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<p>From </p>
<p><a href="http://ohr.edu/this_week/insights_into_halacha/6863">http://ohr.edu/this_week/insights_into_halacha/6863</a></p>
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<p>For many of us in the know, as well as to the surprise of anyone who might be thinking of traveling to or from
<em>Eretz</em> <em>Yisrael</em>, say anytime from after <em>Pesach</em> until <em>
Shabbos</em> <em>Chazon</em>, right before <em>Tisha</em> <em>B’Av</em>, something is off. I am referring to the weekly
<em>parshah</em>, which would not be the same regularly scheduled one in <em>Chutz</em>
<em>La’aretz</em> as it is in <em>Eretz</em> <em>Yisrael</em>.</p>
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<p>Truthfully, this type of dichotomy actually happens not so infrequently, as it essentially occurs whenever the last day of a
<em>Yom Tov</em> falls on Shabbos. In <em>Chutz</em> <em>La’aretz</em> where <em>
Yom</em> <em>Tov</em> <em>Sheini</em> is <em>halachically</em> mandated,<a href="http://ohr.edu/6863#_edn1" name="_ednref1" title="">[1]</a> a
<em>Yom Tov Krias HaTorah</em> is publicly <em>leined</em>, yet, in <em>Eretz</em>
<em>Yisrael</em> (unless by specific <em>Chutznik</em> <em>minyanim</em><a href="http://ohr.edu/6863#_edn2" name="_ednref2">[2]</a>) the
<em>Krias HaTorah</em> of the next scheduled <em>parshah</em> is read. This puts <em>
Eretz</em> <em>Yisrael</em> a <em>parshah</em> ahead until the rest of the world soon ‘catches up’, by an upcoming potential double-<em>parshah</em>, which each would be read separately in
<em>Eretz</em> <em>Yisrael</em>.</p>
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<p>See the above URL for much more about this topic.</p>
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<p>YL<br>
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