DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 1.35 MB)
The Friday Night Prayer Service According to the Custom of Halab

The custom in Aram Soba (Aleppo, Syria) – which is still observed by the Syrian Jewish community today – is to begin the Friday night prayer service with the chapter of Tehillim "Mizmor Le’David Havu L’Hashem Beneh Elim," and then to proceed directly to Lecha Dodi, without reciting the Ana Be’cho’ah prayer. Lecha Dodi is followed by Mizmor Shir Le’Yom Ha’Shabbat and Hashem Malach, after which we proceed directly to Kol Yisrael and Bameh Madlikin; we do not recite Kaddish after Hashem Malach at this point in the service. After Bameh Madlikin, we recite the paragraph of "Rabbi Hananya Ben Akashya," and not "Amar Rabbi Elazar Amar Rabbi Hanina." We then recite Kaddish Al Yisrael, followed by another recitation of Mizmor Shir and Hasham Malach, which is recited this time while seated. We remain seated during the Kaddish following "Hashem Malach," but the custom is then to stand for "Barechu" after the Kaddish, when we receive the extra Neshama (soul) of Shabbat.

The Lecha Dodi hymn was composed by the great Kabbalist Rabbi Shlomo Alkabetz, and he embedded his name in the first letters of the stanzas: "Shamor Ve’zachor" (Shin), "Likrat Shabbat" ("Lamed"), "Mikdash Melech" (Mem), "Hit’oreri Hit’oreri" (Heh). Rabbi Shlomo Alkabetz was a Levi, and he actually composed an additional four stanzas whose first letters spell "Halevi": "Hitna’ari," "Lo Teboshi," "Ve’hayu Li’mshisa," "Yamin U’smol." However, the custom in Syria was to omit these four stanzas, and this is the custom we follow, as well. The reason for this practice has to do with the Messianist movement of Shabtai Tzvi, who claimed that he was the Mashiah and attracted many followers throughout the Jewish world who believed that he was the Messiah sent to redeem the Jewish people. Unfortunately, the Sabbatean movement made inroads in Syria, where many Jews were misled into accepting Shabtai Tzvi’s messiahship. In response to this episode, the Hachamim decided to minimize the references to Mashiah in the prayer service, in an effort to draw people’s attention away from the concept of the Messiah, a concept that was corrupted by Shabtai Tzvi and his followers. It was therefore decided to omit the four "Halevi" stanzas of Lecha Dodi, which contain several clear references to Mashiah, such as "Al Yad Ben Yishai Bet Ha’lahmi" ("through the son of Yishai, from Bet Lehem"), "Ve’nibneta Ir Al Tilah" ("the city [of Jerusalem] shall be rebuilt on its foundations"), and "Al Yad Ish Ben Parsi" ("through the man who descends from the house of Peretz [Mashiah]"). For this reason, we omit these four stanzas, and recite only the stanzas that spell the name "Shlomo."

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Purim- Laws Regarding the Megila Scroll
Purim – Does One Add Al Ha'nisim in Birkat Ha'mazon if the Meal Ends After Dark?
Purim – Sending Mishlo'ah Manot to a Mourner
Purim – When is the Preferred Time for the Purim Meal?
Handling a Megila on Shabbat
Purim Katan: Haman's Decree and Kashrut
"Purim Katan" – the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Days of Adar Rishon
Purim- Is Megilat Esther Considered Muktze on Shabbat
Purim- Machatzit Ha'shekel
Purim- Reading Haman's 10 Son's Names In One Breath, and Is It Permissible TO Recite The Berachot on The Megila If Less Than A Minyan
Purim- When and How To Recite Havdala When Purim Falls Out On Motza’ei Shabbat
Purim- An Explanation and Understanding of the Page with 10 Names in Megilat Esther
Purim- Some Halachot When Taanit Esther Is Observed On Thursday Prior To Purim That Falls Out On Saturday Night
Is It Permissible for A Sofer To Use Silk Screening Process When Producing a Megilah or Sefer Torah
Purim- Certain Required Characteristics of A Kosher Megilah
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found