He designed hundreds of structures, including hospitals, office buildings, synagogues and condominiums, in addition to about 200 other hotels. |
|
Liberal and Reform synagogues have abandoned their erstwhile preference for confirmation over Bar and Batmitzvah. |
|
Le Pen is not welcome in Birmingham where churches, mosques, synagogues, gurdwaras, mandhirs and temples fill the skyline. |
|
Their mosques are known as masjids and not by any other name like temple, church or synagogues. |
|
Nothing to date has been found in them to indicate ritual space, such as the bema of the Byzantine-period synagogues. |
|
There are around 20 schools in the area catering for Hasidic children, and over 70 synagogues. |
|
Prominent edifices such as historic structures, public buildings, churches, synagogues, and high rises get special treatment. |
|
Haven't churches, synagogues and mosques met the same fate at the hands of vandals? |
|
Of the synagogues they built and rebuilt, four still nestle in this timeless Turkish warren, two as museums. |
|
Slovaks affiliated with the major religions worship in established churches or synagogues. |
|
The bold phrase from the Psalms stands in relief over most Holy Arks in the synagogues. |
|
Whereas John had worked outside settled areas, Jesus went from town to town, village to village, usually preaching in synagogues on the sabbath. |
|
We can build thousands of synagogues, mikvas, cemeteries and hotels, as well as tens of thousands of homes. |
|
From the top, we can see mosques, churches and synagogues and graveyard after graveyard. |
|
Some remaining holdouts are being forcibly taken from their homes, schools and synagogues. |
|
Almost everywhere there are new churches, mosques, synagogues, and temples springing to life along our vast exurban periphery. |
|
The author does not ignore the fact that churches and synagogues are buildings for public worship. |
|
Multiethnicity is demonstrated by the many churches, synagogues, Hindu temples, and mosques. |
|
At least some members of the evangelist's communities have parted company painfully with local synagogues. |
|
Despite the controversial nature of the film, 15 Orthodox synagogues have asked for a screening. |
|
|
Individual churches, synagogues, and temples could make their own rules about which marriages they would bless. |
|
It had over a dozen synagogues and was renowned for its impressive cultural and social organizations. |
|
The bema also appears in synagogues, and from it the Pentateuch and Torah are read. |
|
They dug up a green bottle with a Star of David stamped into the bottom, mezuzot and burnt armrests of chairs from synagogues. |
|
Most of the synagogues in Vienna were destroyed, burned in full view of fire departments and the public. |
|
Their services have been held in small chapels, ornate synagogues, simple firehouses, and grand cathedrals. |
|
Community resources, including churches and synagogues, volunteer and neighbourhood groups frequently offer companion services. |
|
The congregations of the various synagogues were often associated with their European country of origin. |
|
They also prepared a display case about all of the synagogues that once existed in Warsaw. |
|
The building of new synagogues on the eve of the Revolution is considered in the context of the nouveau riche and the move to suburbia. |
|
It has always been the case that churches, synagogues and mosques have fostered compassionate care for the unfortunate. |
|
Of all the synagogues in Williamsburg, the rabbi can count on one hand how many will let him enter to pray. |
|
A handful of young imbeciles were daubing synagogues with anti-semitic graffiti and their offences were rarely prosecuted. |
|
Jesus was teaching in the synagogues and temples of Galilee. |
|
He'd come to your child's bar mitzvah, but his interest in synagogues seemed anthropological. |
|
Though many of the appearances of Jesus in synagogues in the canonical Gospels are likely fictional, issues of social order and especially discontent come into view. |
|
Written sources provide evidence of wall paintings in synagogues from medieval times, and the wooden synagogues of eastern Europe were richly decorated. |
|
The DLC answer: support federal funding of social work by churches, synagogues and mosques. |
|
As you know, there have been attacks on synagogues in several European countries in the last few days. |
|
A couple of synagogues in my city have been defaced not dissimilarly to the images on the photos that have been circulated. |
|
|
And he went all through Galilee, preaching in their synagogues and casting out devils. |
|
People tend to like churches and synagogues with intricate detail, like the lacy Gothicism of Grace Church at Broadway and 10th Street. |
|
For eighteen centuries, Judaism would develop as a religion, based around synagogues and rabbis, yeshivas and the ethical teachings of Tora and Talmud. |
|
The same television program alleged that CSIS received advance notice that synagogues in the Toronto area would be defaced after the Metzgers were arrested. |
|
He was good at ecumenism, visiting both synagogues and mosques. |
|
In synagogues from here to Hawaii, the only topic of conversation that gurgles around growling tummies concerns hunger: What did you have for dinner? |
|
We remember what happened in the old city of Dubrovnik, during the Bosnian war, or rather the Balkan war, and the destruction of the Mostar bridge, churches, synagogues and mosques. |
|
Did not Allah check one set of people by means of another, there would surely have been pulled down monasteries, churches, synagogues, and mosques, in which the name of Allah is commemorated in abundant measure. |
|
According to section 3.2 of the amended Criteria, the existence of neighboring orthodox synagogues will not prevent the allocation of buildings for non-orthodox synagogues. |
|
Bomb attacks occurred in front of two synagogues in the city. |
|
Some attend schools that are run by religious groups, and others join after-school and weekend programs sponsored by their churches, synagogues, or mosques. |
|
Liverpool contains several synagogues, of which the Grade I listed Moorish Revival Princes Road Synagogue is architecturally the most notable. |
|
In total, there are 84 synagogues in Northern England registered for marriages. |
|
There is no set blueprint for synagogues and the architectural shapes and interior designs of synagogues vary greatly. |
|
Some synagogues and community buildings were turned into mosques and existing mosques began to expand their buildings. |
|
They not only founded their own synagogues, but had a strong influence on the 'Amsterdam dialect' adding a large Yiddish local vocabulary. |
|
Late 1st century developments attributed to the Council of Jamnia eventually led to Christians' expulsion from synagogues. |
|
In 519, when a mob had burned down the synagogues of Ravenna, Theoderic ordered the town to rebuild them at its own expense. |
|
By 1940, as many as 90 percent of the churches, synagogues, and mosques that had been operating in 1917 were closed. |
|
Antwerp has an extensive network of synagogues, shops, schools and organizations. |
|
|
Until 1890, when the local Chevra Kadisha was set up, funeral services were performed by the shamashim, the beadles of the synagogues. |
|
There are four functioning Orthodox synagogues in Gibraltar and several kosher establishments. |
|
I've contacted museums, synagogues, libraries, universities and everyplace else I can think of, but no one can take all of it,'' Terry said. |
|
After the former president died in 1885, synagogues throughout the nation said kaddish for him. |
|
Some communities decorate their synagogues with green plants and flowers, reflecting traditions that Mt. Sinai was a green mountain and that Shavuot is a day of judgment for fruit trees. |
|
It features wordless chants, instrumental pieces, songs, religious music played in synagogues, klezmer music, and little-researched popular genres such as purimshpil. |
|
And here then unfolded slowly but surely the, uh, grim story of what happened during the night, that the synagogues all through Germany had been set on fire, destroyed. |
|
Churches, synagogues, and other religious institutions are in ideal position to participate in this kind-hearted work because of their beliefs, their authority in their communities, and their resources of willing workers. |
|
By 1948, synagogues, yeshivas and mikvahs had opened again. |
|
It includes carvings, carousel animals, historic photographs of arks and carvings from synagogues in Eastern Europe and ornately painted papercuts. |
|
Similar prayers were offered in synagogues and churches throughout the UK that day, confirming to the public their suspicion of the desperate plight of the troops. |
|
Traditionally, bar mitzvah and bat mitzvah ceremonies are held in synagogues, where 13-year-olds demonstrate their proficiency in Hebrew and symbolically enter adulthood. |
|
Princes Road is widely considered to be the most magnificent of Britain's Moorish Revival synagogues and one of the finest buildings in Liverpool. |
|
Thomas in the 1st century continued worshiping in synagogues. |
|
The Reform movement mostly refer to their synagogues as temples. |
|
Through most of the 18th century, American synagogues conducted and recorded their business in Portuguese, even if their daily language was English. |
|
See also List of the oldest synagogues in the United States. |
|
Religious institutions remained monitored by the Soviet government, but churches, synagogues, temples, and mosques were all given more leeway in the Brezhnev era. |
|