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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 - 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 ”
- What Is Kapparot? - halachamoment. com
Kapparot is performed by waving a chicken or money over one’s head and declaring that the chicken or money being waved should receive the punishment for one’s sins, instead of oneself Afterward, the chicken or money is given to the poor
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