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On today’s page, Menachot 110, we close out a tractate defined not by slaughter, but by grasping—by what can be held, measured, and offered within human limits. Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin connects this idea to the broader story of Torah itself, where so much remains just beyond our reach and each generation builds on what it can only partially grasp. What does it mean to inherit a tradition that is always a little out of reach, yet still close enough to hold? Listen and find out.
By Tablet Magazine4.8
541541 ratings
On today’s page, Menachot 110, we close out a tractate defined not by slaughter, but by grasping—by what can be held, measured, and offered within human limits. Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin connects this idea to the broader story of Torah itself, where so much remains just beyond our reach and each generation builds on what it can only partially grasp. What does it mean to inherit a tradition that is always a little out of reach, yet still close enough to hold? Listen and find out.

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