Text too small? 100%
קול התור Kol HaTor
קול התור
Kol HaTor
The Voice of the Turtledove

Ask Kol

Bring your questions about the Restoration of Israel

For decades, the teachings on the reunification of the Twelve Tribes have lived across hundreds of studies, newsletters and commentaries. Now you can simply ask.

Type any question about the return of the Lost Ten Tribes, the Two Sticks of Ezekiel, the role of Ephraim, or any theme in these writings — and you will receive a clear, sourced answer within moments.

What you are using is without precedent in this body of teaching. Decades of studies, prophetic readings, commentaries and source citations — over 112,000 words built up at Kol HaTor across hundreds of articles. No single human reader has ever held the whole corpus in mind at once. Kol can.

Kol does far more than read. It understands the structure of the teaching: it sees when a study from one year is in dialogue with a commentary written years later; it recognizes when the Gaon's reading of one passage illuminates a separate prophetic vision; it draws analogies between figures, between moments, between covenants — connections the writings themselves only suggest across separate articles. Ask a question, and Kol does not return a quotation. It returns a synthesis: every place in the corpus where your question is touched, gathered together, the deeper connections surfaced, presented as a single coherent answer with direct quotations and links back to the original studies. Often the answer reveals an insight that no single article alone contains — because the insight lives in the conversation between articles, and Kol is the first reader that has been able to hear that whole conversation at once.

Behind every word, the principle is absolute: nothing comes from outside the corpus, nothing is invented. When the writings speak, Kol speaks with them. When they speak in many voices on a single theme, Kol gathers them into one. When they are silent on a question, Kol tells you so plainly — and points you to the closest study that is.

Begin with a question that matters to you. Each answer is a doorway — not a destination — back into the writings themselves.

✨ Loading…
Try one of these
How to ask well — guidance for substantive answers

Clear, specific questions return the most substantive answers. Kol works best when the question points to a definite theme — a figure, a vision, a passage, an event, a question of timing or interpretation. The sharper the question, the sharper the response.

Examples that draw deep, well-sourced answers:

  • "Who are the Lost Ten Tribes today, and what is the evidence of their return?"
  • "What does the Gaon of Vilna teach about the role of Mashiach ben Yosef?"
  • "Why is the return of Ephraim, and not Judah, considered the first step of redemption?"
  • "What is the Two Sticks vision in Ezekiel 37, and how is it understood as unfolding now?"
  • "How do the writings connect the ingathering of exiles to the Universal Kingdom?"

What you'll receive. Each answer is between a paragraph and a full page in length, depending on the depth of the source material. Quotations are drawn directly from the writings, in their original phrasing. Source links are always provided — every answer is a beginning, not a final word. Where Kol must reason between multiple sources, it tells you so. Where the writings do not address a question, Kol does not invent — it tells you the writings are silent on this point, and points you to the closest related study.

Kol is offered as a tool to guide and to point you toward the sources — never to replace them. For deep study, always return to the full articles.

People are asking

Join the Restoration

This teaching is offered freely to all. Those who wish to help carry the vision to the scattered seekers of the world can become part of the mission.

Reader

Free, always
  • 2 questions every day
  • Full access to all studies
  • Share answers anywhere
  • No sign-up needed — just ask
"Every question asked, every answer shared, brings one more soul closer to the reunification of Israel."
Please note: answers are generated by an AI trained exclusively on these writings. While it draws faithfully from the original teachings, it is a tool and may occasionally express something imperfectly or incompletely. For deep study, always refer to the full articles. The AI is here to guide and point you toward the sources — not to replace them.
Ask Kol