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- Aleinu abstract "Aleinu (Hebrew: עָלֵינוּ, "it is our duty") or Aleinu leshabei'ach ("[it is] our duty to praise [God]"), meaning "it is upon us or it is our obligation or duty to praise God," is a Jewish prayer found in the siddur, the classical Jewish prayerbook. It is recited at the end of each of the three daily Jewish services. It is also recited following the New Moon blessing and after a circumcision is performed. It is second only to the Kaddish (counting all its forms) as the most frequently recited prayer in current synagogue liturgy.A folkloric tradition attributes this prayer to the biblical Joshua at the time of his conquest of Jericho. This might have been inspired by the fact that the first letters of the first four verses spell, in reverse, Hoshea, which was the childhood name of Joshua (Numbers 13:16). Another attribution is to the Men of the Great Assembly, during the period of the Second Temple. An early—that is, pre-Christian—origin of the prayer is evidenced by its explicit mention of bowing and kneeling—practices associated with the Temple, and its non-mention of exile or a desire to restore Israel or the Temple. On the other hand, it has been argued that the phrase: "lirot meherah be-tiferet uzechah" (to speedily see your tiferet and oz) is in fact a request for the speedy rebuilding of the Temple. The allusion is based on Psalms 78:61 and 96:6. If so, at least the second paragraph of Aleinu was written after the destruction in 70 CE (perhaps around the time of Rav).Its first appearance is the manuscript of the Rosh Hashana liturgy by the Talmudic sage Rav (Rabbi Abba Arikha, died 247), who lived in Babylonia (Persia). He included it in the Rosh Hashana mussaf service as a prologue to the Kingship portion of the Amidah. For that reason some attribute to Rav the authorship, or at least the revising, of Aleinu.In Blois, France, in 1171, it is alleged that a number of Jews—reportedly 34 men and 17 women—were burned at the stake for refusing to renounce their faith. They are said to have gone to their deaths bravely singing Aleinu to a "soul-stirring" melody, which astonished their executioners. Some have suggested that this act of martyrdom inspired the adoption of Aleinu into the daily liturgy. But Aleinu is already found at the end of the daily shacharit in Mahzor Vitry in the early 12th century, well before 1171.".
- Aleinu wikiPageExternalLink 166%20aleinu%20pt%201.mp3.
- Aleinu wikiPageExternalLink 167%20aleinu%20pt%202.mp3.
- Aleinu wikiPageID "142731".
- Aleinu wikiPageLength "26734".
- Aleinu wikiPageOutDegree "53".
- Aleinu wikiPageRevisionID "678505960".
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Abba_Arika.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Amidah.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Ashkenazi.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Ashkenazi_Jews.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Blois.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Hebrew_words_and_phrases_in_Jewish_prayers_and_blessings.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Maariv.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Mincha.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Shacharit.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Category:Siddur.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Christian_censorship.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Conservative_Judaism.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Gematria.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Hayyim_ben_Joseph_Vital.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Hebrew_language.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Isaac_Luria.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Isaiah.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Italian_Jews.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_prayer.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Jewish_services.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Jonathan_Sacks.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Kabbalah.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Kaddish.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Koren_Sacks_Siddur.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Koren_Siddur.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Jewish_prayers_and_blessings.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Masorti.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Mussaf.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Mustaarabi_Jews.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Posek.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Reconstructionist_Judaism.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Reform_Judaism.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Religious_censorship.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Reuven_Hammer.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Romanization_of_Hebrew.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Rosh_Hashana.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Rosh_Hashanah.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Sephardi.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Sephardi_Jews.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Siddur.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Siddurim.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Spanish_and_Portuguese_Jews.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Tikkun_olam.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Torah_Ark.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Torah_ark.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Yehoshua_Leib_Diskin.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLink Yom_Kippur.
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLinkText "Aleinu".
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLinkText "Aleynu".
- Aleinu wikiPageWikiLinkText "aleinu".
- Aleinu hasPhotoCollection Aleinu.
- Aleinu wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Aleinu wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Jewish_prayers.
- Aleinu wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Jews_and_Judaism.
- Aleinu wikiPageUsesTemplate Hebrew.
- Aleinu subject Category:Hebrew_words_and_phrases_in_Jewish_prayers_and_blessings.
- Aleinu subject Category:Maariv.
- Aleinu subject Category:Mincha.
- Aleinu subject Category:Shacharit.
- Aleinu subject Category:Siddur.
- Aleinu hypernym Prayer.
- Aleinu type Article.
- Aleinu type Book.
- Aleinu type Holiday.
- Aleinu type Article.
- Aleinu type Book.
- Aleinu type Service.
- Aleinu comment "Aleinu (Hebrew: עָלֵינוּ, "it is our duty") or Aleinu leshabei'ach ("[it is] our duty to praise [God]"), meaning "it is upon us or it is our obligation or duty to praise God," is a Jewish prayer found in the siddur, the classical Jewish prayerbook. It is recited at the end of each of the three daily Jewish services. It is also recited following the New Moon blessing and after a circumcision is performed.".
- Aleinu label "Aleinu".
- Aleinu sameAs Alenu.
- Aleinu sameAs Alenu.
- Aleinu sameAs Aleinu.
- Aleinu sameAs Alenou.
- Aleinu sameAs עלינו_לשבח.
- Aleinu sameAs Aleinu.
- Aleinu sameAs m.011_96.
- Aleinu sameAs Q2707232.
- Aleinu sameAs Q2707232.
- Aleinu sameAs עלינו_לשבח.
- Aleinu wasDerivedFrom Aleinu?oldid=678505960.
- Aleinu isPrimaryTopicOf Aleinu.