Difference between revisions of "Yom Kippur"

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Just prior to the beginning of services on the eve of Yom Kippur, the congregation recites [[Kol Nidre]], or "all vows".  This [[Aramaic]] prayer is an appeal to God to forgive vows unfulfilled that do not affect any other person.  Vows affected include only those made to oneself, or between oneself and God.  [[Anti-semites]] have tried to use the prayer to malign Jews as untrustworthy.
 
Just prior to the beginning of services on the eve of Yom Kippur, the congregation recites [[Kol Nidre]], or "all vows".  This [[Aramaic]] prayer is an appeal to God to forgive vows unfulfilled that do not affect any other person.  Vows affected include only those made to oneself, or between oneself and God.  [[Anti-semites]] have tried to use the prayer to malign Jews as untrustworthy.
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== See also ==
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*[[Yom Kippur War]]
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*[[Israel]]
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[[Category:Judaism]]
 
[[Category:Judaism]]

Revision as of 23:03, November 14, 2007

Jews Praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur (1878), by Maurycy Gottlieb, depicts Ashkenazi Jews of late 19th-century Eastern Europe.

Yom Kippur is the most solemn holy day in Judaism. It is a day of atonement (prayer, repentance and fasting) observed in some way by nearly all Jewish people. Observant Jews refrain completely from all food and drink on Yom Kippur. Most of the day is spent in the synagogue.

"Before the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem, there was an elaborate ceremony of confession and repentance led by the high priest and including the sacrifice of a goat, the scapegoat." (Leviticus 16.)

Just prior to the beginning of services on the eve of Yom Kippur, the congregation recites Kol Nidre, or "all vows". This Aramaic prayer is an appeal to God to forgive vows unfulfilled that do not affect any other person. Vows affected include only those made to oneself, or between oneself and God. Anti-semites have tried to use the prayer to malign Jews as untrustworthy.

See also