine": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ืืชื” ื”' ืืž\"ื” ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื• ื•ื’ืืœ ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื—ืชื•ื ื‘ื’ืื•ืœื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ื•ืžืกื™ื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ื— ื•ื›ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ' ืฉืœื ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื’ืืœ ื•ื›ื•' ืื ื• ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื’ืื•ืœืชื™ื ื• ื•ื’ืื•ืœืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•. ",
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+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ื™ืขื ื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื”.</b> ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื‘ืจื›ื ื• ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ื™ื’ื™ืขื ื• ืœืžื•ืขื“ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ืฉ ืฉื’ื•ืจืกื™ื ื›ืŸ ื”ื’ื™ืขื ื• ืœืžื•ืขื“ื™ื ืฉื›ืœ ื ื•ืกื— ื”ื‘ืจื›ื” ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœื ื›ื—. <b>ืœืžื•ืขื“ื™ื</b> ืืœื• ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ื•ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื <b>ื•ืœืจื’ืœื™ื</b> ืืœื• ืคืกื— ืฉื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื•ืกื›ื•ืช. <b>ืฉืžื—ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืฉื ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืคืกื—ื™ื</b>. ื›ื™ ื”ื–ื‘ื— ืžื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ืคืกื—."
259
+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืžื‘ืจืš</b> ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืžื•. ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ืคืขื ืฉื ื™ื™ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื™ื“ื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ ืงื•ืจื ื”ื”ื’ื“' ื•ื”ื”ืœืœ ื•ืžืกื™ื— ื“ืขืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ื ื˜ื™ืœื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืขืกืงื ื™ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื ื’ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืžื˜ืžื ืืช ื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืœื›ืš ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื—ื–ื•ืจ ื•ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืœืื›ืœ ืคืช ื•ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืื›ืœ ืขืช ื‘ื™ื“ื™ื ืžืกื•ืื‘ื•ืช ื•ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉืื ืฉืžืจ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืžื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื ื’ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืžื˜ืžื ื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื—ื–ื•ืจ ื•ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ื•ืื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”."
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+ ]
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ "Rachtzah": [],
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+ "Motzi Matzah": [],
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+ "Maror": [],
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+ "Korech": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ื›ืš ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืชื™ ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื ืงืจืื•' ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื ืื—ืช ืฉืœืžื” ื•ืื—ืช ืคืจื•ืกื” ื•ื‘ื•ืฆืข ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื” ื“ืืž' ืžืจ ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉืžื ื™ื— ืฉืœืžื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ื•ื‘ื•ืฆืข. ืžืื™ ื˜ืขืžื ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื” ื“ืจื›ื• ืฉืœ ืขื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื” ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื”. ื•ืžื ื™ื— ืฉืœืžื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ืขืœ ืฉื ืœื—ื ืžืฉื ื” ื•ื‘ื•ืฆืข ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืชื“ื™ืจื” ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื•ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื‘ื•ืฆืข ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ืฉืชื—ืชื™ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื”. ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื™ื—ื“ ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื›ืœื ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœื”ืกื‘ ื“ืืžืจื™' ืžืฆื” ืฆืจื™ื›๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝ ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ื•ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœืž' ื•ื“ืขื‘ื“ ื›ืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ ื•ื›ืžืจ ืขื‘ื“.",
272
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ื›ืš ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ื—ื–ืจืช ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื” ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ืžื˜ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื™ืคื” ืžืฉื•ื ืงืคื ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืืจืก ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื™ืจืง. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืชื•ืœืขืช. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœื™ืœื” ื•ืœื ื™ืจืื” ืื•ืชื• ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื”ื•ื ืจืคื•ืืชื• ืฉืžื•ื ืขืชื• ืžืœื”ื–ื™ืง.",
273
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ</b> ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื›ืœ ื”ืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืœื ื”ืกื‘ื” ื“ืืžืจื• ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืจื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื–ื›ืจ ืœื•ื™ืžืจืจื•. ื•ื”ืกื‘ื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœื—ืจื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืจื•ืจ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืคืช ืคื•ื˜ืจืชื• ืžืฉื•' ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™' ื”ื‘ืื™ื ืžื—ืžืช ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืœื ืœืคื ื™ื”ื ื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจื™ื”'.",
274
+ "<b>ื•ืœืื—ืจ</b> ืฉืื›ืœื• ืžืจื•' ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื ื•ื—ื–ืจืช ื•ื›ื•ืจื›ืŸ ื™ื—ื“ ื•ืื•ื›ืœื ื›ืื—ื“ ื‘ืœื ื”ืกื‘ื” ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ืžืจื•ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื” ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ื›ื”ืœืœ ื“ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื™ืื›ืœื•ื”ื•. ื•ื‘ืขืจื•ืš ืืžืจ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืœืœ ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื‘ืžืฆื”. ื•ื‘ืžืจื•ืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ. ื•ื›ื•ืจืš ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืชื•ืจื” ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžื‘ื˜ืœ ื–ื” ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ื“ืžืฆื” ื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืฉื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื™ืื›ืœื•ื”ื•. ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื“ืื™ื›ื ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื“ืœื™ื‘ื ืคืกื— ืœื. ืื™ืŸ ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช. ื“ืืชื™ ื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื•ืžื‘ื˜ืœ ื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื ืืœื ื–ื” ืขืฆืžื• ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืขืฆืžื•. ื•ืื—\"ื› ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื‘ืจื›ื ื• ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ื•ืขืœ ื”ื—ื–ืจืช ื•ืื›ื™ืœื” ื–ื• ืœื–ื›ื” ื‘ืขืœืžื ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”. ื›ืชื‘ ืื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืจื—ื™ ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืขืฉื•' ืžืฆื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื‘ื—ืจ ืœื ื™ืฉื•ื— ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืฉื” ื›ืจื™ื›ื” ื›ื”ืœืœ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชืขืœื” ืœื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืœื›ืจื™ื›ื” ื“ื”ืœืœ. ื“ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ืืชืžืจ ื”ืœื›ืชื ืœื ื›ืžืจ ื•ืœื ื›ืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื—ืžืจื ื‘ืชืจื•ื™ื”ื•. ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขื‘ื“ ืฉื™ืขืœื• ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื ื•ื‘ืฉื™ื—ืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื–ื”ืจ ืื‘ืœ ื˜ื•ืœ ื›ืจื™ืš ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืคืกืง. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Shulchan Orech": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ื›ืš ื ืžืฉืš ื‘ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ืœ ืฆืจื›ื•. ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฆื” ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ืฉืฉืžื• ื‘ื’ื ื™ื–ื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืคื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืฉืืจื•ืชื ืฆืจื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ืฉืžืœื•ืชื. ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข ื•ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ืœื•ื ืื—ืจ ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ืคืกืง ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ื‘ื˜ืขื ื”ืžืฆื” ื‘ืคื™ื•. ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ื–ื”ืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ืฉืœ ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื—ืฆื•ืช. ื•ืื ืœืื• ืœื ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื• ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ื›ื™ ืื ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Tzafun": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืื ืฉื›ื—</b> ื•ืœื ืื›ืœ ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื ื˜ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœื‘ืจืš ืื• ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื‘ ืœืŸ ื•ื ื‘ืจื™ืš ืื• ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืจืš ื›ื‘ืจ ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื‘ืจืš ื‘ืค\"ื” ื›ืชื‘ ืื‘ื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื™ ื•ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ืฉื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ื”ืžื•ืฆื™' ื•ื™ืื›ืœื ื”. ื•ืื ืœื ื ื–ื›ืจ ืขื“ ืฉื‘ืจืš ื‘ืค\"ื” ืœื ื™ืื›ืœื ื” ืคืขื ืื—ืจืช ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืขื•ื“ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ืค\"ื”. ื•ื ืžืฆื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’' ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ืฉืชื”. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื›ื“ืื™ ื”ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉืœื ื• ืœืกืžื•ืš ืขืœื™ื”ื ื›ื™ ื›ืœื ืฉืžื•ืจื•ืช ืžืฉืขืช ืœื™ืฉื” ื•ืžืฆื” ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืฉืื›ืœ ืชืขืœื” ืœื• ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืžืฆืช ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ. ื•ื”ืจ\"ืจ ืคืจืฅ ื›ืชื‘ ืืข\"ื’ ื“ืืžืจ ื”ื‘ ืœืŸ ื•ื ื‘ืจื™ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›' ืืข\"ื’ ื“ื‘ืขืœืž' ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืกื™ืœื•ืง ืฉืื ื™ ื”ื›ื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืžืฆื•ื” ื“ืจืžื™ ืจื—ืžื ' ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืช' ืืช ื›' ื“ืจื—ืžื ' ืกืžื›ื™ื ืŸ. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืฉื•ืชื” ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™' ื•ื’ื•' ืขืœื™ื• ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ. ื•ืื•ืž' ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ืชืœื™ื ื”ืงื•ืจืื™ื ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืฉืœืฉ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ืœื ื™ื• ื”ื•ื“ื•. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืืฉ ื•ืื ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื™' ื™ืกืคื™ืงื• ืœื• ืืฉืชื• ื•ื‘ื ื• ื”ืงื˜ืŸ. "
286
+ ]
287
+ ],
288
+ "Barech": {
289
+ "Birkat Hamazon": [
290
+ [],
291
+ [
292
+ "<b> ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ืฉืื›ืœ ื”ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ืœื• ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืžื•. ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืฉื•ืชื”. ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’' ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ืฉืชื” ื•ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืœืžื” ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ืฉืœื ื™ืฉืชื›ืจ ื•ื™ืฉื›ื— ืžืœื’ืžื•ืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ. ื•ืžืงืฉื” ื•ื”ื ื›ื‘ืจ ืžืฉื•ื›ืจ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืžืชืจืฅ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืžืฉื›ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืžืฉื›ืจ. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื‘ื”\"ื’ ื•ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ ื•ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ืฉืืกื•ืจ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืื—ืจ ืžืฆืช ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉืชื™ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื”ืœืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืžื ื“ื‘ืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืงื‘ืข ืขืฆืžื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื”ื™ื” ื›ืื•ื›ืœ ืคืกื— ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื—ื‘ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ื’ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืจืื” ื›ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช. ื•ื”ืจื™ ืชืคืก ืฉื™ื˜ืช ื”ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืขืกื•ืง ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ื”ื’ื“ืช ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื ืกื™ื ืฉืขืฉื” ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืขื“ ืฉืœื ืชื—ื˜ืคื ื• ืฉื ื”. ื™ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืฉ ืื ื™ืฉืชื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ื™ืฉืชื›ืจ. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ืชื ื‘ืชื•ืกืคืชื ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœืขืกื•ืง ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ื‘ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื–ืงื ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง. "
293
+ ]
294
+ ],
295
+ "Third Cup of Wine": [],
296
+ "Pour Out Thy Wrath": [
297
+ [
298
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ</b> ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืกืžืš ืžืŸ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื›ื ื’ื“ ื•ื”ื‘ืืชื™ ืืชื›ื ื•ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืžื™ื ื™ืฉืชื”."
299
+ ],
300
+ [
301
+ "<b>ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš ืขืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืืจื‘ืข ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืข ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืœื”ืฉืงื•ืช ืืช ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื ื•ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื‘ื–ื” ื”ื›ื•ืก ืื ื• ืžืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื”ืžืฆื•ื” ืžืขืชื” ืขืฉื” ืžื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื ื• ืœืฉืคื•ืš ืื•ืชื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืขืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื."
302
+ ]
303
+ ]
304
+ },
305
+ "Hallel": {
306
+ "Second Half of Hallel": [
307
+ [],
308
+ [
309
+ "ืขืœ ืืžืชืš ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”.",
310
+ "ื•ืœื ื™ื”ืœื›ื• ื‘ืœื ื ื•ืŸ ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”.",
311
+ "ื™ื”ื’ื• ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”.",
312
+ "ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื‘ื•ื˜ื— ื‘ื”ื ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”.",
313
+ "ื ืชืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื‘ืœื ื”\"ื."
314
+ ],
315
+ [
316
+ "ืžืŸ ื“ืžืขื” ื‘ื ื•\"ืŸ ืืจื•ื›ื”. "
317
+ ],
318
+ [
319
+ "ื ื’ื“ื” ื ื ื”ื“' ื‘ืจืคื™.",
320
+ "ื‘ืชื•ื›ื›ื™ ื”ื›' ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฆื™\"ืจื™. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื—ื™ืจ\"ืง."
321
+ ],
322
+ [],
323
+ [],
324
+ [],
325
+ [],
326
+ [],
327
+ [
328
+ "ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื’ืžืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ืื•ืžืจ ื™ื”ืœืœื•ืš ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืฉื™ืจ ื•ื—ื•ืชื ืžืœืš ืžื”ื•ืœืœ ื‘ืชื•ืฉื‘ื—ื•ืช ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ. ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื ืจืฆื” ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืื•ืž' ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืœืœ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ื•ื“ื• ืœื”' ื›ื™ ื˜ื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื“ื• ืœืืœืงื™ ื”ืืœืงื™ื ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื•' ื—ืกื“ื™' ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›\"ื• ื“ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœื ื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืŸ ืื•ืชื ื‘ืจื—ืžื™ื• ื•ื‘ืจื•ื‘ ื—ืกื“ื™ื• ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื ืฉืžืช ื›ืœ ื—ื™ ื•ื—ื•ืชื ื‘ื™ืฉืชื‘ื— ื•ื—ื•ืชื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™\"ืฅ ื’ื™ืืช. ื•ื”ืจ\"ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื™ ื“ื™ ื‘ื—ืชื™ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืชื‘ื— ื•ืœืžื” ื™ื—ืชื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืคืขืžื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืกื“ืจ ืจื‘ื™' ืกืขื“ื™ื” ื–\"ืœ. "
329
+ ]
330
+ ],
331
+ "Songs of Praise and Thanks": [],
332
+ "Fourth Cup of Wine": [
333
+ [
334
+ "ื•ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ืช ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื™ืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™' ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื›ื•ืก ื•ื›ื•ืก ืžืืจื‘ืขืชืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ. ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ืื™ ื›ืชื‘ ืœื ื—ื–ื™ ืœื ื ืžืื™ ื“ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืชืจ ื›ืœื”ื• ื›ืฉื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื—ื“ื ืžืฆื•ื” ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืœื™ื›ื ื ืžืœืš ื‘ื‘ืจื›ื” ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื™. ื•ื”ืจื™ื\"ืฃ ื›ืชื‘ ื“ื‘ืชืจ ืชืจื™ ื›ืฉื™ ืงืžืื™. ื•ื‘ืชืจ ืชืจื™ ื›ืฉื™ ื‘ืชืจืื™ ืžื‘ืจ' ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ. ื•ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื›ืชื‘ ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉื”ืจื™\"ืฃ ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•' ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื–ื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื•ื–ื” ืœืฉืจื•ืช. ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•' ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื–ื” ืœืฉืจื•ืช ืžื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช. ื•ืื ื™ ืœื ื›ืŸ ืงื‘ืœืชื™ ืืœื ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืจื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืชื•' ื•ืขื“ื™ืฃ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืžืœืฉืจื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืจื•ืช ื“ื”ื ืขื“ื™ืฃ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืžืœืฉืจื•ืช. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื›ืœื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืžื ื“ื‘ืจ."
335
+ ]
336
+ ]
337
+ },
338
+ "Nirtzah": {
339
+ "Chasal Siddur Pesach": [],
340
+ "L'Shana HaBaa": [],
341
+ "And It Happened at Midnight": [
342
+ [],
343
+ [],
344
+ [
345
+ "<b>ืื– ืจื•ื‘ ื ืกื™ื ื”ืคืœืืช ื‘ืœื™ืœื”.</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžืกืคืจ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืืจืขื• ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื—. ื’ืจ ืฆื“ืง ืื‘ืจื”ื. ื ืฆื—ืชื•. ื ืชืช ืœื• ื ืฆื—ื•ืŸ ื•ื’ื‘ื•ืจ' ืขืœ ื”ืžืœื•ื›ื” ื›ื ื—ืœืง ืœื• ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื—ืœืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื• ื•ื™ื›ื. ื“ื ืช ืžืœืš ื’ืจืจ. ืื‘ื™ืžืœืš. ื‘ื—ืœื•ื ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ' ื•ื™ื‘ื ื”' ืืœ ืื‘ื™ืžืœืš ื‘ื—ืœื•ื ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ื”ืคื—ื“ืช ืืจืžื™ ืœื‘ืŸ ื”ืืจืžื™. ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ืฉืจ ืœืืœ ื•ื™ื•ื›ืœ ื‘ื• ืœื™ืœื” ื›ืฉื ืื‘ืง ืขื ื”ืžืœืืš. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื–ืจ ืืœ ืžืœืืš ื•ื™ื•ื›ืœ. ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืžืจื™ืช ืขื ืืœืงื™ื. ื–ืจืข ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ ืคืชืจื•ืก. ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื˜ื™ืกืช ื ื’ื™ื“ ื—ืจื•ืฉืช. ืขืคื™ืคืช ื›ืžื• ื™ื ื•ื•ืฉ ืขืœื™ ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉืžื”ืจ ื‘ืชืฉืข ืžืื•ืช ืจื›ื‘ ื‘ืจื–ืœ. ื ื’ื™ื“ ื—ืจื•ืฉืช ืกื™ืกืจื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืจื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื. ืกืœื™ืช ื›ื›ื‘ื™ ืื•ืจ ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื›ื›ื‘ื™ื ืžืžืฉื™ืœื•ืช' ื ืœื—ืžื• ืขื ืกื™ืกืจื. ื™ืขืฅ ืžื—ืจืฃ ืกื ื—ืจื™ื‘ ืื—ืจ ืฉืœื— ืขื‘ื“ื™ื• ืœื—ืจืฃ ื”'. ืœื ื•ืคืฃ ืื•ื•ื™ ื™ื ื•ืคืฃ ื™ื“ื• ื”ืจ ื‘ืช ืฆื™ื•ืŸ. ืื•ื•ื™ ืขืœ ืฉื ื›ื™ ื‘ื—ืจ ื”' ื‘ืฆื™ื•ืŸ ืื•ื”. ื”ื•ื‘ืฉืช ืคื’ืจื™ื• ืฉื ืืž' ื•ื”ื ื” ื›ืœื ืคื’ืจื™ ืžืชื™ื. ื›ืจืข ื‘ืœ. ืขื– ืฉื ืืžืจ ื›ืจืข ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ื ื ื‘ื•. ืžืฆื‘ื• ืฆืœื ืฉื”ืงื™' ื ื‘ื•ื›ื“ื ืฆืจ ื‘ื‘ืงืข' ื“ื•ืจื. ืœืื™ืฉ ื—ืžื•ื“ื•ืช. ื“ื ื™ืืœ. ื ื’ืœื” ืจื–. ื”ื—ืœื•ื ืฉื—ืœื ื ื‘ื•ื›ื“ื ืฆืจ. ืžืฉืชื›ืจ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืงื“ืฉ. ื‘ืœืฉืฆืจ ืฉืฆื•' ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื›ืœื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ื. ื ื”ืจื’ ื‘ื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืœืœื™ื ืงื˜ื™ืœ ื‘ืœื˜ืฉืฆืจ. ื ื•ืฉืข ืžื‘ื•ืจ ืืจื™ื•ืช ื“ื ื™ืืœ. ืคื•ืชืจ ื‘ืขืชื•ืชื™ ืœื™ืœื” ื”ืคื•ืชืจ ื”ื—ืœื•ืžื•ืช. ืฉื ืจืื™' ื‘ืขืชืชื™ ืœื™ืœื”. ื™\"ืž ื‘ืขืชื•ืชื™ ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืชื”. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื—ืœื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืžื‘ื”ื™ืœื™ื ืžืคื—ื™ื“ื™ื ื”ืื“ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ืื” ื ื˜ืจ ืื’ื’ื™. ื”ืžืŸ. ื‘ื ื“ื“ ืฉื ืช ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ' ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื”ื•ื ื ื“ื“ื” ืฉื ืช ื”ืžืœืš. ืคื•ืจื” ืชื“ืจื•ืš. ื›ืžื• ืคื•ืจื” ื“ืจื›ืชื™ ืœื‘ื“ื™. ื›ืฉื•ืžืจ ืžื” ืžืœื™ืœื”. ืœืื“ื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืฉื ื“ื•ืžื”. ืืœื™ ืงื•ืจื ืžืฉืขื™ืจ ืฉื•ืžืจ ืžื” ืžืœื™ืœื” ื•ื›ื•'. ื•ื“ืข ืฉื›ืœ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉื ืขืฉื• ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื”ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื—. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ื™ืžืœืš. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืคืจืขื”. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ื’ื“ื•ืŸ. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืกื™ืกืจื. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ื“ื ื™ืืœ. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืกื ื—ืจื™ื‘. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืžืฉื™ื— ืœืขืชื™ื“ ืœื‘ื. ื•ืฉื ื“ื‘ืจ ืืชื ื‘ืงืจ ืœืฆื“ื™ืงื™ื ื•ื’ื ืœื™ืœื” ืœืจืฉืขื™ื."
346
+ ]
347
+ ],
348
+ "Zevach Pesach": [
349
+ [],
350
+ [
351
+ "<b>ืื•ืžืฅ ื’ื‘ื•ืจื•ืชื™ืš ื”ืคืœืืช ื‘ืคืกื—.</b> ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžืคืจืฉ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืืจืขื• ื‘ืคืกื—. ื‘ืจืืฉ ื›ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ื•ืช ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ื”ืžื•ืขื“ื™ื. ื’ืœื™ืช ืœืื–ืจื—ื™. ืœืื‘ืจื”ื. ื—ืฆื™ ืœื™ืœ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื—ืœืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœื™ืœื”. ื“ืœืชื™ื• ื“ืคืงืช ื›ื—ื•ื ื”ื™ื•ื. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืจื ืืœื™ื• ื”' ื•ื›ื•' ื”ื•ื ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ืคืชื— ื”ืื”ืœ ื›ื—ื•ื ื”ื™ื•ื. ื”ืกืขื™ื“ ื ื•ืฆืฆื™ื ื”ืื›ื™ืœ ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ืฉื”ื ื ื•ืฆืฆื™ื ื›ืขื™ืŸ ื ื—ืฉืช ืงืœืœ. ืขื•ื’ื•ืช ืžืฆื•ืช. ืฉื ืืžืจ ืœื•ืฉื™ ื•ืขืฉื™ ืขื’ื•ืช. ื•ืคืกื— ื”ื™ื”. ื•ืืœ ื”ื‘ืงืจ ืจืฅ ืื‘ืจื”ื ื›ื“ืคืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ. ื–ื•ืขืžื• ืกื“ื•ืžื™ื™ื. ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื”ื›ืขื™ืก ื”ืกื“ื•ืžื™ื™ื ื•ืฉืจืคื ื‘ืืฉ ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”' ื”ืžื˜ื™ืจ ืขืœ ืกื“ื•ื ื’ืคืจื™ืช ื•ืืฉ. ื—ื•ืœืฅ ืœื•ื˜ ืžื”ื. ืœื•ื˜ ื ื•ืฆืœ ืžืžื”ืคื›ืช ืกื“ื•ื ื‘ื–ื›ื•ืช ืื‘ืจื”ื. ื•ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ืœื™ืœ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืœ ืคืกื—. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื‘ืื• ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ืกื“ื•ืžื” ื‘ืขืจื‘. ื˜ืื˜ืืช ืื“ืžืช ืžื•ืฃ ื•ื ื•ืฃ ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื ' ื•ื˜ืื˜ืช ื™ื” ื‘ืžื˜ืื˜ื™ ื”ืฉืžื“. ืงื” ืจืืฉ ื›ืœ ืื•ืŸ ืžื—ืฆืช. ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืžื—ืฆืช ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื›ืžื• ืจืืฉื™ืช ืื•ื ื. ืฉื ' ื•ื”' ื”ื›ื” ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื›ื‘ื™\"ืจ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืฉื ืงืจ' ื›ื‘ื™ืจ ื›ื— ืขืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ืฉื ืงืจืื• ื‘ืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ืคืกื—ืช ืฉื ' ื•ืคืกื—ืชื™ ืขืœื™ื›ื ืœื‘ืœืชื™ ืชืช ืžืฉื—ื™ืช. ืฉื ' ื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื›ืš ื ื’ืฃ ืœืžืฉื—ื™ืช ื•ื›ื•'. ืžืกื•ื’ืจืช ื™ืจื™ื—ื• ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืกื•ื’ืจืช ื•ืžืกื•ื’ืจืช. ืกื•ื’ืจื” ื ืžืกืจ' ื‘ื™ื“ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื‘ืขืชื•ืชื™ ืคืกื—. ืกื•ื’ืจื” ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžืกื™ืจื”. ื›ืžื• ื”ื™ืกื’ื™ืจื•ื ื™ ื‘ืขืœื™ ืงืขื™ืœื”. ื ืฉืžื“ื” ืžื“ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื’ื“ืขื•ืŸ. ื‘ืฆืœื™ืœ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ ืขื•ืžืจ. ื‘ื–ื›ื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืžืจ ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื ื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืชื”ืคืš ื•ื›ื•'. ืคื•ืœ ื•ืœื•ื“. ืฉืจื™ ืžืœืš ืืžื•ืจ. ืขื•ื“ ื”ื™ื•ื ื‘ื ื•ืช ืœืขืžื•ื“ ื–ื”ื• ืกื ื—ืจื™ื‘ ืžืœืš ืืฉื•ืจ ื›ื“ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืค' ื—ืœืง. ืคืก ื™ื“ ื›ืชื‘ื”. ืขืœ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื ื ืžื ื ืชืงืœ ื•ืคืจืฉื™ืŸ. ื›ื“ื™ ืœืงืขืงืข ืฆื•ืœ. ื–ื” ื‘ื‘ืœ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœืฆื•ืœื” ื—ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืœ ื‘ืœืฉืฆืจ ื•ื›ื•'. ืฆืคื” ื”ืฆืคื™ืช ื‘ืœืฉืฆืจ ืฆื•ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื›ืœื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ื ื”ื•ื ื•ืฉืจื™ื• ื ืฉื™ื• ื•ืคืœื’ืฉื™ื•. ืงื”ืœ ื›ื ืกื” ื”ื“ืกื” ืืฉืช. ืฆื•ื ืœืฉืœืฉ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื›ื ื•ืก ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื”ื•ื“ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืฆื•ืžื• ืขืœื™ ืฉืœืฉืช ื™ืžื™ื ืœื™ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ื. ืจืืฉ ืžื‘ื™ืช ืจืฉืข ื”ืžืŸ. ืฉืชื™ ืืœื” ืจื’ืข. ื›ืžื• ืฉืืž' ื”ื ื‘ื™'. ื•ืชื‘ื•ืื ื™ ืœืš ืฉืชื™ ืืœื” ื›ื•'. ืฉื›ื•ืœ ื•ืืœืžื•ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“. ืœืขื•ืฆื™ืช. ื‘ืช ืื“ื•' ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืืจืฅ ืขื•ืฅ. ื‘ืคืกื— ื›ื“ืืžืจื™' ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื ื’ืืœื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ืขืชื™ื“ื™ื ืœื™ื’ืืœ."
352
+ ]
353
+ ],
354
+ "Ki Lo Na'e": [],
355
+ "Adir Hu": [],
356
+ "Sefirat HaOmer": [],
357
+ "Echad Mi Yodea": [],
358
+ "Chad Gadya": []
359
+ }
360
+ },
361
+ "schema": {
362
+ "heTitle": "ืงืžื—ื ื“ืื‘ื™ืฉื•ื ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
363
+ "enTitle": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
364
+ "key": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "nodes": [
366
+ {
367
+ "heTitle": "ืงื“ืฉ",
368
+ "enTitle": "Kadesh"
369
+ },
370
+ {
371
+ "heTitle": "ื•ืจื—ืฅ",
372
+ "enTitle": "Urchatz"
373
+ },
374
+ {
375
+ "heTitle": "ื›ืจืคืก",
376
+ "enTitle": "Karpas"
377
+ },
378
+ {
379
+ "heTitle": "ื™ื—ืฅ",
380
+ "enTitle": "Yachatz"
381
+ },
382
+ {
383
+ "heTitle": "ืžื’ื™ื“",
384
+ "enTitle": "Magid",
385
+ "nodes": [
386
+ {
387
+ "heTitle": "ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื",
388
+ "enTitle": "Ha Lachma Anya"
389
+ },
390
+ {
391
+ "heTitle": "ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”",
392
+ "enTitle": "Four Questions"
393
+ },
394
+ {
395
+ "heTitle": "ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•",
396
+ "enTitle": "We Were Slaves in Egypt"
397
+ },
398
+ {
399
+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง",
400
+ "enTitle": "Story of the Five Rabbis"
401
+ },
402
+ {
403
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื",
404
+ "enTitle": "The Four Sons"
405
+ },
406
+ {
407
+ "heTitle": "ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ",
408
+ "enTitle": "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh"
409
+ },
410
+ {
411
+ "heTitle": "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•",
412
+ "enTitle": "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers"
413
+ },
414
+ {
415
+ "heTitle": "ืืจืžื™ ืื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™",
416
+ "enTitle": "First Fruits Declaration"
417
+ },
418
+ {
419
+ "heTitle": "ืขืฉืจ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช",
420
+ "enTitle": "The Ten Plagues"
421
+ },
422
+ {
423
+ "heTitle": "ื“ื™ื™ื ื•",
424
+ "enTitle": "Dayenu"
425
+ },
426
+ {
427
+ "heTitle": "ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ",
428
+ "enTitle": "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things"
429
+ },
430
+ {
431
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœืœ",
432
+ "enTitle": "First Half of Hallel"
433
+ },
434
+ {
435
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ื”",
436
+ "enTitle": "Second Cup of Wine"
437
+ }
438
+ ]
439
+ },
440
+ {
441
+ "heTitle": "ืจื—ืฆื”",
442
+ "enTitle": "Rachtzah"
443
+ },
444
+ {
445
+ "heTitle": "ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฆื”",
446
+ "enTitle": "Motzi Matzah"
447
+ },
448
+ {
449
+ "heTitle": "ืžืจื•ืจ",
450
+ "enTitle": "Maror"
451
+ },
452
+ {
453
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืจืš",
454
+ "enTitle": "Korech"
455
+ },
456
+ {
457
+ "heTitle": "ืฉื•ืœื—ืŸ ืขื•ืจืš",
458
+ "enTitle": "Shulchan Orech"
459
+ },
460
+ {
461
+ "heTitle": "ืฆืคื•ืŸ",
462
+ "enTitle": "Tzafun"
463
+ },
464
+ {
465
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจืš",
466
+ "enTitle": "Barech",
467
+ "nodes": [
468
+ {
469
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ",
470
+ "enTitle": "Birkat Hamazon"
471
+ },
472
+ {
473
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช",
474
+ "enTitle": "Third Cup of Wine"
475
+ },
476
+ {
477
+ "heTitle": "ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš",
478
+ "enTitle": "Pour Out Thy Wrath"
479
+ }
480
+ ]
481
+ },
482
+ {
483
+ "heTitle": "ื”ืœืœ",
484
+ "enTitle": "Hallel",
485
+ "nodes": [
486
+ {
487
+ "heTitle": "ืžืกื™ื™ืžื™ื ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ",
488
+ "enTitle": "Second Half of Hallel"
489
+ },
490
+ {
491
+ "heTitle": "ืžื–ืžื•ืจื™ ื”ื•ื“ื™ื”",
492
+ "enTitle": "Songs of Praise and Thanks"
493
+ },
494
+ {
495
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช",
496
+ "enTitle": "Fourth Cup of Wine"
497
+ }
498
+ ]
499
+ },
500
+ {
501
+ "heTitle": "ื ืจืฆื”",
502
+ "enTitle": "Nirtzah",
503
+ "nodes": [
504
+ {
505
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืกืœ ืกื™ื“ื•ืจ ืคืกื—",
506
+ "enTitle": "Chasal Siddur Pesach"
507
+ },
508
+ {
509
+ "heTitle": "ืœืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื”",
510
+ "enTitle": "L'Shana HaBaa"
511
+ },
512
+ {
513
+ "heTitle": "ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœื™ืœื”",
514
+ "enTitle": "And It Happened at Midnight"
515
+ },
516
+ {
517
+ "heTitle": "ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื—",
518
+ "enTitle": "Zevach Pesach"
519
+ },
520
+ {
521
+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื‘ืžืœื•ื›ื”",
522
+ "enTitle": "Ki Lo Na'e"
523
+ },
524
+ {
525
+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื”ื•ื",
526
+ "enTitle": "Adir Hu"
527
+ },
528
+ {
529
+ "heTitle": "ืกืคื™ืจืช ื”ืขื•ืžืจ",
530
+ "enTitle": "Sefirat HaOmer"
531
+ },
532
+ {
533
+ "heTitle": "ืื—ื“ ืžื™ ื™ื•ื“ืข",
534
+ "enTitle": "Echad Mi Yodea"
535
+ },
536
+ {
537
+ "heTitle": "ื—ื“ ื’ื“ื™ื",
538
+ "enTitle": "Chad Gadya"
539
+ }
540
+ ]
541
+ }
542
+ ]
543
+ }
544
+ }
json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah/Hebrew/merged.json ADDED
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+ {
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+ "title": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "language": "he",
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+ "versionTitle": "merged",
5
+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org/Kimcha_Davshuna_on_Pesach_Haggadah",
6
+ "text": {
7
+ "Kadesh": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ื‘ื•ืื</b> ืžื‘ื™ืช ื”ื›ื ืกืช ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื™ืขืจืš ืฉืœื—ื ื• ื‘ื“ืจืš ื—ื™ืจื•ืช ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืฉื ื‘ืืจ. ื•ืœื ื™ืฉื‘ื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉืชื—ืฉืš ื”ื™ื•ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื•ื“ืื™ ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืขืช ืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช. ื•ืืคื™' ืขื ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ื™ืคื—ืชื• ืœื• ืžื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™' ื•ืฉื•ืชื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื•ื ืจืžื– ื‘ืค' ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ืฉืœื— ืคืจืขื” ืืช ื”ืขื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืชืจื™' ื•ื™ืกื‘ ืืœืงื™' ืืช ื”ืขื ื›ื™ ื›ืฉื ื’ืืœื• ืื›ืœื• ื“ืจืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ืžืฆื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื‘ื—ืจ ื‘ื™ื™ืŸ ืื“ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœื“ื ืฉื”ื–ื• ืขืœ ื”ืžืฉืงื•ืฃ ื•ื”ืžื–ื•ื–ื•ืช ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื“ื™ื• ื ืงื™ื•ืช ื™ืฉื‘ ืืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื•ื™ืงื“ืฉ ืืžื ื ืจื•ื‘ ื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื ื•ื”ื’ื™' ืœื‘ื“ื•ืง ื ืงื‘ื™ื”ื ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื•ื‘ืขืœื™ืœื” ื–ื• ืจื•ื—ืฆื™ื ื™ื“ื™ื”ื. ืฉืื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื“ื™ื• ื ืงื™ื•ืช ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืœืจื—ื•ืฅ ืื•ืช' ื‘ื—ื ื ื•ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื ื˜ื™' ื™ื“ื™ื. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืขืœ ื ื˜ื™ืœื” ื–ื• ืœื ื™ื‘ื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืจืง ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืื—ืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉ. ื•ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื”ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืคืจื•ืช ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืžื’ืกื™ ื”ืจื•ื—. ื•ื˜ืขื ืœืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืืœื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ื’ืื•ืœื” ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืค' ื•ืืจื. ืœื›ืŸ ืืžื•' ืœื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืื ื™ ื”' ื•ื”ื•ืฆืืชื™ ืืชื›ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื”ืฆืœืชื™ ืืชื›ื ืžืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื. ื•ื’ืืœืชื™ ืืชื›ื ื‘ื–ืจื•ืข ื ื˜ื•ื™ื”. ื•ืœืงื—ืชื™ ืืชื›ื ืœื™ ืœืขื. ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ื•ื”ื•ืฆืืชื™ ื•ื”ืฆืœืชื™ ื•ื’ืืœืชื™ ื•ืœืงื—ืชื™. ื•ื™\"ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืืžื•ืจื™' ื‘ืคืจืขื”. ื•ื›ื•ืก ืคืจืขื” ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืืฉื—ื˜ ืื•ืชื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืคืจืขื”. ื•ื ืชืช ื›ื•ืก ืคืจืขื” ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืืชืŸ ืืช ื”ื›ื•ืก ืขืœ ื™ื“ ืคืจืขื”. ื•ื™\"ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช. ื•ื™\"ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืœื”ืฉืงื•' ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื. ื›ื™ ื‘ื” ืืžืจ ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ืงื— ืืช ื›ื•ืก ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืžื” ื”ื–ืืช ื•ื”ืฉืงื™ืช ืื•ืชื• ืืช ื›ืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื›ื•ืก ื–ื”ื‘ ื‘ื‘ืœ ื‘ื™ื“ ื”' ืžืฉื‘ืจืช ื›ืœ ื”ืืจืฅ ื•ื’ื•' ื›ื™ ื›ื•ืก ื‘ื™ื“ ื”' ื•ื™ื™ืŸ ื—ืžืจ ืžืœื ืžืกืš. ื™ืžื˜ืจ ืขืœ ืจืฉืขื™ื ืคื—ื™' ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืจื•ื— ื–ืœืขืคื•ืช ืžื ืช ื›ื•ืกื. ื›ื ื’ื“ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ื ื—ืžื•ืช. ื”' ืžื ืช ื—ืœืงื™ ื•ื›ื•ืกื™ ืชืขืจื•' ืœืคื ื™ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื•ื›ื•' ืจืืฉื™ ื›ื•ืกื™ ืจื•ื™ื”. ื›ื•ืก ื™ืฉื•ืขื•ืช ืืฉื. ืคื™' ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ื“ ืœื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืžืฉื™ื— ื•ื' ืœืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื. ื™ืฉ ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉืชื™ื™ืช ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื›ืžื• ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืจื•ืจ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืœืชืจืฅ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืืœื ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ื” ืฉืขื•ืฉื™' ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื‘ืœื ื”ืคืกืง. ืื‘ืœ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•' ืฉืขื•ืฉ' ืžืฆื•ื” ืื—ืช ืขืœ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื‘ื”ืคืกืง ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื”ื. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ืจื‘ ื ื˜ืจื•ื ืื™ ื’ืื•ืŸ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•' ืฉืœ ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืฉืœื ืœืฉืชื•' ื•ืื ืœื ืฉืชื” ืœื ื™ื‘ื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื•ืชื• ื•ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืžืœืงื•' ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ. ื•ืžื” ืฉืืžืจ ืืคื™' ืขื ื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืกื‘ ืจ\"ืœ ืืคื™' ืขื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจื’ื™ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืกื‘. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืž' ืœืขืฉื™ืจ ืฉืจื’ื™ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืกื‘ ืขืœ ื›ืœื™ ืžืœืช ื•ื›ืจืคืก ื•ืชื›ืœืช. ื•ื”ื”ืกื‘ื” ืฆืจื™ื›' ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืขืœ ืฆื“ ืฉืžืืœ. ื•ื”ืกื‘ืช ื™ืžื™ืŸ ืื™ื ื” ื”ืกื‘ื” ืฉืžื ื™ืงื“ื™ื ืงื ื” ืœื•ืฉื˜. ื•ืืฉื” ืื™ื ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ื”ืกื‘ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืืžืช ื‘ืขืœื” ืขืœื™ื”. ื•ืื ื”ื™ื ืืฉื” ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ืืœืžื ื” ื•ื’ืจื•ืฉื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืฉื•ืช ืื—ืจื™ื ืขืœื™ื”. ื‘ืŸ ืืฆืœ ืื‘ื™ื• ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื•ื ืจื‘ื• ืžื•ื‘ื”ืง ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ืชืœืžื™ื“ ืืฆืœ ืจื‘ื• ืื™ื ื• ืžืกื‘ ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ืชืŸ ืœื• ืจื‘ื• ืจืฉื•ืช. ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžืกื‘ ืœืคื ื™ ืจื‘ื• ื•ืื ื”ื™ื” ืื‘ื™ื• ืจื‘ื• ืžืกื‘ ืœืคื ื™ื•. ืฉื”ืื‘ ืžื•ื—ืœ ืขืœ ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ืœื‘ื ื• ื•ื”ื•ื ื’ืก ื‘ื• ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืŸ ื‘ืชืœืžื™ื“ ืœืคื ื™ ืจื‘ื•. ืฉืžืฉ ืœืคื ื™ ืจื‘ื• ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ืื‘ื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื™ ืฉื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจื’ื™ืœื•ืช ื‘ืืจืฆื ื• ืœื”ืกื‘ ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื›ื“ืจื›ื• ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืกื‘. ",
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+ "<b>ื•ืžื›ื™ื ื™ืŸ</b> ืงืขืจื” ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื’' ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื‘' ืžื™ื ื™ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื•ื—ืจื•ืกืช. ื”ื‘' ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ืŸ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืฆืœื™ ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ื•ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืžื‘ื•ืฉืœ ื–ื›ืจ ืœื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื”ืžื‘ื•ืฉืœืช ื”ื ืื›ืœืช ืงื•ื“ื ืœืคืกื— ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื ื”ืคืกื— ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข. ื•ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื™ืœื™ืฃ ืœื” ืžืงืจื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืขืฆื ืœื ืชืฉื‘ืจื• ื‘ื• ื•ืืœื• ื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืจืขื‘ื•ืŸ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ืœื—ื•ืฉ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื‘ื™ืจืช ืขืฆื. ื•ื›ืš ื”ื™ื ื”ืžืฆื•ื” ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ื‘ื\"ื™ ืืงื‘\"ื• ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืžื ื• ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืืงื‘\"ื• ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ื–ื‘ื—. ื•ื›ืฉื’ืžืจื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืืช ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืžื‘ื™ืื™ื ื”ืคืกื— ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™' ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข. ื•ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื—ืœ ื™\"ื“ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื›ื™ ืื ื”ืฆืœื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ื•ืœื ื”ืžื‘ื•ืฉืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืฉืœื ื”ื™ืชื” ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื“ื•ื—ื” ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืื•ืชื• ื–ืžืŸ. ื•ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืฉืœื•ืงื—ื™' ืœื‘' ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™' ื‘ืขื ื•ื“ืจื•ืขื. ื‘ืขื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื ืจื—ืžื ื ืœืžืคืจืง ื™ืชื ื. ื•ื“ืจื•ืขื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื“ืคืจืง ื™ืชื ื ื‘ื“ืจื•ืขื ืžืจืžืžื. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืžื™ื ื™ ื™ืจืงื•ืช. ื ื”ื’ื• ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื›ืจืคืก. ื›ื™ ื›ืฉืชื”ืคื•ืš ื›ืจ\"ืค ื™ื”ื™ื” ืคืจ\"ืš ื•ื”ืก' ืจืžื– ืœืฉืฉื™' ืจื‘ื•ื. ื•ื”ืื—ืจ ื”ื—ื–ืจืช ืฉื ืงืจืืช ื—ืกื ืฉื—ืก ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•. ื•ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœื˜ื™ื˜ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื‘ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื•ืขื•ืฉื™' ืื•ืชื” ืžื™ื ื™ ืคืจื•ืช ืžืชื•ืงื™ื ื•ื—ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืžืชื‘ืœื™' ืื•ืชื” ื‘ืชื‘ืœื™' ืœื“ืžื•ืชื” ืœื—ื•ืžืจ ืขื ื”ืชื‘ืŸ ื•ืžืฉื™ืžื™' ื‘ื” ืชืคื•ื—ื™ื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืชื—ืช ื”ืชืคื•ื— ืขื•ืจืจืชื™ืš. ื•ืื’ื•ื–ื™' ื–ื›ืจ ืืœ ื’ื ืช ืื’ื•ื– ื™ืจื“ืชื™. ื•ืชืื ื™ื ืœื–ื›ืจ ื”ืชืื ' ื—ื ื˜ื” ืคื’ื™ื”. ืชืžืจื™' ื–ืืช ืงื•ืžืชืš ื“ืžืชื” ืœืชืžืจ. ื•ืชื‘ืœื™ืŸ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืงื ื” ื•ืงื ืžื•ืŸ ืฉื“ื•ืžื™ืŸ ืœืชื‘ืŸ.",
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+ "<b>ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ</b> ืžืืŸ ื“ื‘ืขื™ ืœื‘ืจื•ื›ื™ ื‘ืชืจื™ ื•ืชืœืช ืื‘ืชื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ืขื‘ื™ื“ ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ืื›ื™ืœ ื›ืœ ืžืื™ ื“ื‘ืขื™ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ื”ื“ืจ ืžื‘ืจืš ืœื›ืœ ื—ื“ ื•ื—ื“ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ืฉืชื• ืื™ื ื”ื• ื›ืกื ื“ืงื“ื•ืฉื ื•ืื’ื“ืชื ื•ืื›ืœื™ ื™ืจืงื™ ื•ืžืฆื” ื•ืื™ื”ื• ืœื ืื›ื™ืœ ืžื“ื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื”ื• ื•ืฉื‘ื™ืง ืœื”ื• ืœืžื’ืžืจ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™ื”ื•. ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ ืื ื”ื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ื”ื“ืจ ืื–ื™ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืชื ืื—ืจื™ื ื. ื•ืขื‘ื™ื“ ื”ื›ื™ ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ื‘ื™ืชื ื•ื‘ื™ืชื. ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ื ื”ื ื™ื ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื“ืื™ื ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืืœื ืื ื›ืŸ ื™ื”ื™ื” ื ื”ื ื” ืขืžื”ื ืฉืื ื™ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืœื—ื ืฉืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื”ื™ื•ื ืฉื”ื ื—ื•ื‘ื”. ื”ืœื›ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืืฃ ืขืœ ื’ื‘ ื“ืื™ื ื• ื ื”ื ื”. ื•ืžื™ื”ื• ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ืš ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืœื ืœื˜ืขื•ื ืžื“ื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื”ื•. ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ. ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืื–ื™ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ื’ืžืจ ื”ืœื™ืœื ื•ืฉืชื™ ื›ืกื ื“ื”ืœื™ืœื. ื•ืื™ ื‘ืขื™ ืœืืงื“ื•ืžื™ ืœื”ื ื™ื ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ืžื‘ืจืš ืœื™ื” ื•ืœื ืื›ื™ืœ ื•ืœื ื˜ืขื ืžื“ื™ ื‘ื”ื“ื™ื”ื• ื•ื”ื“ืจ ืื–ื™ืœ ืœื‘ื™ืชื™ื” ื•ืžืงื“ืฉ ื”ืจืฉื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ื•. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืœื”ืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ืœื•ืžืจ ืขื“ ื’ืืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืœื‘ืจืš ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื”ื•ืœืš ืœืฉืืจ ื‘ืชื™ื ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื—ื•ื–ืจ ืœื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ืœืคื™ ืฉืœื ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืœืขืงื•ืจ ืžืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ืœืœื›ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืื—ืจ ืืคื™ืœื• ื”ื ื™ื— ืฉื ื–ืงืŸ ืื• ื—ื•ืœื” ืืœื ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืžืฆื•ื” ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ืœืงืจืืช ื—ืชืŸ ืื• ืœืงืจืืช ื›ืœื”. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื’ื ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื” ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืืชื ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงื™ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชืŸ. ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืฆื•ืช ื—ืชืŸ ื•ื›ืœื” ื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช. ื•ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืœื• ืœืขืงื•ืจ ื•ืœืœื›ืช ืœืงืจืืชื. ืื‘ืœ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืงื™ืื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื ืื™ื ื” ืžืฆื•ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืื—ืจ ืฉื’ืžืจ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ืื• ืงื•ื“ื. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืขื˜ื•ืจ ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ื“ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ืืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื˜ื•ืขื ืขืžื”ื. ืฉืœื ืืžืจื• ืืœื ื‘ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืœื—ื ืฉืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืžืขื‘ื“ ื›ืจื‘ ื—ืกื“ื ื“ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื—ื–ืจืช ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ. ื•ืื›ื™ืœ. ื•ื›ื™ ืžื ื•ื™ ืœืžืจื•ืจ ืื›ื™ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื•ืœื ื ื”ื™ืจื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืชืงื ืช ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื”ื™ื ืžืฉื•ื ื”ื›ืจื ืœืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ื”ื•ื™ ื›ื‘ืจื›ืช ืžืฆื” ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื˜ื•ืขื. ื•ืžื” ืฉื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™ื\"ืฃ ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ ืื ื”ื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ืชืงื ื” ืœื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ืื ืื™ื ื ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื›ืชื‘ ืจื‘ ืขืžืจื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืชืงื ื” ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืฉืื ืžื‘ืจืš ืœื”ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืชื• ืœื ืžืฆื™ ืœืžืฉืชื™ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื™ื”. ื•ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื›ืชื‘ ื“ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ืื™ื ื ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื™ืฉ ืชืงื ื” ืœื”ืงืจื•ืชื ืžืœื” ื‘ืžืœื” ื›ืงื˜ืŸ ืฉืžืงืจื ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ืฉืขื•ื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจื™ื• ืžื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื›ืืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืฉื ืฉืžื™ื ืœื‘ื˜ืœื”. ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ืŸ ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื›ืชื‘ ื•ืืคืฉืจ ื“ืืฃ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืจืš ื›ื“ื™ ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื›ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืœื—ื ื“ืžืฆื” ืžื•ืฆื™ืื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื”ื›ื ื ืžื™ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืชืงื ื• ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื•ืชืงื ื• ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ืขืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื ืžื™. ื•ืื™ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื ื›ื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืขื™ื ื™ ืžื“ืืž' ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืคืจืง ืžื™ ืฉืžืชื• ืชื ื™ื ื›ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉืื“ื ืคื˜ื•ืจ ืžื”ืŸ ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ืžืงืฉื” ื•ื”ื ืชื ื™ื ืŸ ื›ืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžื—ื•ื™ื™ื‘ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื™ื ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชืŸ ื”ื ืื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ื™ื‘ื ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืื ื›ืŸ ืืœื ืฉื ื™ื ื”ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ื” ื•ืื›ืœืช ื•ืžืฉื‘ืขืช ื•ื‘ืจื›ืช. ืžื™ ืฉืื›ืœ ื”ื•ื ืžื‘ืจืš ื•ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื–\"ืœ. ื›ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื›ืœ ื–ื” ืžื•ื›ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ื• ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ืœื• ื›ื•ืก ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืชื—ืœื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื•ื. ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื‘ืจืš ืฉืขืฉื” ื ืกื™ื ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื‘ืจื›ืช ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื• ื”ื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ืžื” ื•ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžื‘ื•ืืจืช ืฉืžื–ื›ืจืช ืคืจื˜ ื”ื ืก. ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ืžื”ื ื›ื•ืกื• ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื“ืจืš ื—ืจื•ืช.",
13
+ "<b>ื•ืื</b> ื—ืœ ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืื•ืž' ืชื—ืœื” ื•ื™ื›ืœื• ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ืขืœ ื”ื™ื•ื ื•ืื•ืž' ื‘ื—ืชื™ืžื” ื•ืฉื‘ืช ื•ืžื•ืขื“ื™ ืงื“ืฉืš ื‘ืื”ื‘ื” ื•ื‘ืจืฆื•ืŸ ื•ื‘ืฉืžื—ื” ื•ื‘ืฉืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื ื—ืœืชื ื•. ืฉืžื—ื” ื‘ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืžืคื•ืจืฉืช ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉืžื—ืชื›ื ื•ืืž' ื‘ืกืคืจื™ ืืœื• ื”ืฉื‘ืชื•ืช. ื•ื‘ืฉื‘ืช ืžืฆืื ื• ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื ื—ืœื” ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืฉืžืจื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืืช ื”ืฉื‘ืช ืœื“ื•ืจื•ืชื. ืœื›ืŸ ืื•ืž' ื”ื ื—ืœืชื ื•. ื•ื—ื•ืชื ื‘ื\"ื™ ืžืงื“ืฉ ื”ืฉื‘ืช ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื”ื–ืžื ื™ื. ื•ืื•ืž' ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ืื—\"ื› ืฉื•ืชื”.",
14
+ "<b>ื•ืื</b> ื—ืœ ื‘ืžื•ืฆืื™ ืฉื‘ืช ื”ืกื™ืžืŸ ื™ืงื ื”\"ื– ื™ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื ืจ ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื–ืžืŸ. ื•ืื•ืž' ื‘ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืฉื‘ืช ืœืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื•ืžืฆืื ื• ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ื—ืžื•ืจ ืœืงื“ืฉ ืงืœ ืฉื ' ื•ื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœื” ื”ืคืจื›ืช ืœื›ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืงื“ืฉ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ื”ืงื“ืฉื™ื. ื•ืฉืืœ ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืืคืจื™ื ืœืžื” ื ื”ื’ื• ืœื•ืž' ื•ืืช ื™ื•ื ื–' ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื•ืงื“ืฉืช ื•ืงื“ืฉ' ืืช ืขืžืš ื™ืฉ' ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชืš. ืื—ืจ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืฉื‘ืช ืœืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื™\"ื˜ ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืœื ืžืขื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืชื™ืžื” ื•ืœื ืžืขื™ืŸ ื”ืคืชื™ื—ื”. ื•ื”ืฉื™ื‘ ืจ\"ืช ืžืฉื•' ื“ืืž' ื‘ืข' ืขืจื‘ื™ ืคืกื—ื™' ื”ืคื•ื—ืช ืœื ื™ืคื—ื•ืช ืžื’' ื”ื‘ื“ืœื•' ื•ื”ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื ื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื–' ืจืฆื• ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื–' ื”ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื•' ื‘ื™\"ื˜ ืื—ืจ ืฉื‘ืช ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืขื ื™ืŸ ื™\"ื˜. ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœ. ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืื•ืจ ืœื—ืฉืš. ื‘ื™ืŸ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืœื’ื•ื™' ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื‘ืช ืœื•' ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ื”ืจื™ ืืจื‘ืข. ืืžื ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืช ืœื•' ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ืื™ื ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžื ื™ืŸ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืœ ืืœื ืื’ื ื“ืืž' ืœื” ื‘ืขืœืžื ืืžืจื™' ืœื™ื” ื”ื›ื. ื”ืจื™ ื’'. ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ื•ืฉืช ืฉื‘ืช ืœืงื“ื•ืฉืช ื™\"ื˜ ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื–ื”ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ื ืคืฉ ืฉืžื•ืชืจ ื‘ื™\"ื˜ ื•ืœื ื‘ืฉื‘ืช. ื–ืืช ื™ื•ื ื”ืฉื‘ื™ืขื™ ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื”ืžืขืฉื” ืงื“ืฉืช ื–ื”ื• ื™ื•ื ื˜ื•ื‘ ืื—ืจื•ืŸ ืฉืœ ื—ื’ ืฉื—ืœื•ืง ืžืฉืฉืช ื™ืžื™ ื—ื•ืœื• ืฉืœ ืžื•ืขื“. ื•ื”ื‘ื“ืœืช ื•ืงื“ืฉืช ืืช ืขืžืš ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉืชืš ื”ื ืžื ื™ ื”ื‘ื“ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™' ืœืœื•ื™ื™' ื•ืœื•ื™ื™ื ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืžืขื™ืŸ ื”ื—ืชื™ืžื” ื”ืžื‘ื“ื™ืœ ื‘ื™ืŸ ืงื“ืฉ ืœืงื“ืฉ. ื•ืžืฆืื ื• ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ื”ื ื™' ืœืœื•ื™ื™' ืฉื ืืž' ื‘ื ื™ ืขืžืจื ืื”ืจืŸ ื•ืžืฉื” ื•ื™ื‘ื“ืœ ืื”ืจืŸ ืœืงื“ืฉื• ืงื“ืฉ ื•ืงื“ืฉื™' ืขืกื•ืง ื‘ื“\"ืช. ื•ื”ื‘ื“ืœื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืœื•ื™ื™' ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืฉื ' ื‘ืขืช ื”ื”ื™' ื”ื‘ื“ื™ืœ ืืช ืฉื‘ื˜ ื”ืœื•ื™. ื•ืื•ืž' ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ืื—\"ื› ืฉื•ืชื” ื•ืื™' ืžืจื™ื— ื‘ืฉืžื™ื ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืฉืžื ื•ื—ืช ื”ื™\"ื˜ ื”ื•ื ืžืฉื™ื‘ ืืช ื”ื ืคืฉ ื•ื”ื•ื ืœื• ื‘ืžืงื•' ื”ืจื—ืช ื”ื‘ืฉืžื™ื. "
15
+ ]
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+ ],
17
+ "Urchatz": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืœืื—ืจ</b> ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื”ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœื” ื‘ืžืฉืงื” ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ืคืช. ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืืžืจ ื›ืœ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœื• ื‘ืžืฉืงื” ืฆืจื™ืš ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื™ื“ื™ื ื“ืœืžื ื ื’ืข ื‘ืžืฉืงื™ื ื•ื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืขืกืงื ื™ื•ืช ื”ื. ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ื‘ืืจื ื• ืฉื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืžืฆื•ื ืขื™ืœื ื•ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืงื•ื“ื ื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจ ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืœื“ื™ื“ืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ื ื–ื”ืจื™ืŸ ืžื˜ื•ืžืื”."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Karpas": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ืœื•ืงื— ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืจืคืก ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฅ ืื• ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืœื”ืžื™ืช ื”ืชื•ืœืขืช ืฉื‘ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื”. ื•ืจ\"ืช ื•ืจืฉื‘\"ื ื”ื ื”ื™ื’ื• ืชืœืžื™ื“ื™ื”ื ืœื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ื—ื•ืžืฅ ื•ืžื‘ื™ืื™ืŸ ืจืื™ื” ืžื“ืชื ืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืื• ืœืคื ื™ื• ืžื˜ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ื–ืจืช ืขื“ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื’ื™ืข ืœืคืจืคืจืช ื”ืคืช ื ืžืฆื ืฉื‘ืžืฉื ื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื–ื›ื™ืจ ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืขื“ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™. ื•ื”ืจ' ื™ื•ื ื” ืคื™' ืœืคื™ ืฉื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืืœื ืœื”ื›ืจื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื•ืจื’ื™ืœื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ื”ืฉื ื” ืฉืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ื—ื–ืจืช ื‘ืœื ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืฉืฉื™ื ืœืงืคื. ื’ื ืขืชื” ื™ืื›ืœื• ื›ืžื• ื‘ืฉืืจ ื™ืžื•ืช ื”ืฉื ื” ื‘ืœื ื—ืจื•ืกืช. ืื‘ืœ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืฉื•ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื–ื”ื™ืจื• ื—ื›ืžื™' ืฉืœื ื™ื”ื ื‘ื• ืžืฉื•ื ืกื›ื ื” ื•ืงื•ืคื ืคืจืฉื• ืฉื”ื•' ืชื•ืœืขืช ื›ื“ืชื ืŸ ื‘ืชืจื•ืžื•' ื”ืื•ื›ืœ ืชื•ืœืขืช ืฉื‘ืขื™ืงืจื™ ื”ืื™ืœื ื•ืช ื•ืงื™ืคื ืžื‘ื™ืจืงื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ืื™ ืคื™ืจืฉ ืขื™ืงืจ ื”ืงื™ืคื ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ืช ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ืงืคื•ื™ ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื ืคื™ื—ื” ื•ืจื•ื— ืฉืื•ื—ื–ืช ื‘ืžืขื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืื›ืœื•ืช ื•ื ืงืจื ืงื™ืคื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™' ืžื ืคื—ืช. ื•ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื”ื™ื ืกื ืฉื˜ื•ืจื“ ืื•ืชื• ืจื•ื—. ื•ื”ื˜ืขื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ืืข\"ืค ืฉื”ื™ื ืžืฆื•ื” ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืกื•ืคืจื™' ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื ื˜ืคืœื” ืœื›ืจืคืก ื•ืชื ืŸ ื›ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ืขืงืจ ื•ืขืžื• ื˜ืคืœื” ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ืขืงืจ ื•ืคื•ื˜ืจ ืืช ื”ื˜ืคืœื” ื•ื›ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ืืœื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื›ื™ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืื™ื ื” ื”ืคืฉ' ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ืื›ื™ืœื” ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื•ืื™ื ื• ื ืžืœืš.",
27
+ "ืื‘ืœ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื ื˜ื™ืœื” ื”ื•ื™ื ื”ืกื— ื”ื“ืขืช ืฉื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืขืกืงื ื™ื•ืช ื”ื. ื•ืžื–ื” ื”ื˜ืขื ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ื ืคืฉื•ืช ืจื‘ื•ืช ืื—ืจ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื”ืคืกืง ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจ' ื‘ื \"ืจ ืœืคื™ ืฉื—ื•ื‘ืช ืื›ื™ืœืชื• ื”ื™ื ืขื ื”ืžืฆื” ืฉื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื™ืื›ืœื•ื”ื• ื•ืื ื›ืŸ ื ื—ืฉื•ื‘ ืื•ืชื• ื›ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ื‘ืื™ื ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืœื ืœืคื ื™ื”ื ื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจื™ื”ื ื•ืžื–ื” ื”ื˜ืขื ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื”. ื•ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ื‘ืื™ื ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืœื”ื‘ืจื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืืœื• ื”ืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื“ืจืš ืœื˜ื‘ืœ ื‘ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืช. ื•ืžื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืฉืืจ ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืืœื ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ืฉืชื™ ื‘ืจื›ื•ืช ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ื˜ื•ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื•ื›ืฉื’ื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ื•ืื•ื›ืœื” ื•ื—ื•ื–ืจ ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. "
28
+ ]
29
+ ],
30
+ "Yachatz": [
31
+ [],
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+ [
33
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ื›ืจืคืก ื‘ื•ืฆืข ืื—ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื™ืชืŸ ื—ืฆื™ื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉืชื™ ื”ืฉืœืžื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืฆื™ื” ื”ืื—ืจ ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืคื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืฉืืจื•ืชื ืฆืจื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ืฉืžืœื•ืชื ืœืžืฆื•ืช ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืฉื ืื›ืœ ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืžื” ื ื”ื’ื• ืœืคืจื•ืก ื”ืžืฆื” ืงื•ื“ื ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืืžืจ ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ืคืจื•ืกื” ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืกื—ื™ื ืžื” ื“ืจื›ื• ืฉืœ ืขื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื” ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื”.",
34
+ "<b>ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ</b> ื–\"ืœ ืžืืŸ ื“ืœื™ืช ืœื™ื” ืืœื ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืื›ื™ืœ ื‘ืจื™ืฉื ื“ืœื ืžื ื˜ืจ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื” ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื”. ื•ื”ืœืœ ื›ืจื™ืš ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ืื›ื™ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. ื•ืชืžื” ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ืœืคื™ ืกื‘ืจืชื• ืฉืื•ื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื”ื™ืืš ื™ืขืฉื” ื›ืจื™ื›ื” ืื—ืจ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ื•ื™ืื›ืœ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉืžื•ืจ ืื—ืจื™ื• ื•ื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื˜ืขื ืžืฆื”. ื“ื™ื•ืชืจ ืžืกืชื‘ืจ ืœืคื™ ืกื‘ืจืชื• ืœื”ื ื™ื— ื”ื›ืจื™ื›ื” ืฉืื™ื ื” ืืœื ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ืžืžื” ืฉื™ื‘ื˜ืœ ื ื•ืขื ื”ืžืฆื” ืฉืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ืžืคื™ื•. ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื ื” ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ืื—ืจื™ื• ื›ืœื•ื. ื•ื‘ืขืœ ื”ืขื˜ื•ืจ ื›ืชื‘ ืชื™ืื›ืœ ืžื™ื“ ื“ืœื ืžื ื˜ืจ ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื•ื™ืื›ืœ ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”. ื•ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ื›ืชื‘ ืฉื•ืื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ื“ืžื ื˜ืจ ืžื™ื“ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ืžืฆื” ืžืฉื•ืžืจืช ืœืชืื‘ื•ืŸ ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื•ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ืฉืฉ ืื ื™ืื›ืœ ืื—ืจื™ื• ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื“ืœื ืžื ื˜ืจ. "
35
+ ]
36
+ ],
37
+ "Magid": {
38
+ "Ha Lachma Anya": [
39
+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
42
+ "<b>ื•ืžืชื—ื™ืœ</b> ื”ื”ื’ื“ื”. ื•ื”ืงืฉื” ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืงืจื™ืืชื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ืžื’ืœื” ื•ื”ืœื ืžืฆื•ืช ืขืฉื” ื”ื™ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ื•ืœื™ ื•ืชืจืฅ ื›ื™ ื‘ืžื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื–ื›ืจ ืœื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื™ืฆื. ื•ื”ืจืฉื‘\"ื ื–\"ืœ ืชื™ืจืฅ ื˜ืขื ืื—ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ืงืจื™ืืชื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื” ืงืฆื‘ื” ืฉืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื‘ืขืœืžื ืฉื™ื“ื‘ืจ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื™ืฆื ืืœื ื›ืœ ื”ืžืจื‘ื” ื”ืจื™ ื–ื” ืžืฉื•ื‘ื—. ื•ื ืงืจืืช ื”ื’ื“ื” ืขืœ ืฉื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ืžื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืื’ื“ื” ืฉืžื•ืฉื›ื™ืŸ ืœื‘ื• ืฉืœ ืื“ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื ืจืื” ืœื™ ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ ืžื–ื” ื”ืคืจื•ืฉ ื”ื•ื ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื›ืžื• ื”' ืฉืคืชื™ ืชืคืชื— ื•ืคื™ ื™ื’ื™ื“ ืชื”ืœืชืš ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ื• ื™ืžืฉื™ืš ืชื”ืœืชืš ื›ื™ ื”ื›ืœ ื”ื•ืœืš ืื—ืจ ื›ื•ื ืช ื”ืœื‘ ื›ื™ ื‘ืกืคืจ ื”ืื“ื ื ืคืœืื•ืช ื•ื ื•ืจืื•ืช ื™ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝืื•ืช ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ื˜ื‘ืขื™ ื™ืžืฉืš ืžืžื ื• ืื”ื‘ื” ื•ืฉืžื—ื” ื•ืชืขื ื•ื’ ื ืคืฉื™ื™ ื›ื™ ืžื™ ืฉืžืข ื›ื–ืืช ืขื ื™ืŸ ืžื‘ื”ื™ืœ ื™ื•ืชืจ ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื›ื•ื–ืจ ื›ื™ ื”ื™ื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉืฉ ืžืื•ืช ืืœืฃ ืจื’ืœื™ ืžืชื™ื—ืกื™ื ืฉืœ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืฉื‘ื˜ื™ื ื•ืœื ื ื›ื ืก ื‘ื™ื ื™ื”ื ื ื›ืจื™ ืžื™ื—ืœื™ื ื”ืžื•ืขื“ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื“ ืœืื‘ื•ืชื ื•ื‘ื”ื™ื•ืชื ื‘ืชื›ืœื™ืช ื”ืขื ื•ื™ ื•ื”ื“ืœื•ืช ื‘ื™ื“ ืคืจืขื” ื”ื•ืจื’ ืืช ื‘ื ื™ื”ื ืฉืœื ื™ืจื‘ื• ืฉืœื— ืžืฉื” ื•ืื”ืจืŸ ืขื ื—ื•ืœืฉืชื ื•ืขืžื“ื• ื›ื ื’ื“ ืคืจืขื” ืขื ื—ื–ืงืชื• ื‘ืื•ืชื•ืช ื•ื‘ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ื•ื‘ืฉื ื•ื™ ื”ืžื ื”ื’ื™ื ื•ืœื ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื”ืกืชืจ ืžื”ื ื•ืœื ืœืžื ื•ืข ืขืฆืžื• ืžื”ืขืฉืจ ืžื›ื•ืช ืืฉืจ ื—ืœื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืžื™ืžื™ื”ื ื•ื‘ืืจืฆื ื•ื‘ืื•ื™ืจื ื•ื‘ืฆืžื—ื™ืชื ื•ื‘ื‘ื”ืžืชื ื•ื‘ื’ื•ืคื ื•ื‘ื ืคืฉื•ืช ืฉืžืชื• ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ื”ื ื‘ืจื’ืข ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืฆื•ืช ืœื™ืœื” ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืช ืืฉืจ ืื™ืŸ ืฉื ืžืช ื–ื•ืœืชื™ ื‘ืชื™ ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ื‘ืื•ืช ื‘ืื–ื”ืจื” ื•ื‘ืžื•ืขื“ ื•ืžืกืชืœืงื•ืช ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืชื‘ืจืจ ื›ื™ ื”ื ื‘ื›ื•ื ื” ืžืืช ืืœื•ืง' ื—ืคืฅ ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืขื•ืฉื” ื—ืคืฆื• ื‘ืขืช ืฉื™ื—ืคื•ืฅ ืœื ืžืฆื“ ื”ื˜ื‘ืข ื•ืœื ืžืฆื“ ื”ื›ื›ื‘ื™ื ื•ืœื ืžืฆื“ ื›ืฉืคื™ื ื•ืœื ื‘ืžืงืจื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื™ืฆืื• ื‘ื ื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื ื–ื›ืจ ื‘ื™ืœื” ืžื™ ืฉื™ืงื‘ืข ื‘ืœื‘ื• ืฉืขื•ืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืืœื” ื‘ื›ื•ื ื” ืœื ื‘ืžื™ ืฉืงื•ืจื ื‘ืกืคืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ื‘ืœื™ ื‘ื—ื™ื ื” ื™ืชืงืจื‘ ืืœ ื”ื‘ื•ืจื ื‘ื™ื•ืชืจ. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืกื•ื“ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ื”ืžืฉื›ืช ืœื‘ ื”ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื ืœืืžื•ื ื” ื”ืฉืœืžื”. ",
43
+ "<b>ื•ื›ืฉืื•ืžืจ</b> ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ืŸ ื”ืกืœ ืฉื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืžื”ืžืฆื•ื” ืœืฉืžื— ื”ืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ืžืกื™ืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืืœื• ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”. ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื”ื™ืœื•ืช ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืžื” ืฉืœืคื ื™ื ื• ื‘ืงืขืจื” ื•ืขื›ืฉื™ื• ื”ื™ื ืžืกื•ืœืงืช ืžืœืคื ื™ื ื•. ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจ' ืืข\"ืค ืื‘ื™ื™ ื”ื•ื” ื™ืชื™ื‘ ืงืžื™ื” ื“ืจื‘ื” ื—ื–ื ื“ืงื ืžื’ื‘ื”ื™ ืคืชื•ืจื ืืž' ื•ืžื™ ืื›ืœื™ื ืŸ ื“ืงื ืขืงืจื™ืชื• ืชื‘ื ืžืงืžืŸ. ืืžืจ ืคื˜ืจืชื™ื ืŸ ืžืœื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื•ืคื™ืจืฉ ืจืฉื‘\"ื ื”ื ื™ ืžื™ืœื™ ืœื“ื™ื“ื”ื• ืฉื”ืœืฉื•ื ื•ืช ืงื˜ื ื™ื ืื‘ืœ ืื ื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื ื• ื”ืฉืœื—ื ื•ืช ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื ืงืœ ืœืกืœืงื ืžืกืœืงื™ื ื”ืกืœ ืื• ื”ืงืขืจื” ืฉื‘ื• ื”ืฉืœืฉื” ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™' ื•ื“ื™ ืœื ื• ื‘ื›ืš.",
44
+ "<b>ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื.</b> ื›ื•' ื›ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ื”ืœื—ื ืฉืื›ืœื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ ืžื”ื• ื“ื™ ืื›ืœื• ืื‘ื”ืชื ื ื‘ืืจืขื ื“ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื”ืœื ื•ื™ืืคื• ืืช ื”ื‘ืฆืง ื•ื›ื•' ืขื’ื•ืช ืžืฆื•ืช ื›ื™ ืœื ื—ืžืฅ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืืœื ืื—ืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืžืชืจืฅ ื”ืื‘ืจื‘ื ื™ืœื• ื‘ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ืฉื›ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ืคืจืš ื”ื™ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื”ื ืœื—ื ืžืฆื” ืฉื”ื•ื ืงืฉื” ืœืขื›ื•ืœ ื›ืžื• ืฉื ื•ืชื ื™ื ื”ื™ื•ื ืœืคื•ืขืœื™ื ื”ืขืžืœื™ืŸ ืœื—ื ื”ืคื•ืœื™ืŸ ื•ื”ืงื˜ื ื™ื•ืช ื”ื‘ืœืชื™ ืžืชืขื›ืœ ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื• ื ื•ืชื ื™ื ืœื”ื.",
45
+ "<b> ื•ืœืžื”</b> ื ืงืจืืช ื”ืžืฆื” ืœื—ื ืขื ื™ ืœื—ื ืฉืขื•ื ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ืจื‘ื” ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืงืจื™ืืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ื”ื”ืœืœ ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืชื•.",
46
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ</b> ืžื” ื“ืจื›ื• ืฉืœ ืขื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ืก' ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ืก' ืฉื‘ื•ืฆืขื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื”. ื“\"ื ืžื” ืขื ื™ ืžืกื™ืง ื•ื”ื•ื ืื•ืคื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืขื ื™ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื•ืฉืคื—ื•' ื•ื”ื•ื ืขืฆืžื• ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ืžืกื™ืง ื•ืืฉืชื• ืื•ืคื”. ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื–ืจื– ืขืฉื™ื™' ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ื’ื ื™ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื™ืจ ืžืชืขืกืง ื‘ื”ื ื•ืžืกื™ืง ื•ืืฉืชื• ืื•ืคื” ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ืชื‘ื ืœื™ื“ื™ ื—ืžื•ืฅ ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™\"ืž ืœืžื” ื ืงืจื ืœื—ื ืขื ื™ ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœืฉื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืืœื ื›ืฉืขื•' ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืขื ื™ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืขื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื•' ืขืฉื™ืจื™ืช ื”ืืคื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื‘ื“ืœื™ ื“ืœื•ืช.",
47
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ื›ืคื™ืŸ ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ.</b> ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ืœืคื™ ืฉื—ื•ื‘' ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืงื‘ืขื• ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ืžืฉืžื ื™' ืžื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ืžืฆื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ื”ืคืกื—. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ื›ืœ ื“ื›ืคื™ืŸ ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœ ืื“ื ืžืจืขื™ื‘ ืขืฆืžื• ื‘ืขืจื‘ ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืื›ืœ ืžืฆื” ืœืชืื‘ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืงื•ืจื ืœื‘ื ื™ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉื›ืœื ืจืขื‘ื™ื.",
48
+ "<b>ื›ืœ ื“ืฆืจื™ืš ื™ื™ืชื™ ื•ื™ืคืกื—.</b> ืื™ื›ื ื“ืืžืจ ื“ืœื ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ืœื™ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื ื• ืคืกื— ืขืชื”. ื•ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉื˜ื•ื‘ ืœืืžืจื• ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ืœืคืจืฉ ื•ื™ืคืกื— ื›ืžื• ื•ื™ืคืกืข ื›ืœื•' ื™ืขื‘ื•ืจ ืขืœื™ ืœืกืขื•' ืืฆืœื™ ืื• ืœืคื™ ืฉืžืฉื™ืžื™ื ื‘ืฉืœ ื”ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื‘' ืชื‘ืฉื™ืœื™ื ื' ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื—. ืœื›ืŸ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื™ื• ืื•ืž' ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืœื–ื›ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ื›ืžื• ืฉืื ื• ืื›ืœื™ื ื”ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื•ืฉืืจ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืขื•ืฉื™ื ืœื–ื›ืจ ื”ืคืกื—.",
49
+ "<b>ื”ื ืฉืชื ื”ื›ื.</b> ืื—ืจ ืฉื”ื–ื›ืจื ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื–ื” ืขื’ืžืช ื ืคืฉ ืœืžืกื•ื‘ื™' ืืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืžื–ื•ื›ื™' ื—ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื•ื‘ื˜ื•ืœ ื”ืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื›ืŸ ืžืกื“ืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื”ื•ื ืžื ื—ื ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ืื•' ื”ืฉื ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืื ื—ื ื• ื›ืืŸ ื•ืœื ื ื•ื›ืœ ืœืขืฉื•' ื—ื•ื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœื”ืงืจื™' ื”ืคืกื—. ื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื•ืื ืœื ื ื–ื›ื” ืœืฉืœืžื•' ื”ืžื›ื•ื•ืŸ. ืœืคื—ื•' ื ื–ื›ื” ืžื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืื ื—ื ื• ืคื” ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื•ื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื ื™ ื—ื•ืจื™ืŸ. ืื• ื”ื•ื ื›ืžื• ืชืคืœื” ื™ื”ื™ ืจืฆื•ืŸ ืฉื™ืงื™ื™ื ืœื ื• ื”ื‘\"ื” ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ื•ื™ืขื•ื“ื™ื• ืฉื™ืขื“ ืœื’ืืœื™ื ื• ืžื’ืœื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืฉื ื–ื›ื” ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื‘ืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื” ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืžื” ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ื›ืœ ื–ืืช ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืืจืžื™ืช. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœืฉื•ื ื ื•ื”ืœืขื– ืฉืœื”ื ืฉื”ืจื™ ื‘ื‘ื‘ืœ ื ืชืงืŸ ื•ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ื ืกื™ื ื•ื”ืชื™ื ื•ืงื•ืช ื•ืขืžื™ ื”ืืจืฅ ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ื”ื›ืœ ืฉื•ืžืขื™ื. ื•ื™\"ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืกืคืจื™ื ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืฉืžื—ื” ืืจืžื™ืช. "
50
+ ]
51
+ ],
52
+ "Four Questions": [
53
+ [],
54
+ [
55
+ "<b>ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื–ื” ื ืชืงืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ืžื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืœื• ื‘ืŸ ื›ื“ื’ืจืกื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืคืจืง ืืขืค\"ื™ ื—ื›ื ื‘ื ื• ืฉื•ืืœื• ื•ืื ืœืื• ืืฉืชื• ืฉื•ืืœืชื•. ื•ืื ืœืื• ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืืœ ืœืขืฆืžื•. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื”ื‘ืงื™ืื™ื ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉื•ืืœื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืืช ื–ื” ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”. ",
56
+ "<b>ืื™ืŸ ืื ื• ืžื˜ื‘ืœื™ืŸ ืืคื™ืœื• ืคืขื ืื—ืช.</b> ืื›ื™ืœืช ื™ืจืง ืงืจื™ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืขืœ ืฉื“ืจื›ื• ืœืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ื—ื•ืžืฅ ืื• ื—ืจื•ืกืช.",
57
+ "<b> ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืฉื ื™ ืคืขืžื™ื.</b> ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื•ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืฉื ื™ ื•ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืื™ืŸ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืืœื ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ ื”ืชื ื•ืงื•ืช ืฉื™ืฉืืœื• ื•ื™ืืžืจื• ืœืžื” ืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื”ื™ืจืงื•ืช ืงื•ื“ื ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ื•ื‘ืฉืืจ ื”ื™ืœื•ืช ืชื•ืš ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื”.",
58
+ "<b>ื•ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื›ืœื ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ื.</b> ืืคื™' ื”ืฉืžืฉ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ืกื‘ ื•ื‘ืŸ ืœืคื ื™ ืื‘ื™ื• ื•ืฉื” ื—ืฉื•ื‘ื” ืืฆืœ ื‘ืขืœื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ืจืš ื—ืจื•ืช ื•ืฉืจืจื”."
59
+ ]
60
+ ],
61
+ "We Were Slaves in Egypt": [
62
+ [],
63
+ [
64
+ "<b>ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืคืจืขื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื.</b> ื”ื™ื ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ืœืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื” ื‘ืฉืืœืช ื”ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืฉื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื›ืœื ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ื›ืœืœ ืชืฉื•ื‘ื” ื–ื• ื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืฉืœืคื™ื›' ื ืฉืชื ื” ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื›ืœ ืฉืืจ ื”ืœื™ืœื•ืช. ื•ืื ืชืืž' ืžืื™ ื“ื”ื•ื” ื”ื•ื” ื•ืžื” ืœื ื• ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ืžื” ืฉืขื‘ืจ ืœื›ืš ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจ' ืฉืืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืื ื—ื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื ื™ื ื• ืขื“ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื.",
65
+ "<b>ื•ืืคื™' ื›ืœื ื• ื—ื›ืžื™ื ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ื“ืืžืจื™' ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืฉื ื™ ืช\"ื— ื”ื‘ืงื™ืื™ื ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉื•ืืœื™ื ื–ื” ืืช ื–ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื”. ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืกืคืจ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš."
66
+ ]
67
+ ],
68
+ "Story of the Five Rabbis": [
69
+ [
70
+ "<b>ืžืขืฉื” ื‘ืจ' ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ื•ืจ' ื™ื”ื•ืฉืข ื•ื›ื•' ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง. </b>ื‘ื–ืืช ื”ื‘ื‘ื ืžืงืฉ' ื”ืจื‘ื” ืงื•ืฉื™ื•' ื”ืื‘ืจื‘ื ื™ืœื• ื‘ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื— ืื™ืš ื™ืชื›ืŸ ืฉื ื–ื“ืžื ื• ื›ืœ ืืœื• ื”ื—ื›ืžื™' ืฉื–ื” ื“ื™ืจืชื• ื‘ืœื•ื“ ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืคืงื™ืขื™ืŸ ื•ืื™ืš ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื ืขืชืง ืžืžืงื•ืžื• ืœืœื•ืŸ ื‘ื›ืžื• ื–ื” ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ื—ื’ ื”ืคืกื— ื”ื ื›ื‘ื“ ื”ื–ื” ืืฉืจ ื‘ืจื’ื™ืœื•ืช ื›ืœ ืื“ื ืœื”ืขื‘ื™ืจ ืขืฆืžื• ืœืฉืžื•ื— ืขื ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื–ื” ื”ืžืงื•' ื‘ืœืชื™ ืจืฉื•ื ื•ืœื ื ืงืจื ืฉืžื• ืขืœื™ ืื“ืžื•ืช ื•ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ืืจืฅ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื•ืœื ื‘ื‘ืœ ืจืง ื‘ื›ืืŸ. ื•ืžืชืจ' ืฉื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ื”ื•ื ื‘ืขื™ื ื™ื• ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืขืœ ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื›ืกืชื•ืช ืžืจื•ืงืžื•ืช ื–ื”ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ื–ื”ื‘ ื•ื”ืื‘ื ื™ื ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืžื‘ื”ื™ืงื•ืช ื›ื‘ืจืงื™ื ืœื”ื•ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ืขื•ืฆื ื–ืจื™ื–ื•ืช ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื–ื” ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื™ื•ืฉื‘ื™ื ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ื ื›ื‘ื ื™ ืžืœื›ื™ื ืืžื ื ืœืคื™ ื”ืคืฉื˜ ื”ื•ื ืฉื ืžืงื•ื.",
71
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ืง\"ืฉ ืฉืœ ืฉื—ืจื™ืช.</b> ื‘ื ืœืœืžื“ ืฉืืœืžืœื ื”ื™ื•ืช ื”ืงืจื™' ืฉืžืข ืžืฆื•ื” ืขื•ื‘ืจืช ืขื“ื™ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื ืžื ืขื™ื ืžืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื."
72
+ ],
73
+ [
74
+ "<b>ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ืืœืขื–ืจ ื‘ืŸ ืขื–ืจื™ื ื”ืจื™ ืื ื™ ื›ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื.</b> ื•ืœื ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉืื•ืžืจ ื‘ื’ืžืจื ื“ืื“ืจื• ืœื™ื” ืชืžื ื™ ืกืจ ื“ืจื™ ื—ื•ื•ืจืชื ื‘ื™ื•ื ืฉื”ื•ืฉื™ื‘ื•ื”ื• ื ืฉื™ื ื•ืงืคืฆื” ืขืœื™ื• ื–ืงื ื” ื•ื ืจืื” ื›ืžื• ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื“ืœืื• ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื ืื” ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ื‘ื™ืฉื™ื‘' ืžื–ืงืŸ.",
75
+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื–ื›ื™ืชื™ ืฉืชืืžืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•'.</b> ืœื ื–ื›ื™ืชื™ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื•ืžืจ ืœื ื ืฆื—ืชื™ ื›ืžื• ื›ืœ ืžืืŸ ื“ื–ื›ื™ ืœืžืœื›ื. ืœื ื ืฆื—ืชื™ ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉื™ื–ืจื• ืœื“ื‘ืจื™ ืขื“ ืฉื“ืจืฉื” ื‘ืŸ ื–ื•ืžื. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืกื‘ื•ืจ ืžืงื•ื“ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจืื•ื™ ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืื ื‘ื™ื•ื ืขื“ ืฉืฉืžืข ื“ืจืฉืช ื‘ืŸ ื–ื•ืžื ื•ืžื›ืืŸ ื•ืื™ืœืš ืชืงืŸ ืœืืžืจื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ื™ื•ื ืืžืช ื•ื™ืฆื™ื‘ ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ืืžืช ื•ืืžื•ื ื”. ื•ื ืจืื” ืฉืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืžื“ืœื’ ืคืจืฉืช ืฆืฆื™ืช ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืจืื™ืชื ืื•ืชื• ื•ืœื™ืœื” ืœืื• ื–ืžืŸ ืจืื™ื™ื” ื”ื™ื, ืขื“ ืฉืฉืžืข ื“ืจื™ืฉืช ื‘ืŸ ื–ื•ืžื ื•ืงื‘ืขื” ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื‘ื™ื•ื ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื”. ื•ื—ื›ืžื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื™ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ืš ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ื–ื” ื›ืœ ื™ืžื™ ื—ื™ื™ืš ื”ืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื. ื›ื“ืืžืจื™ื ืŸ ืœื ืฉืชืขืงืจ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืžืงื•ืžื”. ืืœื ืฉื™ื”ื ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ืขื™ืงืจ ื•ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื˜ืคืœ."
76
+ ]
77
+ ],
78
+ "The Four Sons": [
79
+ [
80
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื.</b> ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื ืงืจื ืžืงื•ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืžืงื•ืžื• ืฉืœ ืขื•ืœื ื•ืื™ืŸ ื”ืขื•ืœื ืžืงื•ืžื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ื”ื ื” ืžืงื•ื ืืชื™ ื”ื ื” ืื ื™ ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืœื ื ืืžืจ ืืœื ื”ื ื” ื”ืžืงื•ื ืืชื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ืžืขื•ืŸ ื•ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ื–ื•ืœืช ืžืงื•ื. ื•ืขื•ื“ ืชืžืฆื ื›ื™ ืžืงื•ื ืขื•ืœื” ืœืžื ื™ืŸ ื”ืฉื ื›ื™ ื™' ืคืขืžื™ื ื™' ื”ื ืง' ื•ื”' ืคืขืžื™ื ื”' ื›\"ื”. ื•' ืคืขืžื™ื ื•' ื”ื ืœ\"ื•. ื•ื”' ืคืขืžื™ื ื”' ื›\"ื” ืชื—ื‘ืจื ื›ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื• ืงืค\"ื• ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ืžืงื•ื. ",
81
+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื”.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืจื•ืฆื” ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ื”ืžืงืจืื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืข ื‘ื ื™ื ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืชื—ืœื” ื•ืื—ืจ ื›ืš ื“ื•ืจืฉ.",
82
+ "<b>ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื”.</b> ืคืจื•ืฉื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ื” ื‘ืืจื‘ืข ืžืงื•ืžื•ืช ื•ืœืคื™ ื”ืžืงืจืื•ืช ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ื™ื ืื ื• ืœืžื“ื™ื ืฉื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคืจืฉ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืงื•ืจื ืื•ืชื ื‘ื ื™ื ืฉืขื“ื™ืŸ ืื™ื ื ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ื ื›ืœื•ื ื›ืžื• ื”ื ืขืจื™ื."
83
+ ],
84
+ [
85
+ "<b>ื—ื›ื ืžื”ื• ืื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืืฉืจ ืฆื•ื” ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ื• ืืชื›ื.</b> ืคืกื•ืง ื–ื” ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื•ืืชื—ื ืŸ ื•ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืชืจื™ื” ื•ืืžืจืช ืœื‘ื ืš ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ืชืŸ ื”' ืื•ืชื•ืช ื•ืžื•ืคืชื™ื ื•ื’ื•'. ื™ืฉ ืœื”ืชื™ืฉื‘ ื‘ืฉืืœืช ื”ื—ื›ื ื›ื™ ืื™ืŸ ืกืคืง ืœืคื™ ืฉื›ืœื• ื™ื”ื•ืœืœ ืื™ืฉ ื•ื”ื“ื‘ื•ืจ ื ืžืฉืš ืื—ืจ ื”ืฉื›ืœ ื•ื“ื‘ืจื™ ืคื™ ื—ื›ื ื—ืŸ ืชืคื•ื—ื™ ื–ื”ื‘ ื‘ืžืฉื›ื™ื•ืช ื›ืกืฃ ืฉืื™ืŸ ื”ื›ืคืœ ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื• ื”ื—ื›ื ืจืง ื›ืœ ืชื‘ื” ื•ืชื‘ื” ืžื•ืจื” ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœืขืฆืžื• ื•ื™ื‘ื—ืจ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืขืจื•ืžื™ื ื•ื™ืฉ ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื–ื”ื• ืชื•ื›ืŸ ื›ื•ื ืชื• ื•ืฉืืœืชื• ื”ื™ื ื–ืืช ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ื•ืคืกื— ืืฉืจ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื—ืงื™ื ื•ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืฉื” ื–ื›ืจ ืชืžื™ื ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืœืžื ื•ื™ื™ื• ื•ืฆืœื™ ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช. ื›ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื• ื›ื›ืœ ื—ืงืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื’ื•ืžืจ ื•ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ื—ื›ื ืฉืืœื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื”ื ืขื“ื•ืช ืžื•ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ืขื ื™ื ื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื”ื ื ื•ืขื ื•ืขื“ื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืžืขืžื™ืง ืœืฉืืœ ื‘ื”ื™ื•ืช ื›ืœ ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื•ื”ืžืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืชืœื•ื™ื™ื ื‘ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื’ื•ืŸ ื•ืขืฆื ืœื ืชืฉื‘ืจื• ื‘ื• ื•ืฉืืจ ื“ืงื“ื•ืงื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ื”ืขืงืจ ืœืžื” ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”. ื•ื“ืจืš ื”ื—ื‘ื™ื‘ ื—ื‘ื™ื‘ ืงื•ื“ื ื‘ืื›ื™ืœื” ื›ื™ ืžื” ื™ื•ืขื™ืœื• ื”ืžืขื“ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ ืžืœื ื›ืจืกื• ื•ืœื ื™ื›ื™ืœ ืขื•ื“ ื˜ื•ื‘ื ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืฉืœืคื™ื›ืš ืžืงื“ื™ืžื™ื ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืœืคื™ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื™ื ื™ ืžืชื™ืงื” ืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืœื”ืกื™ืจ ื˜ืขื ื”ื‘ืฉืจ ืžืคื™ื• ืœืงื™ื ื•ื— ืกืขื•ื“ื”. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืžืื—ืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื•. ื•ื–ื” ืฉืื ื• ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื’ื ืื ื—ื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžืฆื” ืžืฉื•ืžืจืช ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื—. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™\"ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื ืฉืืœืช ื”ื—ื›ื ื”ืžืขืžื™ืง ื›ืฉืจื•ืื” ืฉื‘ื ื™ื• ืขื ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื ืžื ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ืคืกื— ืื—ื“ ื•ืคืขืžื™' ืžื’ื™ืข ืœืื—ื“ ืžื”ืŸ ื—ืœืง ืžื•ืขื˜ ื•ื”ืŸ ืžืงืคื™ื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื• ืœืื›ืœื• ืžื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ืจื’ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืœืขืฉื•' ื‘ืฉืืจ ื”ื™ืžื™ื ืœื”ืชื—ื‘ืจ ื•ืœื”ืชืืกืฃ ื™ื—ื“ ื‘ืกืขื•ื“ื” ื•ืœื”ืงืคื™ื“ ื‘ื—ืœืง ืžื•ืขื˜ ื›ื–ื”. ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืฉื•ืืœ ืžื” ื”ืขื“ื•ืช ื•ื”ื—ืงื™ื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืขืชื” ืฉื“ืจืš ื”ืขื•ืœื ืœื—ื•ื’ ื•ืœืฉืžื•ื— ืขื ืื ืฉื™ ื‘ื™ืชื• ืžื ื™ื—ื™ื ื‘ืชื™ื”ื ื•ื”ื•ืœื›ื™ื ืืฆืœ ื—ื‘ืจื™ื”ื. ื•ืื ืžืคื ื™ ื—ื‘ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœืฉืœื•ื— ืžื ื•ืช ืื™ืฉ ืœืจืขื”ื• ื›ืžื• ื‘ืฉืืจ ื”ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ื•ืื™ื ื• ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ืืžื ื ืฉืืžืจ ืืฉืจ ืฆื•ื” ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ื• ืืชื›ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื“ืข ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ื ื”ืคืกื— ืขืœ ื”ืงื˜ืŸ ื•ื›ื‘ืจ ืงื‘ืœ ืข๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื™ื• ืขื•ืœ ืžืœื›ื•ืช ืฉืžื™ื ื‘ืืžืจื• ื”' ืืœืงื™ื ื•. ",
86
+ "<b>ืืฃ ืืชื” ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื”ืคืกื— ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ.</b> ืœืคื™ ืชื•ื›ืŸ ืฉืืœื” ื–ื• ืชืกื‘ื™ืจ ืœื• ื›ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืงืจื‘ืŸ ื–ื” ื‘ื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ืื—ืช ื”ื•ื ื•ืฉื›ื ื™ื• ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ื‘ื™ืช ืื—ื“ ื™ืื›ืœ ื•ืชืจื’ื•ืžื• ื‘ื—ื‘ื•ืจื” ื—ื“ื ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื ืžื ื” ืขืœื™ื• ืื™ืŸ ืกื“ืจ ืœื•ืžืจ ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื ืื™ ืžื”ื›ื ืชืฉื ืกืจื‘ืœื™ ืฉืื ื™ ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื”ืคื˜ืจ ื•ื–ื• ืชืฉื•ื‘' ืœืขื•ืžืง ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืื•ื›ืœื™' ืื™ืฉ ืื™ืฉ ื‘ื‘ื™ืชื• ื•ื‘ื—ื•ืžื•ืชื™ื• ื›ืฉืืจ ื”ืžื•ืขื“ื™ื.",
87
+ "ื•ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ืŸ ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืžืกื™ื™ืžื™' ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื”ืคื˜ืจื” ืฉืžืกื™ื™ืžื™ื ื‘ื” ืชืคืœืช ืฉื—ืจื™ืช. ื•ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื‘ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื™ื•ื ื™ ืงื•ืจื™ืŸ ืœื ื›ืœื•ื ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ. ืคืจื•ืฉ ืื—ืจ ืžืคื˜ื™ืจื™ื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืคืชื™ื—ืช ืคื” ืœื“ื‘ื•ืจ ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื™ืคื˜ื™ืจื• ื‘ืฉืคื”. ื•ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืœืคืจื•ืฉ ื”ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ื ื•ื˜ืจื™ืงื•ืŸ ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื™ื ื™ ืžืชื™ืงืช ืœืคืจื•ืฉ ื”ืฉื ื™ ืืคื™ืงื• ืžื ืื™."
88
+ ],
89
+ [
90
+ "<b>ืจืฉืข ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื ืืœ ืคืจืขื” ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื™ื” ื›ื™ ื™ืืžืจื• ืืœื™ื›ื ื‘ื ื™ื›ื ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืœื›ื ื‘ื‘ืŸ ืจืฉืข ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืœื›ื ื“ืžืฉืžืข ืœื›ื ื•ืœื ืœื• ืžื” ื”ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื”ื–ืืช ืœื›ื ืžืฉืžืข ื’ื ื›ืŸ ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื˜ื•ืจื— ืฉื”ื•ื ืžื“ื‘ืจ ื“ืจืš ืจืฉืข ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืžื” ื”ื˜ื•ืจื— ื”ื–ื” ืฉืืชื ืžื˜ืจื™ื—ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ื›ืœ ืฉื ื” ืœืขื›ื‘ ืกืขื•ื“ืชื™' ื•ืœืขืจื‘ื‘ ืฉืžื—ืช ื”ื—ื’ ื•ืงื•ืจื ืขื‘ื•ื“ืช ื”ืžืงื•ื ื˜ื•ืจื— ื•ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื’ื ืฉืžืฆื™ื ื• ืกืชื ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื‘ืงืจื‘ื ื•ืช ืœืขื•ืœื ื™ืฉ ืœื“ื•ืŸ ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืจืฉืข ืœื›ืฃ ื—ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืขืฆืžื• ืžืŸ ื”ื›ืœืœ ื’ื ื›ืŸ. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืชื” ื”ืงื”ื” ืืช ืฉื ื™ื•, ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื—ื•ืœืฉ ื”ืฉื ื™ื ื›ืžื• ื•ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื ื™' ืชืงื”ื ื” ืฉืจื•ืื” ืœืื—ืจื™ื ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื•ื”ื•ื ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ื•ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ื›ื ื’ื“ืš ื“ื‘ืจื” ืชื•ืจื” ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™. ืœื™ ื•ืœื ืœื• ืฉืจืฉืข ื›ืžื•ืš ืืœื• ื”ื™ื” ืฉื ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ื’ืืœ. ื•ืื ืชืืžืจ ื”ื™ืืš ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื•ื’ื•' ื”ื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืœื’ื‘ื™ ื”ืจืฉืข. ื•ื™\"ืœ ืฉื“ื•ืจืฉ ืื•ืชื• ื‘ืื ืื™ื ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืชื ื”ื• ืขื ื™ืŸ ืœืจืฉืข. ื•ื’ื ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืฉื‘ืœื™ ื”ืœืงื˜. ื›ื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืงืจื•ื‘ ืœืžื™ืŸ ื”ืจืฉืข ื›ื™ ืžืชื•ืš ืจืฉืข ื”ื•ื ืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžืขืžื™ืง ืœืฉืื•ืœ ื•ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืชื™ื• ืฉืœ ืžืงื•ื ืจืง ืขื•ืฉื” ืื•ืชื ืžืฆื•ืช ืื ืฉื™ื ืžืœื•ืžื“ื”."
91
+ ],
92
+ [
93
+ "<b>ืชื ืžื” ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ.</b> ืชื ืงื•ืจื ืœืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื—ื›ื ืฉื™ื“ืข ืœื”ืขืžื™ืง ื•ืœื”ืกื“ื™ืจ ืฉืืœืชื• ื“ืจืš ืžื•ืกืจ ื•ื—ื›ืžื”. ื•ื’ื ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื• ืจืฉืข ืืœื ืฉื•ืืœ ืกืชื ืžื” ื–ืืช."
94
+ ],
95
+ [
96
+ "<b>ื•ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืืœ ืืช ืคืชื— ืœื•.</b> ื›ืžื• ืคืชื— ืคื™ืš ืœืืœื. ื‘ืคืจืฉืช ื‘ื ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื. ืœื ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื–ื” ื”ืคืกื•ืง ืฉืืœืช ืฉื•ื ื‘ืŸ ืืœื ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืกืชื. ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ืœืžื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ื“ืจื•ืฉ ืœื• ื‘ื”ื’ื“ื” ื•ืคืจืกื ืœื• ืืช ื”ื ืก."
97
+ ]
98
+ ],
99
+ "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh": [
100
+ [
101
+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ื“ืช ืœื‘ื ืš. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื“ืฉ.</b> ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืขื ื™ืŸ ื”ื”ื•ื“ืขื” ืžื”ืื‘ ืœื‘ืŸ ืฉืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ื“ืข ืœืฉืื•ืœ. ืจืง ืืœื• ื“ื‘ืจื™ ื”ืžื—ื‘ืจ ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉื”ื•ื ื“ื•ืจืฉ ืื•ืชื• ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื“ืฉ ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืœื• ืœื‘ืŸ ืžืฉื ื›ื ืก ืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ื›ื“ืจืš ืฉื”ื–ื”ื™ืจ ืžืฉื” ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื“ืฉ ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื ื™ื•ื ืฉื ื’ืืœื• ื‘ื•. ื™ื›ื•ืœ ื™ื”ื ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœื“ืจื•ืฉ ืœื• ืžื‘ืขื•ื“ ื™ื•ื ื›ืฉืฉื•ื—ื˜ื™ืŸ ืคืกื—ื™ื”ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื”ื•ืื™ืœ ื•ื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ื•ื ืชืœืžื•ื“ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืœื ืืžืจืชื™ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื™ืฉ ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ืฉืชื•ื›ืœ ืœื•ืžืจ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืฉืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš. ื•ืœืžื“ื ื• ื–ื” ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ืงื“ื™ื ืœื•ืžืจ ืฉื‘ืขืช ื™ืžื™ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื™ืื›ืœ ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช. ื•ืกื•ืฃ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืฆืืชื™ ืžืžืฆืจื™ื. ",
102
+ "<b>ื“ื‘ืจ ืื—ืจ</b> ืขืฉื” ื”' ืœื™ ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื”. ื–ื” ื‘ื’ืžื˜ืจื™ื ืฉื ื™ื ืขืฉืจ ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉืื“ื ืขื•ืฉื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ื•ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื›ืจืคืก ืฉืชื™ ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื™ื“ื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฆื” ืžืจื•ืจ ื›ืจื™ื›ื”. ื•ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ืื•ืžืจ ื‘ืฉืขืช ืฉืคืกื— ื•ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ื•ืœืฉื•ืŸ ื–ื” ืžืฉืžืข ืฉืžื•ืจื” ืœื• ื‘ืืฆื‘ืข."
103
+ ]
104
+ ],
105
+ "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers": [
106
+ [
107
+ "<b>ืžืชื—ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื.</b> ืœืคื™ ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื” ืฉืฉื ื™ื ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ื•ืžืกื™ื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ื—. ื•ืืžืจ ืขืœื” ืžืื™ ื’ื ื•ืช ืจื‘ ืืžืจ ืžืชื—ืœื” ื•ืฉืžื•ืืœ ืืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ ื›ืชืจื•ื™ื”ื•. ื•ืžืชื—ืœื” ื”ื•ื ืžื•ืกื‘ ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจื ื• ืœืžืขืœื” ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ืœื ืืžืจืชื™ ืืœื ื‘ืฉืขื” ืฉืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื•ื ื—ื™ื ืœืคื ื™ืš ื•ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืฉื•ืžื“ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืืกื•ืจ ื‘ืื›ื™ืœืช ื”ืคืกื— ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ืœ ื‘ืŸ ื ื›ืจ ืœื ื™ืื›ืœ ื‘ื•. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื•ื›ืฉืงืจื‘ืŸ ืœื“ืช ื”ืืžืช ื•ื ืžื•ืœื• ื‘ืฆืืชื ืื– ื”ื•ื›ืฉืจื• ืœื”ืงืจื™ื‘ ื•ืœื”ืชืงืจื‘ ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ืชื•. ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืฉืžืขื• ื”ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื™ืœืžื“ื• ื•ื™ืงื—ื• ืžื•ืกืจ ื•ืืœ ื™ื˜ื• ืœื‘ื ืœืœื›ืช ืื—ืจื™ ื”ื”ื‘ืœ ื•ื™ื’ืœื• ืžืขืœ ืฉืœื—ืŸ ืื‘ื™ื”ื ืฉื‘ืฉืžื™ื. ื•ื”ื ื›ื•ืŸ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื–ื›ื™ืจ ื™ืจื™ื“ืชืŸ ืœืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืื™ืš ื”ื™ื” ื•ืžืขืฉื™ื”ื ืืฉืจ ืœืžื“ื• ื‘ื”ืชืขืจื‘ื ื‘ื’ื•ื™ื ื•ื™ืฆื™ืืชื ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื”ื ืกื™ื ื•ื”ื ืคืœืื•ืช ืฉืขืฉื” ืขืžื ื•. ืžืจื•ื‘ ืื”ื‘ืชื• ืื•ืชื ื• ื•ื™ื‘ื—ืจ ื‘ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ื‘ื–ืจืขื ืื—ืจื™ื”ื ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื›ืžื” ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ืœื ื‘ื—ืจ ื›ื™ ืื ื‘ื‘ืŸ ืกื’ื•ืœืชื• ื™ืฆื—ืง ื”ื™ื” ืขื•ืœื” ืชืžื™ืžื”. ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื™ืฆื—ืง ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ืขืฉื• ื™ืขืงื‘ ื‘ื—ืจ ืœื• ื™ื”. ื•ื’ื–ืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ื‘ืขื•ืœื ื”ื–ื” ื›ื“ื™ ืœื–ื›ื•ืชื ืœืขื•ืœื ื”ื‘ื ื›ืžืคื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื. ื•ืืจื‘ื” ืืช ื–ืจืขื• ื“ื•ืจืฉ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื•ืืจื‘ื” ื›ืžื” ืจื™ื‘ื™ื ืจื‘ืชื™ ื‘ืขื“ื•."
108
+ ],
109
+ [
110
+ "<b>ื•ืืชืŸ ืœืขืฉื• ืืช ื”ืจ ืฉืขื™ืจ.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืชืจื’ืžื™ืŸ ื”ืจ ืฉื™ื™ื“ืŸ ืขืœ ืฉื ื•ืฉืขื™ืจื™ื ื™ืจืงื“ื• ืฉื ื›ื™ ื”ื•ื ืžื—ืœืงื• ืฉืœ ืกืžืืœ ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืกืขืจ ื‘ืœื‘ื• ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ื”ืœืš ื‘ืกืขืจื•ืช ืชื™ืžืŸ ื•ื”ื•ื ืžื—ืœืง ืžืื“ื™ื ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืื“ืžื•ื ื™. ื•ื™ืขืงื‘ ืื™ืฉ ื—ืœืง ื”ืคืš ืžืื™ืฉ ืฉืขื™ืจ ืžืจื•ื—ืง ื•ืžื•ื‘ื“ืœ ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืขืจื•ืช ื•ืžื•ืชืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื›ืŸ ืฆื•ืจืชื• ื‘ื›ืกื ื”ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื•ื”ื•ื ื•ื‘ื ื™ื• ื™ืจื“ื• ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ืœืคืจื•ืข ืฉื˜ืจ ื—ื•ื‘ ืฉื ื’ื–ืจ ืขืœื™ื”ื ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ืฉื•ืžืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื• ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืชื›ืฃ ืœืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ ืฉื›ืฉื ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื” ื›ืš ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืจืขื”. ื•ืื ื• ืžืชื ื—ืžื™ื ื•ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื—ืจื™ ื”ื’ื“ืช ื”ื’ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื’ืœื•' ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ืžืงื•' ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ืœืฉืžื•ืจ ืœื ื• ื”ื‘ื˜ื—' ืขืœ ื’ืื•ืœื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื ื•. ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืฉืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ ืชืžื™ื“ ืžืชื™ ื™ื‘ื•ืื• ื•ื™ื’ื™ืขื• ื™ืžื™ ื”ืฉืœื•' ื•ืขืช ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”. ืฉื ' ื•ื™ืืžืจ ื•ื’ื•' ื‘ืืจืฅ ืœื ืœื”ื ื‘ื‘ื‘\"ืœ ื•ืขื‘ื“ื•\"ื ื‘ืžื“ื™ ื•ืขื ื• ืื•ืชื ื‘ื™ื•\"ืŸ ื•ื’ื ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื•ื“\"ื• ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™ ื‘ืื“ื•\"ื ื•ื—ืชื ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ื™ื‘ืื• ื‘ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ื”ืจื™ ื”ื”ื‘ื˜ื—ื” ืฉืœ ื’ืื•ืœื” ืžื›ืœ ื”ืžืœื›ื™ื•ืช ื•ื”ืฉืขื‘ื•ื“ื™ื. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื™ืฉ ืœืคืจืฉ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืงื‘\"ื” ื”ื™ื” ื—ืคืฅ ืœืงืจื‘ ื’ืื•ืœืชื ื—ืฉื‘ ืื•ืชื ืง\"ืฅ ืฉื ื” ืžืฉืขื” ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื”ื’ื–ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ืขื“ ืฉืขื” ืฉื™ืฆืื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืช\"ืœ ืฉื ื”. ืฉื”ืจื™ ืœื ื ืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ื™ ืื ืจ\"ื™ ืฉื ื™ื ื›ืžื ื™ืŸ ืจื“\"ื• ื•ื”ื™ื ื• ืžื—ืฉื‘ ืืช ื”ืงืฅ ืœื“ืœื’ื• ื•ืœืงืคืฆื• ื•ื—ืฉื‘ ื”ืง\"ืฅ ื›ืžืฉืžืขื• ื•ืคืฉื•ื˜ื• ื›ืืœื• ื ืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื• ืžืžืฉ."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื”ื™ื ืฉืขืžื“ื” ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื•ืœื ื•.</b> ื”ื‘ื˜ื—' ื”ื’ืื•ืœื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘\"ื” ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ืื‘ื™ื ื• ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ื›ืฉื”ืจืื” ืœื• ื”ืฉืขื‘ื•' ื•ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”. ื”ื™ื ืฉืขืžื“ื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ื‘ื‘ื‘ืœ ื•ื™ื•ืŸ ื•ืžื“ื™. ื•ื”ื™ื ื”ืขื•ืžื“ืช ืœื ื• ื‘ืื“ื•ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ื‘\"ืจ ื•ื”ื ื” ืื™ืžื” ื–ื• ื‘ื‘\"ืœ ื—ืฉื™ื›ื” ื–ื• ืžื“\"ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœื” ื–ื• ื™ื•ืŸ. ื ื•ืคืœืช ืขืœื™ื• ื–ื• ืื“ื•ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ืจืื” ืœื• ื”ื’ืื•ืœื” ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ื™ื‘ืื• ื•ื›ื•'. ",
118
+ "<b>ืฉืœื ืื—ื“ ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ืขืžื“ ืขืœื™' ืœื›ืœื•ืชื™ื ื•.</b> ื›ืœื•ืž' ืœื ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ืœื‘ื“ื ืขืžื“ื• ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื ื• ื•ืœื›ืœื•ืชื™ื ื• ืืœื ืฉื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ืขื•ืžื“ื™ื ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื ื• ื‘ื›ื— ืื•ืชื” ื”ื’ื–ืจื” ืฉืœ ื”ื’ืœื™ื•ืช ืฉื ื’ื–ืจื” ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื‘ืชืจื™ื ื•ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืžืฆื™ืœื ื• ืžื™ื“ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื—ื ื•."
119
+ ]
120
+ ],
121
+ "First Fruits Declaration": [
122
+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืฆื ื•ืœืžื“ ืžื” ื‘ืงืฉ ืœื‘ืŸ ื”ืืจืžื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืœื™ืขืงื‘.</b> ืฉื’ื ื”ื•ื ื‘ื ืžื›ื— ืื•ืชื” ื”ื’ื–ื™ืจื” ืฉืคืจืขื” ืœื ื’ื–ืจ ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื–ื›ืจื™ื ื•ืœื‘ืŸ ื‘ืงืฉ ืœืขืงื•ืจ ืืช ื”ื›ืœ ืฉืืžืจ ื™ืฉ ืœืืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืขืžื›ื ืจืข. ืฉืืœืžืœื ื”ื—ืœื•ื ื›ืžื• ืฉืžืคืจืฉ ื•ืืœืงื™ ืื‘ื™ื›ื ืืžืฉ ืืžืจ ืืœื™ ื”ืฉืžืจ ืœืš ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืžืขืฉื•ืช ื”ื™ื” ืœื• ืœื•ืžืจ ืืœื ืฉืœื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืžื›ืฉืฃ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ื“ื‘ืจื™ื• ื•ื‘ื”ื–ื›ืจื•ืชื™ื• ื•ื”ืฉื‘ืขื•ืชื™ื• ื”ืฉื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœื‘ืœื•ืข ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ืœื”ื–ื™ืง ื•ืœื›ืœื•ืช ืืช ื–ืจืขื•. ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™ ืฉื‘ื ื‘ื”ืกื›ืžื” ืžื•ื—ืœื˜ืช ืœืื‘ื“ื• ืœื•ืœื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื ื˜ืœ ืœื• ื›ื—ื• ื•ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืžืฆืจืฃ ืœื• ืžื—ืฉื‘ื” ืจืขื” ืœืžืขืฉื” ืœื›ืŸ ื ืืžืจ ืืจืžื™ ืื•ื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื ืฆื•ืœ ืžืœื‘ืŸ ื ื•ืกืฃ ืœื• ืคื’ืข ืื—ืจ ื•ื›ื•' ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืจื“ ืžืฆืจื™ืžื” ืื ื•ืก ืขืœ ืคื™ ื”ื“ื‘ื•ืจ. ื•ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ื‘ืคืจืง ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืจืื•ื™ ื”ื™ื” ื™ืขืงื‘ ืื‘ื™ื ื• ืœืจื“ืช ื‘ืฉืœืฉืœืื•ืช ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื–ืœ ืืœื ืฉื–ื›ื•ืชื• ื’ืจื ืœื• ื•ื™ืจื“ ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื’ื“ื•ืœ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื—ื‘ืœื™ ืื“ื ืืžืฉื›ื ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืชื•ืช ืื”ื‘ื”. ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ื•ื ืจื•ื— ื”ืงื“ืฉ. ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื”ื. "
125
+ ],
126
+ [
127
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื’ืจ ืฉื ืžืœืžื“ ืฉืœื ื™ืจื“ ืœื”ืฉืชืงืข.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืœืงื‘ื•ืข ืฉื ื™ืฉื•ื‘ ื•ืœื”ื™ื•ืช ื›ืชื•ืฉื‘ ืืœื ืœื’ื•ืจ ืฉื ื›ื’ืจ ื•ืื™ืฉ ื ื›ืจื™."
128
+ ],
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+ [],
130
+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื™ื”ื™ ืฉื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืžืœืžื“ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฆื•ื™ื™ื ื™ื.</b> ืžืกื•ืžื ื™ื ืœื’ื•ื™ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื ื™ื›ืจื™ื ื•ื™ื“ื•ืขื™ื ื•ื ืงื‘ืฆื™ื ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืื—ื“ ื•ืœื ื ืคืจื“ื™ื ื•ืคื–ื•ืจื™ื ื•ืขื ื”ื™ื•ืชื ืื ืฉื™ื ืžืขื˜ื™ื ื”ื™ื• ื ื—ืฉื‘ื™ื ืื•ืžื” ื‘ืคื ื™ ืขืฆืžื”."
132
+ ],
133
+ [
134
+ "<b>ื•ืจื‘ ื›ืฆืžื— ื”ืฉื“ื”.</b> ืžื” ืฆืžื— ื”ืฉื“ื” ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉื’ื•ื–ื–ื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื™ื•ืชืจ ืฆื•ืžื—. ืืฃ ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื›ืœ ืžื” ืฉืžืขื ื™ื ืื•ืชื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ืคืจื™ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ื. ื•ื›ืŸ ื”ื•ื ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื ื• ืื•ืชื• ื›ืŸ ื™ืจื‘ื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื™ืคืจื•ืฅ.",
135
+ "<b>ื•ืืช ืขืจื•ื ื•ืขืจื™ื”.</b> ืขืจื•ืžื™ื ื•ืžืฉื•ืœืœื™ื ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉื”ื’ื™ืข ื–ืžืŸ ื”ืงืฅ ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ื“ื ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ื ืชืŸ ืœื”ื ืคืกื— ื•ืžื™ืœื” ืฉื ืžื•ืœื• ื‘ื™ื•ื ืืจื‘ืขื” ืขืฉืจ ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื•ื–ื”ื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžืชื‘ื•ืกืกืช ื‘ื“ืžื™ืš. ืฉื ื™ ื“ืžื™ื ื“ื ืžื™ืœื” ื•ื“ื ืคืกื—."
136
+ ],
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+ [
138
+ "<b>ื•ื™ืจืขื• ืื•ืชื ื• ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื.</b> ื ืชื—ื›ืžื• ืœื”ืจืข ืœื ื• ืืžืจื• ืฉื•ื˜ื” ื”ื™ื” ืขืฉื• ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžืžืชื™ืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื™ืžื•ืช ืื‘ื™ื• ืœื”ืจื•ื’ ื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืš ื”ื•ืœื™ื“ ื‘ื ื™ื ื•ื’ื“ืœืŸ ื•ื›ืŸ ืœื‘ืŸ ืฉื”ืœืš ืื—ืจ ื”ื—ืœื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื”ืฉืžืจ ืœืš ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืขื ื™ืขืงื‘. ืื‘ืœ ืื ื• ื ืชื—ื›ื ืœืขืงื•ืจ ืืช ื›ืœื."
139
+ ],
140
+ [
141
+ "<b>ืœืžืขืŸ ืขื ื•ืชื• ื‘ื‘ืกื‘ืœื•ืชื.</b> ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื‘ืกื›ืœื•ืช ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืฉืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืื•ืชื ืœืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื›ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื™ืฉืื•ื”ื• ืขืœ ื›ืชืฃ ื™ืกื‘ืœื•ื”ื•."
142
+ ],
143
+ [
144
+ "<b>ื‘ืคืจืš.</b> ื‘ืชื—ืœื” ื‘ืคื” ืจืš ื›ืžื• ืฉื“ืจืฉื• ืฉืชืœื” ืคืจืขื” ืœื‘ื ื” ื‘ืฆื•ืืจื• ื•ื ืชื—ื–ืงื• ื•ื”ื•ืกื™ืคื• ืื•ืžืฅ ืœื›ื‘ื•ื“ ื”ืžืœืš. ื•ืื—ืจื™ ื›ืŸ ืฉืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื”ื ื‘ืคืจืš. ื•ื™ืจื ืืช ืขื ื™ื™ื ื•. ื–ื• ืคืจื™ืฉื•ืช ื“ืจืš ืืจืฅ. ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืขื ื™ื™ื ื• ื›ืžื• ืื ืชืขื ื” ืืช ื‘ื ื•ืชื™ ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžื‘ื˜ืœื™ื ืžื”ื ืขื•ื ืช ื ืฉื•ืชื™ื”ื."
145
+ ],
146
+ [],
147
+ [],
148
+ [],
149
+ [],
150
+ [],
151
+ [
152
+ "<b>ืืช ืขืžืœื ื•. ืืœื• ื”ื‘ื ื™ื.</b> ืฉื”ื ื’ื“ืœื™ื ืžืขืžืœ ื”ืื“ื ื•ื™ื’ื™ืข ื›ืคื™ื• ื”ื‘ื ืœื”ื."
153
+ ],
154
+ [
155
+ "<b>ืœื—ืฆื ื•. ื–ื• ื”ื“ื—ืง.</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ืชื›ืŸ ื”ืœื‘ื ื™ื ืชืชื ื•."
156
+ ],
157
+ [],
158
+ [
159
+ "<b>ื•ื™ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืœืืš ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืฉืจืฃ.</b> ื•ืžืฉื” ืœื ื”ื™ื” ืฉืœื™ื— ืจืง ืœื“ื‘ืจ ืืœ ืคืจืขื”. ืื‘ืœ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื™ื“ื• ื›ื— ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ืืœื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื‘ืขืฆืžื•. ื•ื ืืžืจ ื–ื” ืขืœ ืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืื•ืชื” ื”ื‘\"ื” ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืœืืš. ืืœื ื”ื•ื ื‘ืขืฆืžื• ื”ื›ื” ืื•ืชื. ื•ื”ื ื“ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื•ืœื ื™ืชืŸ ื”ืžืฉื—ื™ืช ืœื‘ื ืืœ ื‘ืชื™ื›ื ืงื•ืจื ื”ืžื›ื” ืžืฉื—ื™ืช ื•ืคืจื•ืฉื• ื•ืœื ื™ืชืŸ ื”ื”ืฉื—ืชื” ืœื‘ื ืืœ ื‘ืชื™ื›ื."
160
+ ],
161
+ [],
162
+ [
163
+ "<b>ื‘ื™ื“ ื—ื–ืงื” ื–ื• ื”ื“ื‘ืจ.</b> ืคื™ืจืฉ ื‘ืื’ื“ืช ืชืœื™ื ื›ืœ ืžื›ืช ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ื”ืงื‘\"ื” ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื”ื‘ื™ื ืžื›ืช ื“ื‘ืจ ืขื ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืกื’ืจ ืœื‘ืจื“ ื‘ืขื™ืจื ื•ืžืงื ื™ื”ื ืœืจืฉืคื™ื (ืชื”ืœื™ื ืขื—, ืžื—). ืžื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืžืกืจ ืžืงื ื™ื”ื ืœืจืฉืคื™ื ื‘ืžื›ืช ื‘ืจื“ ื“ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ื‘ืจ. ืžื–ื” ืื ื• ืœืžื“ื™ื ืœืฉืืจ ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉื”ื™ื” ื”ื“ื‘ืจ ืขืžื”ื."
164
+ ],
165
+ [
166
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื–ืจื•ืข ื ื˜ื•ื™ื” ื–ื• ื”ื—ืจื‘.</b> ืื™ื–ื• ืžื›ืช ื—ืจื‘ ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ืžืฆื™ื ื• ื‘ืคืกื™ืงืชื ื“ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืข' ืฉืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ื•ืžืช ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื ืชื›ื ืกื• ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืืฆืœ ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื”ื. ืืžืจื• ืœื”ื ื‘ื’ื™ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ื•ืžืช ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืœ ืžื” ื“ืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ืขืœ ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืขืžื ืืชื ืขืœื™ื”ื•ืŸ. ืื™ืชื•ืŸ ื•ื ืคื™ืง ืื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืŸ. ื•ืื™ ืœื ืื™ื ื•ืŸ ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ืืžืจื• ืขืฉืจื” ื‘ื ื™ื ืœืื—ืจ ืžืžื ื• ื™ืžื•ืชื•ืŸ ื•ื—ื“ ืžื ื›ื•ืŸ ืœื ื™ืงื•ื ืขืœ ืืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื. ืืžืจื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืฉืžื ื“ืžื™ืœืชื ื ื–ื™ืœ ื’ื‘ื™ ืคืจืขื” ื“ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื“ืœืžื ื”ื•ื ื—ื™ื™' ืขืœ ื ืคืฉื™ื” ื•ืืคื™ืงืืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืŸ. ื”ืœื›ื• ืืฆืœ ืคืจืขื” ืืžืจื• ืœื• ื‘ื’ื™ืŸ ื“ืืžืจ ืžืฉื” ื•ืžืช ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ ื•ื›ืœ ืžื” ื“ืืžืจ ืžืคื” ืขืœ ื”ืœื™ืš ืขืžื ืืชื ืขืœื™ื”ื•ืŸ. ืืœื ืงื•ื ื•ืืคื™ืง ืืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ืจื™ื™ื ืžื‘ื™ื ืŸ ื•ืื™ ืœื ื”ืœื™ืš ืขื™ื ื ืžื™ื™ืชื™ืŸ. ืืžืจ ืงื•ืžื• ืฆืื• ืงืคื—ื• ืฉื•ืงื™ื”ื ืฉืœ ืืœื•. ืื ื ืืžืจื™ืช ืื• ื ืคืฉื™ ืื• ื ืคืฉื™ื”ื•ืŸ ื“ื”ืœื™ืŸ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื™ื ื•ืืชื•ืŸ ืืžืจื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื“ื™ืŸ. ืžื™ื“ ื™ืฆืื• ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•' ื•ื”ืจื’ื• ื‘ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื”ื ืฉืฉื™ื ืจื‘ื•ื ื”ื”ื•ื™ ืœืžื›ื” ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ื”ื. ืžื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื”ืจื’ื• ื‘ื”ื ื•ื–ื• ื”ื™ื ืžื›ืช ื”ื—ืจื‘ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื."
167
+ ],
168
+ [
169
+ "<b>ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื–ื• ื’ืœื•ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื”.</b> ืคื™ืจื•ืฉ ืฉื ื’ืœื” ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื‘ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื•ื”ื›ื” ื”ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืชื•ื›ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื ' ืื• ื”ื ืกื” ืืœืงื™' ื‘ื‘ืจืืฉื™ืช ืจื‘ื” ืืžืจ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ื“ืŸ ืžืœื‘ื•ื ืœืงื—ืช ืœื• ื’ื•ื™ ืขื“ ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจืื™ื ืข\"ื› ืื•ืชื™ืŸ ื”ืŸ. ื•ืื ื™ืืžืจ ืœืš ืข\"ื” ื”ืŸ ืืžื•ืจ ืœื• ืฆื ืžื”ืŸ ื’ื•ื™ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืื™ื ื• ืžืŸ ื”ืžื ื™ืŸ ื•ื”ื ื›ื ื’ื“ ื”ืฉื ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื‘ืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื™ื ื•ืฉืชื™ื ืื•ืชื™ื•ืช. ืชื“ืข ืฉื›ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื–ื” ืืœื™ ื•ืื ื•ื”ื•. ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืจืื™ื ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื‘ืืฆื‘ืข. ื•ื–ื”ื• ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจื ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื•ื‘ืžื•ืจืื™ื ื’ื“ื•ืœื™ื ืืœื• ื ื•ืจืื•ืช ืฉืœ ื’ืœื•ื™ ืฉื›ื™ื ื”. ืืขืค\"ื™ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืœืื” ื’ืœื•ืœื™ื ื•ื˜ื ื•ืคื™ื ืืขืค\"ื™ ื›ืŸ ื ืจืื” ืœื”ื ืœืงื™ื™ื ืžื” ืฉื ืืž' ืœื™ืขืงื‘ ื•ืื ื›ื™ ืืขืœืš ื’ื ืขืœื”. ื•ื ื’ืœื” ืขืœื™ื”ื ื‘' ืคืขืžื™ื ื' ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื™ื•ื ืจ\"ื— ื ื™ืกืŸ ืฉื ' ื•ื™ื“ื‘ืจ ื”' ืืœ ืžืฉื” ื•ืื”ืจืŸ ื‘ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืœืืžืจ ื”ื—ื“ืฉ ื”ื–ื” ืœื›ื. ื•ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ืฉืขืช ื”ื’ืื•ืœื”. ื•ื›ืžื• ื›ืŸ ืจืื•ื”ื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื. ื›ืžื• ืฉืืž' ืจืืชื” ืฉืคื—ื” ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืžื” ืฉืœื ืจืื” ื™ื—ื–ืงืืœ ื‘ืŸ ื‘ื•ื–ื™. ื•ื”ืจื•ืื” ืฉื›ื™ื ื” ื ืจืชืข ื•ื ื‘ื”ืœ ื•ื–ื”ื• ืžื•ืจื."
170
+ ]
171
+ ],
172
+ "The Ten Plagues": [
173
+ [],
174
+ [],
175
+ [],
176
+ [],
177
+ [],
178
+ [],
179
+ [],
180
+ [],
181
+ [],
182
+ [],
183
+ [],
184
+ [],
185
+ [],
186
+ [],
187
+ [],
188
+ [],
189
+ [
190
+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ื™ื” ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžื ื™ื.</b> ืงืฉื” ืžื” ื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœืกื™ืžืŸ ื•ื”ืœื ื”ื›ืœ ื™ื•ื“ืขื™ืŸ ืœืงื—ืช ืื•ืช ืื—ืช ืžื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื•ืœืขืฉื•ืช ืกื™ืžืŸ. ืืœื ืœื ื‘ื ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ืืœื ืœื™ืชืŸ ืกื™ืžืŸ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉืœืงื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืฉืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกื™ ื”ื™ื” ืื•ืžืจ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืžื›ื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ ืžืืชื™ื ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืื•ืžืจ ืžืืชื™ื ื•ื—ืžืฉื™ื. ื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื›ืœื ืขื•ืœื” ื—ืžืฉ ืžืื•ืช. ื•ืขืœ ื–ื” ืฉื ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื”ื•ื“ื” ื”ืกื™ืžืŸ ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืขื“\"ืฉ ื‘ืื—\"ื‘ ืฉืขื•ืœื” ื—ืžืฉ ืžืื•ืช ื•ื' ื•ื‘ื’ืžื˜ืจื™ื ืœื ืงืคื“ื™ื ืŸ ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ื' ื™ื•ืชืจ ืื• ื—ืกืจ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ืกืคืจ ืชื”ืœื™ื ืื™ื ื ืกื“ื•ืจื™ื ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ืŸ ืกื“ื•ืจื™ื ื‘ืคืจืฉื”. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžืŸ ื–ื” ืœื”ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉื”ืกื“ืจ ืžื”ืคืจืฉื” ื”ื•ื ื”ืขื™ืงืจ. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™' ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžื›ื•' ื™ืฉ ืžื”ื ื‘ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžื”ื ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื” ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื ืชืŸ ื‘ื”ื ืกื™ืžื ื™ื ืฉื›ืœื ื”ื•ืœื›ื™' ืฉืœืฉ ืฉืœืฉ. ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืกื“ืจ ื–ื” ื‘' ืขื ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ื”ื’' ื‘ืœื™ ื”ืชืจืื” ื“ื ืฆืคืจื“ืข ื‘ื”ืชืจืื” ื›ื ื™ื ื”ื’' ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื” ืข\"ื“ ื‘ื”ืชืจืื” ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ืœื ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ืœืขื•ืœื ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ืœืจืืฉ ื›ื“ื™ืŸ ื”ืžืœืงื•' ืžื™ ืฉืœืงื” ื•ืฉื ื”. ื‘ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืื™ืŸ ืžืœืงื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืจืง ืžื›ื ื™ืกื™' ืื•ืชื• ืœื›ืคื” ื•ืžืื›ื™ืœื™ืŸ ืœื—ื ืฉืขื•ืจื™' ืขื“ ืฉื›ืจืกื• ื ื‘ืงืขืช ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืจืฉืข ื”ื•ื ื•ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื™ื•ืชืจ ื”ืชืจืื” ื•ื›ืŸ ื‘ืจื“ ืืจื‘ื” ื‘ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ื—ืฉืš ื‘ืœื™ ื”ืชืจืื”. ื•ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื‘' ืžืžื›ืช ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ื ืฉืืจืช ืœื‘ื“ื” ืœืคื™ื›ืš ื”ื•ืฆืจืš ืœื›ื•ืœืœื” ื•ืœืฆืจืคื” ื‘ืชื™ื‘ืช ื‘ืื—\"ื‘. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื˜ืขื ืื—ืจ ื“ืฆ\"ืš ืฉืœืฉืชื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืื”ืจืŸ. ืขื“\"ืฉ ืขืจื•ื‘ ื“ื‘ืจ ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื–ื” ื•ืœื ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื–ื”. ืฉื—ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืฉื ื™ื”ื. ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ืงื—ื• ืœื›ื ืžืœื ื—ืคื ื™ื›ื ืคื™ื— ื”ื›ื‘ืฉืŸ. ื‘ื\"ื— ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ืžืฉื”. ื‘' ื‘ื›ื•ืจื•ืช ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื ืžืฆื ื›ืœ ืกื™ืžืŸ ื‘ื’ื“ืจ ืœื‘ื“ื•. ",
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืื•ืžืจ. ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ืฉื”ื‘ื™ื ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆืจื™ื™ื ื”ื™ืชื” ืฉืœ ืืจื‘ืข ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉื ืืžืจ ื™ืฉืœื— ื‘ื ื—ืจื•ืŸ ืืคื• ืขื‘ืจื” ื•ื–ืขื ื•ืฆืจื” ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื™ืฉ ืœื”ืชื‘ื•ื ืŸ ื‘ืžื—ืœื•ืงืช ืืœื• ื”ืชื ืื™ื ืฉืื—ื“ ืื•ืžืจ ื•ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ืžืจื•ื‘ืขืช ื•ื”ื' ืื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื™ื ืžื—ื•ืžืฉืช. ื•ื”ืจื•ืงื— ื ื•ืชืŸ ื‘ื–ื” ื˜ืขื ื™ืคื” ื‘ืžืื™ ืคืœื™ื’ื™. ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ ื›ื•ื ืช ืจื‘ื™ ืืœื™ืขื–ืจ ืฉืื•ืžืจ ืฉื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื”ื™ืชื” ืžืืจื‘ืข ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื•ื ื›ื™ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช ื”ื™ื• ืžืฉื•ืชืคื•ืช ื‘ื›ืœ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ืœื ื”ื™ื• ืœื•ืงื™ื ื‘ื™ืกื•ื“ ืžื™ื•ื—ื“. ื•ื ืžืฆืืช ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื‘ืœื•ืœื” ืžื›ืœ ื”ืืจื‘ืขื” ื™ืกื•ื“ื•ืช. ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืงื™ื‘ื ืฉืื•ืžืจ ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื—ืžืฉ ืžื›ื•ืช ื›ื•ื ืชื• ื›ื™ ืชื ื•ืขืช ื”ื’ืœื’ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ื™ืกื•ื“ ื•ื”ื’ืฉื ื”ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืžืกื™ื™ืขืช ื‘ื›ืœ ืžื›ื” ื•ืžื›ื”. ื‘ืขื‘ื•ืจ ื–ื” ื”ื•ื ื”ืกื•ื‘ื‘ ื•ื”ืžืกื‘ื‘ ื”ื›ืœ ื‘ืจืฆื•ืŸ ื”ืžื•ืจื” ื•ืœื”ื•ื“ื™ืข ื›ื™ ืžืœื›ื•ืชื• ื‘ื›ืœ ืžืฉืœื”."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Dayenu": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื›ืžื” ืžืขืœื•ืช ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•.</b> ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉืืœื• ื”ืชื ืื™ื ื”ื™ื• ืžืขืœื™ืŸ ื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื—ื“ ื‘ื—ืฉื‘ื•ืŸ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืืžืจ ืžืขืœื•ืช ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ืœืžืงื•ื ืขืœื™ื ื•. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ืขื“ื™ืŸ ื ื•ื›ืœ ืœืฉืคืจ ื•ืœื”ืจื‘ื•ืช ื‘ืžืขืœื•ืช ื”ื˜ื•ื‘ื•ืช ื•ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืขืฉื” ื”ืžืงื•ื ื‘ืจื•ื‘ ื—ื‘ืชื• ืืœื™ื ื•."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "ื•ื›ืŸ ืžืคืจืฉ ื•ื”ื•ืœืš <b>ืืœื• ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืœื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื.</b> ื ืก ื’ื“ื•ืœ ื”ื™ื” ื•ื“ื™ ืœื ื•. ื›ื“ืžืคืจืฉ ื‘ืื’ื“ื” ืื• ื”ื ืกื” ืืœืงื™' ืœื‘ื ืœืงื—ืช ืœื• ื’ื•ื™ ืžืงืจื‘ ื’ื•ื™ ื›ื–ื” ืฉืžื•ืฉืš ืืช ื”ืขื•ื‘ืจ ืžืžืขื™ ืืžื• ืฉืœื ื‘ื–ืžื ื•. ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื• ืจืื•ื™ื™ืŸ ืœืฆืืช ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืžื“ืช ื”ื“ื™ืŸ ืžืงื˜ืจื’ืช ืขืœื™ื”ืŸ ืืœื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื– ื•ืืœื• ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืข\"ื–. ืืœื• ืžื’ืœื™ ืขืจื™ื•ืช. ื•ืืœื• ืžื’ืœื™ ืขืจื™ื•ืช. ื•ืื—ืจ ืฉื›ืคืœ ืœื ื• ืืช ื”ื ืก ื”ื–ื” ืœื”ื•ืฆื™ืื ื•. ื•ืœืขืฉื•ืช ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื ืข\"ื™ ืฉื ืฉืชืขื‘ื“ื• ื‘ื ื•. ื›\"ืฉ ื™ืฉ ืœื ื• ืœืฉื‘ื— ืœืื“ื•ืŸ ื”ื›ืœ. ื•ืœื ืจ\"ืœ ืฉืœื ื™ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื›ืœืœ ื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื•ื’ื ืืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ ืืฉืจ ื™ืขื‘ื“ื• ื“ืŸ ืื ื›ื™ ืืœื ืœื ืขืฉื” ื‘ื”ื ืฉืคื˜ื™ื ื‘ื›ืœื ืืœื ื‘ืžืงืฆืชื ื“ื™ื™ื ื•."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืœื ื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืืช ืžืžื•ื ื.</b> ื’ื ื–ื” ืื™ืŸ ืจ\"ืœ ืžื›ื•ืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื”ื‘ื˜ื™ื— ืœืื‘ืจื”ื ื•ืื—\"ื› ื™ื‘ืื• ื‘ืจื›ื•ืฉ ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืืœื ืจ\"ืœ ืžื‘ื–ืช ื”ื™ื."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืืœื• ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจ ืกื™ื ื™.</b> ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืœื ื• ื›ื‘ื•ื“ื• ื“ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ืœื ื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ืื• ืฉืœื ื™ื•ืกื™ืฃ ืœื ื• ื”ืžืฆื•ืช ื›ืœืŸ ืืœื ื›ืžื• ืฉื ืฆื˜ื•ื• ื‘ื ื™ ื ื— ื“ื™ื™ื ื•. ื•ื™ืฉ ืžืคืจืฉื™ืŸ ืืœื• ืงืจื‘ื ื• ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืจ ืกื ื™ ื•ืœื ื ืชืŸ ืœื ื• ืืช ื”ืชื•ืจื” ื“ื™ื™ื ื• ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืคืกืงื” ืžืžื ื• ื–ื•ื”ืžื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื• ื–\"ืœ ื›ืฉืขืžื“ื• ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืขืœ ื”ืจ ืกื ื™ ืคืกืงื” ื–ื•ื”ืžืชืŸ. ื’ื•ื™ื ืฉืœื ืขืžื“ื• ืขืœ ื”ืจ ืกื ื™ ืœื ืคืกืงื” ื–ื•ื”ืžืชืŸ. ื›ืœ ืฉื›ืŸ ืฉืขืฉื” ืœื ื• ื›ืœ ืืœื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื–ื” ืžืฉื›ืŸ ืฉืœื•. ื‘ื™ืช ื”ื‘ื—ื™ืจื” ื–ื” ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืฉื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœื™ื. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืจื‘ืŸ ื’ืžืœื™ืืœ ืื•ืžืจ ื›ืœ ืฉืœื ืืžืจ ืฉืœืฉื” ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืœื• ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืœื•ืž' ืืคื™ืœื• ื™ืื›ืœ ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ. ืื™ื ื• ื™ื•ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื• ืื ืœื ื™ืืžืจ ื’' ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ืืœื• ืœืžื” ื”ื ื‘ืื™' ืฉืžืฆืื ื• ืฉื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ืžืงืคื™' ืขืœ ืืžื™ืจ' ื•ื”ื’ื“ื”."
220
+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ื•ื’ื•' ืขืœ ืฉื•ื ืฉืœื ื”ืกืคื™ืง.</b> ื•ื™ืฉ ืœืฉืื•ืœ ื›ื™ ื›ื‘ืจ ื ืฆื˜ื•ื• ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื‘ืกืช' ื•ืœื ืืžืจ ื”ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื˜ืขื ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ. ืคืจืฉ ืจื‘ื™ ื™ื•ืกืฃ ืงืžื—ื™ ืฉืžื” ืฉื ืฆื˜ื•ื• ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื•' ืงื•ื“ื ืœื›ืŸ ื”ื™ื” ืขืœ ืฉื ื”ืขืชื™ื“. ื”ืฉื ื™ื•ื“ืข ื”ืขืชื™ื“ื•ืช ื•ื™ื“ืข ืฉื”ื™ื” ืœื”ื ืœืฆืืช ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื‘ื—ืคื–ื•ืŸ. ื•ืืคื™ืœื• ืื ื”ื™ื• ืจื•ืฆื™ื ืœื ื”ื™ื• ื™ื›ื•ืœื™ื ืœื”ื—ืžื™ืฅ ื‘ืฆืงื ืฆื•ื” ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื”ืคืกื— ืขืœ ืžืฆื•' ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื•ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืฉื‘ืขื” ื™ืžื™ื ืžืฆื”."
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+ ],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ื‘ื›ืœ ื“ื•ืจ ื•ื“ื•ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœื”ืจืื•ืช ืขืฆืžื• ื›ืืœื• ื”ื•ื ื™ืฆื ืžืฉื.</b> ื–ื” ืžื•ืกื‘ ืขืœ ืžื” ืฉืืžืจื ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœืช ื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืืœื• ืœื ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ื”ื‘\"ื” ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ืขื“ื™ืŸ ืื ื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ื ื• ืžืฉื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื“ืืžืจื™ ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื•ืžืจ ื•ืื•ืชื ื• ื”ื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฉื ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื”ืจื™ ืื ื• ื‘ื›ืœืœ ื›ืœ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืืœื• ืœื ื™ืฆืื• ื”ื ืขื“ื™ื™ืŸ ื”ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื. ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื•ื“ื•ืช ืœื”ืœืœ ื•ื›ื•'. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
232
+ "First Half of Hallel": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ืœืคื™ื›ืš ืื ื• ื—ื™ื™ื‘ื™ื ืœื”ื•ื“ื•ืช ื•ื›ื•'.</b> ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ื›ืืœื• ืื ื—ื ื• ื™ืฆืื• ืžืžืฆืจื™ื ื—ื•ื‘ื” ืขืœื™ื ื• ืœื”ืœืœ ื•ืœืฉื‘ื— ื•ื›ื•' ื›ืžื• ืฉืขืฉื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•. ื•ื ื”ื’ื• ืฉืžืขืชื” ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื›ืœ ื' ื›ื•ืกื• ื‘ื™ื“ื• ืฉืžื›ืืŸ ืื ื• ืคื•ืชื—ื™ืŸ ื‘ืฉื™ืจ ืฉื”ื”ื’ื“ื” ืื™ื ื” ืืœื ืกืคื•ืจื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™ื ื‘ืขืœืžื ื•ืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื™ืจื” ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื›' ื•ืœืืžืจ ืœื”ื ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื”ื—ื“ืœืชื™ ืชืจื•ืฉื™. ื”ืžืฉืžื— ืืœืงื™ื ื•ืื ืฉื™ื. ืื ืื ืฉื™ื ืžืฉืžื— ืืœืงื™ื ื‘ืžื” ืžืฉืžื—. ืืœื ืžื›ืืŸ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื™ืจื” ืืœื ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ. ื•ืžื–ื›ื™ืจ ื›ืืŸ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืžื™ื ื™ ืฉื‘ื— ืœื”ื•ื“ื•ืช ืœื”ืœืœ ืœืฉื‘ื— ื•ืœืคืืจ ื•ื›ื•' ื›ื ื’ื“ ืฉื‘ืขื” ืจืงื™ืขื™ื. ื•ื ืืžืจ ืœืคื ื™ื• ื”ืœืœื•ื™ื”. ื”ืœืœื• ืขื‘ื“ื™ ื”'. ื•ืื•ืžืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ืขื“ ื—ืœืžื™ืฉ ืœืžืขื™ื ื• ืžื™ื ื•ืžื ื”ื’ื ื• ืฉืœื ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”. ื›ื™ ื›ืŸ ื ืžืฆื ื‘ืฉื ืชืฉื•ื‘ืช ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™' ืœืžื” ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื— ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉื’ื•ืžืจื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœืคื™ ืฉื—ื•ืœืงื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืœืฉื ื™ื. ื•ื’ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืื•ืชื• ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœื—ืŸ ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ื”ืœืœ ืืœื ื‘ืชื•ืจืช ืฉื™ืจ ื•ื”ื•ื“ืื” ื‘ืœื‘ื“. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื”ื™ืืš ื™ื‘ืจืš ืœื’ืžื•ืจ ื•ื”ื•ื ืคื•ืกืง ื‘ืืžืฆืข. ื”ืžื’ื‘ื™ื”ื™ ื”ืžืฉืคื™ืœื™ ืžืงื™ืžื™ ืœื”ื•ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ืžื•ืฉื™ื‘ื™ ื”' ื™ื•ื“ื™\"ืŸ ื ื•ืกืคื•ืช ื›ื ื’ื“ ื—ืžืฉื™ื ืžื›ื•ืช ืฉืœืงื• ื‘ืžืฆืจื™ื ืื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื ืžืžื–ืจื— ืฉืžืฉ ืขื“ ืžื‘ื•ืื• ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื•. ื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืžืฉืœื•ืชื™ื• ื‘ืคืชื— ื”ืž\"ื."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Second Cup of Wine": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื‘ืจื•ืš ืืชื” ื”' ืืž\"ื” ืืฉืจ ื’ืืœื ื• ื•ื’ืืœ ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•.</b> ืœืคื™ ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื—ืชื•ื ื‘ื’ืื•ืœื” ื›ืžื• ืฉืืžืจื ื• ืžืชื—ื™ืœ ื‘ื’ื ื•ืช ื•ืžืกื™ื™ื ื‘ืฉื‘ื— ื•ื›ืœืคื™ ืฉืืžืจ' ืฉืœื ืืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ื‘ืœื‘ื“ ื’ืืœ ื•ื›ื•' ืื ื• ืžื–ื›ื™ืจื™ืŸ ื’ืื•ืœืชื™ื ื• ื•ื’ืื•ืœืช ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•. ",
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+ "<b>ื•ื”ื’ื™ืขื ื• ืœื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื”.</b> ืืฃ ืขืœ ืคื™ ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื‘ืจื›ื ื• ืฉื”ื—ื™ื™ื ื• ื‘ืงื“ื•ืฉ ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ื›ืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืœื•ืžืจ ื›ืŸ ื™ื’ื™ืขื ื• ืœืžื•ืขื“ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื™ืฉ ืฉื’ื•ืจืกื™ื ื›ืŸ ื”ื’ื™ืขื ื• ืœืžื•ืขื“ื™ื ืฉื›ืœ ื ื•ืกื— ื”ื‘ืจื›ื” ืžื“ื‘ืจ ืœื ื›ื—. <b>ืœืžื•ืขื“ื™ื</b> ืืœื• ืจืืฉ ื”ืฉื ื” ื•ื™ื•ื ื”ื›ืคื•ืจื™ื <b>ื•ืœืจื’ืœื™ื</b> ืืœื• ืคืกื— ืฉื‘ื•ืขื•ืช ื•ืกื›ื•ืช. <b>ืฉืžื—ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ื ืื›ืœ ืฉื ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื‘ื—ื™ื ื•ืžืŸ ื”ืคืกื—ื™ื</b>. ื›ื™ ื”ื–ื‘ื— ืžื”ื—ื’ื™ื’ื” ืงื•ื“ื ืœืงืจื‘ืŸ ืคืกื—."
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+ ],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืžื‘ืจืš</b> ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืžื•. ื•ื ื•ื˜ืœื™ืŸ ื™ื“ื™ื”ื ืคืขื ืฉื ื™ื™ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ืขืœ ื ื˜ื™ืœืช ื™ื“ื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ื™ืŸ ื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœืฉื ื™ ืงื•ืจื ื”ื”ื’ื“' ื•ื”ื”ืœืœ ื•ืžืกื™ื— ื“ืขืชื• ืžืŸ ื”ื ื˜ื™ืœื” ื”ืจืืฉื•ื ื”. ื•ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืขืกืงื ื™ื•ืช ืฉืžื ื ื’ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ื”ืžื˜ืžื ืืช ื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืœื›ืš ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื—ื–ื•ืจ ื•ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ืฉ ืœื• ืœืื›ืœ ืคืช ื•ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ืœืื›ืœ ืขืช ื‘ื™ื“ื™ื ืžืกื•ืื‘ื•ืช ื•ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉืื ืฉืžืจ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืžื˜ื‘ื•ืœ ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืฉืœื ื ื’ืข ื‘ื“ื‘ืจ ืฉืžื˜ืžื ื”ื™ื“ื™ื ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื—ื–ื•ืจ ื•ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ื•ืื ืจื•ืฆื” ืœื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›ื”."
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+ ]
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ "Rachtzah": [],
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+ "Motzi Matzah": [],
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+ "Maror": [],
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+ "Korech": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ื›ืš ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื‘ื™ืช ืฉืชื™ ืžืฆื•ืช ื”ื ืงืจืื•' ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื ืื—ืช ืฉืœืžื” ื•ืื—ืช ืคืจื•ืกื” ื•ื‘ื•ืฆืข ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื” ื“ืืž' ืžืจ ื”ื›ืœ ืžื•ื“ื™ื ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉืžื ื™ื— ืฉืœืžื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ื•ื‘ื•ืฆืข. ืžืื™ ื˜ืขืžื ืœื—ื ืขื•ื ื™ ื›ืชื™ื‘ ืžื” ื“ืจื›ื• ืฉืœ ืขื ื™ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื” ืืฃ ื›ืืŸ ื‘ืคืจื•ืกื”. ื•ืžื ื™ื— ืฉืœืžื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ืขืœ ืฉื ืœื—ื ืžืฉื ื” ื•ื‘ื•ืฆืข ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืœืคื™ ืฉื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืชื“ื™ืจื” ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื•ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ืขื“ ืฉื‘ื•ืฆืข ืžืŸ ื”ืฉืœืžื” ืฉืชื—ืชื™ื” ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื”. ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ืžืฉื ื™ื”ืŸ ื™ื—ื“ ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ ืœื›ืœื ื•ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืœื”ืกื‘ ื“ืืžืจื™' ืžืฆื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื” ื”ืกื‘ื”. ื•ื’ืื•ื ื™ื ืื—ืจื™ื ืฉืžื‘ืจื›ื™ื ื”ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืขืœ ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ื•ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ืขืœ ื”ืฉืœืž' ื•ื“ืขื‘ื“ ื›ืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ ื•ื›ืžืจ ืขื‘ื“.",
256
+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ื›ืš ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ื—ื–ืจืช ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื” ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืจื•ืจ ื•ืžื˜ื‘ืœ ื‘ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื™ืคื” ืžืฉื•ื ืงืคื ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืืจืก ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื™ืจืง. ื•ื™ืฉ ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉื”ื•ื ืชื•ืœืขืช. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœื™ืœื” ื•ืœื ื™ืจืื” ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ืชื• ื”ื—ืจื•ืกืช ื”ื•ื ืจืคื•ืืชื• ืฉืžื•ื ืขืชื• ืžืœื”ื–ื™ืง.",
257
+ "<b>ื•ื ื•ืชืŸ</b> ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืžืžื ื• ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื›ืœ ื”ืคื—ื•ืช ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ื‘ืœื ื”ืกื‘ื” ื“ืืžืจื• ื‘ื’ืžืจื ืžืจื•ืจ ืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื”. ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืžืจื•ืจ ื–ื›ืจ ืœื•ื™ืžืจืจื•. ื•ื”ืกื‘ื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœื—ืจื•ืช. ื•ืื™ืŸ ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ืื“ืžื” ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืจื•ืจ ืœืคื™ ืฉื”ืคืช ืคื•ื˜ืจืชื• ืžืฉื•' ื“ื”ื•ื™ ื“ื‘ืจื™' ื”ื‘ืื™ื ืžื—ืžืช ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืกืขื•ื“ื” ืฉืื™ืŸ ื˜ืขื•ื ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ื” ืœื ืœืคื ื™ื”ื ื•ืœื ืœืื—ืจื™ื”'.",
258
+ "<b>ื•ืœืื—ืจ</b> ืฉืื›ืœื• ืžืจื•' ื›ื–ื™ืช ืœื›ืœ ืื—ื“ ื ื•ื˜ืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ื”ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช ืฉืœ ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื ื•ื—ื–ืจืช ื•ื›ื•ืจื›ืŸ ื™ื—ื“ ื•ืื•ื›ืœื ื›ืื—ื“ ื‘ืœื ื”ืกื‘ื” ืฉื”ืจื™ ื™ืฉ ื‘ื” ืžืจื•ืจ ืฉืื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ื”ืกื‘ื” ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ื ืื•ืชื• ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ ื›ื”ืœืœ ื“ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื™ืื›ืœื•ื”ื•. ื•ื‘ืขืจื•ืš ืืžืจ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ืฉื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ืงื™ื™ื ื”ื™ื” ื”ืœืœ ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ืื›ื™ืœืช ืžืฆื” ื‘ืžืฆื”. ื•ื‘ืžืจื•ืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืจื•ืจ. ื•ื›ื•ืจืš ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉืฉื ื™ื”ื ืžื“ื‘ืจื™ ืชื•ืจื” ืื™ืŸ ื–ื” ืžื‘ื˜ืœ ื–ื” ืื‘ืœ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื”ื–ื” ื“ืžืฆื” ื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ืขืจื‘ ืชืื›ืœื• ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืžื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ืฉื ืืžืจ ืขืœ ืžืฆื•ืช ื•ืžืจื•ืจื™ื ื™ืื›ืœื•ื”ื•. ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื“ืื™ื›ื ืคืกื— ืื™ืŸ ื‘ื–ืžืŸ ื“ืœื™ื‘ื ืคืกื— ืœื. ืื™ืŸ ืœืื›ืœืŸ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช. ื“ืืชื™ ื“ืจื‘ื ืŸ ื•ืžื‘ื˜ืœ ื“ืื•ืจื™ื™ืชื ืืœื ื–ื” ืขืฆืžื• ื•ื–ื” ื‘ืขืฆืžื•. ื•ืื—\"ื› ืื•ื›ืœืŸ ื‘ื‘ืช ืื—ืช ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืงื“ืฉ. ื•ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื›ื‘ืจ ื‘ืจื›ื ื• ืขืœ ื”ืžืฆื” ื•ืขืœ ื”ื—ื–ืจืช ื•ืื›ื™ืœื” ื–ื• ืœื–ื›ื” ื‘ืขืœืžื ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™ืŸ ืขืœื™ื”. ื›ืชื‘ ืื‘ืŸ ื”ื™ืจื—ื™ ื”ืจื•ืฆื” ืœืขืฉื•' ืžืฆื•ื” ืžืŸ ื”ืžื•ื‘ื—ืจ ืœื ื™ืฉื•ื— ืขื“ ืฉื™ืขืฉื” ื›ืจื™ื›ื” ื›ื”ืœืœ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืชืขืœื” ืœื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ ืœื›ืจื™ื›ื” ื“ื”ืœืœ. ื“ื”ื ืžืฉื•ื ื“ืœื ืืชืžืจ ื”ืœื›ืชื ืœื ื›ืžืจ ื•ืœื ื›ืžืจ ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ืŸ ืœื—ืžืจื ื‘ืชืจื•ื™ื”ื•. ื”ื›ื™ ื ืžื™ ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ื” ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ืŸ ืœืžืขื‘ื“ ืฉื™ืขืœื• ืœืฉื ื™ื”ื ื•ื‘ืฉื™ื—ืช ื—ื•ืœื™ืŸ ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื”ื–ื”ืจ ืื‘ืœ ื˜ื•ืœ ื›ืจื™ืš ืœื ื”ื•ื™ ื”ืคืกืง. "
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Shulchan Orech": [
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ื›ืš ื ืžืฉืš ื‘ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ื•ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ืœ ืฆืจื›ื•. ื•ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ื–ื™ืช ืžืŸ ื”ืžืฆื” ื”ืคืจื•ืกื” ืฉืฉืžื• ื‘ื’ื ื™ื–ื” ืชื—ืช ื”ืžืคื” ื–ื›ืจ ืœืžืฉืืจื•ืชื ืฆืจื•ืจื•ืช ื‘ืฉืžืœื•ืชื. ื•ืื•ื›ืœื™ืŸ ืื•ืชื• ืœืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื–ื›ืจ ืœืคืกื— ืฉื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ืขืœ ื”ืฉื‘ืข ื•ืื™ื ื• ืื•ื›ืœ ื›ืœื•ื ืื—ืจ ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ื”ื™ื” ื”ืคืกืง ืกืขื•ื“ืชื• ื‘ื˜ืขื ื”ืžืฆื” ื‘ืคื™ื•. ื•ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื™ื–ื”ืจ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ืžืฆื” ื–ื• ืฉืœ ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืงื•ื“ื ื—ืฆื•ืช. ื•ืื ืœืื• ืœื ื™ืฆื ื™ื“ื™ ื—ื•ื‘ืชื• ื‘ืคืกื— ืฉืœื ื”ื™ื” ื ืื›ืœ ื›ื™ ืื ืขื“ ื—ืฆื•ืช."
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Tzafun": [
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+ [
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+ "<b>ื•ืื ืฉื›ื—</b> ื•ืœื ืื›ืœ ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืขื“ ืฉื ื˜ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ืœื‘ืจืš ืื• ืฉืืžืจ ื”ื‘ ืœืŸ ื•ื ื‘ืจื™ืš ืื• ืืคื™ืœื• ื‘ืจืš ื›ื‘ืจ ื•ื ื–ื›ืจ ืงื•ื“ื ืฉื‘ืจืš ื‘ืค\"ื” ื›ืชื‘ ืื‘ื™ ื”ืขื–ืจื™ ื•ื”ืจื\"ืฉ ืฉื™ื˜ื•ืœ ื™ื“ื™ื• ื•ื™ื‘ืจืš ื”ืžื•ืฆื™' ื•ื™ืื›ืœื ื”. ื•ืื ืœื ื ื–ื›ืจ ืขื“ ืฉื‘ืจืš ื‘ืค\"ื” ืœื ื™ืื›ืœื ื” ืคืขื ืื—ืจืช ืžืคื ื™ ืฉื”ื™ื” ืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืขื•ื“ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ืœื‘ืจืš ื‘ืค\"ื”. ื•ื ืžืฆื ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื“' ื›ื•ืกื•ืช. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื“ืงื™ื™ืžื ืœืŸ ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’' ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ืฉืชื”. ื•ืขื•ื“ ื›ื“ืื™ ื”ื ืžืฆื•ืช ืฉืœื ื• ืœืกืžื•ืš ืขืœื™ื”ื ื›ื™ ื›ืœื ืฉืžื•ืจื•ืช ืžืฉืขืช ืœื™ืฉื” ื•ืžืฆื” ืื—ืจื•ื ื” ืฉืื›ืœ ืชืขืœื” ืœื• ื‘ืžืงื•ื ืžืฆืช ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ. ื•ื”ืจ\"ืจ ืคืจืฅ ื›ืชื‘ ืืข\"ื’ ื“ืืžืจ ื”ื‘ ืœืŸ ื•ื ื‘ืจื™ืš ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืœืื›ื•ืœ ื‘ืœื ื‘ืจื›' ืืข\"ื’ ื“ื‘ืขืœืž' ื—ืฉื™ื‘ ืกื™ืœื•ืง ืฉืื ื™ ื”ื›ื ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืžืฆื•ื” ื“ืจืžื™ ืจื—ืžื ' ืขืœื™ื” ืื™ื›ื ืœืžื™ืช' ืืช ื›' ื“ืจื—ืžื ' ืกืžื›ื™ื ืŸ. ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉืฉื•ืชื” ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ. ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™' ื•ื’ื•' ืขืœื™ื• ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ. ื•ืื•ืž' ื‘ืžื“ืจืฉ ืชืœื™ื ื”ืงื•ืจืื™ื ืฆืจื™ื›ื™ื ืฉื™ื”ื™ื• ืฉืœืฉ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉื™ืืžืจ ืื—ื“ ืœื ื™ื• ื”ื•ื“ื•. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจืืฉ ื•ืื ืื™ ืืคืฉืจ ื‘ืฉืœืฉื” ื’ื“ื•ืœื™' ื™ืกืคื™ืงื• ืœื• ืืฉืชื• ื•ื‘ื ื• ื”ืงื˜ืŸ. "
270
+ ]
271
+ ],
272
+ "Barech": {
273
+ "Birkat Hamazon": [
274
+ [],
275
+ [
276
+ "<b> ื•ืื—ืจ</b> ืฉืื›ืœ ื”ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ืžื•ื–ื’ื™ืŸ ืœื• ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœื™ื• ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ืขืžื•. ื‘ื™ืŸ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ื”ืœืœื• ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืฉื•ืชื”. ื‘ื™ืŸ ื’' ืœืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœื ื™ืฉืชื” ื•ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ืœืžื” ื‘ืฉื‘ื™ืœ ืฉืœื ื™ืฉืชื›ืจ ื•ื™ืฉื›ื— ืžืœื’ืžื•ืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ. ื•ืžืงืฉื” ื•ื”ื ื›ื‘ืจ ืžืฉื•ื›ืจ ื”ื•ื. ื•ืžืชืจืฅ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืžืฉื›ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืžืฉื›ืจ. ื•ื›ืชื‘ ื‘ื”\"ื’ ื•ื”ืจื™\"ืฃ ื•ื”ืจืžื‘\"ื ืฉืืกื•ืจ ืœืฉ๏ฟฝ๏ฟฝื•ืช ืื—ืจ ืžืฆืช ืืคื™ืงื•ืžืŸ ื—ื•ืฅ ืžืฉืชื™ ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื‘ืจื›ื” ื•ืื—ื“ ืฉืœ ื”ืœืœ. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืžื ื“ื‘ืจ ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืงื‘ืข ืขืฆืžื• ืขืœ ื”ื™ื™ืŸ ื•ื™ื”ื™ื” ื›ืื•ื›ืœ ืคืกื— ื‘ืฉืชื™ ื—ื‘ื•ืจื•ืช ื•ื’ื ื›ื“ื™ ืฉืœื ื™ืจืื” ื›ืžื•ืกื™ืฃ ืขืœ ื”ื›ื•ืกื•ืช. ื•ื”ืจื™ ืชืคืก ืฉื™ื˜ืช ื”ื™ืจื•ืฉืœืžื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืœืขืกื•ืง ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื” ื‘ื”ื’ื“ืช ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื•ืœืกืคืจ ื‘ื ืกื™ื ืฉืขืฉื” ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืœืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื• ืขื“ ืฉืœื ืชื—ื˜ืคื ื• ืฉื ื”. ื™ืฉ ืœื—ื•ืฉ ืื ื™ืฉืชื” ื™ื•ืชืจ ื™ืฉืชื›ืจ. ื•ื”ื›ื™ ืื™ืชื ื‘ืชื•ืกืคืชื ืฉื—ื™ื™ื‘ ืื“ื ืœืขืกื•ืง ื‘ื”ืœื›ื•ืช ื”ืคืกื— ื•ื‘ื™ืฆื™ืืช ืžืฆืจื™ื ื›ืœ ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ื‘ืžืขืฉื” ื”ื–ืงื ื™ื ืฉื”ื™ื• ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง. "
277
+ ]
278
+ ],
279
+ "Third Cup of Wine": [],
280
+ "Pour Out Thy Wrath": [
281
+ [
282
+ "<b>ืื‘ืœ</b> ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ื”ืชื™ืจื• ืฉื™ืฉ ืœื• ืกืžืš ืžืŸ ื”ืคืกื•ืง ื›ื ื’ื“ ื•ื”ื‘ืืชื™ ืืชื›ื ื•ืื ืจืฆื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืžื™ื ื™ืฉืชื”."
283
+ ],
284
+ [
285
+ "<b>ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš ืขืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื.</b> ืžืคื ื™ ืฉืืจื‘ืข ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืืœื• ื”ืŸ ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืข ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืฉืขืชื™ื“ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืœื”ืฉืงื•ืช ืืช ืื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืœื ื•ืื ื• ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืขืœ ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ ืœืคื ื™ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื‘ื–ื” ื”ื›ื•ืก ืื ื• ืžืฉืœื™ืžื™ื ื”ืžืฆื•ื” ืžืขืชื” ืขืฉื” ืžื” ืฉื”ื‘ื˜ื—ืชื ื• ืœืฉืคื•ืš ืื•ืชื ืืจื‘ืขื” ื›ื•ืกื•ืช ืฉืœ ืคื•ืจืขื ื•ืช ืขืœ ื”ื’ื•ื™ื."
286
+ ]
287
+ ]
288
+ },
289
+ "Hallel": {
290
+ "Second Half of Hallel": [
291
+ [],
292
+ [
293
+ "ืขืœ ืืžืชืš ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”.",
294
+ "ื•ืœื ื™ื”ืœื›ื• ื‘ืœื ื ื•ืŸ ื‘ืื—ืจื•ื ื”.",
295
+ "ื™ื”ื’ื• ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”.",
296
+ "ื›ืœ ืืฉืจ ื‘ื•ื˜ื— ื‘ื”ื ื‘ืœื ื•ื™\"ื• ื‘ืชื—ืœื”.",
297
+ "ื ืชืŸ ืœื‘ื ื™ ืื“ื ื‘ืœื ื”\"ื."
298
+ ],
299
+ [
300
+ "ืžืŸ ื“ืžืขื” ื‘ื ื•\"ืŸ ืืจื•ื›ื”. "
301
+ ],
302
+ [
303
+ "ื ื’ื“ื” ื ื ื”ื“' ื‘ืจืคื™.",
304
+ "ื‘ืชื•ื›ื›ื™ ื”ื›' ืจืืฉื•ื ื” ืฆื™\"ืจื™. ื•ื”ืฉื ื™ ื‘ื—ื™ืจ\"ืง."
305
+ ],
306
+ [],
307
+ [],
308
+ [],
309
+ [],
310
+ [],
311
+ [
312
+ "ื•ืœืื—ืจ ืฉื’ืžืจ ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ ืื•ืžืจ ื™ื”ืœืœื•ืš ืฉื”ื™ื ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืฉื™ืจ ื•ื—ื•ืชื ืžืœืš ืžื”ื•ืœืœ ื‘ืชื•ืฉื‘ื—ื•ืช ื•ืžื‘ืจืš ื‘ื•ืจื ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ. ื•ืฉื•ืชื” ื‘ื”ืกื‘ื” ื”ื•ื ื•ื›ืœ ื”ืžืกื•ื‘ื™ืŸ. ื•ืื ืจืฆื” ืœื”ื•ืกื™ืฃ ื›ื•ืก ื—ืžื™ืฉื™ ืื•ืž' ืขืœื™ื• ื”ืœืœ ื”ื’ื“ื•ืœ ืฉื”ื•ื ื”ื•ื“ื• ืœื”' ื›ื™ ื˜ื•ื‘ ื”ื•ื“ื• ืœืืœืงื™ ื”ืืœืงื™ื ื•ื™ืฉ ื‘ื• ื›ื•' ื—ืกื“ื™' ื›ื ื’ื“ ื›\"ื• ื“ื•ืจื•ืช ืฉืœื ื ืชืŸ ืชื•ืจื” ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ ืžืŸ ืื•ืชื ื‘ืจื—ืžื™ื• ื•ื‘ืจื•ื‘ ื—ืกื“ื™ื• ื•ืื•ืžืจ ื ืฉืžืช ื›ืœ ื—ื™ ื•ื—ื•ืชื ื‘ื™ืฉืชื‘ื— ื•ื—ื•ืชื ืขืœื™ื• ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื‘ ื”ืจื™\"ืฅ ื’ื™ืืช. ื•ื”ืจ\"ืจ ื—ื™ื™ื ื›ื”ืŸ ืœื ื”ื™ื” ื—ื•ืชื ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื”ื”ืœืœ ื‘ื‘ืจื›ืช ื›ื™ ื“ื™ ื‘ื—ืชื™ืžื” ืฉืœ ื™ืฉืชื‘ื— ื•ืœืžื” ื™ื—ืชื•ื ืฉื ื™ ืคืขืžื™ื ื‘ืขื ื™ืŸ ืื—ืจ ื•ื›ืŸ ื›ืชื•ื‘ ื‘ืกื“ืจ ืจื‘ื™' ืกืขื“ื™ื” ื–\"ืœ. "
313
+ ]
314
+ ],
315
+ "Songs of Praise and Thanks": [],
316
+ "Fourth Cup of Wine": [
317
+ [
318
+ "ื•ืœืขื ื™ืŸ ื‘ืจื›ืช ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื™ืฉ ืžืŸ ื”ื’ืื•ื ื™' ืื•ืžืจื™ื ืฉืฆืจื™ืš ืœื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื›ืœ ื›ื•ืก ื•ื›ื•ืก ืžืืจื‘ืขืชืŸ ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ. ื•ืจื‘ื™ื ื• ื”ืื™ ื›ืชื‘ ืœื ื—ื–ื™ ืœื ื ืžืื™ ื“ืžื‘ืจืš ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืชืจ ื›ืœื”ื• ื›ืฉื™ ื›ื™ื•ืŸ ื“ื—ื“ื ืžืฆื•ื” ื ื™ื ื”ื• ื•ืœื™ื›ื ื ืžืœืš ื‘ื‘ืจื›ื” ืœื‘ืกื•ืฃ ืฉื ื™. ื•ื”ืจื™ื\"ืฃ ื›ืชื‘ ื“ื‘ืชืจ ืชืจื™ ื›ืฉื™ ืงืžืื™. ื•ื‘ืชืจ ืชืจื™ ื›ืฉื™ ื‘ืชืจืื™ ืžื‘ืจ' ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ. ื•ื‘ืขืœ ื”ื”ืฉืœืžื” ื›ืชื‘ ืžืกืชื‘ืจื ืฉื”ืจื™\"ืฃ ืกื‘ื™ืจื ืœื™ื” ื“ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•' ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื–ื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช ื•ื–ื” ืœืฉืจื•ืช. ื•ื›ืฉื ืฉื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•' ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืžืฉื•ื ืฉื–ื” ืœืฉืจื•ืช ืžื” ืœืฉืชื•ืช. ื•ืื ื™ ืœื ื›ืŸ ืงื‘ืœืชื™ ืืœื ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืจื•ืช ืื™ื ื• ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืื—ืจ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืชื•' ื•ืขื“ื™ืฃ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืžืœืฉืจื•ืช. ืื‘ืœ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉืœืคื ื™ ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืคื•ื˜ืจ ื™ื™ืŸ ืฉื‘ืชื•ืš ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ ืฉื”ื•ื ืœืฉืจื•ืช ื“ื”ื ืขื“ื™ืฃ ืœืฉืชื•ืช ืžืœืฉืจื•ืช. ื”ืœื›ืš ืื™ืŸ ืžื‘ืจื›ื™' ืขืœ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ื•ืขืœ ืคืจื™ ื”ื’ืคืŸ ืืœื ื‘ืกื•ืฃ ื›ืœื. ื•ื›ืŸ ืขืžื ื“ื‘ืจ."
319
+ ]
320
+ ]
321
+ },
322
+ "Nirtzah": {
323
+ "Chasal Siddur Pesach": [],
324
+ "L'Shana HaBaa": [],
325
+ "And It Happened at Midnight": [
326
+ [],
327
+ [],
328
+ [
329
+ "<b>ืื– ืจื•ื‘ ื ืกื™ื ื”ืคืœืืช ื‘ืœื™ืœื”.</b> ื›ืžื• ืฉื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžืกืคืจ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืืจืขื• ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื—. ื’ืจ ืฆื“ืง ืื‘ืจื”ื. ื ืฆื—ืชื•. ื ืชืช ืœื• ื ืฆื—ื•ืŸ ื•ื’ื‘ื•ืจ' ืขืœ ื”ืžืœื•ื›ื” ื›ื ื—ืœืง ืœื• ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื—ืœืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื•ื ื•ืขื‘ื“ื™ื• ื•ื™ื›ื. ื“ื ืช ืžืœืš ื’ืจืจ. ืื‘ื™ืžืœืš. ื‘ื—ืœื•ื ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ' ื•ื™ื‘ื ื”' ืืœ ืื‘ื™ืžืœืš ื‘ื—ืœื•ื ื”ืœื™ืœื”. ื”ืคื—ื“ืช ืืจืžื™ ืœื‘ืŸ ื”ืืจืžื™. ื•ื™ืฉืจืืœ ื™ืฉืจ ืœืืœ ื•ื™ื•ื›ืœ ื‘ื• ืœื™ืœื” ื›ืฉื ืื‘ืง ืขื ื”ืžืœืืš. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื–ืจ ืืœ ืžืœืืš ื•ื™ื•ื›ืœ. ื•ื›ืชื™ื‘ ื›ื™ ืžืจื™ืช ืขื ืืœืงื™ื. ื–ืจืข ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ ืคืชืจื•ืก. ืžืฆืจื™ื. ื˜ื™ืกืช ื ื’ื™ื“ ื—ืจื•ืฉืช. ืขืคื™ืคืช ื›ืžื• ื™ื ื•ื•ืฉ ืขืœื™ ืื•ื›ืœ ืฉืžื”ืจ ื‘ืชืฉืข ืžืื•ืช ืจื›ื‘ ื‘ืจื–ืœ. ื ื’ื™ื“ ื—ืจื•ืฉืช ืกื™ืกืจื ืฉื”ื™ื” ืžื—ืจื•ืฉืช ื”ื’ื•ื™ื. ืกืœื™ืช ื›ื›ื‘ื™ ืื•ืจ ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื›ื›ื‘ื™ื ืžืžืฉื™ืœื•ืช' ื ืœื—ืžื• ืขื ืกื™ืกืจื. ื™ืขืฅ ืžื—ืจืฃ ืกื ื—ืจื™ื‘ ืื—ืจ ืฉืœื— ืขื‘ื“ื™ื• ืœื—ืจืฃ ื”'. ืœื ื•ืคืฃ ืื•ื•ื™ ื™ื ื•ืคืฃ ื™ื“ื• ื”ืจ ื‘ืช ืฆื™ื•ืŸ. ืื•ื•ื™ ืขืœ ืฉื ื›ื™ ื‘ื—ืจ ื”' ื‘ืฆื™ื•ืŸ ืื•ื”. ื”ื•ื‘ืฉืช ืคื’ืจื™ื• ืฉื ืืž' ื•ื”ื ื” ื›ืœื ืคื’ืจื™ ืžืชื™ื. ื›ืจืข ื‘ืœ. ืขื– ืฉื ืืžืจ ื›ืจืข ื‘ืœ ืงื•ื“ื ื ื‘ื•. ืžืฆื‘ื• ืฆืœื ืฉื”ืงื™' ื ื‘ื•ื›ื“ื ืฆืจ ื‘ื‘ืงืข' ื“ื•ืจื. ืœืื™ืฉ ื—ืžื•ื“ื•ืช. ื“ื ื™ืืœ. ื ื’ืœื” ืจื–. ื”ื—ืœื•ื ืฉื—ืœื ื ื‘ื•ื›ื“ื ืฆืจ. ืžืฉืชื›ืจ ื‘ื›ืœื™ ืงื“ืฉ. ื‘ืœืฉืฆืจ ืฉืฆื•' ื•ื”ื•ืฆื™ืื• ื›ืœื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ื. ื ื”ืจื’ ื‘ื• ื‘ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื™ืช ื‘ืœืœื™ื ืงื˜ื™ืœ ื‘ืœื˜ืฉืฆืจ. ื ื•ืฉืข ืžื‘ื•ืจ ืืจื™ื•ืช ื“ื ื™ืืœ. ืคื•ืชืจ ื‘ืขืชื•ืชื™ ืœื™ืœื” ื”ืคื•ืชืจ ื”ื—ืœื•ืžื•ืช. ืฉื ืจืื™' ื‘ืขืชืชื™ ืœื™ืœื”. ื™\"ืž ื‘ืขืชื•ืชื™ ืžืœืฉื•ืŸ ื‘ืขืชื”. ื›ืœื•ืžืจ ื—ืœื•ืžื•ืช ื”ืžื‘ื”ื™ืœื™ื ืžืคื—ื™ื“ื™ื ื”ืื“ื ื‘ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ืื” ื ื˜ืจ ืื’ื’ื™. ื”ืžืŸ. ื‘ื ื“ื“ ืฉื ืช ืœื™ืœื”. ืฉื ' ื‘ืœื™ืœื” ื”ื”ื•ื ื ื“ื“ื” ืฉื ืช ื”ืžืœืš. ืคื•ืจื” ืชื“ืจื•ืš. ื›ืžื• ืคื•ืจื” ื“ืจื›ืชื™ ืœื‘ื“ื™. ื›ืฉื•ืžืจ ืžื” ืžืœื™ืœื”. ืœืื“ื•ื ืฉื ืืžืจ ืžืฉื ื“ื•ืžื”. ืืœื™ ืงื•ืจื ืžืฉืขื™ืจ ืฉื•ืžืจ ืžื” ืžืœื™ืœื” ื•ื›ื•'. ื•ื“ืข ืฉื›ืœ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉื ืขืฉื• ืœื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื”ืŸ ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืคืกื—. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ืจื”ื. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืื‘ื™ืžืœืš. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืคืจืขื”. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ื’ื“ื•ืŸ. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืกื™ืกืจื. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ื“ื ื™ืืœ. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืกื ื—ืจื™ื‘. ืœื™ืœื• ืฉืœ ืžืฉื™ื— ืœืขืชื™ื“ ืœื‘ื. ื•ืฉื ื“ื‘ืจ ืืชื ื‘ืงืจ ืœืฆื“ื™ืงื™ื ื•ื’ื ืœื™ืœื” ืœืจืฉืขื™ื."
330
+ ]
331
+ ],
332
+ "Zevach Pesach": [
333
+ [],
334
+ [
335
+ "<b>ืื•ืžืฅ ื’ื‘ื•ืจื•ืชื™ืš ื”ืคืœืืช ื‘ืคืกื—.</b> ื”ื•ืœืš ื•ืžืคืจืฉ ื”ื ืกื™ื ืฉืืจืขื• ื‘ืคืกื—. ื‘ืจืืฉ ื›ืœ ืžื•ืขื“ื•ืช ืคืกื— ื”ื•ื ืจืืฉื•ืŸ ืœื›ืœ ื”ืžื•ืขื“ื™ื. ื’ืœื™ืช ืœืื–ืจื—ื™. ืœืื‘ืจื”ื. ื—ืฆื™ ืœื™ืœ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื—ืœืง ืขืœื™ื”ื ืœื™ืœื”. ื“ืœืชื™ื• ื“ืคืงืช ื›ื—ื•ื ื”ื™ื•ื. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ืจื ืืœื™ื• ื”' ื•ื›ื•' ื”ื•ื ื™ื•ืฉื‘ ืคืชื— ื”ืื”ืœ ื›ื—ื•ื ื”ื™ื•ื. ื”ืกืขื™ื“ ื ื•ืฆืฆื™ื ื”ืื›ื™ืœ ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ืฉื”ื ื ื•ืฆืฆื™ื ื›ืขื™ืŸ ื ื—ืฉืช ืงืœืœ. ืขื•ื’ื•ืช ืžืฆื•ืช. ืฉื ืืžืจ ืœื•ืฉื™ ื•ืขืฉื™ ืขื’ื•ืช. ื•ืคืกื— ื”ื™ื”. ื•ืืœ ื”ื‘ืงืจ ืจืฅ ืื‘ืจื”ื ื›ื“ืคืจืฉื™ื ืŸ ืœืขื™ืœ. ื–ื•ืขืžื• ืกื“ื•ืžื™ื™ื. ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ื”ื›ืขื™ืก ื”ืกื“ื•ืžื™ื™ื ื•ืฉืจืคื ื‘ืืฉ ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื”' ื”ืžื˜ื™ืจ ืขืœ ืกื“ื•ื ื’ืคืจื™ืช ื•ืืฉ. ื—ื•ืœืฅ ืœื•ื˜ ืžื”ื. ืœื•ื˜ ื ื•ืฆืœ ืžืžื”ืคื›ืช ืกื“ื•ื ื‘ื–ื›ื•ืช ืื‘ืจื”ื. ื•ื–ื” ื”ื™ื” ืœื™ืœ ืฉื ื™ ืฉืœ ืคืกื—. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื•ื™ื‘ืื• ื”ืžืœืื›ื™ื ืกื“ื•ืžื” ื‘ืขืจื‘. ื˜ืื˜ืืช ืื“ืžืช ืžื•ืฃ ื•ื ื•ืฃ ืืจืฅ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืฉื ' ื•ื˜ืื˜ืช ื™ื” ื‘ืžื˜ืื˜ื™ ื”ืฉืžื“. ืงื” ืจืืฉ ื›ืœ ืื•ืŸ ืžื—ืฆืช. ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืžื—ืฆืช ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืฉืžื•ืจื™ื ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื›ืžื• ืจืืฉื™ืช ืื•ื ื. ืฉื ' ื•ื”' ื”ื›ื” ื›ืœ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ื›ื‘ื™\"ืจ ื”ืงื“ื•ืฉ ื‘ืจื•ืš ื”ื•ื ืฉื ืงืจ' ื›ื‘ื™ืจ ื›ื— ืขืœ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ืฉื ืงืจืื• ื‘ืŸ ื‘ื›ื•ืจ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ื›ื•ืจื™ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ืคืกื—ืช ืฉื ' ื•ืคืกื—ืชื™ ืขืœื™ื›ื ืœื‘ืœืชื™ ืชืช ืžืฉื—ื™ืช. ืฉื ' ื•ืœื ื™ื”ื™ื” ื‘ื›ืš ื ื’ืฃ ืœืžืฉื—ื™ืช ื•ื›ื•'. ืžืกื•ื’ืจืช ื™ืจื™ื—ื• ืฉื”ื™ืชื” ืกื•ื’ืจืช ื•ืžืกื•ื’ืจืช. ืกื•ื’ืจื” ื ืžืกืจ' ื‘ื™ื“ ื™ืฉืจืืœ. ื‘ืขืชื•ืชื™ ืคืกื—. ืกื•ื’ืจื” ืœืฉื•ืŸ ืžืกื™ืจื”. ื›ืžื• ื”ื™ืกื’ื™ืจื•ื ื™ ื‘ืขืœื™ ืงืขื™ืœื”. ื ืฉืžื“ื” ืžื“ื™ืŸ ืขืœ ื™ื“ื™ ื’ื“ืขื•ืŸ. ื‘ืฆืœื™ืœ ืฉืขื•ืจื™ ืขื•ืžืจ. ื‘ื–ื›ื•ืช ื”ืขื•ืžืจ ื›ืžื• ืฉื›ืชื•ื‘ ื•ื”ื ื” ื‘ืœื™ืœ ืžืฆืจื™ื ืžืชื”ืคืš ื•ื›ื•'. ืคื•ืœ ื•ืœื•ื“. ืฉืจื™ ืžืœืš ืืžื•ืจ. ืขื•ื“ ื”ื™ื•ื ื‘ื ื•ืช ืœืขืžื•ื“ ื–ื”ื• ืกื ื—ืจื™ื‘ ืžืœืš ืืฉื•ืจ ื›ื“ืžื•ื›ื— ื‘ืค' ื—ืœืง. ืคืก ื™ื“ ื›ืชื‘ื”. ืขืœ ื”ื›ื•ืชืœ ืžื ื ืžื ื ืชืงืœ ื•ืคืจืฉื™ืŸ. ื›ื“ื™ ืœืงืขืงืข ืฆื•ืœ. ื–ื” ื‘ื‘ืœ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื”ืื•ืžืจ ืœืฆื•ืœื” ื—ื•ืจื‘ื™ ืขืœ ื‘ืœืฉืฆืจ ื•ื›ื•'. ืฆืคื” ื”ืฆืคื™ืช ื‘ืœืฉืฆืจ ืฆื•ื” ืœื”ื‘ื™ื ื›ืœื™ ื‘ื™ืช ื”ืžืงื“ืฉ ื•ื ืฉืชืžืฉ ื‘ื”ื ื”ื•ื ื•ืฉืจื™ื• ื ืฉื™ื• ื•ืคืœื’ืฉื™ื•. ืงื”ืœ ื›ื ืกื” ื”ื“ืกื” ืืฉืช. ืฆื•ื ืœืฉืœืฉ. ืฉื ืืžืจ ื›ื ื•ืก ื›ืœ ื”ื™ื”ื•ื“ื™ื ื•ื›ื•' ื•ืฆื•ืžื• ืขืœื™ ืฉืœืฉืช ื™ืžื™ื ืœื™ืœื” ื•ื™ื•ื. ืจืืฉ ืžื‘ื™ืช ืจืฉืข ื”ืžืŸ. ืฉืชื™ ืืœื” ืจื’ืข. ื›ืžื• ืฉืืž' ื”ื ื‘ื™'. ื•ืชื‘ื•ืื ื™ ืœืš ืฉืชื™ ืืœื” ื›ื•'. ืฉื›ื•ืœ ื•ืืœืžื•ืŸ ื‘ื™ื•ื ืื—ื“. ืœืขื•ืฆื™ืช. ื‘ืช ืื“ื•' ื™ื•ืฉื‘ืช ื‘ืืจืฅ ืขื•ืฅ. ื‘ืคืกื— ื›ื“ืืžืจื™' ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ื ื’ืืœื• ื•ื‘ื ื™ืกืŸ ืขืชื™ื“ื™ื ืœื™ื’ืืœ."
336
+ ]
337
+ ],
338
+ "Ki Lo Na'e": [],
339
+ "Adir Hu": [],
340
+ "Sefirat HaOmer": [],
341
+ "Echad Mi Yodea": [],
342
+ "Chad Gadya": []
343
+ }
344
+ },
345
+ "versions": [
346
+ [
347
+ "Mahzor Roma, Bologna 1540",
348
+ "https://www.nli.org.il/he/books/NNL_ALEPH001073413"
349
+ ]
350
+ ],
351
+ "heTitle": "ืงืžื—ื ื“ืื‘ื™ืฉื•ื ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
352
+ "categories": [
353
+ "Liturgy",
354
+ "Haggadah",
355
+ "Commentary"
356
+ ],
357
+ "schema": {
358
+ "heTitle": "ืงืžื—ื ื“ืื‘ื™ืฉื•ื ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
359
+ "enTitle": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
360
+ "key": "Kimcha Davshuna on Pesach Haggadah",
361
+ "nodes": [
362
+ {
363
+ "heTitle": "ืงื“ืฉ",
364
+ "enTitle": "Kadesh"
365
+ },
366
+ {
367
+ "heTitle": "ื•ืจื—ืฅ",
368
+ "enTitle": "Urchatz"
369
+ },
370
+ {
371
+ "heTitle": "ื›ืจืคืก",
372
+ "enTitle": "Karpas"
373
+ },
374
+ {
375
+ "heTitle": "ื™ื—ืฅ",
376
+ "enTitle": "Yachatz"
377
+ },
378
+ {
379
+ "heTitle": "ืžื’ื™ื“",
380
+ "enTitle": "Magid",
381
+ "nodes": [
382
+ {
383
+ "heTitle": "ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื",
384
+ "enTitle": "Ha Lachma Anya"
385
+ },
386
+ {
387
+ "heTitle": "ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”",
388
+ "enTitle": "Four Questions"
389
+ },
390
+ {
391
+ "heTitle": "ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•",
392
+ "enTitle": "We Were Slaves in Egypt"
393
+ },
394
+ {
395
+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง",
396
+ "enTitle": "Story of the Five Rabbis"
397
+ },
398
+ {
399
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื",
400
+ "enTitle": "The Four Sons"
401
+ },
402
+ {
403
+ "heTitle": "ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ",
404
+ "enTitle": "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh"
405
+ },
406
+ {
407
+ "heTitle": "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•",
408
+ "enTitle": "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers"
409
+ },
410
+ {
411
+ "heTitle": "ืืจืžื™ ืื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™",
412
+ "enTitle": "First Fruits Declaration"
413
+ },
414
+ {
415
+ "heTitle": "ืขืฉืจ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช",
416
+ "enTitle": "The Ten Plagues"
417
+ },
418
+ {
419
+ "heTitle": "ื“ื™ื™ื ื•",
420
+ "enTitle": "Dayenu"
421
+ },
422
+ {
423
+ "heTitle": "ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ",
424
+ "enTitle": "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things"
425
+ },
426
+ {
427
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœืœ",
428
+ "enTitle": "First Half of Hallel"
429
+ },
430
+ {
431
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ื”",
432
+ "enTitle": "Second Cup of Wine"
433
+ }
434
+ ]
435
+ },
436
+ {
437
+ "heTitle": "ืจื—ืฆื”",
438
+ "enTitle": "Rachtzah"
439
+ },
440
+ {
441
+ "heTitle": "ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฆื”",
442
+ "enTitle": "Motzi Matzah"
443
+ },
444
+ {
445
+ "heTitle": "ืžืจื•ืจ",
446
+ "enTitle": "Maror"
447
+ },
448
+ {
449
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืจืš",
450
+ "enTitle": "Korech"
451
+ },
452
+ {
453
+ "heTitle": "ืฉื•ืœื—ืŸ ืขื•ืจืš",
454
+ "enTitle": "Shulchan Orech"
455
+ },
456
+ {
457
+ "heTitle": "ืฆืคื•ืŸ",
458
+ "enTitle": "Tzafun"
459
+ },
460
+ {
461
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจืš",
462
+ "enTitle": "Barech",
463
+ "nodes": [
464
+ {
465
+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ",
466
+ "enTitle": "Birkat Hamazon"
467
+ },
468
+ {
469
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช",
470
+ "enTitle": "Third Cup of Wine"
471
+ },
472
+ {
473
+ "heTitle": "ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš",
474
+ "enTitle": "Pour Out Thy Wrath"
475
+ }
476
+ ]
477
+ },
478
+ {
479
+ "heTitle": "ื”ืœืœ",
480
+ "enTitle": "Hallel",
481
+ "nodes": [
482
+ {
483
+ "heTitle": "ืžืกื™ื™ืžื™ื ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ",
484
+ "enTitle": "Second Half of Hallel"
485
+ },
486
+ {
487
+ "heTitle": "ืžื–ืžื•ืจื™ ื”ื•ื“ื™ื”",
488
+ "enTitle": "Songs of Praise and Thanks"
489
+ },
490
+ {
491
+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช",
492
+ "enTitle": "Fourth Cup of Wine"
493
+ }
494
+ ]
495
+ },
496
+ {
497
+ "heTitle": "ื ืจืฆื”",
498
+ "enTitle": "Nirtzah",
499
+ "nodes": [
500
+ {
501
+ "heTitle": "ื—ืกืœ ืกื™ื“ื•ืจ ืคืกื—",
502
+ "enTitle": "Chasal Siddur Pesach"
503
+ },
504
+ {
505
+ "heTitle": "ืœืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื”",
506
+ "enTitle": "L'Shana HaBaa"
507
+ },
508
+ {
509
+ "heTitle": "ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœื™ืœื”",
510
+ "enTitle": "And It Happened at Midnight"
511
+ },
512
+ {
513
+ "heTitle": "ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื—",
514
+ "enTitle": "Zevach Pesach"
515
+ },
516
+ {
517
+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื‘ืžืœื•ื›ื”",
518
+ "enTitle": "Ki Lo Na'e"
519
+ },
520
+ {
521
+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื”ื•ื",
522
+ "enTitle": "Adir Hu"
523
+ },
524
+ {
525
+ "heTitle": "ืกืคื™ืจืช ื”ืขื•ืžืจ",
526
+ "enTitle": "Sefirat HaOmer"
527
+ },
528
+ {
529
+ "heTitle": "ืื—ื“ ืžื™ ื™ื•ื“ืข",
530
+ "enTitle": "Echad Mi Yodea"
531
+ },
532
+ {
533
+ "heTitle": "ื—ื“ ื’ื“ื™ื",
534
+ "enTitle": "Chad Gadya"
535
+ }
536
+ ]
537
+ }
538
+ ]
539
+ }
540
+ }
json/Liturgy/Haggadah/Commentary/Kos Eliyahu on Pesach Haggadah/English/Rabbi Mark Greenspan.json ADDED
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+ {
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+ "language": "en",
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+ "title": "Maaseh Nissim on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "versionSource": "https://www.sefaria.org",
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+ "versionTitle": "Sefaria Community Translation",
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+ "actualLanguage": "en",
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+ "languageFamilyName": "english",
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+ "isBaseText": false,
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+ "isSource": false,
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+ "direction": "ltr",
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ื ื™ืกื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
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+ "categories": [
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+ "Liturgy",
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+ "Haggadah",
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+ "Commentary"
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+ ],
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+ "text": {
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+ "Kadesh": [],
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+ "Urchatz": [],
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+ "Karpas": [],
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+ "Yachatz": [],
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+ "Magid": {
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+ "Ha Lachma Anya": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "To explain this paragraph, we need to introduce the difficulties which the commentaries have expanded upon, which include: (1) why is it written in Aramaic? (2) Why is the decree encumbent on all those who are hungry let them come and eat, which is specifically meant for the poor on Pesach, and not during the other festivals, where it states \"Vesamachta b'Chagecha\"? (3) This announcement is fitting to be said outside for those who sleep in the street, so that they should hear and come to the house, not for those who are already inside the house after the door is already closed. It would make more sense to make this announcement before Kiddush is recited so that the poor person should be able to fulfil both Kiddush and Karpas! (4) Why is it called the bread of poverty? (5) The statement \"that our forefathers ate in the land of Egypt is untrue because they did not eat Matza in Egypt until they left as the verse testifies \"they carried the dough in bundles on their shoulders\". (6) Why does it repeat \"now we are here\" with \"now we are slaves\". (7) Why is this paragraph not said when the temple was still standing?",
28
+ "In order to answer these difficulties, we need to provide the following introduction. It is fitting for a servant which has come from prison to thank and bless the one who took him out in his kindness. The nature of man also obligates him to be happy when he remembers the moment that he was freed, how much more so the day that he is emancipated. However, it is not the way of a person who has already left prison once and is then imprisoned again in an even worse prison than the first one to dance and be joyful in his second prison because he was released once before. He is completely enveloped in prison - of what help was his first emancipation?",
29
+ "It is also known that when a person has great joy, it is his way to invite many beloved friends to make a joyous party, and the greater his joy, the more he desires to share it with his friends to enjoy that moment with him. We see testimony to this in the feast of Achashveirosh (who invited all the people in 127 provinces to feast with him)",
30
+ "It is known that the commentators explain that also while the Jews ate Matzah in Egypt, because the Egyptians wouldn't let the Jew's dough rise, because of the pressure of their work. This is the explanation of the Abarbanel as to why it is called the bread of affliction.",
31
+ "After all these introductions, we can explain this paragraph, for it was established after the second temple's destruction. The reason is that a person's heart should not be amazed at the making of a feast on leaving Egypt, yet we are still servants of Achashveirosh, and are still entrenched in this bitter exile. This is not what a person does (as explained above). We therefore say ื›ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื ื“ื™ ืื›ืœื• ืื‘ื”ืชื ื ื‘ืืจืขื ื“ืžืฆืจื™ื. This meal that we are eating is likened to the meal which our forefathers ate in Egypt (because the word bread signifies a meal, as is described in the book of Samuel). It is therefore fitting to not be happy - after all we are in a worst exile than the first. We are eating this meal with a bitter heart, as our forefathers ate it in Egypt - with sadness, and poverty, lacking the basics of life. This is in contrast to the moment when the temple stood (which is why we did not say it then)"
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+ ]
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+ ],
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+ "Four Questions": [],
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+ "We Were Slaves in Egypt": [],
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+ "Story of the Five Rabbis": [],
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+ "The Four Sons": [],
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+ "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh": [],
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+ "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers": [],
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+ "First Fruits Declaration": [],
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+ "The Ten Plagues": [],
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+ "Dayenu": [],
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+ "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things": [],
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+ "First Half of Hallel": [],
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+ "Second Cup of Wine": []
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+ },
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+ "Rachtzah": [],
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+ "Motzi Matzah": [],
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+ "Maror": [],
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+ "Korech": [],
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+ "Shulchan Orech": [],
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+ "Tzafun": [],
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+ "Barech": {
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+ "Birkat Hamazon": [],
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+ "Third Cup of Wine": [],
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+ "Pour Out Thy Wrath": []
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+ },
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+ "Hallel": {
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+ "Second Half of Hallel": [],
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+ "Songs of Praise and Thanks": [],
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+ "Fourth Cup of Wine": []
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+ },
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+ "Nirtzah": {
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+ "Chasal Siddur Pesach": [],
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+ "L'Shana HaBaa": [],
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+ "And It Happened at Midnight": [],
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+ "Zevach Pesach": [],
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+ "Ki Lo Na'e": [],
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+ "Adir Hu": [],
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+ "Sefirat HaOmer": [],
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+ "Echad Mi Yodea": [],
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+ "Chad Gadya": [
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [],
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+ [
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+ "The angel of death came: The messiah of Joseph will be killed by the angel of death."
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+ ]
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ },
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+ "schema": {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ื ื™ืกื™ื ืขืœ ื”ื’ื“ื” ืฉืœ ืคืกื—",
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+ "enTitle": "Maaseh Nissim on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "key": "Maaseh Nissim on Pesach Haggadah",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืงื“ืฉ",
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+ "enTitle": "Kadesh"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื•ืจื—ืฅ",
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+ "enTitle": "Urchatz"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ืจืคืก",
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+ "enTitle": "Karpas"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื™ื—ืฅ",
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+ "enTitle": "Yachatz"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื’ื™ื“",
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+ "enTitle": "Magid",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื”ื ืœื—ืžื ืขื ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Ha Lachma Anya"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื” ื ืฉืชื ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Four Questions"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืขื‘ื“ื™ื ื”ื™ื™ื ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "We Were Slaves in Egypt"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืขืฉื” ืฉื”ื™ื” ื‘ื‘ื ื™ ื‘ืจืง",
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+ "enTitle": "Story of the Five Rabbis"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื ื’ื“ ืืจื‘ืขื” ื‘ื ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "The Four Sons"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื™ื›ื•ืœ ืžืจืืฉ ื—ื•ื“ืฉ",
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+ "enTitle": "Yechol Me'rosh Chodesh"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืชื—ื™ืœื” ืขื•ื‘ื“ื™ ืขื‘ื•ื“ื” ื–ืจื” ื”ื™ื• ืื‘ื•ืชื™ื ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "In the Beginning Our Fathers Were Idol Worshipers"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืืจืžื™ ืื‘ื“ ืื‘ื™",
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+ "enTitle": "First Fruits Declaration"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืขืฉืจ ื”ืžื›ื•ืช",
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+ "enTitle": "The Ten Plagues"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื“ื™ื™ื ื•",
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+ "enTitle": "Dayenu"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืคืกื— ืžืฆื” ื•ืžืจื•ืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Rabban Gamliel's Three Things"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœืœ",
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+ "enTitle": "First Half of Hallel"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉื ื™ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Second Cup of Wine"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืจื—ืฆื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Rachtzah"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื•ืฆื™ื ืžืฆื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Motzi Matzah"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืจื•ืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Maror"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืจืš",
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+ "enTitle": "Korech"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืฉื•ืœื—ืŸ ืขื•ืจืš",
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+ "enTitle": "Shulchan Orech"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืฆืคื•ืŸ",
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+ "enTitle": "Tzafun"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจืš",
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+ "enTitle": "Barech",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื‘ืจื›ืช ื”ืžื–ื•ืŸ",
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+ "enTitle": "Birkat Hamazon"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืฉืœื™ืฉื™ืช",
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+ "enTitle": "Third Cup of Wine"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืฉืคื•ืš ื—ืžืชืš",
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+ "enTitle": "Pour Out Thy Wrath"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื”ืœืœ",
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+ "enTitle": "Hallel",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžืกื™ื™ืžื™ื ืืช ื”ื”ืœืœ",
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+ "enTitle": "Second Half of Hallel"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืžื–ืžื•ืจื™ ื”ื•ื“ื™ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Songs of Praise and Thanks"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื›ื•ืก ืจื‘ื™ืขื™ืช",
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+ "enTitle": "Fourth Cup of Wine"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื ืจืฆื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Nirtzah",
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+ "nodes": [
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ืกืœ ืกื™ื“ื•ืจ ืคืกื—",
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+ "enTitle": "Chasal Siddur Pesach"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืœืฉื ื” ื”ื‘ืื”",
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+ "enTitle": "L'Shana HaBaa"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื•ื™ื”ื™ ื‘ื—ืฆื™ ื”ืœื™ืœื”",
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+ "enTitle": "And It Happened at Midnight"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื–ื‘ื— ืคืกื—",
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+ "enTitle": "Zevach Pesach"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื‘ืžืœื•ื›ื”",
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+ "enTitle": "Ki Lo Na'e"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื“ื™ืจ ื”ื•ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Adir Hu"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืกืคื™ืจืช ื”ืขื•ืžืจ",
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+ "enTitle": "Sefirat HaOmer"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ืื—ื“ ืžื™ ื™ื•ื“ืข",
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+ "enTitle": "Echad Mi Yodea"
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+ },
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+ {
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+ "heTitle": "ื—ื“ ื’ื“ื™ื",
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+ "enTitle": "Chad Gadya"
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ ]
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+ }
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+ }
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