Revayah: Jewish Stories

Revayah: Jewish Stories

By Fazeel Jabbar Kadalakkaran

  • Category: Reference
  • Release Date: 2025-05-13
  • Current Version: 1.0.10
  • Adult Rating: 17+
  • File Size: 81.30 MB
  • Developer: Fazeel Jabbar Kadalakkaran
  • Compatibility: Android, iOS 15.0
Score: 3.97342
3.97342
From 301 Ratings

Description

Revayah offers a peaceful space to pause, breathe, and reconnect with your Jewish heritage through the Torah teachings’ timeless wisdom. Listen to 20+ beautifully narrated stories from the Torah - each designed to calm your mind and nourish your spiritual growth. Add the gentle background sounds of ocean waves or soft piano to create a soothing meditation space. Why people love Revayah - A curated library of 22 short Jewish stories - Grouped by themes like faith, kindness, reflection, peace, and sleep - Calming background sounds (piano, rain, ocean, ambient tones & more) - Dedicated sleep stories to ease anxiety and help you unwind - Simple audio player with lock screen controls - Light & dark mode for every time of day - Great for families - includes stories for kids Grow your spirit Each Revayah story delivers a gentle moral insight or spiritual reminder to help center your day. Reconnect with peace When life feels overwhelming, try Revayah to reset your thoughts, rest, and experience a sense of clarity. Wind down with calm Play short 7-10 minute stories from sacred Jewish scriptures to find peace and be more mindful. Premium features A paid subscription is required to unlock full access to Revayah’s narrated stories, soothing background sounds, and continuous playback. PAYMENT AND SUBSCRIPTION OPTIONS Choose between the below to access the best Revayah features: • Monthly Subscription • Annual Subscription Your subscription will automatically renew at the same price unless you cancel. You can turn off auto-renewal at least 24 hours before the end of the billing period. You can also cancel your subscription at any time through your Apple account settings. Support: [email protected] Terms of Use: https://revayah.app/terms-of-use Privacy Policy: https://revayah.app/privacy-policy

Screenshots

Reviews

  • Charged 39.99

    1
    By LillyGizmo
    Stop charging my acct. the app is unexpectedly poor.
  • Rip off ???

    1
    By Annie joh
    I signed up for one month and this site changed it to 3 day trial with a $39 charge to be paid in 3 days . The App doesn’t let me sign in to fix your error .
  • Good Stories and Insultingly Bad Pronunciation.

    1
    By Dawaker
    Simply, fix the obvious AI mispronunciations replete in this app masquerading as educational. You can’t be educating people on these scriptures if you can’t get basic, fundamental, and holy texts pronounced accurately.
  • Terrible

    2
    By Chana718
    Really bad. The voice is AI and soooo boring. Stories are simple, but deep. Sounds like all are AI created. Do not waste your money.
  • Thank you

    4
    By TZ4534
    I love the stories and teaching moments m. Each on seems to speak to me a the perfect moment. The only thing is , I can’t seem to add background sound.
  • Fraud

    3
    By Nat B 99
    I wanted to like this app, but after one day, I realized the stories do not resonate with me. There was a 14 day moneyback guarantee, but when I asked them after one day to refund me, they are refusing. I don’t like being scammed like this.
  • Dr. Green’s Review

    1
    By Dr Charles Green
    I asked for a month trial but charged for a year. I stopped the app and they charged me again. They are located in AbuDaubi? I want my money refunded and no further affiliation with the app.
  • DO NOT GET THIS APP🛑🛑🛑🛑

    1
    By C.h.a.i.m.
    They will steal your money. Nobody will answer you. There’s no customer service. Even if you unsubscribe they will still charge you the monthly fee. They are not even Jewish or Christians. It’s a rip off.
  • Scam

    1
    By AngryyyyyyGrr
    They charged my card improperly. Had to cancel my entire card. The content was also boring and redundant.
  • Tough to listen to

    2
    By adamchern
    I really wanted to like this, but I can’t. They use Jewish/hebrew terms like Hashem and Moshe Rabeinu, the understanding of which I think it safe to say requires at least a basic knowledge/familiarity with Jewish prayer. However, the narrator doesn’t pronounce the Chet or Chaf and many other sounds as they are supposed to be pronounced. It’s a bit weird and may be actually be automation. Chana isn’t even anglicized to Hanna, it’s ch-Anna With the ch being the same sound as “chips”. Shechem becomes Shay-chem or shechem. The ch again like in chips. Yisrael is yizrail. Penina is pen-nine-ah. It’s really difficult to listen to. “He thought, Chass veshalom…” “she received a brasha “. Etc. it just doesn’t do it for me.

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