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- Kapparot - Wikipedia
Kapparot (Hebrew: כפרות, Ashkenazi transliteration: Kapporois, Kapores) is a customary atonement ritual practiced by some Orthodox Jews on the eve of Yom Kippur
- The Kaparot Ceremony - Chabad. org
Since late Talmudic times, it has been a widespread Jewish custom to perform kaparot in preparation for Yom Kippur Kaparot (also spelled kapparot or kaporos) literally means “atonements,” just as Yom Kippur means “the Day of Atonement ”
- Kapparot: The Yom Kippur Tradition of Chicken Twirling
What is kapparot? According to Professor of Classical Rabbinic Literature Reuven Kimelman, kapparot involves swinging a living chicken three times around your head while reciting a prayer Traditionally, men use roosters and women hens, though pregnant women use both in case they're having a boy
- Kapparot, Swinging a Chicken Over Ones Head - My Jewish Learning
Kaparot follows the pattern of the scapegoat, a ritual of riddance, but comes too close to superstition in indicating that one may substitute the death of an animal for one’s own life
- The Custom of Kapparot - Jewish Virtual Library
What is kapparot? Kapparot is a custom in which the sins of a person are symbolically transferred to a fowl The custom is practiced in certain Orthodox circles on the day before Yom Kippur (in some congregations, also on the day before Rosh Hashana or on Hoshana Raba
- Kapparot: Why Thousands of Chickens Will Die in Israel
As Jewish communities worldwide gear up for Yom Kippur—the holiest day in the Jewish calendar—thousands of chickens will die as part of a controversial atonement ritual The Kapparot is a
- Kapparot - The Kaparot Guide
Kaparot can be done any time during the Ten Days of Repentance (i e between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur), but the ideal time is on the day preceding Yom Kippur during the early pre-dawn hours, for a "thread of Divine kindness" prevails during those hours
- The Kaparot Ceremony - ChabadofBensonhurst. com
Since late Talmudic times, it has been a widespread Jewish custom to perform kaparot in preparation for Yom Kippur Kaparot (also spelled kapparot or kaporos) literally means “atonements,” just as Yom Kippur means “the Day of Atonement ”
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