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Rabbi's Message
BS"D
In the Torah there is no mention of the term
Rosh Hashana. Rather, the Torah refers to the fact
that in the seventh month there will be a "Yom Teruah".
The Aramaic translation by Onkelos
uses the word "Yabbova" as a day of "Crying". As a
result, we have a strange event occur in chapter 8 of the book of
Nechemia. The people had returned from the captivity
in Babylon and were now going to celebrate Rosh Hashana in
Israel for the first time in seventy years. The chapter tells
us that the people began to cry until the Levites explained to them
that the "Crying" refers to the sound of the Shofar, and
not the people. Instead, they are told to go home and
rejoice, which is what they did.
Now, we are told very clearly that The Mitzva
of the day is Shofar. The fulfillment of the Mitzva is to
hear 100 Kolos (voices). These are made up of three
types of sounds: Tekiah, Shevarim, and Teruah.
They are produced in three variations of mixes, but what is steady
is that the groups of sounds always begin with a Tekiah and
end with a Tekiah; but the one variation is that at the end
of all is the Tekiah Gedola (the great Tekiah).
The Shevarim and Teruah are in fact
sounds of crying; the first representing the broken sounds of sobbing,
while the latter is the continuous sound of weeping. This
is the "Yabbova" that Onkelos is referring to when translating
"Yom Teruah" - the day when all mankind passes before G-d
"Kevenai Maron" (like a flock of sheep). On Rosh
Hashana our destiny is inscribed, and on Yom Kippur it
is sealed. There is plenty of reason for the sounds of "Yabbova".
In spite of this, in fact because of this,
we see this as a day of Coronation of the King of Kings, when His
Dominion shall be exalted and His Throne shall be established on
Mercy. This is the sound of the very royal Tekiah,
an act of coronation. This was why the people were told to
go home and rejoice. A coronation is a day of rejoicing for
the people and a day of commitment to the King and His commands.
That comes before and after the "Yabbova", as important as
it is.
By understanding this, we hope to truly fulfill
the Mitzva of Shofar in all the aspects of Malchiyot (Kingship),
Zichronot (Memories) and Shofros.
MAY WE ALL BE INSCRIBED IN THE BOOK OF LIFE FOR
A HEALTHY AND HAPPY NEW YEAR.
Rabbi
Joseph D. Krupnik
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