Sefaria Parshat Shoftim, 3rd Portion (Devarim (Deuteronomy) 18:1-18:5)

 Sefaria Parshat Shoftim, 3rd Portion (Devarim (Deuteronomy) 18:1-18:5)

Level one:

Reading the weekly parsha with the haftorah both with Rashi in two languages: Hebrew-English.
When we are used in it: reading it very quickly every day the whole year and on Simcha Torah we start over again with Bereshith.

About This Text

Deuteronomy
Tanakh
Deuteronomy (“Devarim”) is the fifth and last book of the Torah, primarily consisting of Moses’ final speeches ahead of his death. He reminds the Israelites of seminal events that happened in the desert, like the sin of the spies, the giving of the Torah, and the sin of the Golden Calf. He also reviews old laws, introduces new laws to follow as the Israelites enter Israel, and emphasizes the importance of faithfulness to God.
Composed: Sinai/Canaan (c.1400 - c.400 BCE)נוצר/נערך: סיני / כנען (1400 - 400 לפנה"ס בקירוב)

Current Version

Miqra According to the Masorah (MAM) is a digital Hebrew edition of the Tanakh based on the Aleppo Codex and related manuscripts. It is designed for readers, and as such it contains added elements to aid vocalization of the text. For instance: When an accent is marked in an unstressed syllable, an extra accent is added in the proper place (pashtazarqasegoltelisha). Legarmeih and paseq are visibly distinguished. Qamaz qatan is indicated by its designated Unicode character (alternatives are documented where traditions differ about its application).
The text of MAM is fully documented. The complete introduction to the edition (Hebrew) explains the types of editorial decisions that have been made and the reasons for them (English abstract). In addition, every word in the Bible about which there is some textual concern or ambiguity includes a documentation note; these notes can be viewed conveniently here. If an error is discovered, it may be reported to User:Dovi at Hebrew Wikisource. Please check the documentation notes before reporting an error. 
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Current Translation

Dedicated by an anonymous donor in honor of all women and girls who study, teach, and transform Torah.

Read the preface to The Contemporary Torah

See the Dictionary of Gender in the Torah
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Source: nli.org.il
Digitization: Sefaria
License: CC-BY-NC

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