Cantorial Comments
by
Cantor
What Type of Horn Do You Blow?
At this time of year, when we stand at the
precipice of the High Holiday season, I thought it would be interesting to
investigate the history of the shofar, that age old, wonderful,
instrument sounded on Rosh Hashanah to mark the beginning of the New Year and
on Yom Kippur to mark the end of the fast. Of all the musical instruments used
by our people, the shofar is mentioned most frequently in the Bible (72 times),
thus indicating its paramount importance in the religious as well as secular
life of our people. The shofar is the only instrument of our people that
has survived the millennia in its original form and which is still used in the
liturgy, although with greatly curtailed functions.
Although the Torah commands us to blow the shofar
on Rosh Hashanah, and on the Jubilee year, some Jewish musicologists believe
that the ancient Hebrews borrowed the shofar from the Assyrians. The rationale
for this position is that the word shofar is derived from the Assyrian
word shapparu, "wild goat" (of the ibex family). However
mainstream historians maintain that the shofar is entirely Jewish in origin.
They base their belief on the fact that the shofar is made of a ram's horn and
the shofar was named for the source of material of which it was made.
Another approach to the word shofar is that it is derived from the semitic words shu and far which correspond to
the words hollow and empty which after preparation would accurately describe a
shofar.
The original form of the shofar was a curved one
like that of the ram's horn. Later, a special procedure was used to produce
straight shofarot with a distinct bend close to the bell. In the time of the
The shofar blown in the
After the destruction of the
Although secularists discount the religious
symbolism related to the shofar and maintain that the blowing of a horn made of
an animal was a practice of all primitive people, we place special significance
on the blowing of the Shofar on Rosh Hashanah. Some of these reasons include:
to remind us symbolically of God's promise to our forefathers Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob (that the people of Israel shall number as the sands of the Earth and
the stars in the heavens), to remember the close relationship between Abraham
and God and the acceptability and provision of a ram as a sacrifice in by
Abraham in lieu of his son, and to connect us with the providential hope that
at some future time the prophet Elijah will sound the shofar of deliverance
to herald the coming of the Messiah.
Although we primarily associate the shofar with
Rosh Hashana, its use on other occasions of importance in Jewish History
deserves mention. The shofar was blown to call the people to arms and to
signify that the encampment of the people was to be moved. It was blown by King
Asa to renew the covenant, and Joshua and the people at
As we listen to the sounds of the Shofar
let us pray for health and prosperity; for the ennoblement of our lives and
perfection of our actions and our prayers; so that this forthcoming year will
be a year of peace and prosperity for us, for