High Holidays
Times and locations for the 5768 Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kipppur services can be found HERE
Although the High Holidays themselves--the two days of Rosh
Hashanah (the Jewish New Year) and Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement)--occupy
three days only, they lie within a web of liturgy and customs that extend
from the beginning of the preceding Hebrew month of Elul through Yom Kippur.
The focus of this entire period is the process of teshuvah, or repentance,
whereby a Jew admits to sins, asks for forgiveness, and resolves not to repeat
the sins. Recognizing the psychological
difficulty of self-examination and personal change, the rabbis instituted
a 40-day period whose intensity spirals toward its culmination on Yom Kippur,
a day devoted entirely to fasting and repentance.
The High Holiday period begins on the first day of the Jewish month of Elul.
In the Ashkenazi tradition, during this month of soul searching, the shofar,
or ram’s horn, is blown each morning except on the Sabbath, to call
upon listeners to begin the difficult process of repentance. Also in Elul
special haftarot--prophetic portions--focusing on consolation acknowledge
the vulnerability of an individual grappling with personal change. During
the week before Rosh Hashanah, intensity increases as traditional Jews
begin reciting selichot, prayers that involve confessing sins and requesting
God’s forgiveness and help. On the Sabbath before Rosh Hashanah,
the selichot are chanted at midnight, rather than their usual early morning
hour.
The culmination of the High Holiday period occurs during the Ten Days of
Repentance, which begin on 1 Tishri with Rosh Hashanah and end with Yom Kippur.
During this period, human beings have the chance to tip the scales of divine
judgment in their favor through repentance, prayer, and tzedakah (performing
righteous deeds and giving money to charitable causes).
Not only is Rosh Hashanah the Jewish New Year, which commemorates God’s
creation of the world, but also the Day of Judgment, when God remembers and
judges all human deeds. Except on Shabbat, services are punctuated with the
call of the shofar, which according to Maimonides, is saying, “Awake,
you sleepers, from your slumber…examine your deeds, return in repentance,
and remember your Creator.” Human beings are believed to be in mortal
danger at this time, with their lives hinging on the decision to repent.
Only those who choose to forego sin are inscribed in the symbolic “book
of life” that is a central liturgical image of Rosh Hashanah. On the
afternoon of the first day of Rosh Hashanah, the theological bent of the
morning services is reinforced in a concrete way during the Tashlikh ceremony,
during which individuals symbolically cast away their personal sins by throwing
breadcrumbs into a flowing body of water. This action is accompanied by the
recitation of biblical verses that evoke the human capacity for repentance
and the beneficence of Divine forgiveness through the metaphor of casting
sins into depths of the waters.
The Sabbath between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur is called Shabbat Shuvah,
the Sabbath of Return, or Repentance, after a verse from the haftarah declaring “Return
O Israel to the Lord, your God” (Hosea 14:2).
The transition to Yom Kippur begins the in the hours preceding the evening
onset of the festival with the recitation of the first vidui, or communal
confession of sins, at the afternoon service. Some Jews choose to go to the
mikveh, or ritual bath, to purify themselves before the holiday. The striving
toward inner purity is also reflected in the white outfits traditional for
the day. In traditional congregations, men will don a white robe called a
kittel over their holiday clothes. In some liberal congregation, both men
and women might choose to wear white garments to symbolize this quest for
spiritual purity.
Within the Ten Days of Repentance, Yom Kippur is the pinnacle of intensity,
moving toward the decisive moment at its close when God is imagined as sealing
the books of life and death. The day’s total focus on spiritual concerns
is exemplified by fasting and abstaining from everyday activities such as
bathing, sexual relations, and the wearing of leather shoes.
The liturgical day of Yom Kippur, known as the Sabbath of Sabbaths, begins
with the Kol nidre service immediately prior to sunset. The heartrending
poems and prayers of the Machzor, the prayer book used for Rosh Hashanah
and Yom Kippur, which express the themes of repentance, human frailty, and
humility before God, combine with the nusach, or musical style of the service,
to express the momentousness of the day.
Liturgical elements that distinguish the Yom Kippur services include a recounting
of the Temple service on Yom Kippur, a description of the suffering of rabbis
martyred by the Romans, and the reading of the Book of Jonah. The day closes
with the Neilah service, during which penitents pray before the open ark,
with one last chance to repent before the book of Life is sealed. The very
name of the service, Neilah (locking) refers to the imagery that the gates
of repentance, open during the High Holidays, are now shutting. A lengthy
sounding of the shofar, called a tekiah gedolah, releases the Jew back into
the realm of the everyday bolstered by a final echo of the call to repentance.
