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genizah
/ ɡɛˈ²Ô¾±Ë³úÉ™ /
noun
- Judaism a repository (usually in a synagogue) for books and other sacred objects which can no longer be used but which may not be destroyed
˜yÐÄvlog History and Origins
Origin of genizah1
Example Sentences
Ideally, he would like to add to the cemetery a genizah, a place for the proper disposal of worn-out or damaged Jewish religious items.
One salient document, a letter Hamoutal carried with her from France, was recovered in 1864 from the genizah of a Cairo synagogue.
But the scroll’s possible age means that it may sit squarely between the older Dead Sea Scrolls and the Cairo Genizah, a cache of medieval Hebrew books.
“We see a document in Cambridge, England, and another in St. Petersburg, Russia, and we think if the handwriting matches,†explained Mark R. Cohen, a professor of Near Eastern Studies at Princeton University who has been studying the genizah since 1972.
Marina Rustow, a historian at Johns Hopkins University, said about 15,000 genizah fragments deal with everyday, nonreligious matters, most of them dated 950 to 1250.
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