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Yom Kippur

Yom Kippur (/ˌjɒm kɪˈpʊər, ˌjɔːm ˈkɪpər, ˌjm-/ YAHM kip-OOR, YAWM KIP-ər, YOHM-;[1] Hebrew: יוֹם כִּפּוּר, Yōm Kippūr [ˈjom kiˈpuʁ], lit.'Day of Atonement') is the holiest day in Judaism and Samaritanism.[2][3][4] It occurs annually on the 10th of Tishrei,[5] corresponding to a date in September or early October.

Yom Kippur
יוֹם כִּפּוּר
Observed byJews and Samaritans
TypeReligious, national (in Israel)
SignificanceAtonement and repentance to God for personal sins; sealing of one's fate for the upcoming year
Observances
Date10 Tishrei
2022 dateSunset, 4 October –
nightfall, 5 October
2023 dateSunset, 24 September –
nightfall, 25 September
2024 dateSunset, 11 October –
nightfall, 12 October
2025 dateSunset, 1 October –
nightfall, 2 October
FrequencyAnnual (Hebrew calendar)
Related toRosh HaShanah

For traditional Jewish observants, it is primarily centered on atonement and repentance, the day's main observances consist of full fasting and ascetic behavior accompanied by a long prayer service in synagogue, as well as sin confessions. Many Jewish denominations, such as Reconstructionist Judaism (vs. Reform, Conservative, Orthodox, etc.) focus strongly on one’s goals and accomplishments and setting yearly intentions, rather than focusing on “sins.”

Alongside the related holiday of Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur is one of the two components of the "High Holy Days" of Judaism. It is also the last day of the Ten Days of Repentance.

Name edit

The formal Hebrew name of the holiday is Yom HaKippurim, 'day [of] the atonements'.[6] This name is used in the Bible,[7] Mishnah,[8] and Shulchan Aruch.[9] The word kippurim 'atonement' is one of many Biblical Hebrew words which, while using a grammatical plural form, refers to a singular abstract concept.[6]

Beginning in the classical period, the singular form kippur began to be used in piyyut, for example in Unetanneh Tokef, alongside the standard plural form kippurim. Use of kippur spread In the medieval period, with Yom Kippur becoming the holiday's name in Yiddish and Kippur in Ladino. In modern Hebrew, Yom Kippur or simply Kippur is the common name, while Yom HaKippurim is used in formal writing.[6]

In older English texts, the translation "Day of Atonement" is often used.

Significance edit

High Holy Days edit

Yom Kippur is one of the two High Holy Days, or Days of Awe (Hebrew yamim noraim), alongside Rosh Hashanah (which falls nine days previously).[10] According to Jewish tradition, on Rosh Hashanah God inscribes each person's fate for the coming year into the Book of Life, and waits until Yom Kippur to "seal" the verdict.[11] This process is described dramatically in the poem Unetanneh Tokef, which is recited on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur:

A great shofar will be blown, and a small still voice will be heard. The angels will make haste, and be seized with fear and trembling, and will say: "Behold, the day of judgment!"... On Rosh Hashanah it is written, and on the Yom Kippur fast it is sealed, how many will pass and how many will be created, who will live and who will die, who in his time and who not in his time... But repentance, prayer, and charity remove the evil of the decree... For You do not desire a person's death, but rather that he repent and live. Until the day of his death You wait for him; if he repents, You accept him immediately.

During the Days of Awe, a Jew reflects on the year, goals, and past actions, how his or her behavior has possibly hurt others and seek forgiveness for wrongs done against God and against other human beings.

The Talmud states that the greatest and happiest holy day for the Jews is Tu B'Av, with Yom Kippur as a close second.[12]

Repentance (Teshuva) edit

Repentance in Judaism (Hebrew: Teshuva), traditionally, consists of regretting having committed the sin, resolving not to commit that sin in the future, and confessing that sin before God.[13]

While repentance for one's sins can and should be done at any time, it is considered especially desirable during the Ten Days of Repentance between Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur, and particularly on Yom Kippur itself.[14] Thus, the Yom Kippur prayers contain extended confessions which list varieties of times where they’ve gone wrong, sometimes defined as ‘sin’, and to which one can add their own missteps, along with requests for forgiveness from God.

According to the Talmud, "Yom Kippur atones for sins done against God (bein adam leMakom), but does not atone for sins done against other human beings (bein adam lechavero) until the other person has been appeased."[15] Therefore, it is considered imperative to repair the harm that one has done to others before or during Yom Kippur. Yom Kippur is described in the prayers as "a day of creating love and brotherhood, a day of abandoning jealousy and strife".[16] It is said that "if one does not remove hatred [from their heart] on Yom Kippur, their prayers are not heard".[17]

Thirteen attributes edit

According to the Bible, after the golden calf sin, Moses descended from Mount Sinai and broke the Tablets of Stone, which contained the Ten Commandments and symbolized the covenant with God.[18] After God agreed to forgive the people's sin, Moses was told to return to Mount Sinai for a second 40-day period, in order to receive a second set of tablets.[19] According to rabbinic tradition, the date Moses descended with the second set of tablets was Yom Kippur. On this day Moses announced to the people that they had been forgiven; as a result the Torah fixed this date as a permanent holiday of forgiveness.[20][21][22]

The new covenant, which God announced by proclaiming the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy to Moses, is textually similar to the covenant of the Ten Commandments except that God's nature is described as merciful and forgiving, rather than zealous.[23] When the Jewish people sinned in later eras, prophets would repeatedly quote the Thirteen Attributes to God as a reminder of God's commitment to mercy and forgiveness.[24] This is continued to the present day, as recitation of the Thirteen Attributes remains an important part of the Yom Kippur prayers (in Maariv and Neilah).

Closeness to God edit

While many of the observances of Yom Kippur (such as fasting and long prayers) can be difficult, there is also a tradition in which they are interpreted positively, as indications of closeness of God. Various sources compare the observances of Yom Kippur – fasting, barefootness (not wearing leather shoes), standing (in prayer), particular manners of prayer, even the peace that exists between Jews on this day – with the behavior of angels, suggesting that on Yom Kippur Jews become like angels in heaven, purified and close to God and not limited by physicality.[25][26]

Yom Kippur was also unique as a time of closeness to God in the Yom Kippur Temple service. Yom Kippur was the only occasion on which High Priest was allowed to enter the Holy of Holies, the innermost chamber of the Temple in Jerusalem, where God's presence was said to dwell. On Yom Kippur the High Priest of Israel entered the Holy of Holies several times, first to create a cloud of incense smoke in which (the Bible promises) God would reveal Himself without being seen,[27] and later to offer sacrifices of atonement.[28]

While the encounter with God and the atonement may appear to be unrelated, in fact they are mutually dependent. On one hand, the priest is only worthy to approach God when in a state of purity, with the sins of the people being forgiven. On the other hand, only by approaching God with an intimate, personal request can God be persuaded to abandon justice for mercy, permitting the purification to take place.[29][30]

According to the Torah, the Yom Kippur Temple service was commanded in wake of the deaths of Nadab and Abihu on the eighth day of the Tabernacle inauguration.[31] Not only was this eighth day the occasion of the Yom Kippur command, but the eighth day was also similar in its nature to Yom Kippur, both in biblical texts (e.g. the sacrifices offered on each day) and in rabbinic interpretation.[32] The purpose of the eighth day was the revelation of God's presence to the people;[32]: 14  similarly, the Yom Kippur service was a unique opportunity for the people's representative to obtain closeness with God.[33]

A midrash compares the Yom Kippur prayers to a verse from the Song of Songs, describing a woman who rises from bed at night to begin a romantic encounter with her lover. With each Yom Kippur prayer, it is implied, Jews approach closer to God:

"I rose up to open to my beloved. My hands dripped with myrrh, my fingers with flowing myrrh, upon the handles of the bolt" (Song of Songs 5:5) – "I rose up to open to my beloved" – this refers to Yotzer [the morning prayer]; "My hands dripped with myrrh" – this refers to Mussaf; "my fingers with flowing myrrh" – this refers to Mincha; "upon the handles of the bolt" – this refers to Neilah.[34]

Using a similar metaphor, the Mishnah describes Yom Kippur as a wedding date, as on this date Moses returned having reestablished the covenant between God and Israel.[35]

Purification edit

In Leviticus 16:30, the Torah summarizes the purpose of Yom Kippur as follows:

For on this day atonement shall be made for you, to purify you; from all your sins before the Lord you shall be purified.[36]

There are two forms of impurity in Judaism (see Tumah and taharah): ritual impurity (e.g. when one touches a corpse) and moral impurity (when one commits a serious sin).[37][38] While the Yom Kippur Temple service did purify the Temple if it had become ritually impure,[39] the emphasis of the day is on the Jewish people's purification from moral impurity.[36]

Leviticus 16:30 mentions purification twice. According to Netziv, the first mention is a promise that God will purify Israel on this day, while the second is a command, calling on Israel to purify themselves through repentance.[40] Thus, on this day Jews do their utmost to repent. But if, by the end of the day, they have reached the limits of their ability and are still morally flawed, God extends them forgiveness and purification anyway.[41]

Jeremiah 17:13 states that "Israel's hope (mikveh) is in God". According to Rabbi Akiva, this verse alludes to a ritual purification bath (also pronounced mikveh), and thus on Yom Kippur God metaphorically becomes a mikveh in which Israel immerses and purifies itself.[42] This idea is symbolized by immersion in an actual mikveh. In the Yom Kippur Temple service, the High Priest would immerse upon putting on and taking off his white Yom Kippur garments;[43] the rabbis counted no fewer than five immersions over the course of the day's service.[44] Among modern-day Jews, too, there is a custom of immersion before Yom Kippur (though not on Yom Kippur itself, as bathing is forbidden in normal circumstances).[45]

When the scapegoat was selected on Yom Kippur to symbolically carry the people's sins to the desert, a crimson cord was tied around its horns.[46] While the practical purpose of this cord was to distinguish the scapegoat from the goat which was to be slaughtered, it also symbolized the sin which the scapegoat was carrying away.[47] Isaiah 1:18 promises that if the Jewish people repents, "if [their] sins are like crimson, they shall become white as snow." According to tradition, in some years the scapegoat's cord would miraculously turn white to indicate that the people's sins were forgiven and purification achieved in that year.[48]

Jewish unity edit

Yom Kippur is considered a day of Jewish unity. In Kol Nidre, in which vows are released, vows of excommunication against sinning Jews were similarly lifted and these "transgressors" were allowed to pray alongside other Jews.[49] According to the Talmud, "Any fast in which Jewish sinners do not also participate is not a valid fast".[50]

Similarly, the Mishnah describes Yom Kippur as a day on which men and women would once meet each other in the vineyards in order to arrange marriages.[35] While this story is surprising given the generally somber nature of the day, it is based on the Biblical episode where the oath against marrying Benjaminites was circumvented by allowing them to take women from the vineyards as wives, and thus indicates the day's theme of abandoning grudges in order for the Jewish people to be reunited.[51]: 29–30 

Observance edit

As one of the most culturally significant Jewish holidays, Yom Kippur is observed by many secular Jews who may not observe other holidays. Many secular Jews attend synagogue on Yom Kippur—for many secular Jews the High Holy Days are the only times of the year during which they attend synagogue[52]—causing synagogue attendance to soar.

Erev Yom Kippur edit

 
On the eve of Yom Kippur by Jakub Weinles

On the day preceding Yom Kippur, known as Erev Yom Kippur (lit. 'eve [of] day [of] atonement'), a number of activities are customarily performed in preparation for Yom Kippur. These activities generally relate to the themes of the holiday, but are forbidden or impractical to do on Yom Kippur itself.

According to the Talmud, "Yom Kippur does not atone for sins between a person and his fellow until he has appeased his fellow."[53] Thus, it is common practice on Erev Yom Kippur to request forgiveness from other individuals for misdeeds one has done to them. The Talmud records no less than 14 stories attesting to the importance of the day for repairing relationships with one's spouses, parents, children, coworkers, the poor, and other individuals.[54] The day before a major Jewish holiday is often devoted towards preparing for that holiday (as with burning chametz before Passover or obtaining the Four Species before Sukkot); for Yom Kippur, the appropriate preparation is to seek forgiveness from one's fellow man.[54] Nevertheless, one should not ask forgiveness if this will cause further harm (for example, by bringing up an insult the victim was unaware of).[55]

According to halakha, one must eat on Erev Yom Kippur. A variety of reasons have been suggested for this requirement, among them:[55][56]

  • Most obviously, eating well before the fast will make it easier to complete the fast in good health.
  • Eating before the fast will actually make the fast subjectively more difficult, due to "withdrawal" from the previous day's feast, and thus increase a person's level of "affliction" on this day (though it is not agreed that a person should in fact attempt to increase their affliction beyond the basic requirements[57]).
  • In general, Jewish holidays are celebrated with festive meals. Since a meal celebrating Yom Kippur cannot be held on the day itself, it is held beforehand.
  • One celebrates the forgiveness they are about to receive for their sins, thus demonstrating that they are in fact bothered by their sins, and thus are more deserving of forgiveness.

Many Orthodox men immerse themselves in a mikveh on this day.[58] Opinions differ on whether this is a technical act to remove ritual impurity, or else a symbolic one to symbolize one's cleansing from sin on Yom Kippur.[55]

The kapparot ritual, in which either money or a chicken is given to charity, is performed by some on Erev Yom Kippur as a means to enhance atonement.

In this day's morning prayer service (Shacharit), additional selichot prayers are recited. In the afternoon prayer (Mincha), the long confession is recited, just as it is on Yom Kippur itself. This confession is recited before the last Erev Yom Kippur meal (the "Separation Meal" - in Hebrew se'udah hamafseket or aruha hamafseket),[59] in case one becomes intoxicated at this meal and is unable to confess properly afterwards, or else because a person might choke to death at that meal and die without confessing (seemingly an unlikely possibility, but one which reminds a person of their mortality).[55]

Fasting and asceticism edit

The Torah commands Jews to "afflict themselves" (ve'initem et nafshoteichem) on Yom Kippur.[60] While these verses do not explicitly mention the form of affliction, the phrase "afflicting oneself" frequently appears elsewhere in connection with fasting or lack of food,[61] and public fast days for repentance were a common practice in Biblical times.[62] According to the Jewish oral tradition, the Yom Kippur "affliction" consists of the following five prohibitions:[63]

  1. Fasting (no eating and drinking)
  2. No wearing of leather shoes
  3. No bathing or washing
  4. No anointing oneself with perfumes or lotions
  5. No sex

In traditional custom, the fast is required of all over 13, but is waived in the case of medical conditions.[64] In such situations, though, it is preferable (if the medical situation allows for it) to consume only small amounts of food or drink at a time.[65][66]

Fasting, along with the other restrictions, begins at sundown, and ends after nightfall the following day. One should add a few minutes to the beginning and end of the day, called tosefet Yom Kippur, lit. 'addition to Yom Kippur'.

Yom Kippur is the only day when fasting is permitted on Shabbat.[67]

Due to the principle of pikuach nefesh, eating and drinking are sometimes permissible on Yom Kippur to safeguard health. A person who is ill is actually required to break the fast.[68]

Just as it is a mitzvah to fast on Yom Kippur, it may also be a mitzvah to eat or drink on Yom Kippur to safeguard a person's health.[69]

Symbolism edit

A number of different interpretations of these restrictions have been suggested.

In one approach, fasting replaces animal sacrifices. Fasting causes one's fat and blood to be diminished, just as the fat and blood of a sacrifice were burned on the altar. Thus, the fast is a form of sacrifice which can atone for sin like the Temple sacrifices once did.[70]

Other approaches suggest that the prohibitions represent not suffering, but rather special holiness. For example, on Yom Kippur, Jews are said to become like angels. Just as angels do not need to eat, drink, or wear shoes, so too Jews do not engage on these activities on Yom Kippur.[25] By detaching themselves from physical needs, Jews become purified and resemble angels.[26][71]

Similarly, the prohibitions allude to the experience of Moses on Mount Sinai, who did not eat or drink while receiving the Torah and while receiving forgiveness for the people's sins.[72]

Similarly, the prohibitions have been interpreted as a return to the purity of the biblical Garden of Eden. Upon leaving Eden shoes became necessary for the first time ("thorns and thistles will grow in your way...the snake will raise its head (to bite you) and you will give your heel (to crush it)"[73]); thus on Yom Kippur Jews do not wear (leather) shoes. While in Eden food and drink were easily obtained, but after the expulsion man must work for food "by the sweat of [his] brow"; thus food and drink are refrained from on Yom Kippur, as well as washing, and the use of cosmetics to remove sweat or its odor. In Eden death was unknown and procreation unnecessary; similarly on Yom Kippur marital relations are avoided.[74]

According to Maimonides, the purpose of fasting (and the restriction on work) is to remove distractions from the task of repentance.[75]

By refraining from these activities, the body is uncomfortable but can still survive. The soul is considered to be the life force in a body. Therefore, by making one's body uncomfortable, one's soul is uncomfortable. By feeling pain, one can feel how others feel when they are in pain.[76]

Prohibition on work edit

The Torah calls Yom Kippur a day of rest (shabbat shabbaton) on which work is prohibited.[77] Thus, the activities forbidden on Shabbat are also forbidden on Yom Kippur: the 39 categories of work as well as the rabbinic Shabbat prohibitions.[78]

Other observances edit

Wearing white clothing is traditional to symbolize one's purity on this day. Various reasons have been suggested for this custom:

  • On Yom Kippur, Jews are similar to the angels in heaven who are said to wear white.[79]
  • To alludes to the verse "If your sins are like crimson, they shall become white as snow" (Isaiah 1:18)[72]
  • To recall the High Priest who wore white for the Yom Kippur Temple service (and on no other occasion)[72]

Many Ashkenazi Jewish men wear a kittel which, in addition to being white, symbolizes the seriousness of God's judgment on this day (as the deceased are buried wearing kittels).[80]

Yom Kippur is honored in the same ways as Shabbat and other holidays, to the extent permitted. Thus, the house is cleaned ahead of time, and the table covered with a nice tablecloth, even though it will not be used for eating. The synagogue is cleaned ahead of time, and all the lights left on. One bathes before Yom Kippur, and clean clothes are worn. Smelling pleasant smells is allowed on Yom Kippur, so many make a point of smelling pleasant spices throughout the day.[78] Candles are lit just before Yom Kippur, as is done before Shabbat.

It is traditional for parents to give their children a special blessing before beginning the Yom Kippur prayers.[81] Those whose parents have died light a yahrzeit candle in their memory before Yom Kippur begins.[82]

Prayer services edit

The Yom Kippur prayer service includes several unique aspects. One is the number of prayer services. Unlike a regular day which has three prayer services (Shacharit, Mincha, and Maariv), or a Shabbat or Yom Tov which has four prayer services (those three, plus Mussaf), Yom Kippur has five prayer services (those four, plus Ne'ila, the closing prayer).[83] The prayer services also include private and public confessions of sins (Vidui),[11] and a unique prayer dedicated to the special Yom Kippur avodah (service) of the Kohen Gadol (high priest) in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem.[84] The Yom Kippur prayer services include additional poems (piyyutim) and petitions for forgiveness (selichot). Notable poems recited include Avinu Malkeinu, Unetanneh Tokef, Ki Anu Amecha, the Ten Martyrs, HaAderet v'HaEmunah, and Mareh Kohen. If Yom Kippur falls on Shabbat, Avinu Malkeinu is only recited during the Ne'ila prayer service.

Many married Ashkenazi Orthodox men wear a kittel, a white robe-like garment for evening prayers on Yom Kippur, also used in Eastern European communities by men on their wedding day.[85][86] They also wear a tallit (prayer shawl), which is typically worn only during morning services.[87]

Order of prayers edit

Before the beginning of Yom Kippur, many Jews recite the optional Tefillah Zakkah ('the pure prayer'), in which (among other topics) one declares that they forgive anyone who has harmed them in the past, "except for damages which can be recovered in court, and except for those who say: I will harm him and he will forgive me", asks God not to punish anyone who has been so forgiven, and asks God to show similar graciousness in forgiving their own sins.[88]

Like all Jewish holidays, Yom Kippur begins in the evening, and the evening prayer (Maariv) is preceded by the special Kol Nidre (described below) prayer.

The next morning, the morning prayer (Shacharit) is recited. The Torah reading is from Leviticus 16, describing the Yom Kippur Temple service and the laws of the day. The Yom Kippur Torah reading is divided into six portions. The Haftarah is from Isaiah 57:14–58–14, according to which God will ignore the prayers of one who fasts while continuing to perform evil deeds. Yizkor is then recited.

Next is the added prayer (Mussaf) as on all other holidays. The highlight of this prayer is the Avodah recitation, where the prayer leader recounts the Yom Kippur Temple service by which the High Priest would once obtain atonement from God in the Temple in Jerusalem. Other notable additions to Yom Kippur Mussaf include the Unetanneh Tokef and Ten Martyrs poems.

While the Yom Kippur prayer service is long and takes up most of the day, there is generally a break of several hours after Mussaf before the next prayers, which last until the conclusion of the fast.

Next is the afternoon prayer (Mincha) and a Torah reading. The Haftarah that follows is the entire Book of Jonah, which has as its theme the story of God's willingness to forgive those who repent.[89] The service concludes with the Ne'ila ("closing") prayer, which begins shortly before sunset, when the "gates of prayer" will be closed. After Ne'ila, Yom Kippur comes to an end with a recitation of Shema Yisrael and the blowing of the shofar,[84] which marks the conclusion of the fast[87] and symbolizes freedom from sin.[90] Finally, the brief weekday Maariv prayer is recited, before the recitation of Havdalah.

Kol Nidre edit

Before sunset on Yom Kippur eve, worshipers gather in the synagogue. The cantor stands with two community members at his sides, and chants the Kol Nidre prayer (Aramaic: כל נדרי, English translation: 'All vows'). It is recited in a dramatic manner, before the open ark, with an Ashkenazic melody that dates back to the 16th century.[91] Kol Nidre is recited in Aramaic, except in the Italian and Romaniote rites where it is recited in Hebrew.

All personal vows we are likely to make, all personal oaths and pledges we are likely to take between this Yom Kippur and the next Yom Kippur (in some versions: which we took between last Yom Kippur and this Yom Kippur), we publicly renounce. Let them all be relinquished and abandoned, null and void, neither firm nor established. Let our personal vows, pledges and oaths be considered neither vows nor pledges nor oaths.[92]

Then the service continues with the evening prayers (Ma'ariv) and an extended Selichot service.[93]

Avodah edit

The Avodah ('service') passage in the Musaf prayer recounts in detail the Yom Kippur Temple service which was once performed in the Temple in Jerusalem. This passage traditionally features prominently in both the liturgy and the religious thought of the holiday.[84] During its recitation, Jews "imagine themselves in place of the priests when the Temple stood".[94]

This traditional prominence is rooted in the Babylonian Talmud's description of how to attain atonement following the destruction of the Temple.[citation needed] The recitation poetically describes the High Priest's confessions of his and the people's sins, his entry into the Holy of Holies, his sending away of the scapegoat, and all other parts of this day's complex Temple service.[93] A variety of liturgical poems are added, including a poem recounting the radiance of the High Priest after exiting the Holy of Holies, as well as prayers for the speedy rebuilding of the Temple and the restoration of sacrificial worship.

In most Orthodox and some Conservative synagogues, the entire congregation prostrates themselves at each point in the recitation where the High Priest would pronounce God's holiest name (during recitation of Leviticus 16:30).[95] These three times, plus in some congregations the Aleinu prayer during the Musaf Amidah on Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah, are the only times in Jewish services when Jews engage in prostration (except for some Yemenite Jews and talmidei haRambam ('disciples of Maimonides') who may prostrate themselves on other occasions during the year).

Orthodox liturgies include prayers lamenting the inability to perform the Temple service and petitioning for its restoration, which Conservative synagogues generally omit. In some Conservative synagogues, only the Hazzan (cantor) engages in full prostration. Some Conservative synagogues abridge the recitation of the Avodah service to varying degrees, and some omit it entirely. Reconstructionist services omit the entire service as inconsistent with modern sensibilities.

Confession edit

As confession is a core aspect of repentance,[96] confession (or vidui) is a major part of the Yom Kippur prayer services. A confession is recited ten times on Yom Kippur, twice in each of the five standard prayers. In each prayer service, the confession is recited once by the individual in their silent prayer, and again communally during the cantor's repetition of the Amidah. (The Maariv prayer has no repetition, so the second confession is instead recited in the communal Selichot recitation which follows the silent prayer.) Confession is recited an 11th time by individuals in the Mincha prayer of Yom Kippur eve, before the beginning of the holiday.

The Yom Kippur confession text consists of two parts: a short confession beginning with the word Ashamnu (אשמנו, 'we have sinned'), which is a series of words describing sin arranged according to the aleph-bet (Hebrew alphabetic order), and a long confession, beginning with the words Al Cheyt (על חטא, 'for the sin'), which is a set of 22 double acrostics, also arranged according to the aleph-bet, enumerating a range of sins.[citation needed]

In Reform Judaism edit

Reform synagogues generally experience their largest attendance of the year on Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah for worship services. The prayer philosophy of Reform, as described in the introduction of the movement's High Holy Day prayerbook, "Mishkan Hanefesh", is to reflect "varied theological approaches that enable a diverse congregation to share religious experience... with a commitment to Reform tradition, as well as [to] the larger Jewish tradition." A central feature of these Reform services is the rabbinic sermon. "For more than a century and a half in the Reform Movement," writes Rabbi Lance Sussman, "High Holiday sermons were among the most anticipated events in synagogue life, especially on the eve of Rosh Hashanah and Kol Nidre night."[97]

Date of Yom Kippur edit

Yom Kippur falls each year on the tenth day of the Jewish month of Tishrei, which is nine days after the first day of Rosh Hashanah. In terms of the Gregorian calendar, the earliest date on which Yom Kippur can fall is September 14, as happened most recently in 1899 and 2013. The latest Yom Kippur can occur relative to the Gregorian dates is on October 14, as happened in 1967 and will happen again in 2043. After 2089, the differences between the Hebrew calendar and the Gregorian calendar will result in Yom Kippur falling no earlier than September 15.[98] Gregorian calendar dates for recent and upcoming Yom Kippur holidays are:

  • Sunset, 15 September 2021 – nightfall, 16 September 2021
  • Sunset, 4 October 2022 – nightfall, 5 October 2022
  • Sunset, 24 September 2023 – nightfall, 25 September 2023
  • Sunset, 11 October 2024 – nightfall, 12 October 2024
  • Sunset, 1 October 2025 – nightfall, 2 October 2025

In the Torah edit

The Torah calls the day Yom HaKippurim (יוֹם הַכִּיפּוּרִים), and decrees a strict prohibition of work and fasting ("affliction of the soul") on the tenth day of the seventh month, later known as Tishrei.[99] The laws of Yom Kippur are commanded by God to Moses in three passages in the Torah:

  1. Leviticus 16:1–34: Aaron may only enter the sanctuary by performing a complex sacrificial procedure, later known as the Yom Kippur Temple service. This service must be performed yearly on the date of Yom Kippur, while the people are to fast and not work on this date.[100]
  2. Leviticus 23:26–32: The tenth day of Tishrei is a holy day of atonement. A Temple sacrifice must be offered, while the people must fast and not work, "on the ninth day from evening until evening".[101]
  3. Numbers 29:7–11: The tenth day of Tishrei is a holy day; one must fast and not work. The mussaf (additional) sacrifice for the day is specified.[102]

Yom Kippur is mentioned briefly in another context: on Yom Kippur of the Jubilee year the shofar was to be blown.[103] According to some, this is the source for the current custom of blowing the shofar at the conclusion of Yom Kippur.[104]

Temple service edit

When the Temple in Jerusalem stood, Yom Kippur was the occasion of an elaborate sacrificial service, as commanded by Leviticus 16. The rabbis summarized the laws of this service in Mishnah tractate Yoma, and they appear in contemporary traditional Jewish prayer books for Yom Kippur, and are studied as part of a traditional Jewish Yom Kippur worship service.[105] The Mussaf prayer on Yom Kippur includes a section known as the Avodah, where a poem is recited describing this Temple service.

Observance in Israel edit

 
Ayalon Highway in Tel Aviv, empty of cars on Yom Kippur 2004

Yom Kippur is a legal holiday in Israel. There are no radio or television broadcasts, airports are shut down, there is no public transportation, and all shops and businesses are closed.[106]

In 2013, 73% of the Jewish people of Israel said that they were intending to fast on Yom Kippur.[107] It is very common in Israel to wish "Tsom Kal" ([an] easy fast) or "Tsom Mo'il" ([a] benefiting fast) to everyone before Yom Kippur, even if one does not know whether they will fast or not.

It is considered impolite to eat in public on Yom Kippur or to play music or to drive a motor vehicle. There is no legal prohibition on any of these, but in practice such actions are almost universally avoided in Israel during Yom Kippur,[108] except for emergency services.

Over the last few decades, bicycle-riding and inline skating on the empty streets have become common among secular Israeli youths, especially on the eve of Yom Kippur in Tel Aviv.[109]

In 1973, an air raid siren was sounded on the afternoon of Yom Kippur and radio broadcasts were resumed to alert the public to the surprise attack on Israel by Egypt and Syria that launched the Yom Kippur War.[citation needed]

Observance by athletes edit

 
Sandy Koufax
 
Gabe Carimi

Some notable athletes have observed Yom Kippur, even when it conflicted with playing their sport.

In baseball, Sandy Koufax, the Hall of Fame pitcher, decided not to pitch Game 1 of the 1965 World Series because it fell on Yom Kippur. Koufax garnered national attention for his decision, as an example of the conflict between social pressures and personal beliefs.[110]

Hall of Fame first baseman Hank Greenberg attracted national attention in 1934, when he refused to play baseball on Yom Kippur, even though the Tigers were in the middle of a pennant race, and he was leading the league in runs batted in.[111] The Detroit Free Press columnist and poet Edgar A. Guest wrote a poem titled "Speaking of Greenberg", which ended with the lines "We shall miss him on the infield and shall miss him at the bat / But he's true to his religion—and I honor him for that."[112] When Greenberg arrived in synagogue on Yom Kippur, the service stopped suddenly, and the congregation gave an embarrassed Greenberg a standing ovation.[113]

Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Shawn Green, similarly, made headlines in 2001 for sitting out a game for the first time in 415 games (then the longest streak among active players) on Yom Kippur, even though his team was in the middle of a playoff race.[111] Other baseball players who have similarly sat out games on Yom Kippur include Kevin Youkilis, Brad Ausmus, and Art Shamsky.[114][115][116]

Gabe Carimi, the Consensus All-American left tackle in American football who won the 2010 Outland Trophy as the nation's top collegiate interior lineman, faced a conflict in his freshman year of college in 2007. That year Yom Kippur fell on a Saturday, and he fasted until an hour before his football game against Iowa started that night.[117][118][119] Carimi said, "Religion is a part of me, and I don't want to just say I'm Jewish. I actually do make sacrifices that I know are hard choices."[117][120][121] In 2004, Matt Bernstein, standout fullback at University of Wisconsin–Madison, fasted on Yom Kippur, then broke his fast on the sidelines before rushing for 123 yards in a game against Penn State.[122]

In 2011, golfer Laetitia Beck declined a request to join the University of North Carolina Tar Heels Invitational competition, because it conflicted with Yom Kippur.[123][124] Instead, she spent the day fasting and praying.[123] She said: "My Judaism is very important to me, and ... on Yom Kippur, no matter what, I have to fast."[123] Boris Gelfand, Israel's top chess player, played his game in the prestigious London Grand Prix Chess Tournament on 25 September 2012 (eve of Yom Kippur) earlier, to avoid playing on the holiday.[125]

In 2013, the International Tennis Federation fined the Israel Tennis Association "more than $13,000 ... for the inconvenience" of having to reschedule a tennis match between the Israeli and Belgian teams that was originally scheduled on Yom Kippur.[126][127] Dudi Sela, Israel's #1 player, quit his quarterfinal match in the third set of the 2017 Shenzhen Open so he could begin observing Yom Kippur by the time the sun set, forfeiting a possible $34,000 in prize money and 90 rankings points.[128][129]

Professional wrestler Bill Goldberg has a policy of not performing on Yom Kippur.[130][131]

Recognition by the United Nations edit

Since 2016 the United Nations has officially recognized Yom Kippur, stating that from then on no official meetings would take place on the day.[132] In addition, the United Nations stated that, beginning in 2016, they would have nine official holidays and seven floating holidays of which each employee would be able to choose one.[132] It stated that the floating holidays will be Yom Kippur, Day of Vesak, Diwali, Gurpurab, Orthodox Christmas, Orthodox Good Friday, and Presidents' Day.[132] This was the first time the United Nations officially recognized any Jewish holiday.[132]

See also edit

References edit

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  4. ^ "Afflicting the Soul: A Day When Even Children Must Fast – TheTorah.com". thetorah.com. Retrieved 13 September 2022.
  5. ^ Numbers 29:7
  6. ^ a b c יום כיפור ויום הכיפורים
  7. ^ Concordance: כִּפֻּרִים
  8. ^ Mishnah Yoma 1:1, 1:3, 1:4, etc.
  9. ^ Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim 416:4, etc.
  10. ^ "The High Holidays". My Jewish Learning. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  11. ^ a b "Yom Kippur Theology and Themes". My Jewish Learning. Retrieved 27 September 2020.
  12. ^ "The 15th of Av: Love and Rebirth". Chabad.org. Retrieved 30 July 2023.
  13. ^ Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Laws of Teshuva 2:2
  14. ^ Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Laws of Teshuva 2:7
  15. ^ Yoma 85b
  16. ^ Machzor Yom Kippur Ashkenaz: Musaf for Yom Kippur: The Avodah Service
  17. ^ Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 131:4
  18. ^ Exodus 32:15–19
  19. ^ Exodus 34:1–4, 34:28–29
  20. ^ Seder Olam Rabbah 6
  21. ^ "The 120-Day Version Of The Human Story". chabad.org. Retrieved 8 June 2021.
  22. ^ Yaakov Medan, The First Yom Kippur
  23. ^ Yoshi Fargeon, מה בין י"ג מידות לעשרת הדברות?
  24. ^ E.g. Numbers 14:17–18, Micah 7:18–20, Psalms 86:15–16
  25. ^ a b The Affliction: Being an Angel for a Day
  26. ^ a b Becoming Angels on Yom Kippur
  27. ^ Leviticus 16:2, 16:12–13
  28. ^ Leviticus 16:14–16
  29. ^ Atoning Before God
  30. ^ אחרי מות-קדושים | לפני ה' תטהרו
  31. ^ Leviticus 16:2
  32. ^ a b Yoel Bin-Nun, היום השמיני ויום הכיפורים, Megadim 8:9-34 (1989)
  33. ^ הקטורת, נדב ואביהוא ויום הכיפורים
  34. ^ Bahya ben Asher, Kad Hakemach, p. 122b
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  36. ^ a b Leviticus 16:30
  37. ^ Malbim, HaTorah VeHaMitzvah, commentary on Vayikra 11:43, Vayikra 5:2-3
  38. ^ David Tzvi Hoffman, introduction to Leviticus 11 (R. David Zvi Hoffmann, Leviticus 11:1); his term for "moral impurity" is טומאת הקדושות‎.
  39. ^ Leviticus 16:16; see Shadal, Leviticus 16:16
  40. ^ Netziv, Leviticus 16:30
  41. ^ Meir Lichtenstein, אשריכם ישראל לפני מי אתם מיטהרין
  42. ^ Mishnah, Yoma 8:9
  43. ^ Leviticus 16:4, 16:24
  44. ^ Mishnah, Yoma 3:3
  45. ^ Peninei Halakha: 10. Erev Yom Kippur Customs
  46. ^ Mishnah Yoma 4:2
  47. ^ תפקיד הלשון של זהורית
  48. ^ Yoma 67a
  49. ^ אנו מתרין להתפלל עם העבריינים
  50. ^ Keritot 6b
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  52. ^ Cohen, S.M.; Eisen, A.M.: The Jew Within: Self, Family, and Community in America, p. 169. Indiana University Press, 2000. "For completely uninvolved Jews ... the question of synagogue attendance rarely arises. They are unlikely ever to consider the matter, except at Rosh Hashanha and Yom Kippur or to attend a bar or bat mitzvah." See also Samuel C. Heilman, Synagogue Life, 1976.
  53. ^ Yoma 85b
  54. ^ a b "Erev Yom Kippur – The purpose of the day as seen through Talmudic anecdotes (PDF)" (PDF). Retrieved 25 March 2011.
  55. ^ a b c d David Brofsky, The Laws and Practices of Erev Yom Kippur
  56. ^ "Pre-Fast Feasting". chabad.org. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  57. ^ צום יום הכיפורים - עינוי נפש או כמלאכים
  58. ^ "OU Customs for Erev Yom Kippur". Retrieved 21 September 2008.
  59. ^ "The Separation Meal". chabad.org. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
  60. ^ Leviticus 16:29, 16:31, 23:27, 23:29
  61. ^ Psalms 35:13; Isaiah 58:3; 58:10; see also Deuteronomy 8:3, etc.
  62. ^ Concordance: צוֹם
  63. ^ Mishnah tractate Yoma 8:1
  64. ^ See Shulchan Aruch OC 618 and commentaries for the details of who is considered to fall into this category.
  65. ^ What is the procedure for one who must eat on Yom Kippur?
  66. ^ Peninei Halakha: 05. Eating and Drinking Minimal Quantities (“Le-shi’urim”)
  67. ^ מתי אפשר להזיז מועדים?
  68. ^ "Saving a Life (Pikuach Nefesh)". MyJewishLearning.com. Retrieved 24 September 2023.
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  70. ^ Brachot 17a
  71. ^ Drashot Maharal for Shabbat Shuva
  72. ^ a b c הכנת הגוף והנפש ליום כיפור
  73. ^ Genesis 3:18, 3:15
  74. ^ "Why Rabbis wear sneakers on their holiest day"."Article by Avi Rabinowitz, NYU homepages"
  75. ^ The Guide for the Perplexed, 3:43
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  77. ^ Leviticus 16:29, 16:31, 23:27, 23:30
  78. ^ a b Peninei Halacha: Chapter 07 – Laws of Yom Kippur
  79. ^ Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim, 610:4; see Ramban, Leviticus 16:4 which links the High Priest's white Yom Kippur garments to the angels' white garments (Ezekiel 9:3; Daniel 10:5)
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  81. ^ Chayei Adam, 144:19
  82. ^ Aruch Hashulchan 610:6
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  88. ^ תפילה זכה- רשימה בהשפעת יום הכיפורים
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  92. ^ Translation of Philip Birnbaum, from High Holiday Prayer Book, Hebrew Publishing Company, NY, 1951
  93. ^ a b Daniel Goldschmidt, Machzor leyamim noraim
  94. ^ Taz, Orach Chaim 413:4
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  96. ^ Maimonides, Mishneh Torah, Laws of Teshuva 1:1
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  100. ^ Leviticus 16:1–34
  101. ^ Leviticus 23:26–32
  102. ^ Numbers 29:7–11
  103. ^ Leviticus 25:9
  104. ^ Sefer Haagur, Hilchot Yom Hakippurim 951: ...ותוקעין תקיעה אחת זכר ליובל
  105. ^ Arnold Lustiger, Michael Taubes, Menachem Genack, and Hershel Schachter, Kasirer Edition Yom Kippur Machzor With Commentary Adapted from the Teachings of Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik. New York: K'hal Publishing, 2006. pp. 588–589 (summary); 590–618.
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External links edit

  • Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Prayers for Sephardic Jews 11 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine
  • From Our Collections: Marking the New Year – Online exhibition from Yad Vashem on the celebration of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur before, during, and after the Holocaust
  • Dates for Yom Kippur
  • Yom Kippur Prayers sung by Chazzanim
  • More information on Yom Kippur

kippur, 1973, arab, israeli, conflict, ʊər, ɔː, yahm, yawm, yohm, hebrew, יו, yōm, kippūr, ˈjom, kiˈpuʁ, atonement, holiest, judaism, samaritanism, occurs, annually, 10th, tishrei, corresponding, date, september, early, october, יו, jews, praying, synagogue, 1. For the 1973 Arab Israeli conflict see Yom Kippur War Yom Kippur ˌ j ɒ m k ɪ ˈ p ʊer ˌ j ɔː m ˈ k ɪ p er ˌ j oʊ m YAHM kip OOR YAWM KIP er YOHM 1 Hebrew יו ם כ פ ו ר Yōm Kippur ˈjom kiˈpuʁ lit Day of Atonement is the holiest day in Judaism and Samaritanism 2 3 4 It occurs annually on the 10th of Tishrei 5 corresponding to a date in September or early October Yom Kippurיו ם כ פ ו ר Jews Praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur 1878 Maurycy GottliebObserved byJews and SamaritansTypeReligious national in Israel SignificanceAtonement and repentance to God for personal sins sealing of one s fate for the upcoming yearObservancesFastingprayerasceticismDate10 Tishrei2022 dateSunset 4 October nightfall 5 October2023 dateSunset 24 September nightfall 25 September2024 dateSunset 11 October nightfall 12 October2025 dateSunset 1 October nightfall 2 OctoberFrequencyAnnual Hebrew calendar Related toRosh HaShanahFor traditional Jewish observants it is primarily centered on atonement and repentance the day s main observances consist of full fasting and ascetic behavior accompanied by a long prayer service in synagogue as well as sin confessions Many Jewish denominations such as Reconstructionist Judaism vs Reform Conservative Orthodox etc focus strongly on one s goals and accomplishments and setting yearly intentions rather than focusing on sins Alongside the related holiday of Rosh Hashanah Yom Kippur is one of the two components of the High Holy Days of Judaism It is also the last day of the Ten Days of Repentance Contents 1 Name 2 Significance 2 1 High Holy Days 2 2 Repentance Teshuva 2 3 Thirteen attributes 2 4 Closeness to God 2 5 Purification 2 6 Jewish unity 3 Observance 3 1 Erev Yom Kippur 3 2 Fasting and asceticism 3 2 1 Symbolism 3 3 Prohibition on work 3 4 Other observances 4 Prayer services 4 1 Order of prayers 4 2 Kol Nidre 4 3 Avodah 4 4 Confession 4 5 In Reform Judaism 5 Date of Yom Kippur 6 In the Torah 6 1 Temple service 7 Observance in Israel 8 Observance by athletes 9 Recognition by the United Nations 10 See also 11 References 12 External linksName editThe formal Hebrew name of the holiday is Yom HaKippurim day of the atonements 6 This name is used in the Bible 7 Mishnah 8 and Shulchan Aruch 9 The word kippurim atonement is one of many Biblical Hebrew words which while using a grammatical plural form refers to a singular abstract concept 6 Beginning in the classical period the singular form kippur began to be used in piyyut for example in Unetanneh Tokef alongside the standard plural form kippurim Use of kippur spread In the medieval period with Yom Kippur becoming the holiday s name in Yiddish and Kippur in Ladino In modern Hebrew Yom Kippur or simply Kippur is the common name while Yom HaKippurim is used in formal writing 6 In older English texts the translation Day of Atonement is often used Significance editHigh Holy Days edit Yom Kippur is one of the two High Holy Days or Days of Awe Hebrew yamim noraim alongside Rosh Hashanah which falls nine days previously 10 According to Jewish tradition on Rosh Hashanah God inscribes each person s fate for the coming year into the Book of Life and waits until Yom Kippur to seal the verdict 11 This process is described dramatically in the poem Unetanneh Tokef which is recited on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur A great shofar will be blown and a small still voice will be heard The angels will make haste and be seized with fear and trembling and will say Behold the day of judgment On Rosh Hashanah it is written and on the Yom Kippur fast it is sealed how many will pass and how many will be created who will live and who will die who in his time and who not in his time But repentance prayer and charity remove the evil of the decree For You do not desire a person s death but rather that he repent and live Until the day of his death You wait for him if he repents You accept him immediately During the Days of Awe a Jew reflects on the year goals and past actions how his or her behavior has possibly hurt others and seek forgiveness for wrongs done against God and against other human beings The Talmud states that the greatest and happiest holy day for the Jews is Tu B Av with Yom Kippur as a close second 12 Repentance Teshuva edit Repentance in Judaism Hebrew Teshuva traditionally consists of regretting having committed the sin resolving not to commit that sin in the future and confessing that sin before God 13 While repentance for one s sins can and should be done at any time it is considered especially desirable during the Ten Days of Repentance between Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur and particularly on Yom Kippur itself 14 Thus the Yom Kippur prayers contain extended confessions which list varieties of times where they ve gone wrong sometimes defined as sin and to which one can add their own missteps along with requests for forgiveness from God According to the Talmud Yom Kippur atones for sins done against God bein adam leMakom but does not atone for sins done against other human beings bein adam lechavero until the other person has been appeased 15 Therefore it is considered imperative to repair the harm that one has done to others before or during Yom Kippur Yom Kippur is described in the prayers as a day of creating love and brotherhood a day of abandoning jealousy and strife 16 It is said that if one does not remove hatred from their heart on Yom Kippur their prayers are not heard 17 Thirteen attributes edit According to the Bible after the golden calf sin Moses descended from Mount Sinai and broke the Tablets of Stone which contained the Ten Commandments and symbolized the covenant with God 18 After God agreed to forgive the people s sin Moses was told to return to Mount Sinai for a second 40 day period in order to receive a second set of tablets 19 According to rabbinic tradition the date Moses descended with the second set of tablets was Yom Kippur On this day Moses announced to the people that they had been forgiven as a result the Torah fixed this date as a permanent holiday of forgiveness 20 21 22 The new covenant which God announced by proclaiming the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy to Moses is textually similar to the covenant of the Ten Commandments except that God s nature is described as merciful and forgiving rather than zealous 23 When the Jewish people sinned in later eras prophets would repeatedly quote the Thirteen Attributes to God as a reminder of God s commitment to mercy and forgiveness 24 This is continued to the present day as recitation of the Thirteen Attributes remains an important part of the Yom Kippur prayers in Maariv and Neilah Closeness to God edit While many of the observances of Yom Kippur such as fasting and long prayers can be difficult there is also a tradition in which they are interpreted positively as indications of closeness of God Various sources compare the observances of Yom Kippur fasting barefootness not wearing leather shoes standing in prayer particular manners of prayer even the peace that exists between Jews on this day with the behavior of angels suggesting that on Yom Kippur Jews become like angels in heaven purified and close to God and not limited by physicality 25 26 Yom Kippur was also unique as a time of closeness to God in the Yom Kippur Temple service Yom Kippur was the only occasion on which High Priest was allowed to enter the Holy of Holies the innermost chamber of the Temple in Jerusalem where God s presence was said to dwell On Yom Kippur the High Priest of Israel entered the Holy of Holies several times first to create a cloud of incense smoke in which the Bible promises God would reveal Himself without being seen 27 and later to offer sacrifices of atonement 28 While the encounter with God and the atonement may appear to be unrelated in fact they are mutually dependent On one hand the priest is only worthy to approach God when in a state of purity with the sins of the people being forgiven On the other hand only by approaching God with an intimate personal request can God be persuaded to abandon justice for mercy permitting the purification to take place 29 30 According to the Torah the Yom Kippur Temple service was commanded in wake of the deaths of Nadab and Abihu on the eighth day of the Tabernacle inauguration 31 Not only was this eighth day the occasion of the Yom Kippur command but the eighth day was also similar in its nature to Yom Kippur both in biblical texts e g the sacrifices offered on each day and in rabbinic interpretation 32 The purpose of the eighth day was the revelation of God s presence to the people 32 14 similarly the Yom Kippur service was a unique opportunity for the people s representative to obtain closeness with God 33 A midrash compares the Yom Kippur prayers to a verse from the Song of Songs describing a woman who rises from bed at night to begin a romantic encounter with her lover With each Yom Kippur prayer it is implied Jews approach closer to God I rose up to open to my beloved My hands dripped with myrrh my fingers with flowing myrrh upon the handles of the bolt Song of Songs 5 5 I rose up to open to my beloved this refers to Yotzer the morning prayer My hands dripped with myrrh this refers to Mussaf my fingers with flowing myrrh this refers to Mincha upon the handles of the bolt this refers to Neilah 34 Using a similar metaphor the Mishnah describes Yom Kippur as a wedding date as on this date Moses returned having reestablished the covenant between God and Israel 35 Purification edit In Leviticus 16 30 the Torah summarizes the purpose of Yom Kippur as follows For on this day atonement shall be made for you to purify you from all your sins before the Lord you shall be purified 36 There are two forms of impurity in Judaism see Tumah and taharah ritual impurity e g when one touches a corpse and moral impurity when one commits a serious sin 37 38 While the Yom Kippur Temple service did purify the Temple if it had become ritually impure 39 the emphasis of the day is on the Jewish people s purification from moral impurity 36 Leviticus 16 30 mentions purification twice According to Netziv the first mention is a promise that God will purify Israel on this day while the second is a command calling on Israel to purify themselves through repentance 40 Thus on this day Jews do their utmost to repent But if by the end of the day they have reached the limits of their ability and are still morally flawed God extends them forgiveness and purification anyway 41 Jeremiah 17 13 states that Israel s hope mikveh is in God According to Rabbi Akiva this verse alludes to a ritual purification bath also pronounced mikveh and thus on Yom Kippur God metaphorically becomes a mikveh in which Israel immerses and purifies itself 42 This idea is symbolized by immersion in an actual mikveh In the Yom Kippur Temple service the High Priest would immerse upon putting on and taking off his white Yom Kippur garments 43 the rabbis counted no fewer than five immersions over the course of the day s service 44 Among modern day Jews too there is a custom of immersion before Yom Kippur though not on Yom Kippur itself as bathing is forbidden in normal circumstances 45 When the scapegoat was selected on Yom Kippur to symbolically carry the people s sins to the desert a crimson cord was tied around its horns 46 While the practical purpose of this cord was to distinguish the scapegoat from the goat which was to be slaughtered it also symbolized the sin which the scapegoat was carrying away 47 Isaiah 1 18 promises that if the Jewish people repents if their sins are like crimson they shall become white as snow According to tradition in some years the scapegoat s cord would miraculously turn white to indicate that the people s sins were forgiven and purification achieved in that year 48 Jewish unity edit Yom Kippur is considered a day of Jewish unity In Kol Nidre in which vows are released vows of excommunication against sinning Jews were similarly lifted and these transgressors were allowed to pray alongside other Jews 49 According to the Talmud Any fast in which Jewish sinners do not also participate is not a valid fast 50 Similarly the Mishnah describes Yom Kippur as a day on which men and women would once meet each other in the vineyards in order to arrange marriages 35 While this story is surprising given the generally somber nature of the day it is based on the Biblical episode where the oath against marrying Benjaminites was circumvented by allowing them to take women from the vineyards as wives and thus indicates the day s theme of abandoning grudges in order for the Jewish people to be reunited 51 29 30 Observance editAs one of the most culturally significant Jewish holidays Yom Kippur is observed by many secular Jews who may not observe other holidays Many secular Jews attend synagogue on Yom Kippur for many secular Jews the High Holy Days are the only times of the year during which they attend synagogue 52 causing synagogue attendance to soar Erev Yom Kippur edit nbsp On the eve of Yom Kippur by Jakub WeinlesOn the day preceding Yom Kippur known as Erev Yom Kippur lit eve of day of atonement a number of activities are customarily performed in preparation for Yom Kippur These activities generally relate to the themes of the holiday but are forbidden or impractical to do on Yom Kippur itself According to the Talmud Yom Kippur does not atone for sins between a person and his fellow until he has appeased his fellow 53 Thus it is common practice on Erev Yom Kippur to request forgiveness from other individuals for misdeeds one has done to them The Talmud records no less than 14 stories attesting to the importance of the day for repairing relationships with one s spouses parents children coworkers the poor and other individuals 54 The day before a major Jewish holiday is often devoted towards preparing for that holiday as with burning chametz before Passover or obtaining the Four Species before Sukkot for Yom Kippur the appropriate preparation is to seek forgiveness from one s fellow man 54 Nevertheless one should not ask forgiveness if this will cause further harm for example by bringing up an insult the victim was unaware of 55 According to halakha one must eat on Erev Yom Kippur A variety of reasons have been suggested for this requirement among them 55 56 Most obviously eating well before the fast will make it easier to complete the fast in good health Eating before the fast will actually make the fast subjectively more difficult due to withdrawal from the previous day s feast and thus increase a person s level of affliction on this day though it is not agreed that a person should in fact attempt to increase their affliction beyond the basic requirements 57 In general Jewish holidays are celebrated with festive meals Since a meal celebrating Yom Kippur cannot be held on the day itself it is held beforehand One celebrates the forgiveness they are about to receive for their sins thus demonstrating that they are in fact bothered by their sins and thus are more deserving of forgiveness Many Orthodox men immerse themselves in a mikveh on this day 58 Opinions differ on whether this is a technical act to remove ritual impurity or else a symbolic one to symbolize one s cleansing from sin on Yom Kippur 55 The kapparot ritual in which either money or a chicken is given to charity is performed by some on Erev Yom Kippur as a means to enhance atonement In this day s morning prayer service Shacharit additional selichot prayers are recited In the afternoon prayer Mincha the long confession is recited just as it is on Yom Kippur itself This confession is recited before the last Erev Yom Kippur meal the Separation Meal in Hebrew se udah hamafseket or aruha hamafseket 59 in case one becomes intoxicated at this meal and is unable to confess properly afterwards or else because a person might choke to death at that meal and die without confessing seemingly an unlikely possibility but one which reminds a person of their mortality 55 Fasting and asceticism edit The Torah commands Jews to afflict themselves ve initem et nafshoteichem on Yom Kippur 60 While these verses do not explicitly mention the form of affliction the phrase afflicting oneself frequently appears elsewhere in connection with fasting or lack of food 61 and public fast days for repentance were a common practice in Biblical times 62 According to the Jewish oral tradition the Yom Kippur affliction consists of the following five prohibitions 63 Fasting no eating and drinking No wearing of leather shoes No bathing or washing No anointing oneself with perfumes or lotions No sexIn traditional custom the fast is required of all over 13 but is waived in the case of medical conditions 64 In such situations though it is preferable if the medical situation allows for it to consume only small amounts of food or drink at a time 65 66 Fasting along with the other restrictions begins at sundown and ends after nightfall the following day One should add a few minutes to the beginning and end of the day called tosefet Yom Kippur lit addition to Yom Kippur Yom Kippur is the only day when fasting is permitted on Shabbat 67 Due to the principle of pikuach nefesh eating and drinking are sometimes permissible on Yom Kippur to safeguard health A person who is ill is actually required to break the fast 68 Just as it is a mitzvah to fast on Yom Kippur it may also be a mitzvah to eat or drink on Yom Kippur to safeguard a person s health 69 Symbolism edit A number of different interpretations of these restrictions have been suggested In one approach fasting replaces animal sacrifices Fasting causes one s fat and blood to be diminished just as the fat and blood of a sacrifice were burned on the altar Thus the fast is a form of sacrifice which can atone for sin like the Temple sacrifices once did 70 Other approaches suggest that the prohibitions represent not suffering but rather special holiness For example on Yom Kippur Jews are said to become like angels Just as angels do not need to eat drink or wear shoes so too Jews do not engage on these activities on Yom Kippur 25 By detaching themselves from physical needs Jews become purified and resemble angels 26 71 Similarly the prohibitions allude to the experience of Moses on Mount Sinai who did not eat or drink while receiving the Torah and while receiving forgiveness for the people s sins 72 Similarly the prohibitions have been interpreted as a return to the purity of the biblical Garden of Eden Upon leaving Eden shoes became necessary for the first time thorns and thistles will grow in your way the snake will raise its head to bite you and you will give your heel to crush it 73 thus on Yom Kippur Jews do not wear leather shoes While in Eden food and drink were easily obtained but after the expulsion man must work for food by the sweat of his brow thus food and drink are refrained from on Yom Kippur as well as washing and the use of cosmetics to remove sweat or its odor In Eden death was unknown and procreation unnecessary similarly on Yom Kippur marital relations are avoided 74 According to Maimonides the purpose of fasting and the restriction on work is to remove distractions from the task of repentance 75 By refraining from these activities the body is uncomfortable but can still survive The soul is considered to be the life force in a body Therefore by making one s body uncomfortable one s soul is uncomfortable By feeling pain one can feel how others feel when they are in pain 76 Prohibition on work edit The Torah calls Yom Kippur a day of rest shabbat shabbaton on which work is prohibited 77 Thus the activities forbidden on Shabbat are also forbidden on Yom Kippur the 39 categories of work as well as the rabbinic Shabbat prohibitions 78 Other observances edit Wearing white clothing is traditional to symbolize one s purity on this day Various reasons have been suggested for this custom On Yom Kippur Jews are similar to the angels in heaven who are said to wear white 79 To alludes to the verse If your sins are like crimson they shall become white as snow Isaiah 1 18 72 To recall the High Priest who wore white for the Yom Kippur Temple service and on no other occasion 72 Many Ashkenazi Jewish men wear a kittel which in addition to being white symbolizes the seriousness of God s judgment on this day as the deceased are buried wearing kittels 80 Yom Kippur is honored in the same ways as Shabbat and other holidays to the extent permitted Thus the house is cleaned ahead of time and the table covered with a nice tablecloth even though it will not be used for eating The synagogue is cleaned ahead of time and all the lights left on One bathes before Yom Kippur and clean clothes are worn Smelling pleasant smells is allowed on Yom Kippur so many make a point of smelling pleasant spices throughout the day 78 Candles are lit just before Yom Kippur as is done before Shabbat It is traditional for parents to give their children a special blessing before beginning the Yom Kippur prayers 81 Those whose parents have died light a yahrzeit candle in their memory before Yom Kippur begins 82 Prayer services editThe Yom Kippur prayer service includes several unique aspects One is the number of prayer services Unlike a regular day which has three prayer services Shacharit Mincha and Maariv or a Shabbat or Yom Tov which has four prayer services those three plus Mussaf Yom Kippur has five prayer services those four plus Ne ila the closing prayer 83 The prayer services also include private and public confessions of sins Vidui 11 and a unique prayer dedicated to the special Yom Kippur avodah service of the Kohen Gadol high priest in the Holy Temple in Jerusalem 84 The Yom Kippur prayer services include additional poems piyyutim and petitions for forgiveness selichot Notable poems recited include Avinu Malkeinu Unetanneh Tokef Ki Anu Amecha the Ten Martyrs HaAderet v HaEmunah and Mareh Kohen If Yom Kippur falls on Shabbat Avinu Malkeinu is only recited during the Ne ila prayer service Many married Ashkenazi Orthodox men wear a kittel a white robe like garment for evening prayers on Yom Kippur also used in Eastern European communities by men on their wedding day 85 86 They also wear a tallit prayer shawl which is typically worn only during morning services 87 Order of prayers edit Before the beginning of Yom Kippur many Jews recite the optional Tefillah Zakkah the pure prayer in which among other topics one declares that they forgive anyone who has harmed them in the past except for damages which can be recovered in court and except for those who say I will harm him and he will forgive me asks God not to punish anyone who has been so forgiven and asks God to show similar graciousness in forgiving their own sins 88 Like all Jewish holidays Yom Kippur begins in the evening and the evening prayer Maariv is preceded by the special Kol Nidre described below prayer The next morning the morning prayer Shacharit is recited The Torah reading is from Leviticus 16 describing the Yom Kippur Temple service and the laws of the day The Yom Kippur Torah reading is divided into six portions The Haftarah is from Isaiah 57 14 58 14 according to which God will ignore the prayers of one who fasts while continuing to perform evil deeds Yizkor is then recited Next is the added prayer Mussaf as on all other holidays The highlight of this prayer is the Avodah recitation where the prayer leader recounts the Yom Kippur Temple service by which the High Priest would once obtain atonement from God in the Temple in Jerusalem Other notable additions to Yom Kippur Mussaf include the Unetanneh Tokef and Ten Martyrs poems While the Yom Kippur prayer service is long and takes up most of the day there is generally a break of several hours after Mussaf before the next prayers which last until the conclusion of the fast Next is the afternoon prayer Mincha and a Torah reading The Haftarah that follows is the entire Book of Jonah which has as its theme the story of God s willingness to forgive those who repent 89 The service concludes with the Ne ila closing prayer which begins shortly before sunset when the gates of prayer will be closed After Ne ila Yom Kippur comes to an end with a recitation of Shema Yisrael and the blowing of the shofar 84 which marks the conclusion of the fast 87 and symbolizes freedom from sin 90 Finally the brief weekday Maariv prayer is recited before the recitation of Havdalah Kol Nidre edit Main article Kol Nidre Before sunset on Yom Kippur eve worshipers gather in the synagogue The cantor stands with two community members at his sides and chants the Kol Nidre prayer Aramaic כל נדרי English translation All vows It is recited in a dramatic manner before the open ark with an Ashkenazic melody that dates back to the 16th century 91 Kol Nidre is recited in Aramaic except in the Italian and Romaniote rites where it is recited in Hebrew All personal vows we are likely to make all personal oaths and pledges we are likely to take between this Yom Kippur and the next Yom Kippur in some versions which we took between last Yom Kippur and this Yom Kippur we publicly renounce Let them all be relinquished and abandoned null and void neither firm nor established Let our personal vows pledges and oaths be considered neither vows nor pledges nor oaths 92 Then the service continues with the evening prayers Ma ariv and an extended Selichot service 93 Avodah edit Main article Avodah Yom Kippur The Avodah service passage in the Musaf prayer recounts in detail the Yom Kippur Temple service which was once performed in the Temple in Jerusalem This passage traditionally features prominently in both the liturgy and the religious thought of the holiday 84 During its recitation Jews imagine themselves in place of the priests when the Temple stood 94 This traditional prominence is rooted in the Babylonian Talmud s description of how to attain atonement following the destruction of the Temple citation needed The recitation poetically describes the High Priest s confessions of his and the people s sins his entry into the Holy of Holies his sending away of the scapegoat and all other parts of this day s complex Temple service 93 A variety of liturgical poems are added including a poem recounting the radiance of the High Priest after exiting the Holy of Holies as well as prayers for the speedy rebuilding of the Temple and the restoration of sacrificial worship In most Orthodox and some Conservative synagogues the entire congregation prostrates themselves at each point in the recitation where the High Priest would pronounce God s holiest name during recitation of Leviticus 16 30 95 These three times plus in some congregations the Aleinu prayer during the Musaf Amidah on Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah are the only times in Jewish services when Jews engage in prostration except for some Yemenite Jews and talmidei haRambam disciples of Maimonides who may prostrate themselves on other occasions during the year Orthodox liturgies include prayers lamenting the inability to perform the Temple service and petitioning for its restoration which Conservative synagogues generally omit In some Conservative synagogues only the Hazzan cantor engages in full prostration Some Conservative synagogues abridge the recitation of the Avodah service to varying degrees and some omit it entirely Reconstructionist services omit the entire service as inconsistent with modern sensibilities Confession edit As confession is a core aspect of repentance 96 confession or vidui is a major part of the Yom Kippur prayer services A confession is recited ten times on Yom Kippur twice in each of the five standard prayers In each prayer service the confession is recited once by the individual in their silent prayer and again communally during the cantor s repetition of the Amidah The Maariv prayer has no repetition so the second confession is instead recited in the communal Selichot recitation which follows the silent prayer Confession is recited an 11th time by individuals in the Mincha prayer of Yom Kippur eve before the beginning of the holiday The Yom Kippur confession text consists of two parts a short confession beginning with the word Ashamnu אשמנו we have sinned which is a series of words describing sin arranged according to the aleph bet Hebrew alphabetic order and a long confession beginning with the words Al Cheyt על חטא for the sin which is a set of 22 double acrostics also arranged according to the aleph bet enumerating a range of sins citation needed In Reform Judaism edit Reform synagogues generally experience their largest attendance of the year on Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah for worship services The prayer philosophy of Reform as described in the introduction of the movement s High Holy Day prayerbook Mishkan Hanefesh is to reflect varied theological approaches that enable a diverse congregation to share religious experience with a commitment to Reform tradition as well as to the larger Jewish tradition A central feature of these Reform services is the rabbinic sermon For more than a century and a half in the Reform Movement writes Rabbi Lance Sussman High Holiday sermons were among the most anticipated events in synagogue life especially on the eve of Rosh Hashanah and Kol Nidre night 97 Date of Yom Kippur editSee also Jewish and Israeli holidays 2000 2050 Yom Kippur falls each year on the tenth day of the Jewish month of Tishrei which is nine days after the first day of Rosh Hashanah In terms of the Gregorian calendar the earliest date on which Yom Kippur can fall is September 14 as happened most recently in 1899 and 2013 The latest Yom Kippur can occur relative to the Gregorian dates is on October 14 as happened in 1967 and will happen again in 2043 After 2089 the differences between the Hebrew calendar and the Gregorian calendar will result in Yom Kippur falling no earlier than September 15 98 Gregorian calendar dates for recent and upcoming Yom Kippur holidays are Sunset 15 September 2021 nightfall 16 September 2021 Sunset 4 October 2022 nightfall 5 October 2022 Sunset 24 September 2023 nightfall 25 September 2023 Sunset 11 October 2024 nightfall 12 October 2024 Sunset 1 October 2025 nightfall 2 October 2025In the Torah editThe Torah calls the day Yom HaKippurim יו ם ה כ יפ ו ר ים and decrees a strict prohibition of work and fasting affliction of the soul on the tenth day of the seventh month later known as Tishrei 99 The laws of Yom Kippur are commanded by God to Moses in three passages in the Torah Leviticus 16 1 34 Aaron may only enter the sanctuary by performing a complex sacrificial procedure later known as the Yom Kippur Temple service This service must be performed yearly on the date of Yom Kippur while the people are to fast and not work on this date 100 Leviticus 23 26 32 The tenth day of Tishrei is a holy day of atonement A Temple sacrifice must be offered while the people must fast and not work on the ninth day from evening until evening 101 Numbers 29 7 11 The tenth day of Tishrei is a holy day one must fast and not work The mussaf additional sacrifice for the day is specified 102 Yom Kippur is mentioned briefly in another context on Yom Kippur of the Jubilee year the shofar was to be blown 103 According to some this is the source for the current custom of blowing the shofar at the conclusion of Yom Kippur 104 Temple service edit Main article Yom Kippur Temple service When the Temple in Jerusalem stood Yom Kippur was the occasion of an elaborate sacrificial service as commanded by Leviticus 16 The rabbis summarized the laws of this service in Mishnah tractate Yoma and they appear in contemporary traditional Jewish prayer books for Yom Kippur and are studied as part of a traditional Jewish Yom Kippur worship service 105 The Mussaf prayer on Yom Kippur includes a section known as the Avodah where a poem is recited describing this Temple service Observance in Israel edit nbsp Ayalon Highway in Tel Aviv empty of cars on Yom Kippur 2004Yom Kippur is a legal holiday in Israel There are no radio or television broadcasts airports are shut down there is no public transportation and all shops and businesses are closed 106 In 2013 73 of the Jewish people of Israel said that they were intending to fast on Yom Kippur 107 It is very common in Israel to wish Tsom Kal an easy fast or Tsom Mo il a benefiting fast to everyone before Yom Kippur even if one does not know whether they will fast or not It is considered impolite to eat in public on Yom Kippur or to play music or to drive a motor vehicle There is no legal prohibition on any of these but in practice such actions are almost universally avoided in Israel during Yom Kippur 108 except for emergency services Over the last few decades bicycle riding and inline skating on the empty streets have become common among secular Israeli youths especially on the eve of Yom Kippur in Tel Aviv 109 In 1973 an air raid siren was sounded on the afternoon of Yom Kippur and radio broadcasts were resumed to alert the public to the surprise attack on Israel by Egypt and Syria that launched the Yom Kippur War citation needed Observance by athletes edit nbsp Sandy Koufax nbsp Gabe CarimiSome notable athletes have observed Yom Kippur even when it conflicted with playing their sport In baseball Sandy Koufax the Hall of Fame pitcher decided not to pitch Game 1 of the 1965 World Series because it fell on Yom Kippur Koufax garnered national attention for his decision as an example of the conflict between social pressures and personal beliefs 110 Hall of Fame first baseman Hank Greenberg attracted national attention in 1934 when he refused to play baseball on Yom Kippur even though the Tigers were in the middle of a pennant race and he was leading the league in runs batted in 111 The Detroit Free Press columnist and poet Edgar A Guest wrote a poem titled Speaking of Greenberg which ended with the lines We shall miss him on the infield and shall miss him at the bat But he s true to his religion and I honor him for that 112 When Greenberg arrived in synagogue on Yom Kippur the service stopped suddenly and the congregation gave an embarrassed Greenberg a standing ovation 113 Los Angeles Dodgers outfielder Shawn Green similarly made headlines in 2001 for sitting out a game for the first time in 415 games then the longest streak among active players on Yom Kippur even though his team was in the middle of a playoff race 111 Other baseball players who have similarly sat out games on Yom Kippur include Kevin Youkilis Brad Ausmus and Art Shamsky 114 115 116 Gabe Carimi the Consensus All American left tackle in American football who won the 2010 Outland Trophy as the nation s top collegiate interior lineman faced a conflict in his freshman year of college in 2007 That year Yom Kippur fell on a Saturday and he fasted until an hour before his football game against Iowa started that night 117 118 119 Carimi said Religion is a part of me and I don t want to just say I m Jewish I actually do make sacrifices that I know are hard choices 117 120 121 In 2004 Matt Bernstein standout fullback at University of Wisconsin Madison fasted on Yom Kippur then broke his fast on the sidelines before rushing for 123 yards in a game against Penn State 122 In 2011 golfer Laetitia Beck declined a request to join the University of North Carolina Tar Heels Invitational competition because it conflicted with Yom Kippur 123 124 Instead she spent the day fasting and praying 123 She said My Judaism is very important to me and on Yom Kippur no matter what I have to fast 123 Boris Gelfand Israel s top chess player played his game in the prestigious London Grand Prix Chess Tournament on 25 September 2012 eve of Yom Kippur earlier to avoid playing on the holiday 125 In 2013 the International Tennis Federation fined the Israel Tennis Association more than 13 000 for the inconvenience of having to reschedule a tennis match between the Israeli and Belgian teams that was originally scheduled on Yom Kippur 126 127 Dudi Sela Israel s 1 player quit his quarterfinal match in the third set of the 2017 Shenzhen Open so he could begin observing Yom Kippur by the time the sun set forfeiting a possible 34 000 in prize money and 90 rankings points 128 129 Professional wrestler Bill Goldberg has a policy of not performing on Yom Kippur 130 131 Recognition by the United Nations editSince 2016 the United Nations has officially recognized Yom Kippur stating that from then on no official meetings would take place on the day 132 In addition the United Nations stated that beginning in 2016 they would have nine official holidays and seven floating holidays of which each employee would be able to choose one 132 It stated that the floating holidays will be Yom Kippur Day of Vesak Diwali Gurpurab Orthodox Christmas Orthodox Good Friday and Presidents Day 132 This was the first time the United Nations officially recognized any Jewish holiday 132 See also editAshura Break fastReferences edit Wells John C 2008 Longman Pronunciation Dictionary 3rd ed Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 Festival 2016 Seven Festivals Celebrated in the Israelite Samaritan Year Israelite Samaritan Information Institute 24 July 2018 Retrieved 13 September 2022 The Festival of Yom Kippur The day of Atonement The Samaritans Retrieved 13 September 2022 Afflicting the Soul A Day When Even Children Must Fast TheTorah com thetorah com Retrieved 13 September 2022 Numbers 29 7 a b c יום כיפור ויום הכיפורים Concordance כ פ ר ים Mishnah Yoma 1 1 1 3 1 4 etc Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 416 4 etc The High Holidays My Jewish Learning Retrieved 27 September 2020 a b Yom Kippur Theology and Themes My Jewish Learning Retrieved 27 September 2020 The 15th of Av Love and Rebirth Chabad org Retrieved 30 July 2023 Maimonides Mishneh Torah Laws of Teshuva 2 2 Maimonides Mishneh Torah Laws of Teshuva 2 7 Yoma 85b Machzor Yom Kippur Ashkenaz Musaf for Yom Kippur The Avodah Service Kitzur Shulchan Aruch 131 4 Exodus 32 15 19 Exodus 34 1 4 34 28 29 Seder Olam Rabbah 6 The 120 Day Version Of The Human Story chabad org Retrieved 8 June 2021 Yaakov Medan The First Yom Kippur Yoshi Fargeon מה בין י ג מידות לעשרת הדברות E g Numbers 14 17 18 Micah 7 18 20 Psalms 86 15 16 a b The Affliction Being an Angel for a Day a b Becoming Angels on Yom Kippur Leviticus 16 2 16 12 13 Leviticus 16 14 16 Atoning Before God אחרי מות קדושים לפני ה תטהרו Leviticus 16 2 a b Yoel Bin Nun היום השמיני ויום הכיפורים Megadim 8 9 34 1989 הקטורת נדב ואביהוא ויום הכיפורים Bahya ben Asher Kad Hakemach p 122b a b Taanit 4 8 a b Leviticus 16 30 Malbim HaTorah VeHaMitzvah commentary on Vayikra 11 43 Vayikra 5 2 3 David Tzvi Hoffman introduction to Leviticus 11 R David Zvi Hoffmann Leviticus 11 1 his term for moral impurity is טומאת הקדושות Leviticus 16 16 see Shadal Leviticus 16 16 Netziv Leviticus 16 30 Meir Lichtenstein אשריכם ישראל לפני מי אתם מיטהרין Mishnah Yoma 8 9 Leviticus 16 4 16 24 Mishnah Yoma 3 3 Peninei Halakha 10 Erev Yom Kippur Customs Mishnah Yoma 4 2 תפקיד הלשון של זהורית Yoma 67a אנו מתרין להתפלל עם העבריינים Keritot 6b Yaakov Medan Be er Miriam Yom Hakippurim Cohen S M Eisen A M The Jew Within Self Family and Community in America p 169 Indiana University Press 2000 For completely uninvolved Jews the question of synagogue attendance rarely arises They are unlikely ever to consider the matter except at Rosh Hashanha and Yom Kippur or to attend a bar or bat mitzvah See also Samuel C Heilman Synagogue Life 1976 Yoma 85b a b Erev Yom Kippur The purpose of the day as seen through Talmudic anecdotes PDF PDF Retrieved 25 March 2011 a b c d David Brofsky The Laws and Practices of Erev Yom Kippur Pre Fast Feasting chabad org Retrieved 24 September 2023 צום יום הכיפורים עינוי נפש או כמלאכים OU Customs for Erev Yom Kippur Retrieved 21 September 2008 The Separation Meal chabad org Retrieved 24 September 2023 Leviticus 16 29 16 31 23 27 23 29 Psalms 35 13 Isaiah 58 3 58 10 see also Deuteronomy 8 3 etc Concordance צו ם Mishnah tractate Yoma 8 1 See Shulchan Aruch OC 618 and commentaries for the details of who is considered to fall into this category What is the procedure for one who must eat on Yom Kippur Peninei Halakha 05 Eating and Drinking Minimal Quantities Le shi urim מתי אפשר להזיז מועדים Saving a Life Pikuach Nefesh MyJewishLearning com Retrieved 24 September 2023 Eating on Yom Kippur Aish com Retrieved 24 September 2023 Brachot 17a Drashot Maharal for Shabbat Shuva a b c הכנת הגוף והנפש ליום כיפור Genesis 3 18 3 15 Why Rabbis wear sneakers on their holiest day Article by Avi Rabinowitz NYU homepages The Guide for the Perplexed 3 43 Abrams Judith Yom Kippur A Family Service Minneapolis KAR BEN 1990 Print Leviticus 16 29 16 31 23 27 23 30 a b Peninei Halacha Chapter 07 Laws of Yom Kippur Shulchan Aruch Orach Chaim 610 4 see Ramban Leviticus 16 4 which links the High Priest s white Yom Kippur garments to the angels white garments Ezekiel 9 3 Daniel 10 5 Bart Simcha Why is a kittel worn on Yom Kippur askmoses com Archived from the original on 7 June 2011 Retrieved 30 September 2009 Chayei Adam 144 19 Aruch Hashulchan 610 6 Yisroel Cotlar How Many Sets of Prayers On Yom Kippur Chabad Lubavitch Media Center Retrieved 27 September 2020 a b c Yom Kippur Prayers The Jewish Agency for Israel Retrieved 27 September 2020 Jewish Virtual Library Yom Kippur Retrieved 21 September 2008 Halacha L Maaseh Yom Kippur 3 September 2015 Retrieved 20 September 2015 a b Rabbi Daniel Kohn My Jewish Learning Prayer Services Retrieved 22 May 2017 תפילה זכה רשימה בהשפעת יום הכיפורים מחזור ר ה יוה כ סוכות דניאל גולדשמיד page 12 of 855 www hebrewbooks org Retrieved 30 September 2022 Peninei Halakha 18 Declaring Faith and Blowing the Shofar Green David B 26 September 2011 Lawrence A Hoffman and the message of Kol Nidre Haaretz Retrieved 14 September 2013 Translation of Philip Birnbaum from High Holiday Prayer Book Hebrew Publishing Company NY 1951 a b Daniel Goldschmidt Machzor leyamim noraim Taz Orach Chaim 413 4 The High Priest s Yom Kippur Temple Service Jewish Holidays 1 January 1970 Retrieved 30 September 2022 Maimonides Mishneh Torah Laws of Teshuva 1 1 Why We Need Good Sermons Now More Than Ever Archived from the original on 12 September 2018 Retrieved 12 September 2018 Rosh HaShanah and the Gregorian calendar Oztorah com Retrieved 12 September 2012 Leviticus 23 27 Leviticus 16 1 34 Leviticus 23 26 32 Numbers 29 7 11 Leviticus 25 9 Sefer Haagur Hilchot Yom Hakippurim 951 ותוקעין תקיעה אחת זכר ליובל Arnold Lustiger Michael Taubes Menachem Genack and Hershel Schachter Kasirer Edition Yom Kippur Machzor With Commentary Adapted from the Teachings of Rabbi Joseph B Soloveitchik New York K hal Publishing 2006 pp 588 589 summary 590 618 Sounds of The City Israel Insider 14 October 2005 Archived from the original on 17 February 2007 Nachshoni Kobi 13 September 2013 Poll 73 of Israelis fast on Yom Kippur Yedioth Ahronoth Archived from the original on 7 August 2020 Israel shuts down for Yom Kippur The Times of Israel Public Radio International The World Yom Kippur Kids and Bikes in Tel Aviv Theworld org Retrieved 7 March 2015 Solomvits Sandor Yom Kippur and Sandy Koufax JewishSports com Archived from the original on 18 October 2006 Retrieved 2 August 2010 a b Dreier Peter 13 November 2013 How Will Jewish Ballplayers Handle the Yom Kippur Quandry sic Huffingtonpost com Archived from the original on 21 September 2019 Retrieved 14 September 2013 Came Yom Kippur A Hank Greenberg Poem Baseball Almanac Archived from the original on 21 January 2018 Retrieved 20 July 2016 Merron Jeff 26 September 2001 Green Koufax and Greenberg same dilemma different decisions ESPN Archived from the original on 29 January 2019 Retrieved 25 March 2011 Brown M Stephen One on One with Kevin Youkilis JewishSports com Archived from the original on 5 May 2009 Retrieved 4 June 2009 Gammons Peter 29 September 2001 Apolitical blues ESPN Retrieved 18 March 2010 Where Are They Now Art Shamsky Baseball Savvy 14 September 2004 Retrieved 10 September 2010 a b Hirsch Deborah 27 December 2010 Gabe Carimi Star in shul and on the football field JTA Archived from the original on 16 December 2018 Retrieved 9 February 2011 Andrea Waxman 5 October 2007 Yom Kippur then football Carimi fasts and then tackles The Wisconsin Jewish Chronicle Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 9 February 2011 Madeline Miller 17 December 2010 The Biggest Thing in Jewish Sports UW Gridiron Great Gabe Carimi Hillel org Archived from the original on 14 May 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2011 Chris McCoskey 25 February 2011 Combine Leftovers Detroit News Archived from the original on 9 July 2011 Retrieved 2 March 2011 Ellenport Craig 24 February 2011 Why is this prospect different from other prospects NFL com Archived from the original on 30 September 2017 Retrieved 2 March 2011 Ivan Maisel 27 September 2004 Bernstein feasted on Penn State after fasting ESPN com Retrieved 7 October 2011 a b c Saval Malina 14 October 2011 Golf Israelis abroad Beck follows in Koufax s footsteps Haaretz Retrieved 17 September 2013 Soclof Adam 7 October 2011 The original Sandy Koufax of women s golf Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 17 September 2013 Gelfand and Grischuk winners in 4th round London Grand Prix ChessVibes Archived from the original on 26 September 2013 Retrieved 14 September 2013 JTA Israeli tennis players fined for refusing to play on Yom Kippur www timesofisrael com Retrieved 30 September 2022 Yom Kippur Day of Atonement Israeli Tennis Star Dudi Sela Quits Mid Match For Yom Kippur The Forward 1 October 2017 Archived from the original on 27 September 2020 Retrieved 27 September 2020 Vickers Craig 29 September 2017 Dudi Sela retires mid match in Shenzhen for Yom Kippur VAVEL Archived from the original on 27 September 2020 Retrieved 27 September 2020 Handler Judd The Hebrew Hulk San Diego Jewish Journal Archived from the original on 3 October 2009 Rick Reilly Wrestling with Their Son s Career Sports Illustrated Archived from the original on 3 September 2009 Retrieved 13 October 2020 a b c d Tal Trachtman Alroy 19 December 2015 U N recognizes Yom Kippur as official holiday CNN com External links edit nbsp Look up Yom Kippur in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Yom Kippur Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur Prayers for Sephardic Jews Archived 11 May 2021 at the Wayback Machine From Our Collections Marking the New Year Online exhibition from Yad Vashem on the celebration of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur before during and after the Holocaust Dates for Yom Kippur Yom Kippur Prayers sung by Chazzanim More information on Yom Kippur Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Yom Kippur amp oldid 1182394060, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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