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Lag BaOmer

Lag BaOmer (Hebrew: לַ״ג בָּעוֹמֶר, LaG Bāʿōmer), also Lag B'Omer or Lag LaOmer, is a Jewish religious holiday celebrated on the 33rd day of the Counting of the Omer, which occurs on the 18th day of the Hebrew month of Iyar.

Lag BaOmer
A Lag BaOmer bonfire celebration in Israel, symbol of the holiday
Official nameלַ״ג בָּעוֹמֶר
Observed byJews
TypeJewish
Significance33rd day of the Counting of the Omer, which begins the 2nd day of Pesach
Begins18th day of Iyar
Date18 Iyar
2022 dateSunset, 18 May –
nightfall, 19 May[1]
2023 dateSunset, 8 May –
nightfall, 9 May[1]
2024 dateSunset, 25 May –
nightfall, 26 May[1]
2025 dateSunset, 15 May –
nightfall, 16 May[1]
Related toPesach, Shavuot, Counting of the Omer

According to some Rishonim, it is the day on which the plague that killed Rabbi Akiva's 24,000 disciples came to an end, and for this reason the mourning period of Sefirat HaOmer concludes on Lag BaOmer in many communities.[2]

According to modern kabbalistic tradition, this day is the Celebration of Simeon ben Yochai and/or the anniversary of his death. According to a late medieval tradition, Simeon ben Yochai is buried in Meron, and this association has spawned several well-known customs and practices on Lag BaOmer, including the lighting of bonfires and pilgrimages to Meron.[3]

Additionally, in modern-day Israel, the holiday also serves to commemorate the Bar Kokhba Revolt against the Romans.[4]

Etymology

 
Children watch Lag BaOmer bonfire in Tel Aviv, Israel.

Lag BaOmer is Hebrew for "33rd [day] in the Omer". (The Hebrew letter ל (lamed) or "L" has the numerical value of 30 and ג (gimmel) or "G" has the numerical value of 3. A vowel sound is conventionally added for pronunciation purposes.)

Some Jews call this holiday Lag LaOmer, which means "33rd [day] of the Omer", as opposed to Lag BaOmer, "33rd [day] in the Omer". Lag BaOmer is the traditional method of counting by some Ashkenazi and Hasidic Jews; Lag LaOmer is the count used by Sephardi Jews. Lag LaOmer is also the name used by Yosef Karo, who was a Sepharadi, in his Shulchan Aruch (Orach Chaim 493:2, and cf. 489:1 where BaOmer is inserted by a glossator).[5] (The form Lag B'Omer ["33rd day of an Omer"] is also sometimes used, though it is not grammatically correct in this setting.) The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, writes in his Likkutei Sichos that a deeper reason for the term Lag BaOmer is that the Hebrew words Lag BaOmer (ל״ג בעמר, spelled without the "vav"), have the same gematria as Moshe (משה, Moses). He writes that Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai, whose yahrzeit is traditionally observed on this day, was mystically a spark of the soul of Moses.[6][7]

Origins

 
Entrance to the tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his son, Rabbi Eleazar

The origins of Lag BaOmer as a minor festival are unclear. The earliest clear reference to the observance of Lag BaOmer is a brief statement by Isaac ben Dorbolo (12th century, northern France). It is found in his annotations to Mahzor Vitry. He points out that Purim and Lag BaOmer always fall on the same day of the week, but he says nothing about the origin of the holiday.[8] Lag BaOmer is also mentioned in the early 13th century by Avraham ben Nathan in his Sefer HaManhig.[9] The Talmudist Menachem Meiri in his gloss to Yevamot 62b cites the Talmudic passage which states that during the time of Rabbi Akiva, 24,000 of his students died from a divinely-sent plague during the counting of the Omer. The Talmud goes on to say that this was because they did not show proper respect to one another. Meiri named Lag BaOmer as the day when, "according to a tradition of the geonim", the "plague" ended.[10]

Kabbalistic traditions of traveling to any of several locations around Meron at any of several points in the month of Iyyar date to the medieval period, but it is not clear when, by whom, or in what way Lag baOmer was first connected to Simeon ben Yochai.[3]

Nachman Krochmal, a 19th-century Jewish theologian, among others, suggests that the deaths of Rabbi Akiva's students was a veiled reference to the defeat of "Akiva's soldiers" by the Romans, and that Lag BaOmer was the day on which Bar Kokhba enjoyed a brief victory.[10]

During the Middle Ages, Lag BaOmer became a special holiday for rabbinical students and was called "Scholar's Day". It was customary to rejoice on this day through outdoor sports.[11]

Kabbalistic significance

Lag BaOmer has another significance based on the Kabbalistic custom of assigning a Sefirah to each day and week of the Omer count. The first week corresponds to Chesed, the second week to Gevurah, etc., and similarly, the first day of each week corresponds to Chesed, the second day to Gevurah, etc. Thus, the 33rd day, which is the fifth day of the fifth week, corresponds to Hod she-be-Hod (Splendor within [the week of] Splendor). As such, Lag BaOmer represents the level of spiritual manifestation or Hod that would precede the more physical manifestation of the 49th day (Malkhut she-be-Malkhut, Kingship within [the week of] Kingship), which immediately precedes the holiday of Shavuot.[citation needed]

Customs and practices

 
The tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai in Meron on Lag BaOmer

While the Counting of the Omer is a semi-mourning period, all restrictions of mourning are lifted for Ashkenazim on the 33rd day of the Omer. The Sephardic custom is to cease mourning the following day, celebrations being allowed on the 34th day of the Omer, Lad BaOmer (ל״ד בעומר).[12][13] As a result, weddings, parties, listening to music, and haircuts are commonly scheduled to coincide with Lag BaOmer among Ashkenazi Jews, while Sephardi Jews hold weddings the next day.[14] It is customary mainly among Hassidim that three-year-old boys be given their first haircuts (upsherin). While haircuts may be taken anywhere, if possible, the occasion is traditionally held at the tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai in Meron, Israel, or at the Jerusalem grave of Shimon Hatzaddik for those who cannot travel to Meron.[15]

Families go on picnics and outings. Children go out to the fields with their teachers with bows and rubber-tipped arrows. Tachanun, the prayer for special Divine mercy on one's behalf, is not said on days with a festive character, including Lag BaOmer;[16] when God is showing one a "smiling face," so to speak, as He does especially on the holidays, there is no need to ask for special mercy.[citation needed]

Bonfires

Religious

 
Israeli boys collect wood for a Lag BaOmer bonfire.
 
A wood pile awaiting Lag BaOmer celebration

The most well-known custom of Lag BaOmer is the lighting of bonfires. The custom may originate in symbolizing the "spiritual light" brought in to the world by Simeon ben Yochai.[17] Some have speculated a connection between the bonfires of Lag BaOmer and the festivals of May Day and Beltane which are celebrated by some European cultures around halfway between the spring equinox and summer solstice on 1 May, and are also celebrated through large bonfires. In Germany it is also not uncommon to see rural men go out in the woods to shoot arrows at demons on May Day, this custom seems strangely similar to the bow and arrow theme on Lag BaOmer.[18]

Throughout the world celebrants gather on the night and during the day of Lag BaOmer to light fires. A large celebration is held at the Tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his son Rabbi Eleazar in Meron, where hundreds of thousands usually celebrate with bonfires, torches, song, dancing and feasting. In 1983, Rabbi Levi Yitzchak Horowitz of Boston reinstated a century-old tradition among his Hasidim to light a bonfire at the grave of Rabbi Akiva in Tiberias on Lag BaOmer night. The tradition had been abandoned due to murderous attacks on participants in the isolated location. After the bonfire, the Rebbe delivered a dvar Torah, gave blessings, and distributed shirayim. Later that same night, the Rebbe cut the hair of three-year-old boys for their Upsherin.[19]

For many years, New York based Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum of Satmar discouraged bonfires, saying it was not the custom to light them outside of the Land of Israel.[20] However, when his father Rabbi Moses Teitelbaum instructed him to organize a large bonfire in the Satmar enclave of Kiryas Joel tens of thousands turned up.[21]

Zionist

For Zionists (see section below), the bonfires are said to represent the signal fires that the Bar Kokhba rebels lit on the mountaintops to relay messages,[22] or are in remembrance of the Bar Kokhba revolt against the Romans, who had forbidden the kindling of fires that signalled the start of Jewish holidays.[23]

Bows and arrows

Religious

Historically, children across Israel used to go out and play with bows and arrows, reflecting the Midrashic statement that the rainbow (the sign of God's promise to never again destroy the earth with a flood; Genesis 9:11–13) was not seen during Bar Yochai's lifetime, as his merit protected the world.[17][24]

Zionist

In Israel, Lag BaOmer is a holiday for children and the various youth movements. It is also marked in the Israel Defense Forces as a week of the Gadna program (youth brigades) which were established on Lag BaOmer in 1941[dubious ] and which bear the emblem of a bow and arrow.[22]

Parades

 
A Lag BaOmer parade in front of Chabad headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, in 1987

The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, encouraged Lag BaOmer parades to be held in Jewish communities around the world as a demonstration of Jewish unity and pride.[25] Chabad sponsors parades as well as rallies, bonfires and barbecues for thousands of participants around the world each year.[26]

Songs

Several traditional songs are associated with the holiday; these are sung around bonfires, at weddings, and at tishen held by Hasidic Rebbes on Lag BaOmer. The popular song "Bar Yochai" was composed by Rabbi Shimon Lavi, a 16th-century kabbalist in Tripoli, Libya, in honor of Shimon Bar Yochai.[27][28] Other songs include "Ve'Amartem Koh LeChai", a poem arranged as an alphabetical acrostic, and "Amar Rabbi Akiva".[29]

Tish meal

Most Hasidic Rebbes conduct a tish on Lag BaOmer, in addition to or instead of a bonfire. A full meal is usually served, and candles are lit. It is traditional to sing "Bar Yochai", "Ve'Amartem Koh Lechai", and "Amar Rabbi Akiva". Among the Satmar Hasidim, "Tzama Lecha Nafshi" is sung at the tish in addition to the other songs. Teachings of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, both from the Talmud and the Zohar, are generally expounded upon by Rebbes at their tishen. In some Hasidic courts, the Rebbe may shoot a toy bow and arrow during the tish, and three-year-old boys may be brought to have a lock of hair cut by the Rebbe as part of their first haircut.[citation needed]

Rabbinic controversy

Some rabbis, namely the Chasam Sofer[30] and the Shoel Umeishiv,[31] have opposed the celebration of or the practice of certain customs observed on Lag BaOmer. These halachic scholars pointed out that the way Lag BaOmer is observed differs from the traditional manner in which anniversaries of deaths are observed, as Lag BaOmer is observed in a festive way, whereas usually a yahrtzeit is marked by observances that "bring out the solemn and serious nature of the day".[32] Other issues raised include the practice of throwing clothes into bonfires, which is perceived as wasteful, the fact that the holiday has not been celebrated by earlier sages, and the prohibition of establishing holidays. Nevertheless, these authorities did not ban the holiday.[33]

Other rabbis responded to the aforesaid opposition by explaining that it has been observed by many great rabbis and that expensive clothes are never burned. They relate what happened on the day of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai's death as evidence that the day is very holy and should be celebrated.[34]

Zionism

 
A first-grade classroom in Tel Aviv in 1973 with holiday displays; the Lag BaOmer display showing Bar Kokhba is on the left.

In modern Israel, early Zionists redefined Lag BaOmer from a rabbinic-oriented celebration to a commemoration of the Bar Kokhba revolt against the Roman Empire (132–136 CE). According to work published by Yael Zerubavel of Rutgers University, a number of Lag BaOmer traditions were reinterpreted by Zionist ideologues to focus on the victory of the Bar Kokhba rebels rather than their ultimate defeat at Betar three years later. The plague that decimated Rabbi Akiva's 24,000 disciples was explained as a veiled reference to the revolt; the 33rd day when the plague ended was explained as the day of Bar Kokhba's victory. By the late 1940s, Israeli textbooks for schoolchildren painted Bar Kokhba as the hero while Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and Rabbi Akiva stood on the sidelines, cheering him on. This interpretation lent itself to singing and dancing around bonfires by night to celebrate Bar Kokhba's victory, and playing with bows and arrows by day to remember the actions of Bar Kokhba's rebel forces.[11]

This interpretation of the holiday reinforced the Zionist reading of Jewish history and underscored their efforts to establish an independent Jewish state. As Benjamin Lau writes in Haaretz:

This is how Lag Ba'omer became a part of the Israeli-Zionist psyche during the first years of Zionism and Israel. A clear distinction became evident between Jews and Israelis in the way the day was celebrated: The religious Jews lit torches in Rashbi's [Shimon bar Yochai's] honor and sang songs about him, while young Israelis, sitting around an alternative bonfire, sang about a hero "whom the entire nation loved" and focused on the image of a powerful hero who galloped on a lion in his charges against the Romans.[35]

In modern Israel, Lag BaOmer is "a symbol for the fighting Jewish spirit". The Palmach division of the Haganah was established on Lag BaOmer 1941,[dubious ] and the government order creating the Israel Defense Forces was issued on Lag BaOmer 1948.[36] Beginning in 2004, the Israeli government designated Lag BaOmer as the day for saluting the IDF reserves.[37]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Dates for Lag BaOmer". Hebcal.com by Danny Sadinoff and Michael J. Radwin (CC-BY-3.0). Retrieved August 26, 2018.
  2. ^ Walter (2018), p. 192.
  3. ^ a b Brodt, Eliezer. "A Printing Mistake and the Mysterious Origins of Rashbi's Yahrzeit". seforimblog.com. Archived from the original on May 2020. Retrieved May 7, 2015.
  4. ^ Embassy of Israel to the United States, "About Israel: Holidays and Observances: Lag BaOmer," Accessed 05/06/2022.
  5. ^ "Count D'Omer". Ohr Somayach International. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  6. ^ Cohen, Rabbi Tzvi (1985). Bein Pesach L'Shavuos (Hebrew). Chapter 17: Lag BaOmer, p. 301.
  7. ^ Lebovits, Moishe Dovid. (PDF). Halachically Speaking. p. 6. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 12, 2013. Retrieved April 27, 2010.
  8. ^ Mitchell First, The Mysterious Origin of Lag Ba-Omer, Hakirah 20 (2015), pp. 205-218 (available at hakirah.org)
  9. ^ Sefer HaManhig, Jerusalem, 1976-7 (5737), section 106, page 144, https://hebrewbooks.org/pdfpager.aspx?req=14615&st=&pgnum=144
  10. ^ a b Feldman, David M. (2008). . Jewish Virtual Library. Archived from the original on December 27, 2010. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  11. ^ a b Zerubavel, Yael. "Bar Kokhba's Image in Modern Israeli Culture", in The Bar Kokhba War Reconsidered: New perspectives on the Second Jewish Revolt against Rome, Peter Schäfer, ed. Mohr Siebeck, 2003, pp. 282–286. ISBN 3-16-148076-7.
  12. ^ Orach Chayim 493:2.
  13. ^ Travis, Rabbi Daniel Yaakov (April 29, 2010). . Beyond BT. Archived from the original on May 1, 2013. Retrieved May 2, 2010. Also here
  14. ^ "Lag B'Omer: A day for weddings". Jewish Wedding Network. 2009. Archived from the original on January 26, 2013. Retrieved December 5, 2005.
  15. ^ Rossoff, Dovid. "Meron on Lag B'Omer". The Jewish Magazine. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  16. ^ "Jewish Prayers: Tahanun". Jewish Virtual Library. jewishvirtuallibrary.org. Retrieved April 11, 2019.
  17. ^ a b Silberberg, Naftali (2008). "6 Lag BaOmer Customs and Traditions You Should Know". chabad.org. Retrieved December 5, 2011.
  18. ^ "Lag ba-Omer".
  19. ^ Horowitz, Y. F. and Morgenstern, Ashira (November 24, 2010). "Seasons: The Bostoner Rebbetzin remembers and reflects on the occasion of the first yahrtzeit of Grand Rabbi Levi Yitzchak HaLevi Horowitz, ztz"l, 18 Kislev 5771". Mishpacha, Family First supplement, p. 52.
  20. ^ "Satmar Kiryas Joel Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum Speech Against Lag BaOmer". YouTube. 1995. Archived from the original on December 13, 2021. Retrieved May 15, 2014.
  21. ^ Amdurski, Noam (May 9, 2012). "50,000 Expected at Lag Ba'omer Celebration Tonight in Kiryas Yoel". matzav.com. Retrieved May 15, 2014.
  22. ^ a b "Lag BaOmer". The Knesset. 2010. Retrieved April 3, 2014.
  23. ^ . Jerusalem Municipality. May 27, 2005. Archived from the original on June 1, 2012. Retrieved December 5, 2011.
  24. ^ Prero, Rabbi Yehudah (2007). "Lag B'Omer". torah.org. Retrieved April 28, 2013.
  25. ^ "Parades in Central Israel Draw 1,000 Children". chabad.org. May 12, 2009. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  26. ^ Grodnitzky, Reuvena Leah (April 28, 2010). "From South Africa to Finland, Excitement Builds for Unity Parades". chabad.org. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  27. ^ Goldwurm, Hersh (1989). The early acharonim: biographical sketches of the prominent early rabbinic sages and leaders from the fifteenth-seventeenth centuries. Mesorah Publications, Ltd. p. 93. ISBN 0899064884.
  28. ^ Vining, Peggy A. (2008). Galatians and First-Century Ethical Theory. p. 137. ISBN 978-0549956112.
  29. ^ Barzilai, Shmuel (2009). Chassidic ecstasy in music. Peter Lang. p. 104. ISBN 978-3631584521.
  30. ^ Responsa Chasam Sofer, Yoreh Deah 233. Cited by Walter 2018.
  31. ^ Responsa Shoel Umeishiv, volume 5, chapter 39. Cited by Walter 2018.
  32. ^ Walter 2018, p. 195.
  33. ^ Walter 2018, p. 196.
  34. ^ Walter 2018, p. 197.
  35. ^ Lau, Benjamin (May 3, 2007). "Portion of the Week / The fires of Lag Ba'omer". Haaretz. Retrieved April 16, 2013.
  36. ^ "Lag B'Omer". Ynetnews. May 13, 2008. Retrieved May 5, 2012.
  37. ^ "Cabinet Communique". Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs. May 6, 2007. Retrieved December 5, 2011.

Sources

  • Walter, Moshe (2018). The Making of a Minhag: The Laws and Parameters of Jewish Customs. Jerusalem: Feldheim Publishers. ISBN 9781680253368.

External links

  • Lag BaOmer articles on aish.com
  • Chai Rotel in Meron
  • Lag BaOmer articles on chabad.org
  • Video clip of the Lubavitcher Rebbe participating in a Lag BaOmer parade in 1960
  • Jewish Encyclopedia article on Lag BaOmer
  • The Great Parade
  • Lag BaOmer History and Customs on Shulchanaruchharav.com

baomer, hebrew, עו, bāʿōmer, also, omer, laomer, jewish, religious, holiday, celebrated, 33rd, counting, omer, which, occurs, 18th, hebrew, month, iyar, bonfire, celebration, israel, symbol, holidayofficial, nameל, עו, observed, byjewstypejewishsignificance33r. Lag BaOmer Hebrew ל ג ב עו מ ר LaG Baʿōmer also Lag B Omer or Lag LaOmer is a Jewish religious holiday celebrated on the 33rd day of the Counting of the Omer which occurs on the 18th day of the Hebrew month of Iyar Lag BaOmerA Lag BaOmer bonfire celebration in Israel symbol of the holidayOfficial nameל ג ב עו מ ר Observed byJewsTypeJewishSignificance33rd day of the Counting of the Omer which begins the 2nd day of PesachBegins18th day of IyarDate18 Iyar2022 dateSunset 18 May nightfall 19 May 1 2023 dateSunset 8 May nightfall 9 May 1 2024 dateSunset 25 May nightfall 26 May 1 2025 dateSunset 15 May nightfall 16 May 1 Related toPesach Shavuot Counting of the OmerAccording to some Rishonim it is the day on which the plague that killed Rabbi Akiva s 24 000 disciples came to an end and for this reason the mourning period of Sefirat HaOmer concludes on Lag BaOmer in many communities 2 According to modern kabbalistic tradition this day is the Celebration of Simeon ben Yochai and or the anniversary of his death According to a late medieval tradition Simeon ben Yochai is buried in Meron and this association has spawned several well known customs and practices on Lag BaOmer including the lighting of bonfires and pilgrimages to Meron 3 Additionally in modern day Israel the holiday also serves to commemorate the Bar Kokhba Revolt against the Romans 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Origins 2 1 Kabbalistic significance 3 Customs and practices 3 1 Bonfires 3 1 1 Religious 3 1 2 Zionist 3 2 Bows and arrows 3 2 1 Religious 3 2 2 Zionist 3 3 Parades 3 4 Songs 3 5 Tish meal 4 Rabbinic controversy 5 Zionism 6 See also 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksEtymology Edit Children watch Lag BaOmer bonfire in Tel Aviv Israel Main article Counting of the Omer Lag BaOmer is Hebrew for 33rd day in the Omer The Hebrew letter ל lamed or L has the numerical value of 30 and ג gimmel or G has the numerical value of 3 A vowel sound is conventionally added for pronunciation purposes Some Jews call this holiday Lag LaOmer which means 33rd day of the Omer as opposed to Lag BaOmer 33rd day in the Omer Lag BaOmer is the traditional method of counting by some Ashkenazi and Hasidic Jews Lag LaOmer is the count used by Sephardi Jews Lag LaOmer is also the name used by Yosef Karo who was a Sepharadi in his Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 493 2 and cf 489 1 where BaOmer is inserted by a glossator 5 The form Lag B Omer 33rd day of an Omer is also sometimes used though it is not grammatically correct in this setting The Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson writes in his Likkutei Sichos that a deeper reason for the term Lag BaOmer is that the Hebrew words Lag BaOmer ל ג בעמר spelled without the vav have the same gematria as Moshe משה Moses He writes that Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai whose yahrzeit is traditionally observed on this day was mystically a spark of the soul of Moses 6 7 Origins Edit Entrance to the tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his son Rabbi Eleazar The origins of Lag BaOmer as a minor festival are unclear The earliest clear reference to the observance of Lag BaOmer is a brief statement by Isaac ben Dorbolo 12th century northern France It is found in his annotations to Mahzor Vitry He points out that Purim and Lag BaOmer always fall on the same day of the week but he says nothing about the origin of the holiday 8 Lag BaOmer is also mentioned in the early 13th century by Avraham ben Nathan in his Sefer HaManhig 9 The Talmudist Menachem Meiri in his gloss to Yevamot 62b cites the Talmudic passage which states that during the time of Rabbi Akiva 24 000 of his students died from a divinely sent plague during the counting of the Omer The Talmud goes on to say that this was because they did not show proper respect to one another Meiri named Lag BaOmer as the day when according to a tradition of the geonim the plague ended 10 Kabbalistic traditions of traveling to any of several locations around Meron at any of several points in the month of Iyyar date to the medieval period but it is not clear when by whom or in what way Lag baOmer was first connected to Simeon ben Yochai 3 Nachman Krochmal a 19th century Jewish theologian among others suggests that the deaths of Rabbi Akiva s students was a veiled reference to the defeat of Akiva s soldiers by the Romans and that Lag BaOmer was the day on which Bar Kokhba enjoyed a brief victory 10 During the Middle Ages Lag BaOmer became a special holiday for rabbinical students and was called Scholar s Day It was customary to rejoice on this day through outdoor sports 11 Kabbalistic significance Edit Lag BaOmer has another significance based on the Kabbalistic custom of assigning a Sefirah to each day and week of the Omer count The first week corresponds to Chesed the second week to Gevurah etc and similarly the first day of each week corresponds to Chesed the second day to Gevurah etc Thus the 33rd day which is the fifth day of the fifth week corresponds to Hod she be Hod Splendor within the week of Splendor As such Lag BaOmer represents the level of spiritual manifestation or Hod that would precede the more physical manifestation of the 49th day Malkhut she be Malkhut Kingship within the week of Kingship which immediately precedes the holiday of Shavuot citation needed Customs and practices Edit The tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai in Meron on Lag BaOmer While the Counting of the Omer is a semi mourning period all restrictions of mourning are lifted for Ashkenazim on the 33rd day of the Omer The Sephardic custom is to cease mourning the following day celebrations being allowed on the 34th day of the Omer Lad BaOmer ל ד בעומר 12 13 As a result weddings parties listening to music and haircuts are commonly scheduled to coincide with Lag BaOmer among Ashkenazi Jews while Sephardi Jews hold weddings the next day 14 It is customary mainly among Hassidim that three year old boys be given their first haircuts upsherin While haircuts may be taken anywhere if possible the occasion is traditionally held at the tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai in Meron Israel or at the Jerusalem grave of Shimon Hatzaddik for those who cannot travel to Meron 15 Families go on picnics and outings Children go out to the fields with their teachers with bows and rubber tipped arrows Tachanun the prayer for special Divine mercy on one s behalf is not said on days with a festive character including Lag BaOmer 16 when God is showing one a smiling face so to speak as He does especially on the holidays there is no need to ask for special mercy citation needed Bonfires Edit Religious Edit Israeli boys collect wood for a Lag BaOmer bonfire A wood pile awaiting Lag BaOmer celebration The most well known custom of Lag BaOmer is the lighting of bonfires The custom may originate in symbolizing the spiritual light brought in to the world by Simeon ben Yochai 17 Some have speculated a connection between the bonfires of Lag BaOmer and the festivals of May Day and Beltane which are celebrated by some European cultures around halfway between the spring equinox and summer solstice on 1 May and are also celebrated through large bonfires In Germany it is also not uncommon to see rural men go out in the woods to shoot arrows at demons on May Day this custom seems strangely similar to the bow and arrow theme on Lag BaOmer 18 Throughout the world celebrants gather on the night and during the day of Lag BaOmer to light fires A large celebration is held at the Tomb of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and his son Rabbi Eleazar in Meron where hundreds of thousands usually celebrate with bonfires torches song dancing and feasting In 1983 Rabbi Levi Yitzchak Horowitz of Boston reinstated a century old tradition among his Hasidim to light a bonfire at the grave of Rabbi Akiva in Tiberias on Lag BaOmer night The tradition had been abandoned due to murderous attacks on participants in the isolated location After the bonfire the Rebbe delivered a dvar Torah gave blessings and distributed shirayim Later that same night the Rebbe cut the hair of three year old boys for their Upsherin 19 For many years New York based Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum of Satmar discouraged bonfires saying it was not the custom to light them outside of the Land of Israel 20 However when his father Rabbi Moses Teitelbaum instructed him to organize a large bonfire in the Satmar enclave of Kiryas Joel tens of thousands turned up 21 Zionist Edit For Zionists see section below the bonfires are said to represent the signal fires that the Bar Kokhba rebels lit on the mountaintops to relay messages 22 or are in remembrance of the Bar Kokhba revolt against the Romans who had forbidden the kindling of fires that signalled the start of Jewish holidays 23 Bows and arrows Edit Religious Edit Historically children across Israel used to go out and play with bows and arrows reflecting the Midrashic statement that the rainbow the sign of God s promise to never again destroy the earth with a flood Genesis 9 11 13 was not seen during Bar Yochai s lifetime as his merit protected the world 17 24 Zionist Edit In Israel Lag BaOmer is a holiday for children and the various youth movements It is also marked in the Israel Defense Forces as a week of the Gadna program youth brigades which were established on Lag BaOmer in 1941 dubious discuss and which bear the emblem of a bow and arrow 22 Parades Edit A Lag BaOmer parade in front of Chabad headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn New York in 1987 The Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson encouraged Lag BaOmer parades to be held in Jewish communities around the world as a demonstration of Jewish unity and pride 25 Chabad sponsors parades as well as rallies bonfires and barbecues for thousands of participants around the world each year 26 Songs Edit Several traditional songs are associated with the holiday these are sung around bonfires at weddings and at tishen held by Hasidic Rebbes on Lag BaOmer The popular song Bar Yochai was composed by Rabbi Shimon Lavi a 16th century kabbalist in Tripoli Libya in honor of Shimon Bar Yochai 27 28 Other songs include Ve Amartem Koh LeChai a poem arranged as an alphabetical acrostic and Amar Rabbi Akiva 29 Tish meal Edit Most Hasidic Rebbes conduct a tish on Lag BaOmer in addition to or instead of a bonfire A full meal is usually served and candles are lit It is traditional to sing Bar Yochai Ve Amartem Koh Lechai and Amar Rabbi Akiva Among the Satmar Hasidim Tzama Lecha Nafshi is sung at the tish in addition to the other songs Teachings of Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai both from the Talmud and the Zohar are generally expounded upon by Rebbes at their tishen In some Hasidic courts the Rebbe may shoot a toy bow and arrow during the tish and three year old boys may be brought to have a lock of hair cut by the Rebbe as part of their first haircut citation needed Rabbinic controversy EditSome rabbis namely the Chasam Sofer 30 and the Shoel Umeishiv 31 have opposed the celebration of or the practice of certain customs observed on Lag BaOmer These halachic scholars pointed out that the way Lag BaOmer is observed differs from the traditional manner in which anniversaries of deaths are observed as Lag BaOmer is observed in a festive way whereas usually a yahrtzeit is marked by observances that bring out the solemn and serious nature of the day 32 Other issues raised include the practice of throwing clothes into bonfires which is perceived as wasteful the fact that the holiday has not been celebrated by earlier sages and the prohibition of establishing holidays Nevertheless these authorities did not ban the holiday 33 Other rabbis responded to the aforesaid opposition by explaining that it has been observed by many great rabbis and that expensive clothes are never burned They relate what happened on the day of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai s death as evidence that the day is very holy and should be celebrated 34 Zionism Edit A first grade classroom in Tel Aviv in 1973 with holiday displays the Lag BaOmer display showing Bar Kokhba is on the left In modern Israel early Zionists redefined Lag BaOmer from a rabbinic oriented celebration to a commemoration of the Bar Kokhba revolt against the Roman Empire 132 136 CE According to work published by Yael Zerubavel of Rutgers University a number of Lag BaOmer traditions were reinterpreted by Zionist ideologues to focus on the victory of the Bar Kokhba rebels rather than their ultimate defeat at Betar three years later The plague that decimated Rabbi Akiva s 24 000 disciples was explained as a veiled reference to the revolt the 33rd day when the plague ended was explained as the day of Bar Kokhba s victory By the late 1940s Israeli textbooks for schoolchildren painted Bar Kokhba as the hero while Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and Rabbi Akiva stood on the sidelines cheering him on This interpretation lent itself to singing and dancing around bonfires by night to celebrate Bar Kokhba s victory and playing with bows and arrows by day to remember the actions of Bar Kokhba s rebel forces 11 This interpretation of the holiday reinforced the Zionist reading of Jewish history and underscored their efforts to establish an independent Jewish state As Benjamin Lau writes in Haaretz This is how Lag Ba omer became a part of the Israeli Zionist psyche during the first years of Zionism and Israel A clear distinction became evident between Jews and Israelis in the way the day was celebrated The religious Jews lit torches in Rashbi s Shimon bar Yochai s honor and sang songs about him while young Israelis sitting around an alternative bonfire sang about a hero whom the entire nation loved and focused on the image of a powerful hero who galloped on a lion in his charges against the Romans 35 In modern Israel Lag BaOmer is a symbol for the fighting Jewish spirit The Palmach division of the Haganah was established on Lag BaOmer 1941 dubious discuss and the government order creating the Israel Defense Forces was issued on Lag BaOmer 1948 36 Beginning in 2004 the Israeli government designated Lag BaOmer as the day for saluting the IDF reserves 37 See also EditHebrew numerals Jewish and Israeli holidays 2000 2050 Sephirot the 10 attributes emanations found in Kabbalah Significance of numbers in Judaism Hillula of Rabbi Shimon bar YochaiReferences Edit a b c d Dates for Lag BaOmer Hebcal com by Danny Sadinoff and Michael J Radwin CC BY 3 0 Retrieved August 26 2018 Walter 2018 p 192 a b Brodt Eliezer A Printing Mistake and the Mysterious Origins of Rashbi s Yahrzeit seforimblog com Archived from the original on May 2020 Retrieved May 7 2015 Embassy of Israel to the United States About Israel Holidays and Observances Lag BaOmer Accessed 05 06 2022 Count D Omer Ohr Somayach International Retrieved April 28 2013 Cohen Rabbi Tzvi 1985 Bein Pesach L Shavuos Hebrew Chapter 17 Lag BaOmer p 301 Lebovits Moishe Dovid Lag BaOmer PDF Halachically Speaking p 6 Archived from the original PDF on May 12 2013 Retrieved April 27 2010 Mitchell First The Mysterious Origin of Lag Ba Omer Hakirah 20 2015 pp 205 218 available at hakirah org Sefer HaManhig Jerusalem 1976 7 5737 section 106 page 144 https hebrewbooks org pdfpager aspx req 14615 amp st amp pgnum 144 a b Feldman David M 2008 Omer Jewish Virtual Library Archived from the original on December 27 2010 Retrieved April 28 2013 a b Zerubavel Yael Bar Kokhba s Image in Modern Israeli Culture in The Bar Kokhba War Reconsidered New perspectives on the Second Jewish Revolt against Rome Peter Schafer ed Mohr Siebeck 2003 pp 282 286 ISBN 3 16 148076 7 Orach Chayim 493 2 Travis Rabbi Daniel Yaakov April 29 2010 Mourning s End Understanding Sefira and Lag B Omer Beyond BT Archived from the original on May 1 2013 Retrieved May 2 2010 Also here Lag B Omer A day for weddings Jewish Wedding Network 2009 Archived from the original on January 26 2013 Retrieved December 5 2005 Rossoff Dovid Meron on Lag B Omer The Jewish Magazine Retrieved April 28 2010 Jewish Prayers Tahanun Jewish Virtual Library jewishvirtuallibrary org Retrieved April 11 2019 a b Silberberg Naftali 2008 6 Lag BaOmer Customs and Traditions You Should Know chabad org Retrieved December 5 2011 Lag ba Omer Horowitz Y F and Morgenstern Ashira November 24 2010 Seasons The Bostoner Rebbetzin remembers and reflects on the occasion of the first yahrtzeit of Grand Rabbi Levi Yitzchak HaLevi Horowitz ztz l 18 Kislev 5771 Mishpacha Family First supplement p 52 Satmar Kiryas Joel Rabbi Aaron Teitelbaum Speech Against Lag BaOmer YouTube 1995 Archived from the original on December 13 2021 Retrieved May 15 2014 Amdurski Noam May 9 2012 50 000 Expected at Lag Ba omer Celebration Tonight in Kiryas Yoel matzav com Retrieved May 15 2014 a b Lag BaOmer The Knesset 2010 Retrieved April 3 2014 Lag Ba Omer Jerusalem Municipality May 27 2005 Archived from the original on June 1 2012 Retrieved December 5 2011 Prero Rabbi Yehudah 2007 Lag B Omer torah org Retrieved April 28 2013 Parades in Central Israel Draw 1 000 Children chabad org May 12 2009 Retrieved April 28 2010 Grodnitzky Reuvena Leah April 28 2010 From South Africa to Finland Excitement Builds for Unity Parades chabad org Retrieved April 28 2010 Goldwurm Hersh 1989 The early acharonim biographical sketches of the prominent early rabbinic sages and leaders from the fifteenth seventeenth centuries Mesorah Publications Ltd p 93 ISBN 0899064884 Vining Peggy A 2008 Galatians and First Century Ethical Theory p 137 ISBN 978 0549956112 Barzilai Shmuel 2009 Chassidic ecstasy in music Peter Lang p 104 ISBN 978 3631584521 Responsa Chasam Sofer Yoreh Deah 233 Cited by Walter 2018 Responsa Shoel Umeishiv volume 5 chapter 39 Cited by Walter 2018 Walter 2018 p 195 Walter 2018 p 196 Walter 2018 p 197 Lau Benjamin May 3 2007 Portion of the Week The fires of Lag Ba omer Haaretz Retrieved April 16 2013 Lag B Omer Ynetnews May 13 2008 Retrieved May 5 2012 Cabinet Communique Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs May 6 2007 Retrieved December 5 2011 Sources EditWalter Moshe 2018 The Making of a Minhag The Laws and Parameters of Jewish Customs Jerusalem Feldheim Publishers ISBN 9781680253368 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lag Ba omer Lag BaOmer articles on aish com Chai Rotel in Meron Lag BaOmer articles on chabad org Video clip of the Lubavitcher Rebbe participating in a Lag BaOmer parade in 1960 Jewish Encyclopedia article on Lag BaOmer Lag B omer Parade The Great Parade Lag BaOmer History and Customs on Shulchanaruchharav com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lag BaOmer amp oldid 1115552843, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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