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  1. Women at the Wall is not what this question is about. is that a small minority of men choose to be offended when women pray in the way that those women's souls need to pray. A small minority of men seek to limit women's prayers. However, "the issue" of this site is why Jews pray at the Kotel (THE Wall) at all. But since Jews do pray thee, men's ...

  2. What We Do. Get Started! There is a famous and powerful spiritual technique (Segula) that calls for a person to go to the Western Wall for 40 consecutive days to pray for 1 request. For generations, Jews in Jerusalem have traditionally made this pilgrimage to the Kotel to pray for marriage, healing, children, income and many other heartfelt ...

  3. tax deductible $9/day. pray a personally-composed prayer for you exclusively. say tehillim (psalms) Yeshivas Bircas HaTorah will say psalms for you together at their prayer gathering (minyan) Rabbi Nebenzahl, the holy tzaddik and Chief Rabbi of the Old City will say a special prayer in front of a congregation ( Mesheberach) for you. Select.

  4. Classic Prayers ($95): A dedicated Torah scholar will go to the Western Wall for 40 consecutive days to pray a personally-composed prayer for you, as well as others. Minimum donation: approx. $2/day ($95 tax-deductible). Shavuos Sefer Tehillim at King David's Tomb ($180) :

  5. The Founders. Get Started! The idea for Western Wall Prayers originally came from Gershon Burd. Gershon left his family’s insurance business in Chicago in 1999 to pursue full-time Torah studies at the Center Program at Ohr Somayach Yeshiva in Jerusalem. After 2 years, he moved to Yeshivas Bircas HaTorah in the Old City where he learned full ...

  6. The Western Wall, or Kotel, in the Old City of Jerusalem has figured prominently in the Jewish consciousness for centuries. Generations dreamed of appearing before the old stone wall, even just once. Now, the Wall is active 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, and the cracks between the rectangular stones are crammed with paper.

  7. The Western Wall, also known as the “Wailing Wall” or the “Kotel”, is the most religious site in the world for the Jewish people. Located in the Old City of Jerusalem, it is the last remaining outer wall of the ancient Jewish temple, and an incredibly important site of modern Israeli history. Thousands of people of all faiths journey to ...

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