DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Halacha is In Memory of
 Sara Bat Esther veYehuda HaKohen Z"L
"Sweet Grandmother, may your neshama have an Aliyah on the 2nd anniversary of your passing. You are very missed by all."

Dedicated By
S. Kahen

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
      
(File size: 818 KB)
The Controversy Surrounding the Recitation of the “Yag Middot” on Yom Tob

Most of the Mahzorim used among Sepharadim instruct reciting the "Yag Middot" – the list of God’s thirteen "attributes of mercy" ("Hashem Hashem Kel Rahum Ve’hanun…") – at the time when the Torah scroll is removed from the ark on Yom Tob. In truth, the propriety of this practice is subject to considerable controversy. The proponents of reciting the "Yag Middot" on Yom Tob base this practice on a comment of the Arizal (Rav Yishak Luria of Safed, 1534-1572) that one should recite the thirteen attributes on Yom Tob when the Sefer Torah is removed from the ark. This custom is approvingly recorded by the Hid"a (Rav Haim Yosef David Azulai, 1724-1806), in his Birkeh Yosef (Hilchot Pesah), and is also documented by Rav Yaakob Haim Sofer (Baghdad-Israel, 1870-1939), in his Kaf Ha’haim (133:11).

Furthermore, Rav Azriel Mansour wrote a lengthy essay on the subject in his introduction to the work Yimsa Haim, supporting this practice. He notes that this was the custom followed by the late Hacham Ezra Attiah, former Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Porat Yosef in Jerusalem, and this is still the practice observed in the Yeshiva under its current Rosh Yeshiva, Rabbi Shalom Kohen. And, this was the custom of Rabbi Shalom Kohen’s father, the noted Kabbalist Rabbi Efrayim Kohen. Hacham Ben Sion Abba Shaul (1923-1998), also of Yeshivat Porat Yosef, likewise followed this practice.

By contrast, Hacham Yaakob Hillel (contemporary) wrote a responsum demonstrating that it is more proper according to Kabbalistic teaching – and even according to the Arizal – not to say the "Yag Middot" on Yom Tob. And Hacham Ovadia Yosef, in his work Yabia Omer (vol. 9), writes that his personal practice is not to recite the "Yag Middot" on Yom Tob, and that this is the custom followed in his Bet Midrash.

It thus emerges that both customs – to recite the "Yag Middot," and not to recite the "Yag Middot" – are documented in Halachic sources, and both are valid. Therefore, each community should follow its tradition. It is clear that the custom of Halab (Aleppo, Syria), as reflected in our Siddurim, was to recite the "Yag Middot" on Yom Tob, and we should therefore observe this practice as part of our tradition received from previous generations.

Summary: There is some controversy surrounding the custom observed by many to recite the "thirteen attributes of mercy" ("Hashem Hashem Kel Rahum Ve’hanun…") at the time the Torah is removed from the ark on Yom Tob. Each community should follow its tradition in this regard, and the prevalent practice among Syrian Jews is to include this recitation in our Yom Tob prayer service.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Decorating Homes and Synagogues With Flowers on Shabuot
Shabuot – The Special Quality of the Month of Sivan; A Reason for Eating Dairy Products on Shabuot
Giving Charity on Erev Shavuot
Shabuot – Netilat Yadayim, Birkat Ha’Torah and the Bedtime Shema
Shabuot – Shaharit and Musaf on Shabuot Morning
Giving Charity Before Shabuot; Learning on Shabuot Night
Shabuot – Reasons for the Custom to Decorate the Synagogue with Flowers
Shabuot-Preparing When Shavuot Falls Out On Mosaeh Shabbat
Shabuot-Is it Permissible to Donate Blood or Have Elective Surgery on Ereb Shabuot?
Shavuot- Should One Repeat Beracha Rishona for Beverages Throughout The Night While Studying Shavuot Night
Shabuot – The Two Different Versions of the Te’amim for the Ten Commandments
Shabuot – The Halachot of Berachot Over Food and Drinks During Shabuot Night; Reciting Birkat Ha’Torah on Shabuot Morning
If an Israeli Resident is Spending Yom Tob in the Diaspora
Shabuot – The Custom to Remain Awake Throughout the Night
Pesah – How Soon After Pesah May One Eat the Hametz Which He Had Sold?
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found