This is where the tradition of wearing a kippah came from. In Orthodox Jewish communities it is tradition for men to wear the kippah at all times. However, Liberal and Reform Jews may choose to ...
I paused then quickly realized she was referring to the knitted kippah she usually sees me wear to appointments. I said, “You have a good memory. I usually wear a yarmulke on my head.
(JTA) — The head of the main Jewish umbrella in Germany has recommended that Jews not wear kippahs in public in its major cities. “I would actually have to advise individuals not to openly ...
Footage of last week's attack in the Prenzlauer Berg area of Berlin "I used to always advise my Jewish friends and acquaintances not to wear a kippah so as not to show their Jewish identity.
In Orthodox Judaism the kippah is worn by Jewish men at all times, apart from when they are sleeping or washing. In Liberal and Reform Judaism some women choose to wear the kippah if they are ...
Jewish men and some women wear a kippah—or head covering—as a sign of respect for God. A tallit is a fringed garment worn as ...
(JTA) — A French-Jewish lawmaker and his non-Jewish colleague wore kippahs in parliament to signal their rejection of anti-Semitism. Meyer Habib and Claude Goasguen were filmed wearing the ...
Wearing a kippah is cool, and so is observing Shabbat ... If you see me in my day-to-day, I still wear pants and head coverings like bandanas, headbands, or hats. One day I went to buy a chair ...
to only wear a kippah everywhere, to only wear a tallit (prayer shawl), to only whatever the ‘only’ may be, but we are human beings and I appreciated that level of depiction of the rabbi.” ...
Jews in France fear to wear a kippah or a Star of David in public, and so many French Jews are leaving France that the French prime minister, Manuel Valls, gave an impassioned speech two years ago ...
to only wear a kippah everywhere, to only wear a tallit (prayer shawl), to only whatever the ‘only’ may be, but we are human beings and I appreciated that level of depiction of the rabbi.” ...