
Also, a giant shout out to Yechiel Shulman, a student at Epstein Hebrew Academy and son of Rabbi Moshe Shulman of Young Israel. Yechiel came in first place in the eighth-grade division at the U.S. Finals of the Chidon HaTanach, or “Bible Quiz,” which is a worldwide contest run annually by the Jewish Agency. Tanach is an acronym composed of Torah (“Teaching,” also known as the Five Books of Moses), Nevi’im (“Prophets”) and Ketuvim (“Writings”). It contains the canonical texts that comprise the Hebrew Bible, which is made up of 24 books composed mainly in biblical Hebrew, with a few in Aramaic.
The Jewish News Syndicate (JNS.org) covered the event earlier this month and explained it this way:
“With competitors from more than 60 countries, the Chidon HaTanach is the ultimate Jewish trivia game that makes the oldest book in the world entertaining and engaging. It’s a test of skill, memorization and comprehension, but the foundational lessons of the Tanach—the byproduct of learning it—are complex enough to keep a reader’s attention for a lifetime. (Sample question: ‘Who said to whom: ‘Am I really unable to reward you?’ Choose from the following answers: A) Nechemia to Artaxerxes; B) Aaron to Moses; C) David to Barzilai; or D) Balak to Baalam. Answer is at the end of this story.)”
The final event is televised every year in Israel on Yom Ha’atzmaut (Israel Independence Day). American Jewish students, from 6th to 11th grade, gather each spring in New York to choose the U.S. winners, who then continue on to the competition in Israel the following year.
As a result of finishing first, Shulman will go on as one of four competitors to represent the United States at the international competition on Independence Day in Israel in 2019.
(And the answer to the sample question? If you guessed “D,” then you are correct.)
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