Overview: Rosh
Hashanah In The Community
Rosh Hashanah is referred to in the Bible as Yom Teruah
(the day of sounding of the Shofar) or Yom Hazikaron (the day of
remembering), but it is its later, rabbinic interpretation as the New Year that
has become the best known to us. Rosh Hashanah also is traditionally associated
with the creation of the world. This emphasis on new beginnings lends itself
easily to the prevailing High Holiday themes of repentance and renewal.
In the synagogue on Rosh Hashanah, we see a number of themes
repeated in both the liturgy and Torah service. While the structure of the
services is quite similar to daily liturgy, there are numerous additions that
add powerful reminders that this is a time for us to take stock of ourselves
before we enter the coming year. Liturgical poems that emphasize God's kingship
and judiciousness put us in the proper mood for the day. These are complemented
by some additions to the standard prayers as well. For example, in the silent Amidah,
one line is added from Rosh Hashanah through Yom Kippur beginning with "zokhrenu
l'hayyim…" which asks God to remember us for life and to inscribe us
in the book of Life, while another line, "mi khamokha av harahamim…"
asks God to remember us with mercy.
In the additional service, Musaf, there are three
extra blessings in the Amida, known as malkhuyot (kingship), zikhronot
(remembrances), and shofarot (blasts of the ram's horn). Each of these
blessings is comprised of ten biblical verses on that theme, and as a unit they
bring forth the following three ideas: God is King, God punishes the wicked and
rewards the just, and God has been revealed in the past and will be revealed in
the future in the end of days. In liberal movements, such as Reform Judaism,
where Musaf is generally not recited, these verses are added to the morning, or
Shaharit, prayer.
The Torah readings for the two days of Rosh Hashanah
highlight themes of birth, creation, and mercy through the story of the birth
of Isaac, and raise issues of fear, judgment, and testing of faith in the
telling of Isaac's would-be sacrifice. The rabbis connect the ram, which
thankfully substitutes for Isaac's sacrifice, to the Shofar (made of a ram's
horn) that is usually blown shortly after the Torah service and again during
the repetition of the Amidah in the Musaf.
It is these blasts of the shofar that often make the biggest
impression on this holiday. The three different sounds are the tekiah (a
single, long blast), the shevarim (three shorter blasts which together
should be about the same length as one tekiah), and the teruah
(nine staccato blasts, also about the same length of time as the tekiah
and shevarim). There are different opinions about what can be evoked in
this series of blasts. Some view it simply as an alarm that awakens us to our
need to do teshuvah (repentance) and others see the broken teruah,
for example, as the sound of wailing, perhaps in fear of judgment. Whatever the
interpretation, the poignant cries of the Shofar can be quite a moving
juxtaposition to the otherwise wordy High Holiday liturgy.
There is another liturgical addition to Rosh Hashanah that
is quite unlike any other service in Judaism--tashlikh (literally,
throwing away). On the afternoon of the first day of Rosh Hashanah (unless it
is also Shabbat, in which case it is done the second day of the festival), many
people walk to a flowing body of water to symbolically cast away their sins in
the form of bread crumbs thrown upon the waters. A verse from the prophet Micah
7:19 is cited as the origin for this custom. It states, "You will cast
away your sins into the depths of the sea." While this was once
controversial among those who believed it would trivialize the process of
repentance, it has remained a very popular custom to this day.