Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, begins Sunday at sundown. It’s the day when Jews prepare for the New Year by fasting, considering their actions over the past months and making efforts to acknowledge and amend the wrongs they’ve committed. Kind of like steps four through nine of the AA 12-step process.
The deal is that God opens the Book of Life on
Rosh Hashanah and inscribes your name in it, but doesn’t close-and-seal it
until the end of Yom Kippur. You have those ten Days of Awe to get your ducks
in a row.
I really like this concept: devoting serious
time to reflect, measure, acknowledge transgressions and resolving to do
better. We all need to be reminded of this, to go through the cycle at regular
intervals and to take steps to maybe not keep doing the same things over and
over again, expecting different results.
In honor of this holiday, today’s earworm is
Max Bruch’s “Kol Nidre”, arranged for cello and orchestra. Kol Nidre is from
the Ashkenazi tradition of Judaism; it’s sung in the synagogue just before
sundown on Yom Kippur. It’s a mixture of Aramaic and Hebrew, declaring null any
oaths or commitments made to God from one Yom Kippur to the next, and asking
for pardon for shortcomings in fulfilling those vows. The idea, as I understand
it, is to mitigate the sin of failing to fulfill a vow that might have been
made rashly. (It also annulled any vows associated with forced conversion to
Christianity, which was a thing for a long time.)
Cellist Mischa Maisky performs with and
conducts the Verbier Festival Chamber Orchestra in this recording.
May your name be sealed in the Book of Life.