ALEFBET - Hebrew letters made by Gabriele Levy
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RESH silver engagement ring - ALEFBET - THE HEBREW LETTERS ART GALLERY
Gabriele LEVY

RESH silver engagement ring

Regular price €160,00 €0,00 Unit price per
Tax included.

Made in sterling silver mechanically polished to reveal classic beauty and slight texture. 

The ring is a precise miniature of the big home decor wall letters, made by the same sculptor Levy.

Available in various sizes. In order to know your size, please refer to the International Standard for ring sizes.

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Resh is the twentieth letter of the hebrew alphabet.
Pronounciation: R
Example: rosh, head
Resh in gematria represents the number 200.
The letter resh represents choice between greatness and degradation.

The letter resh is quite similar to the letter dalet.

Resh is usually assumed to have come from a pictogram of a head, ultimately reflecting the protosemitic word rais, head.

Resh as an abbreviation can stand for rabbi.

Resh may be found after a person's name on a gravestone to indicate that they were a rabbi or to indicate the other use of rav, as a generic term for a teacher or a personal spiritual guide.

The Talmud maintains that resh stands for rasha', evil. In the Passover hagada' one of the four sons is evil. The other three ask their parents for an explanation "ki ishalcha bincha", "when your children ask you" (Deuteronomy 6:20), while the evil one tells his parents "ki yomeroo aleychem beenchem", "and when your children tell you" (Exodus 12:26), in such a way as to disregards the Passover commandaments. When there is faith, there are no more questions, when there is no faith there are no more answers. (source: Choifetz Haym")

Resh is a container, just as bet (2) and kaf (20) are containers. But while bet and kaf represents forms such as a house or a spoon, resh (200) represents containing the infinite, exponential growth.
It also represents the constant transition, flow and change of life.
It is like a constant flow of energy, breaking through, breaking down into pieces, and building anew.