
A small shofar
A
shofar ( ) is a
horn, traditionally that of a ram, used for
Jewish religious purposes. Shofar-blowing is
incorporated in
synagogue services on
Rosh Hashanah and
Yom Kippur.
In the Bible and rabbinic literature

Shofar (by Alphonse Lévy)
The
shofar is mentioned frequently in the
Hebrew Bible, the
Talmud
and
rabbinic literature. The
blast of a shofar emanating from the thick cloud on
Mount Sinai made the
Israelites tremble in awe (Exodus 19, 20).
The shofar was used in to announce holidays (Ps. lxxxi. 4), and the
Jubilee year (Lev. 25. 9). The first day of the seventh month
(
Tishri) is termed "a memorial of blowing"
(Lev. 23. 24), or "a day of blowing" (Num. xxix. 1), the shofar. It
was also employed in processions (II Sam. 6. 15; I Chron. 15. 28),
as a musical accompaniment (Ps. 98. 6; comp. ib. xlvii. 5) and to
signify the start of a war (Josh. 6. 4; Judges 3. 27; 7. 16, 20; I
Sam. 8. 3). Note that the 'trumpets' described in Numbers 10 are a
different instrument, described by the Hebrew word 'trumpet' not
the word for shofar.
The
Torah describes the first day of the
seventh month (1st of Tishri = Rosh ha-Shanah) as a
zikron
teruah (memorial of blowing; Lev. xxiii) and as a
yom
teru'ah (day of blowing; Num. 29). This was interpreted by the
Jewish sages as referring to the sounding the shofar.
In the
Temple in
Jerusalem
, the shofar was sometimes used together with the
trumpet. On New-Year's Day the
principal ceremony was conducted with the shofar, which instrument
was placed in the center with a trumpet on either side; it was the
horn of a
wild goat and straight in shape,
being ornamented with gold at the
mouthpiece. On fast-days the principal
ceremony was conducted with the trumpets in the center and with a
shofar on either side. On those occasions the shofarot were
rams' horns curved in shape and
ornamented with silver at the mouthpieces. On Yom Kippur of the
jubilee year the ceremony was
performed with the shofar as on New-Year's Day. Rosh Hoshana is the
Jewish New Year. A ceremonial horn, called a “shofar” is blown,
reminding Jews that God is king. A feast with symbolic food is
eaten on Rosh Hashana, and the next ten days are spent in
repentance. Rosh Hashana ends on Yom Kippur. Yom Kippur is a day of
judgment, during which prayers are made asking for
forgiveness.
The shofar
was blown in the times of Joshua to help him
capture Jericho
. As
they surrounded the walls, the shofar was blown and the Jews were
able to capture the city. The shofar was commonly taken out to war
so the troops would know when a battle would begin. The person who
would blow the shofar would call out to the troops from atop a
hill. All of the troops were able to hear the call of the shofar
from their position because of its distinct sound.
Post-Biblical times
In
post-Biblical times, the shofar was
enhanced in its religious use because of the ban on playing musical
instruments as a sign of mourning for the destruction of the
temple. (It is noted that a full orchestra played in the temple,
including, perhaps, a primitive organ.) The shofar continues to
announce the New Year and the new moon, to introduce
Shabbat, to carry out the commandment to sound it on
Rosh Hashanah, and to mark the end of the day of fasting on Yom
Kippur once the services have completed in the evening. The secular
uses have been discarded (although the shofar was sounded to
commemorate the reunification of Jerusalem in 1967) (Judith Kaplan
Eisendrath, Heritage of Music, New York: UAHC, 1972, pp.
44-45).
The shofar is primarily associated with Rosh ha-Shanah. Indeed,
Rosh Hashanah is called "Yom T’ruah" (the day of the shofar blast).
In the
Mishnah (book of early rabbinic laws
derived from the
Torah), a discussion centers
on the centrality of the shofar in the time before the destruction
of the second temple (70 AD). Indeed, the shofar was the center of
the ceremony, with two silver trumpets playing a lesser role. On
other solemn holidays, fasts, and new moon celebrations, two silver
trumpets were featured, with one shofar playing a lesser role. The
shofar is also associated with the
jubilee
year in which, every fifty years, Jewish law provided for the
release of all slaves, land, and debts. The sound of the shofar on
Rosh ha-Shanah announced the jubilee year, and the sound of the
shofar on Yom Kippur proclaimed the actual release of financial
encumbrances.
The
halakha (Jewish law) rules that the
shofar may not be sounded on Shabbat due to the potential that the
ba’al tekiyah (shofar sounder) may inadvertently carry it which is
in a class of forbidden Shabbat work (RH 29b) the historical
explanation is that in ancient Israel, the shofar was sounded on
Shabbat in the temple located in Jerusalem. After the temple’s
destruction, the sounding of the shofar on Shabbat was restricted
to the place where the great
Sanhedrin
(Jewish legislature and court from 400 BCE to 100 C.E.) was
located. However, when the Sanhedrin ceased to exist, the sounding
of the shofar on Shabbat was discontinued (Kieval, The High Holy
Days, p. 114).
The shofar says, "Wake up from your (moral) sleep. You are asleep.
Get up from your slumber. You are in a deep sleep. Search for your
behavior. Become the best person you can. Remember God, the One Who
created you." Mishneh Torah, Laws of Repentance 3:4.
See Arthur l. Finkle,
Shofar Sounders Reference Manual, LA: Torah
Aura, 1993
Mitzvah: Hearing the Sounds
The Sages indicated that the mitzvah was to hear the sounds of the
shofar. They go so far as to establish whether a person hears the
actual sound or just the echo at the outside of the pit or cave;
the bottom; and midway. The Shulchan Aruch sums up that if the
hearer hears the reverberation, the mitzvah is not valid. However,
if the hearer perceives the direct sounds, he fulfils the mitzvah.
See Mishnah Berurah 587:1-3. You can extrapolate this ruling to
hearing the shofar on the radio, the Internet, etc. as being
invalid.
In addition, if one hears the blast but with no intention of
fulfilling the mitzvah, then there is no mitzvah. However, there is
a minority decision on this point.
If one blows with the intention that all who hear will perform the
mitzvah, the mitzvah is valid. If someone passes by and does intend
to hear the Shofar, he can perform the mitzvah because the
community blower blows for everybody. If he stands still, it is
presumed he intends to hear. MB 590:9
Qualifications for Sounding the Shofar
The Shulchan Aruch begins its exploration of fitness by citing
excluding classes of people:
1.Whoever is not obligated to fulfill the mitzvah of sounding the
shofar should not substitute his efforts for another whose duty it
is to perform a mitzvah. For example, the Baal Tekiah sounds a
shofar for a synagogue in Chelm cannot perform he same mitzvah when
another in the town of Lodz can fulfill the mitzvah.2.The mitzvah
is not valid for a deaf mute (cannot hear), moron (lacks the
capacity) and a child (lacks the adult status)3.Women are exempt
because the mitzvah is time bound4.A hermaphrodite may make his
shofar sounding serve for other hermaphrodites5.Women should not be
Baal Tekia’s because they would be substituting her efforts for
another whose duty it is to perform a mitzvah. However, if a female
Baal Tekiya has already intoned the shofar for other women, it is
valid. However, women should not make a blessing.6.Only a freeman
(not even a slave who will become free in the next month) can be a
Baal Tekiya. MB 590:1-5Being a Baal Tekiya (Shofar Sounder) is an
honor.
"The one who blows the shofar on Rosh Hashanah . . . should
likewise be learned in the Torah and shall be God-fearing; the best
man available. Nevertheless, every Jew is eligible for any sacred
office, providing he is acceptable to the congregation. If,
however, he sees that his choice will cause disruption, he should
withdraw his candidacy, even if the improper person will be chosen”
See Shulchan Aruch 3:72.
Moreover, the Baal Tekiya shall abstain from anything that may
cause ritual contamination for three days prior to Rosh Hashanah.
See Shulchan Aruch 3:73
A Baal Tekiya can sound the shofar for shut-ins and home-bound
women who have had baby.
If a blind blower was dismissed, but the community did not find a
blower as proficient, he should be appointed as community blower.
The touchstone is proficiency not disability.
Choice of animal
According to the Talmud, a shofar may be made from the horn of any
animal except that ofa cow or calf (Rosh Hashanah, 26a), although a
ram is preferable. (Mishnah Berurah 586:1). There is no requirement
for ritual slaughter (shechitah), and theoretically, the horn can
come from a non-kosher animal based on the principle of
mutar
beficha (the material is acceptable for putting in the mouth).
Moreover, since the
mitzvah is hearing the
shofar, not eating it, using the horn of a
neveylah or a
non-kosher animal falls into the category of
tashmishe
mitzvah (MB 586:16 (8) Since unkosher substances unfit for
human consumption are not food (Avot 67b), it is permissible to use
animal hair, anointing oil and incense produced from animal
secretions and dyes of crimson, which are made from mollusks
(Megillah 26b).
To cap this issue, a recent article appeared in the Journal of
Halacha, Number LIII, and Contemporary Society, Rabbi Ari Z,
Zivotofsky, Yemenite Shofar: Ideal for the Mitzvah?, Cleveland, OH:
Rabbi Jacob Joseph SchoolR. Ari Z, Zivotofsky, 2007
The Elef Hamagan (586:5) delineates the order of preference: 1)
curved ram; 2) curved other sheep; 3) curved other animal; 4)
straight - ram or otherwise; 5) non-kosher animal; 6) cow. The
first four categories are used with a bracha, the fifth without a
bracha, and the last, not at all.
Shape and material
A shofar may be created from the horn of any
kosher male animal from the
Bovidae family except for
cattle, which is specifically excluded. In practice
two species are generally used: the
Ashkenazi and
Sefardi
shofar is made from the horn of a domestic ram (see
sheep), while a Yemeni shofar is made from the horn of
a
kudu.
Bovidae horns are made of
keratin (the same
material as human toenails and fingernails). An antler, on the
other hand, is not a horn but solid bone. Antlers cannot be used as
a shofar because they cannot be hollowed out.
A crack or hole in the shofar affecting the sound renders it unfit
for ceremonial use. A shofar may not be painted in colors, but it
may be carved with artistic designs (
Shulkhan Arukh,
Orach
Chayim, 586, 17). Shofars (especially the Sephardi shofars) are
often plated with silver across part of their length for display
purposes, although this invalidates them for use in religious
practices. According to
Jewish law women and
minors are exempt from the commandment of hearing the shofar blown
(as is the case with any positive, time-bound commandment), but
they are encouraged to attend the ceremony.
The horn is flattened and shaped by the application of heat, which
softens it. A hole is made from the tip of the horn to the natural
hollow inside. It is played much like a
European brass
instrument, with the player blowing through the hole, causing
the air column inside to vibrate.
Sephardi
shofars usually have a carved mouthpiece resembling that of a
European
trumpet or
French horn, but smaller. Ashkenazi
shofars do not.
Because the hollow of the shofar is irregular in shape, the
harmonics obtained when playing the
instrument can vary: rather than a pure perfect fifth,
intervals as narrow as a fourth, or as wide
as a sixth may be produced.
The sounds

A man demonstrates sounding a shofar
at a synagogue in Minnesota.
The
tekiah and
teruah sounds mentioned in the
Bible were respectively
bass and
treble.
The tekiah was a plain deep sound ending abruptly; the teruah, a
trill between two tekiahs. These three sounds,
constituting a bar of music, were rendered three times: first in
honor of
God's Kingship; next to recall the
near sacrifice of Isaac, in order
to cause the congregation to be remembered before
God; and a third time to comply with the precept
regarding the shofar.
Ten appropriate verses from the Bible are recited at each
repetition, which ends with a benediction. Over time doubts arose
as to the correct sound of the teruah. The
Talmud is uncertain whether it means a
moaning/groaning or a
staccato beat sound.
Shevarim was supposed to be composed of three connected
short sounds; the
teruah of nine very short notes divided
into three disconnected or broken sequences of three notes each.
The duration of the teruah is equal to that of the shevarim; and
the tekiah is half the length of either. This doubt as to the
nature of the real teruah, whether it was simply a moan, a staccato
or both, necessitated two near-repetitions to make sure of securing
the correct sound.
The sequence of the shofar blowing is thus
tekiah,
shevarim-teruah, tekiah; tekiah, shevarim, tekiah; tekiah,
teruah, and then a final blast of "
tekiah gadola"
which means "big tekiah," held as long as possible. This formula
makes thirty sounds for the series, with tekiah being one note,
shevarium three, and teruah nine. This series of thirty sounds is
repeated twice more, making ninety sounds in all. The trebling of
the series is based on the mention of teruah three times in
connection with the seventh month (Lev. xxiii, xxv; Num. xxix), and
also on the above-mentioned division of the service into malchiyot,
zichronot, and shofarot. In addition to these three repetitions, a
single formula of ten sounds is rendered at the close of the
service, making a total of 100 sounds. According to the Sephardic
tradition, a full 101 blasts are sounded, corresponding to the 100
cries of the mother of
Sisera, the captain of
Jabin's army who did not make it home after
being assassinated by the biblical
Yael (Judges
5:28). One cry is left to symbolize the legitimate love of a mother
mourning her son.Another popular kind of a Shofar is the Moroccan
Shofar. A Moroccan Shofar is known in its beauty and the ease of
using it when blowing the Shofar. A Moroccan Shofar is a flat
Shofar with no curves, beside the main curve. The Moroccans use it
because of two main reasons: The first reason is that years ago,
when the Morrocan Jews where not allowed to practice Judaism, it
was easy to hide it in their clothes because of its flat shape. The
second reason is that it has a special sound different from the
other Shofars, also thanks to its shape. A picture of a Moroccan
Shofar can be found at the following link
[14654] where you can see the flat shape of the
Moroccan Shofar.
The performer
The expert who blows (or "blasts" or "sounds") the shofar is termed
the
Tokea (lit. "Blaster") or
Ba'al Tekia (lit.
"Master of the Blast"). Every Jew is eligible for this sacred
office, providing he is acceptable to the congregation. If a
potential choice will cause dissension, he should withdraw his
candidacy, even if the improper person is chosen. See
Shulkhan Arukh 3:72; The
Ba'al Tekia
shall abstain from anything that may cause ritual contamination for
three days prior to Rosh ha-Shanah. See
Shulkhan Arukh 3:73.
Shofar in National Liberation
During the
Ottoman and the British
occupation of Jerusalem
, Jews were not allowed to sound the shofar at the
Western
Wall
. After the
Six Day
War, Rabbi
Shlomo Goren famously
approached the Wall and sounded the shofar.
An additional stanza
was added to Naomi Shemer's song
Yerushalayim Shel Zahav
(Jerusalem of Gold) in which she sings, "שופר קורא בהר הבית בעיר
העתיקה", "a shofar calls out from the Temple Mount
in The Old City
"
Use in modern times
Religious Usage
The shofar is used mainly on
Rosh
Hashanah and
Yom Kippur. It is blown
in
synagogues to mark the end of the fast
at Yom Kippur, and blown at four particular occasions in the
prayers on Rosh Hashanah. Because of its inherent ties to the Days
of Repentance and the inspiration that comes along with hearing its
piercing blasts, the shofar is also blown after morning services
for the entire month of
Elul, the last month of
the Jewish civil year and the sixth of the Jewish ecclesiastical
year. It is not blown on the last day of month, however, to mark
the difference between the voluntary blasts of the month and the
mandatory blasts of the holiday. Shofar blasts are also used during
penitential rituals such as
Yom Kippur
Katan and optional prayer services called during times of
communal distress. The exact modes of sounding can vary from
location to location.
Non-Religious Musical Usage
The shofar is sometimes used in Western
classical music.
Edward Elgar's
oratorio
The Apostles includes
the sound of a shofar blowing, although other instruments, such as
the
flugelhorn, are usually used
instead.
In pop
music, the shofar is used by the Israeli
Oriental metal band Salem in their adaptation of "Al
Taster" psalm. The late trumpeter
Lester Bowie played a shofar with the
Art Ensemble of Chicago. In
Joey Arkenstat's album
Bane,
the former bassist for
Phish is credited for
playing the shofar. In the musical "
Godspell", the first act opens with cast member
David Haskell blowing the shofar, in
preparation for singing "Prepare Ye the Way of the Lord." In his
performances, Israeli composer and singer
Shlomo Gronich uses the shofar to produce a
very wide range of notes.
See also
References
- http://www.divreinavon.com/pdf/Anticipation_Consummation.pdf
The Shofar: Impetus to Anticipation & Consummation
- Elef Hamagen, Rabbi Shemarya Hakreti, edited by Aharon Erand,
Jerusalem: Mekitzei Nirdamim, 2003
- JERUSALEM OF GOLD accessed 9 Dec. 2008
- The Abraham Fund Initiatives::Press Clips -
Crossing the Middle Eastern Tightrope
Arthur L. Finkle,
Easy Guide to Shofar Sounding, LA: Torah
Aura, 2003
- http://www.divreinavon.com/pdf/Anticipation_Consummation.pdf
The Shofar: Impetus to Anticipation & Consummation
- Elef Hamagen, Rabbi Shemarya Hakreti, edited by Aharon Erand,
Jerusalem: Mekitzei Nirdamim, 2003
- JERUSALEM OF GOLD accessed 9 Dec. 2008
- The Abraham Fund Initiatives::Press Clips -
Crossing the Middle Eastern Tightrope
[14655]A Moroccan Shofar
[14656]
Hearing Shofar: The Still Small Voice of the Ram's Horn by
Michael T. Chusid, a three volume compendium of shofar
information.
External links