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Parashah
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Parashah
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A parashah (Hebrew: פָּרָשָׁה, plural parashiyot; pronounced [paʁaˈʃa]) is a section of a book of the Torah or of another biblical book in the Masoretic Text of the Tanakh. In common usage, it refers to one of the 54 weekly portions of the Torah read aloud or chanted from a Torah scroll during synagogue services, enabling the Jewish community to complete an annual cycle of the entire Pentateuch.[1][2]
In Jewish tradition, the parashah serves as the central focus of Shabbat morning prayers, where it is divided among congregants for public recitation in Hebrew, and is often studied with interpretive commentaries such as Targum Onkelos or Rashi.[1] This practice extends to additional readings on Mondays, Thursdays, and holidays, reinforcing communal study and observance.[1] Each parashah is named after its opening word or words, such as Bereshit for the portion beginning "In the beginning" in Genesis 1:1, and it typically spans several chapters to fit the yearly schedule, with shorter portions sometimes combined in non-leap years to align with the cycle.[2]
Historically, the term parashah originally denoted textual divisions within the Torah scroll—either petuchah (open, starting on a new line) or setumah (closed, indented on the same line)—as prescribed in Jewish law for readability and liturgical purposes, though in modern vernacular, it interchangeably refers to the weekly reading alongside the term sidra.[3] The annual cycle, which concludes and restarts on Simchat Torah, emerged as the standard in Babylonian Jewish communities in the early 7th century CE, contrasting with the triennial systems practiced in Palestinian communities from the 6th century CE, and it underscores the parashah's role in fostering ongoing Torah engagement across generations.[1][3][4]
Beyond liturgy, the parashah inspires diverse interpretations in rabbinic literature, sermons (derashah), and contemporary study, linking ancient narratives to ethical, spiritual, and communal life in Judaism.[2]