GLOSSARY
OF TERMS USED IN THIS SITE
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AFIKOMAN
Afikoman (based on Greek, epikomen or epikomion, meaning "that
which comes after" or "dessert") is a half-piece of matzah
hidden at the start of the Passover Seder and eaten at the end of the
festive meal. After the afikoman is eaten, one may not consume any other
food for the rest of the night, aside from the third and fourth cups
of wine and beverages such as water or tea.
The hiding away
of the afikoman has become an opportunity to maintain the interest and
excitement of the children at the table. If the leader of the Seder
hides it, the children are encouraged to locate it and demand a prize
for its safe return. Alternately, the children hide the afikoman and
the leader looks for it; when he or she gives up, the children demand
the ransom for revealing its location. This game reinforces the importance
of the afikoman, as the Seder cannot continue until it is eaten for
"dessert."
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ARON
KODESH (ARON HAKODESH)
The Ark in a synagogue is known as the Aron Kodesh among Ashkenazim
and as Hechal among most Sephardim. It is generally a receptacle or
ornamental closet which contains the synagogue's Torah scrolls. In most
cases, the Ark is located on or near that wall of the sanctuary which
is facing Jerusalem, considered by Jews to be the holiest spot in the
world.
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Aron Kodesh comes
from the Hebrew words meaning "Holy Ark." This name is in
reference to the Ark of the Covenant which was stored in the Holy of
Holies in the ancient Tabernacle and in the Temple in Jerusalem.
Hechal comes from
the Hebrew word for "palace," a term which was also used in
the time of the Temple in Jerusalem to refer to the inner sanctuary
containing the Holy of Holies.
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ASHKENAZI
(ASHKENAZIC)
Ashkenazic Jews are the Jews of France, Germany, and Eastern Europe
and their descendants. "Ashkenaz" is the medieval Hebrew name
for Germany.
BAR MITZVAH / BAT MITZVAH
According to Jewish law, when Jewish children reach the age of maturity
(12 years for girls, 13 years for boys), they become responsible for
their actions. At this point a boy is said to become Bar Mitzvah (Hebrew:
to whom the commandments apply); a girl is said to become Bat Mitzvah
(Hebrew: to whom the commandments apply). The current way of celebrating
one's becoming a Bar Mitzvah did not exist in the time of the Bible
but developed during medieval times.
The current practice
is that on a Sabbath or other day when the Torah is read in the synagogue,
the 13-year-old recites the blessings for the Torah reading, reads from
the Torah and Haftarah and may also lead part or all of the morning
prayer services. The service is often followed by a celebratory meal
with family, friends, and members of the community.
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BIMAH
A bimah (among Ashkenazim) or tebah (among Sephardim) is the elevated
area or platform in a Jewish synagogue which is intended to serve as
the place where the person reading aloud from the Torah stands during
the Torah reading service. The bimah is sometimes described as an altar
or tower. A bimah in a synagogue will generally have the Ark, which
contains the Torahs, as well as a table to rest the Torah scroll on.
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CHALLAH
Challah is a traditional Ashkenazi Jewish braided bread eaten on
the Sabbath (Shabbat) and on all Jewish holidays except Passover, when
Jews are forbidden to eat leavened bread.
CHAMETZ
Chametz or Chometz is the Hebrew term for "leavened bread."
It is any product that contains wheat, barley, oats, spelt or rye that
has leavened (risen). The word is used generally in regard to the Jewish
holiday of Passover (Pesach). The Torah prohibits one from owning, eating
or benefiting from any chametz during Passover. The prohibition against
eating chametz is found in Exodus 13:3. Since it is prohibited to possess
chametz on Pesach, any remaining chametz is sold to a non-Jew by means
of a legal contract, usually with a rabbi acting as the agent. The rabbi
buys the chametz back at the end of Passover.
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CHANUKAH
Chanukah, the Festival of Rededication (also known as the Festival
of Lights) is an eight-day holiday commemorating the rededication of
the Temple after its desecration under Antiochus IV.
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According to the
Talmud, at the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem following the
victory of the Maccabees over the Seleucid Empire, there was only enough
consecrated olive oil to fuel the eternal flame in the Temple for one
day. Miraculously, the oil burned for eight days. The festival is observed
by the kindling of lights on each of the festival's eight nights, one
on the first night, two on the second, and so on.
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CHUMASH
A book (or a set of five books) containing the five books of the
Torah. The word "chumash" comes from the Hebrew word meaning
five. Often a chumash contains the five books, divided up by the weekly
Torah readings (each section called a parshah), and the weekly haftarah
(a passage from the Prophets) portion.
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CHUPPAH
A chuppah is a canopy traditionally used in the Jewish wedding ceremony.
It consists of a cloth or sheet sometimes a tallit ("prayer
shawl") stretched or supported over four poles and is sometimes
carried by attendants to the location where the ceremony will take place.
It is meant to symbolize the home which the couple will build together.
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EITZ
CHAYIM
Literally "Tree of Life." Used in the plural (atzei chayim),
the wooden handles of the Torah scroll. The Tree of Life (Eitz Chayim),
in the Book of Genesis, was the tree in the Garden of Eden whose fruit
gave everlasting life, i.e., immortality.
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After eating from
the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil, the Biblical account states
that Adam and Eve were exiled from the Garden of Eden to prevent them
from eating of the Tree of Life.
The Torah (Five
Books of Moses) is also referred to as the Tree of Life.
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ELIJAH'S
CUP
The fifth ceremonial cup of wine poured during the family Seder dinner
on Passover (Pesach). It is left untouched in honour of the prophet
Elijah, who, according to tradition, will arrive one day as an unknown
guest to herald the advent of the Messiah. During the Seder dinner,
biblical verses are read while the door is briefly opened to welcome
Elijah.
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ELUL
Elul is the twelfth month of the Jewish ecclesiastical year and the
sixth month of the civil year on the Hebrew calendar. Elul usually occurs
in AugustSeptember on the Gregorian calendar.
The month of Elul
is seen as a time to search one's heart and repent in preparation for
the coming Day of Judgment, Rosh Hashanah, and Day of Atonement, Yom
Kippur.
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ESHET
CHAYIL
A Woman of Valor, called Eshet Chayil in Hebrew, is a hymn which is
customarily recited on Friday evenings, after returning from synagogue
and before sitting down to the Sabbath evening meal. Eshet Chayil is
a 22-verse poem (see text below) with which King Solomon concludes the
book of Proverbs.
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According to Jewish
mysticism, the poem is a reference to the Sabbath Queen, the spiritual
soul-mate of the Jewish nation.
"A woman of
valor, who can find? Her worth is far above jewels. The heart of her
husband trusts in her, and nothing shall he lack. She renders him good
and not evil all the days of her life. She opens her hand to the needy
and extends her hand to the poor. She is robed in strength and dignity
and cheerfully faces whatever may come. She opens her mouth with wisdom.
Her tongue is guided by kindness. She tends to the affairs of her household,
and eats not the bread of idleness. Her children come forward and bless
her. Her husband too, and he praises her. Many women have done superbly,
but you surpass them all. Charm is deceitful, and beauty is vain, but
a Godfearing woman is much to be praised. Place before her the fruit
of her hands. Wherever people gather, her deeds speak her praise."
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ETROG
One of several varieties of citron, a citrus fruit of the orange and
lemon family. It is one of the Four Species used in a special waving
ceremony during the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. The other species are
the lulav (date palm frond), hadass (myrtle bough), and aravah (willow
branch). The etrog is usually kept in an ornate protective box.
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HAFTORAH
A short selection from the Prophets read in the synagogue following
the reading of the Torah on Saturdays, holidays and fast days. It contains
a message similar to that of the weekly Torah reading or speaks of the
current holiday.
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HAGGADAH
The Haggadah is a book which contains the order of the Passover Seder
and which is read during the Seder. Haggadah, meaning "telling,"
is a fulfillment of the scriptural commandment to each Jew to recount
the Jews' liberation from slavery in Egypt, as described in the book
of Exodus.
HALLELUYAH
Halleluyah is a transliteration of Hebrew words meaning "Let us
praise God." It is found mainly in the book of Psalms. The word
has been accepted into the English language.
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HAVDALLAH
Havdallah (Hebrew: separation) is a service held both in the synagogue
and at home to mark the end of the Sabbath and holy festivals. Blessings
are made over a plaited candle, a spice box, and wine or other beverage.
The spice box is passed round for all to smell so that the sweet scent
of the holy day lingers with them until the following Sabbath. The candle
is then extinguished in the wine, symbolizing the end of the holy day.
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IYAR
Iyar is the eighth month of the ecclesiastical year and the second month
of the civil year on the Hebrew calendar. Iyar usually falls in AprilMay
on the Gregorian calendar.
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JERUSALEM
Jerusalem (Hebrew: Yerushalayim) is the holiest city in Judaism, King
David's capital and the site of King Solomon's Temple and the Second
Temple. Since ancient times, Jews have faced Jerusalem during prayer.
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KADDISH
A prayer that praises God and expresses a yearning for the establishment
of God's kingdom on earth. The emotional reactions inspired by the Kaddish
come from the circumstances in which it is said: It is recited at funerals
and by mourners, and sons are required to say Kaddish for eleven months
after the death of a parent.
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KETER
TORAH (TORAH CROWN)
Keter is Hebrew for crown. A Torah scroll will often be "dressed"
with ornamental breastplates, fine fabric, and occasionally, a crown,
the metalwork often made of beaten silver. The Book of Exodus, chapter
28, contains a description of the garb of the High Priest.
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special clothing, each piece of which has been reproduced in some fashion
for dressing and decorating the Torah, included a tunic (the Torah mantle,
or covering), a belt (the sash around the Torah scroll), a miter (the
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KIDDUSH
The act of sanctifying the Sabbath (Shabbat) or a Jewish holiday through
the recitation of a blessing over a cup of kosher wine or kosher grape
juice.
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KIPPA
A thin, usually slightly rounded cloth skullcap worn by observant Jewish
men (literal meaning: dome; plural: kippot; Yiddish term: yarmulke).
The Talmud says that the purpose of wearing a kippah is to remind us
of God, who is the Higher Authority "above us" (Kiddushin
31a).
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KOSHER
The Hebrew word kosher means fit or proper as it relates to kosher dietary
law. Kosher foods are permitted to be eaten and can be used as ingredients
in the production of additional food items. Contrary to popular misconception,
rabbis or other religious officials do not "bless" food to
make it kosher. Store-bought foods can be identified as kosher by the
presence of a graphic symbol that indicates that the food has been certified
as kosher by a rabbinical authority.
The basic laws of
Kashrut (a Hebrew word referring to kosher and its application) are
of Biblical origin (Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 17).
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LION
OF JUDAH
Lion of Judah has its origins in the Book of Genesis, where the Israelite
tribe of Judah had the lion as its symbol. David, a descendant of Judah,
is identified with the lion, as is the Davidic monarchy and the Messiah
who will spring from this royal house.
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The writings of the sages often draw moralistic analogies between the
lion and righteous individuals. For these and other reasons, the lion
is heavily represented in Jewish ceremonial art.
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LULAV
A lulav is an unopened date palm branch, the palm branch being one of
the "four species" (three branches and one fruit) required
for the Sukkot holiday. When the two other foliage-related items (myrtle
and willow branches) are tied to the lulav, the collection is referred
to as a lulav as well.
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The lulav branch
and the other two branches of the four species strapped to it, together
with the etrog (citron) fruit, are held in both hands and waved about
in a specified sequence which attests to God's mastery over all of creation.
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MAGEN
DAVID
The Shield of David or Magen David in Hebrew is a generally recognized
symbol of Judaism. It is named after King David of ancient Israel, and
its usage began in the Middle Ages, alongside the more ancient symbol
of the menorah. It is also referred to as the Star of David.
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With the establishment
of the State of Israel in 1948, the Star of David on the flag of Israel
has also become a symbol of Israel.
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MANTLE
(TORAH MANTLE)
A Torah mantle is a cover which dresses and protects the Torah (parchment
scroll containing the Five Books of Moses).
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MATZAH
A Jewish food item made of plain flour and water which is not allowed
to ferment or rise before it is baked. The result is a flat, crispy,
cracker-like bread. Matzah is the traditional substitute for bread during
Passover (Pesach).
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According to the
Torah, when the Children of Israel were leaving ancient Egypt, they
had no time to wait until their bread rose, so they baked it before
it had a chance to rise, and the result was matzah (Exodus 12:39).
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MEGILLAH
The scroll containing the biblical narrative of the Book of Esther,
which forms the basis for the holiday of Purim. Its full text is read
aloud in synagogues twice during the holiday.
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MENORA
((MENORAH)
The menorah is a seven-branched candelabrum. In ancient times, it
was lit by olive oil in the Tabernacle and the Temple in Jerusalem.
The menorah is one of the oldest symbols of the Jewish people. An eight-branched
menorah is used during the holiday of Chanukah.
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MEZUZAH
Mezuzah (Heb. literally "doorpost") refers to one of the 613
commandments in Judaism which requires that a small parchment (klaf)
inscribed with two sections from the Torah's Book of Deuteronomy (6:4-9
and 11:13-21) be affixed to each doorpost and gate in a Jewish home
and business. A small case or box typically covers the parchment.
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MISHKAN
The portable tent-like structure that served the Israelites as a sanctuary
during their wanderings in the wilderness after they left Egypt and
in the early period of their life in Palestine.
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PAROCHET
The curtain on the front of the Aron Kodesh (structure in a synagogue
that holds the Torah scrolls). This curtain represents the covering
that was on the original Ark of the Covenant.
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PASSOVER (PESACH)
Passover (Hebrew: Pesach) is a Jewish holiday which commemorates the
Exodus and freedom of the Israelites from ancient Egypt. As described
in the Book of Exodus, Passover marks the "birth" of the Children
of Israel, who become the Jewish nation, as the Jews' ancestors were
freed from being slaves of Pharaoh and allowed to become followers of
God instead.
Together with Sukkot
("Tabernacles") and Shavuot ("Pentecost"), Passover
is one of the three "pilgrimage festivals," during which the
entire Jewish populace made a pilgrimage to Jerusalem at the time when
the Temple in Jerusalem was standing.
In Israel, Passover
is a seven-day holiday, with the first and last days celebrated as a
full festival (involving abstention from work, special prayer services
and holiday meals). In the Jewish Diaspora, outside Israel, the holiday
is celebrated for eight days, with the first two days and last two days
celebrated as full festivals.
The primary symbol
of Passover is the matzah, a flat, unleavened "bread" which
recalls the hurriedly baked bread that the Israelites ate after their
hasty departure from Egypt. (See also Seder.)
PURIM
A joyous Jewish holiday commemorating the deliverance of the Jewish
people of the ancient Persian Empire from Haman's plot to annihilate
them, as recorded in the Biblical Book of Esther. The holiday is characterized
by public recitation of the Book of Esther, giving mutual gifts of food
and drink, giving charity to the poor, and a celebratory meal (Esther
9:22). Other customs include drinking alcohol, wearing masks and costumes,
and public celebration.
Purim is celebrated
annually on the 14th of the Hebrew month of Adar.
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RIMONIM
The rimonim (Torah finials) are the oldest of the Torah ornaments. Rimonim
is the plural for rimon, which means pomegranate, the symbol of fertility
and life in much of the Eastern world. According to Biblical writing,
the pomegranate adorned the robes of the High Priest (Exodus 28:34),
and it is appropriate that the symbol also tops the Torah rollers that
are known as atzei chayim (trees of life).
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ROSH HASHANAH
Rosh Hashanah is literally translated as "head of the year"
and refers to the Jewish New Year. The Torah refers to the day as "The
Day of the Blowing of the Shofar" (Leviticus 23:24), and rabbinic
literature and the liturgy itself describe Rosh Hashanah as "The
Day of Judgment" (Yom ha-Din) and "The Day of Remembrance"
(Yom ha-Zikkaron). Some descriptions depict God as sitting upon a throne,
while books containing the deeds of all humanity are opened for review.
This holy day is the first of the Yamim Noraim (Hebrew, "Days of
Awe"). A popular custom during this holiday is the eating of apples
dipped in honey, symbolizing the wish for a sweet new year.
SEDER
Seder, literally "order" in Hebrew, is a religious
meal served in Jewish homes on the 15th and 16th of the month of Nisan
to commence the festival of Passover (Pesach). Though Passover commemorates
the Exodus, the historical deliverance of the Jewish people from Egyptian
bondage in the days of Moses (13th century BCE), Jews are ever mindful
that this event was a prelude to God's revelation on Mount Sinai. For
each participant, therefore, the seder is an occasion to relive the
Exodus as a personal spiritual event. Jews in Israel omit the second
seder because they limit Passover to seven days. The text used for the
seder is called a haggadah, and special ceremonial foods, as specified
in the haggadah, are placed on a seder plate.
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SEDER
PLATE
A special plate containing symbolic foods used by Jews during the Passover
seder. Each of the six items arranged on the plate have special significance
to the retelling of the story of the Exodus from Egypt, which is the
focus of this ritual meal.
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The seventh symbolic item used during the meala stack of three
matzot (unleavened bread)is placed on its own plate on the seder
table.
SEPHARDI
(SEPHARDIC)
Sephardic Jews are the Jews of Spain, Portugal, North Africa and the
Middle East and their descendants.
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SHABBAT
(OR SHABBAT KODESH)
Shabbat Kodesh, "Holy Sabbath" (Shabbes in Ashkenazic
pronunciation), is the weekly day of rest, celebration and prayer in
Judaism. It is observed from before sundown on Friday until after nightfall
on Saturday. The Biblical commandment to observe the Sabbath is found
in Exodus 20:8-11 and in Deuteronomy 5:12-15. The lighting of Shabbat
candles ushers in the holy day, and a ceremony, Havdallah, is performed
at the conclusion of the Sabbath.
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SHAVUOT (SHAVUOS)
Shavuot, the "Feast of the Weeks," is the Jewish holiday celebrating
the harvest season in Israel. Shavuot, which means "weeks,"
refers to the timing of the festival, which is held seven weeks after
Passover. Shavuot also commemorates the anniversary of the giving of
the Torah to Moses and the Israelites at Mount Sinai. Some of the customs
associated with Shavuot are the consumption of dairy products; the reading
of the Book of Ruth at morning services; the decoration of homes and
synagogues with greenery; and engaging in all-night Torah study.
SHEMINI ATZERET
Shemini Atzeret (Hebrew: "the Eighth [day] of Assembly") is
a Jewish holiday celebrated on the 22nd day of the Hebrew month of Tishrei.
In the Diaspora it is celebrated for two days, the second day being
separately referred to as Simchat Torah.
The Talmud declares
the eighth day as a separate holiday and one dedicated to the love of
God. References to the celebration can be found in Numbers 29:35 ("On
the eighth day you shall hold a solemn gathering; you shall not work
at your occupations").
In ancient Israel,
Shemini Atzeret coincided with the beginning of the rainy season. Accordingly,
prayers for rain and good crops were recited. Orthodox Jews still recite
the ancient prayers at this time.
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SHEVITI
(SHIVVITI)
A sheviti is an elaborate papercut or a plaque with the verse "I
have placed the Lord always before me" (Psalm 16:8) written in
the form of a menorah. The Hebrew word sheviti means "I have placed."
The purpose of the sheviti is to arouse a person's awareness of the
presence of God. During the 18th and 19th centuries and up to the present,
the synagogue plaques, most of them profusely decorated in shapes and
colours, also contained verses concerning law and the Torah.
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The common decorative
motifs were the seven-branched menorah (candelabrum) of the Temple and
symbolic buildings representing different holy places in Israel. Others
served as amulets, containing magical symbols, such as the Magen David
(Shield of David).
Papercut sheviti
are believed to have been exceedingly common around the 19th century
in Ashkenazic Jewish homes. They served daily religious and other ritual
needs, with the sheviti used, among other things, to indicate the direction
of prayer (Diaspora Jews face east for the purpose of guiding the prayer
to the direction of the holiest city, Jerusalem). The sheviti also featured
the traditional symbols mentioned above and were supplemented with calligraphic
inscriptions in Hebrew (and sometimes in other languages), mainly passages
from the Bible, the interpretive texts and the prayerbook. Personal
dedicatory and memorial inscriptions commemorating special family events
were sometimes included as well.
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SHOFAR
The shofar, a well known symbol of Rosh Hashanah and one of the earliest
instruments used in Jewish music, is usually made from a ram's horn.
The blowing of the shofar is the only specific commandment for Rosh
Hashanah, during which time the shofar is blown 100 times on each of
the two-day holiday. The aim of the sounding of the shofar it to arouse
one's soul to repentance.
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SIDDUR
The siddur is the prayerbook used by Jews over the world, containing
a set order of daily prayers.
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SIMCHAT TORAH
Simchat Torah is a Hebrew term which means "rejoicing with/of the
Torah." The annual cycle of reading the Torah is completed and
begun anew, with the last section of Deuteronomy and the first section
of Genesis read in succession after a festival parade of the Torah scrolls
along with singing and dancing. It is one of the happiest days in the
Jewish calendar. In the Diaspora, Simchat Torah is the second day of
the holiday of Shemini Atzeret, while in Israel, Shemini Atzeret is
also the holiday of Simchat Torah. Both holidays follow immediately
after Sukkot.
SUKKOT
Sukkot (Hebrew: "booths"), also known as the Feast of Booths,
the Feast of Tabernacles, or the Feast of Ingathering, is one of three
major holidays known collectively as the pilgrimage festivals, when
historically the Jewish populace travelled to the Temple in Jerusalem.
During Sukkot, Jews are instructed to construct a temporary structure
(sukkah) in which to eat their meals, entertain guests, relax, and even
sleep. The sukkah is reminiscent of the type of huts in which the ancient
Israelites dwelt during their forty years of wandering in the desert
after the Exodus from Egypt. The obligation to observe Sukkot is found
in Leviticus Chapter 23.
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TALLIIT
The tallit is a prayer shawl, the most authentic Jewish garment. It
is a rectangular-shaped piece of linen or wool (and sometimes, now,
polyester or silk) with special fringes called tzitzit on each of the
four corners.
Most tallitot (alternate
plural: talleisim) have a neckband, called an atarah, which often has
the blessing one recites when donning the Tallit embroidered across
it.
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In Numbers 15:37-4, one reads that God said to Moses: "Speak to
the Israelites and instruct them to make for themselves fringes on the
corners of their garments throughout the ages; let them attach a cord
of blue to the fringe at each corner. That shall be your fringe; look
at it and recall all the commandments of the Lord and observe them...
Thus you shall be reminded to observe all My commandments and to be
holy to your God...."
The purpose of the
tallit, then, is to hold the tzitzit, and the purpose of the tzitzit
(according to the Torah) is to remind us of God's commandments.
The tallit is worn
during morning prayers and during the prayer recited in the synagogue
at the beginning of the evening service on Yom Kippur.
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TALMUD
The Talmud is a record of rabbinic discussions pertaining to Jewish
law, ethics, customs and history. The Talmud has two components: the
Mishnah (c. 200 CE), the first written compendium of Judaism's oral
law; and the Gemara (c. 500 CE), a discussion of the Mishnah and related
writings. The terms Talmud and Gemara are often used interchangeably.
The Gemara is the basis for all codes of rabbinic law and is much quoted
in other rabbinic literature.
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TEFILLIN
Tefillin are two small parchment-filled black boxes with black straps
attached to them. Jewish men are required to place one box on their
head and tie the other one on their arm each weekday morning during
prayer. optional
for women
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Tefillin are biblical in origin and are commanded within the context
of several laws outlining a Jew's relationship to God. "And you
shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul,
and with all your might... Bind them as a sign on your hand and let
them serve as a frontlet between your eyes" (Deuteronomy 6:5-8).
The text that is
inserted inside the two boxes of Tefillin is handwritten by a scribe
and consists of the four sets of Biblical verses in which Tefillin are
commanded (Exodus 13:1-10, 11-16; Deuteronomy 6:4 -9, 11:13-21).
The word Tefillin
is commonly translated in English as "phylacteries."
Putting on Tefillin
is the first mitzvah (commandment) assumed by a Jewish male upon his
Bar Mitzvah. The wearing of Tefillin is
TISHREI
Tishrei is the first month of the civil year and the seventh month of
the ecclesiastical year in the Hebrew calendar. It is an autumn month
of 30 days. Tishrei usually occurs in SeptemberOctober on the
Gregorian calendar.
TREE
OF LIFE
See Eitz Chayim.
TWELVE
TRIBES
Jacob (renamed Israel by God in the book of Genesis, 32:28)
fathered twelve sons: Asher, Benjamin, Dan, Gad, Issachar, Joseph, Judah,
Levi, Naphtali, Reuben, Simeon and Zebulun. They are the ancestors of
the tribes of Israel and the ones for whom the tribes are named. Each
occupied a separate territory (except the tribe of Levi, which was set
apart to serve in the Holy Temple).
VAAD
HA'IR
Vaad is a Hebrew term for council of rabbis, while Ha'ir means "of
the city." It is often translated as "Jewish Community Council."
VALANCE
A valance is a short drapery hung above the curtain on a synagogue Torah
Ark. It takes its Hebrew name, kapporet, from the covering for the original
Ark of the Covenant that Jews carried in the Biblical desert.
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WIMPLE
A long, linen sash used as a binding for the Torah by Jews of Ashkenazic
origin. It is made from the cloth used to swaddle a baby boy at his
brit milah (circumcision), uniting the communal world of the synagogue
with the individual's own life cycle.
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YAD
As one is not supposed to touch the Torah parchment. one follow the
text with a pointer, called a yad. Yad means "hand" in Hebrew,
and the pointer usually is in the shape of a hand with a pointing index
finger.
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YAHRZEIT
A commemoration of the death of a Jew by a mourner (the child, sibling,
spouse or parent of the deceased). The date of the yahrzeit, which is
calculated according to the Hebrew calendar, is the anniversary of the
death, not the burial. The main customs are the recitation of the mourner's
prayer (Kaddish) and the lighting of a yahrzeit candle, a special memorial
candle that burns for 24 hours.
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YOM
HASHOAH SEDER
Yom Hashoah is Hebrew for Holocaust Memorial Day. A modern Orthodox
rabbi in New York, Rabbi Avraham Weiss, conceived of a seder (much like
on Passover) in which the story of the Holocaust would be retold. He
wrote a special haggadah for that purpose. The holding of a Yom HaShoah
seder has become an institution in many communities.
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YOM
KIPPUR
Yom Kippur is the Jewish holiday of the Day of Atonement. It falls on
the tenth day of the Hebrew month of Tishrei. (Leviticus 23:27-28) The
Bible calls the day Yom HaKippurim (Hebrew, "Day of the Atonements").
It is one of the Yamim Noraim (Hebrew, "Days of Awe") and involves
a 25-hour fast and intensive prayer. It is considered to be one of the
holiest and most solemn days of the year. |
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www.cjvma.org
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