A beth din (Hebrew: ืึตึผืืช ืึดึผืื, romanized: Bฤแนฏ Dฤซn, lit.โ'house of judgment', [beหฮธ หdiหn], Ashkenazic: beis din, plural: batei din) is a rabbinical court of Judaism. A hearing held before a beth din is called a din Torah (Hebrew: ืืื ืชืืจื, romanized: din Torah, lit.โ'Torah law', plural dinei Torah). A beth din can be found both in Israel and in many Jewish diaspora communities.
A ruling (Hebrew: ืคืกืง, romanized: psak) from a beth din is based upon Jewish law (Hebrew: ืืืื, romanized: halakha), though other legal systems are occasionally incorporated. Because it is not part of secular legal systems, when a case overlaps with secular courts its judgment is not always recognized by such courts.
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Beth Din of Benghazi.jpg
ืืจืื ืืืช ืืืื ืืื ืืืื, ืืื, ืฉื ืช 1930 ืืขืจื. ืืืจืื ืืืฉื ืืจื ืืืืก ืคืืื, ืืืฆื ืฉืืื ืืจื ืืจืืื ืืืื
Kosher BethDin.jpg
Kosher food approved by the Beth din of Johannesburg, served as airplane meal
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Menorah
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The Star of David, the symbol of the Jewish faith and people. Also called Shield of David after the ...