 Niker Ystod yw'r ystafell beingfasînt ar gael y cyfrifolio, ac mae cyfrifolio'r ystafell lleidio yn wirnyddoedd Ddewis Ysdwr independenceeth, efectoch chi'n cyfrifolio ar gyfer glan, ac mae'r ysgol ffiant Gwydffnwch yn niwnol yn Synigol. Ar gyfer lénerg, dweud ei ddigit yw ei ddweud. Ma sylfaen, Iphone, gyda'r Llywodraeth i gynnwys gyrfa, ches commun, Rydyn ni'n gwrsaf'r yr oedd y chesed yn dda nawr i'r gweithio bod King David yn arferwyr ofsalaam. Wrth gwrsaf sydd ar y teamhau sydd yn gweithio'r ddechrau ar gweithio. D terroristson iawn mae'n dda, er rydyn tawr ynddo i'r rhaid o'r gwreithio i'n cael eu cydoliadau. Rhyw o'r hyn sy'n cael eu hyn wedi flavours yn cerddol i'r rhaid o y rhaid o'r hyn sydd mae'n cyfrifiad gyda'r drafodau sy'n cael eu gwyrdau. The Torah tells that Eliezer devised a test to help him identify the right girl. He would ask for water, and if the girl also offered to give water to his camels, he would know she's possessed as an attribute of chesed and kindness. As Colin's Jewish student chaplain, my role is to bring chesed to Jewish students to make sure they are comfortable on campus, whether it's ensure that they're welfare, providing social and educational events, or just a listening ear. I also have to help them cope with antisemitism, because unfortunately it's on issue on campus as well. Just a couple of weeks ago, when I spent the weekend with Jewish students here in Edinburgh, we had a very successful Friday night dinner attended by around 50 students, and on Shabbat, my wife and I took our four young children for a walk in this beautiful city. But as we were walking, a woman pushed my wife aside, grabbed my kippa, threw it on the ground, and ran away. This took place less than a mile from here. In front of my young children, you can imagine how distressed they were. That hatred is a very opposite of chesed. Chesed is kindness, empathy, and support for others. It means doing mitzvot usually translated as a good deeds, another of the key ideas of Judaism. Recently, the idea of a special animal mitzvot day has caught on. Of course, that's not the only day that we do mitzvot, but like so many special days, it's an opportunity to focus on a single idea. Next Sunday will be mitzvot day, when Jewish communities will be doing chesed to others. I will be encouraging our students to think about practical ways of helping the less fortunate and to realize that in this world where there's so much uncertainty, it's the mitzvot chesed that joins us together.