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made arrangements; there was no need to collect and disburse funds, no need to maintain facilities. It also created opportunities for hosts: to earn a divine reward, to gain prestige by demonstrating charity, to have a good company, and in some cases to arrange a marriage for a daughter. At the same
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In some cases an exchange was arranged: it was customary to send boys for study in some other place, and a family who boarded a student would send their own son to the native place of the visitor to board with the parent of the visitor.
41:. Families invited students to their homes to share the main meal with them on a certain day of a week on a regular basis. A student would try to arrange his
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time it was criticized for being demeaning to the students and in poor communities there was a resentment for being forced to share their meager meals.
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the system was abolished in most
Lithuanian yeshibot, and today it is to be found only in certain towns where a few Bahurim dwell"
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by billeting them daily upon the members of the community originated in Poland and spread to
Germany. Through the influence of
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tells an experience of a poor yeshiva student; in particular it details his weekly schedule of
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Families, Rabbis and
Education: Essays on Traditional Jewish Society in Eastern Europe
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203:
Fifth
Biennial Session of the Jewish Charities in the United States, May 4-6, 1908
65:("meal tickets") issued to the travelling visitors of a community known since the
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The system had its advantages: it was easy to administer: students or a
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The Jewish community has a long practice of hospitality, which included
31:, literally "Eating Days") was a practice of community boarding of
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201:"Jewish Charitable Traditions in Russia: An Introduction", In:
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35:students who came from remote places to study at a
45:for all days of the week with different families.
58:didn't have enough funds to feed their students.
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75:(1902-1908) says: "This custom of feeding the
177:Page:Jewish Encyclopedia Volume 2.pdf/495
224:, New Haven: Yale University Press, 2007
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235:An Offering To the Priests Of Yiddish
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239:The Cross and Other Jewish Stories
222:The Cross and Other Jewish Stories
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54:students, since many yeshivas in
48:This tradition was extended to
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274:Yiddish words and phrases
72:The Jewish Encyclopedia
166:Jewish Virtual Library
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38:beit midrash
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244:The Forward
162:Hospitality
151:“Essen Teg”
102:Eating Days
67:Middle Ages
258:Categories
116:References
100:The story
110:essen teg
43:essen teg
17:Essen teg
269:Charity
205:, 1909
77:Bahurim
63:pletten
51:yeshiva
29:עסן טעג
25:Yiddish
21:esn teg
140:p. 158
89:gabbai
33:Talmud
207:p. 43
104:by
19:or
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124:^
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27::
23:(
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