T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
207.1 | Machar Hodesh | DECEAT::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Tue Oct 07 1986 14:30 | 11 |
| >>< Note 207.0 by ZEPPO::MAHLER "Michael" >
>> -< Time for a new topic. Haftorahs ! >-
>>
>>
>> What was YOUR Haftorah ?
>>
>> Mine was Machar Chodesh. The New Moon ?
Haftorah Machar Chodesh is said on the Shabbat the day before Rosh Chodesh.
/don feinberg
|
207.2 | In the beginning... | GRECO::FRYDMAN | | Tue Oct 07 1986 15:45 | 6 |
| Mine was Bereshith. I have a twin brother and we split it.
He did the Ashkenizie one and I did the Sphardie. All our parents'
friends thought it was cute (:^}
Michael, With Machar Chodesh, its possible to do it a number
of times during the year. Start practicing!
|
207.3 | | GRAMPS::LISS | Fred - ESD&P Shrewsbury MA | Tue Oct 07 1986 16:53 | 4 |
| I stumbled through Lech L'cha.
Fred
|
207.4 | | WFOVX3::KLEINBERGER | Gale Kleinberger | Wed Oct 08 1986 14:10 | 3 |
| What is a Haftorah?
Gale
|
207.5 | what's a haftorah, and what mine was | ULTRA::OFSEVIT | David Ofsevit | Wed Oct 08 1986 16:07 | 28 |
| re .4
A haftorah is an excerpt (at least 10 verses, but sometimes
much longer; the afternoon service on Yom Kippur uses the entire
book of Jonah) from Nevi'im (Prophets) that is read after the weekly
Torah parsha (section). The haftorah is related in some way to
the parsha, so that it serves as an augmentation or explanation
of the parsha.
For instance, the parsha for my bar mitzvah was Tazria, which
mostly defines the laws concerning leprosy. (You can imagine how
little I understood that at age 13.) The haftorah is an excerpt
from Kings, where Elisha cures a Syrian king (Na'aman) -- or maybe
he's just a general, I forget which -- of leprosy by washing in the
waters of the Jordan. The link between the parsha and the haftorah,
obviously, is the disease, but the lesson of the haftorah comes when
Na'aman wonders why he must go to the little insignificant Jordan River
when there are much larger and more impressive rivers in his own
kingdom. The lesson is that actions based on faith, as this clearly
is, have nothing to do with outward appearances. Another lesson is
that leprosy does not respect rank or power, and actions to remove
it do not depend on rank or power either.
As I said somewhere else, under the discussion of the calendar,
Tazria does not often occur by itself, so this haftorah is read
only once every few years.
David
|
207.6 | Emore | FULTON::GOLD | Jack E. Gold, MRO3 | Thu Oct 09 1986 15:26 | 1 |
| My Haftorah was Emore.
|
207.7 | Mine was Vayyetze | CAD::LEVITIN | Sam Levitin | Thu Oct 09 1986 23:26 | 0 |
207.8 | Chayye Sarah | RICKS::KRAVITZ | Terrapin | Sat Oct 11 1986 21:00 | 6 |
| My parasha (sp?) is Chayye Sarah -- The Death of Sarah,
my haftorah is from Samuel concerning the death of King David.
It looks like we have a lot of Bereshit (Genesis) fans here.
Dave
|
207.9 | Really fun stuff to learn before you turn 13 | KACIE::SANDER | Warren Sander | Thu Oct 16 1986 17:38 | 16 |
| I had Mestzorah(sp) as a haftorah. It also deals leprosy. It was
42 lines long and was quite a chore learning. The basic story is
that there are 2 lepers sitting at the edge of a city that is under
seige. They say to each other 'what the heck we can starve here
or go into the enemies camp and try to steal some food and if they
kill us so what, nobody cares' so they go to the camp but during
the night the Lord had sent thuderous sounds and scared the attackers
off. When the Lepers get there they find lots of food et al and
eat and then discuss whether they should tell the folks at the city
about it. They do but are not believed. The head of the city after
getting balled out by the local prophet sends a small party out
to see what is going on. They come back and everyone eats (except
the lepers who are no better off than before as they are outcasts)..
|
207.10 | | ZEPPO::MAHLER | Michael | Thu Oct 16 1986 18:16 | 5 |
|
Heavy.
|
207.11 | | DECEAT::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Fri Oct 17 1986 13:00 | 9 |
| BTW, my haftorah was Beha'alotekha.
Except: my Bar-Mitzvah was on the first Shabbat Chanukah.
Beha'alotakha is said then, and also "in order" (i. e.,
Bemidbar, Naso, Beha'alotekha, ...
So unlike a number of other haftoraot, it's always said twice a year.
/don feinberg
|
207.12 | the shortest | IOSG::LEVY | | Mon Oct 20 1986 14:43 | 13 |
| Hi,
Mine was the shortest. It was from the double sedra (portion of
the law) Achrei Mot, Kedoshim. They can be found in Vayikra (leviticus).
I also did near enough the whole of Achrei Mot (which is said
on Yom Kippur in the afternoon). If you're interested in many of
the laws concerning morality this is where they can be found.
It would be interesting to find out why this particular sub-set
were picked out by the Rabbis to be said on Yom Kippor.
Malcolm
|
207.13 | Future barmitzva dates | SWATT::POLIKOFF | I realy should be working. | Tue Oct 21 1986 11:54 | 14 |
| My son was born on July 27, 1977. What will his Haftorah be
and on what day will he be a barmitzva.
I wonder if someone who knows how to calculate such things,
could enter here in the notes file a list of birthdays, barmitzva
days and Haftorahs for the next year. For instance the list would
have those Barmitzvas for 1987-1988 and would be updated each month
with those gone by removed.
BTW I am trying to use the hebrew_calendar.exe program that
was given somewhere in this notes file but I am entering the date
in the wrong format. What is the correct format and why is it not
in the DEC format? Could someone change hebrew_calendar.c so it
will accept dd-mmm-yyyy?
|
207.14 | | DECEAT::FEINBERG | Don Feinberg | Tue Oct 21 1986 13:32 | 26 |
| >>>< Note 207.13 by SWATT::POLIKOFF "I realy should be working." >
>>> -< Future barmitzva dates >-
>>>
>>> My son was born on July 27, 1977. What will his Haftorah be
>>> and on what day will he be a barmitzva.
You son's Hebrew birthday is Av 12, 5737.
His Bar-Mitzvah will be Av 12, 5750 (i. e., in July or
August 1990)
Now, I don't have a Hebrew calendar here, but your son's birthday is
3 days after Tishah B'Av!
Assuming you chose to be as close as possible, you would
hold the Barmitzvah the next Monday, Thusday, or Shabbos (whichever
comes first) after Tishah B'Av.
Parsha would probably be V'etchanan. The Haftorah is
_always_ Isa. 40:1 to 26 (the first "Haftorah of consolation") on the
Shabbos after Tishah B'Av.
Hope this helps.
/don feinberg
|
207.15 | | SEARS::WOLF | | Tue Oct 21 1986 13:43 | 2 |
| I believe mine was Bo (sp). I did the last portion of the Torah
plus the haftorah reading
|
207.16 | ZACHOR | CANDY::KARLSBERG | | Mon Oct 27 1986 12:41 | 2 |
| Mine was Zachor, the Shabbat prior to Purim. I believe it's one
of the longest, just my luck.
|