Attah Hareita: It Has Been Shown To
You
A prayer recited
on Simchat Torah
By Cantor Macy Nulman
This article is written from a traditional perspective.
This article is excerpted from The Encyclopedia of Jewish Prayer. Reprinted
with the permission of the publisher. Copyright 1996 Jason Aronson, Inc.
Attah Hareita is a
prayer named after its introductory verse (Deuteronomy 4:35), comprising a
collection of other biblical verses, each in praise of God and the Torah. These
verses are recited on the Sabbath and festivals by some Sephardic rites and by
congregations following Hasidic ritual, to mark the beginning of the ceremony
of taking the Torah from the ark, and by the Ashkenazic rite on Simchat
Torah to introduce the Hakafot [Torah procession] ceremony.
The reason the six
verses Attah Hareita, Ayn Kamokha, Malkhutekha, Hashem Melekh, Hashem Oz, and Haytivah Virtzonekha are said
before opening the ark is because of the verse, "And when they that bore
the ark of the Lord had gone six paces, he [David] sacrificed an ox and a
fatling."
The biblical
commentator Rashicomments on the verse Attah Hareita Lada'at ("Unto thee [Israel] it was shown to know") that "when
the Holy One Blessed be He gave the Torah, He opened for them the seven
heavens, and just as He split the upper, so He split the lower [regions], and
they saw that He is one; therefore it is stated Attah Hareita Lada'at."The opening verse is therefore appropriate for Shabbat,
considering that the Torah was given on Shabbat [according to traditional
belief].
According to tradition,
it became customary to recite Attah Hareitain a standing position at the evening service of Shemini Atzeret (if
the ceremony of Hakafot takes place) and also at the evening and morning
services of Simchat Torah. Each verse is read by the Shaliach Tzibbur
[service leader]and repeated by the congregation. At the verse Ki
mitziyon, [For our of Zion] all the Torahs are removed from the ark. Most
congregations, however, remove the scrolls after all the verses have been
recited. The custom also exists that each verse is read by a different member
of the congregation and then repeated by the congregation. The ark is opened at
Vayehi bineso'a [when the ark was carried].
Generally the first
verse, Attah Hareita, is recited by the
rabbi of the congregation and the verse Kohanekha yilbeshu tzedek ["your
priests will be clothed in righteousness"]by a Kohen.
Cantor Macy Nulman is co-founder of the Cantorial Council
of America and former director of the Philip and Sarah Belz School of Jewish
Music at Yeshiva University. He is the
author of numerous books and articles an Jewish liturgy and music education.