Judy Howard
Judy Howard
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Judy Howard
13 Aug 2018 11:28:29
@judy-howard
Breslov Customs for the Month of Elul

Breslov.org

Most Breslover Chassidim in Eretz Yisrael recite the prayers of Yom Kippur Katan  every Erev Rosh Chodesh. But even those who do not observe  Yom Kippur Katan  every month recite the prayers on Erev Rosh Chodesh Elul and Erev Rosh Chodesh Nisan. In addition, many Breslover Chassidim travel to Meron on Erev Rosh Chodesh Elul to recite the  Yom Kippur Katan  prayers beside the grave of the holy Tanna, Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai.

* * *

Rebbe Nachman encouraged his followers to recite the  Tikkunei Zohar  as well as additional prayers and supplications during the month of Elul. It is also customary to remain in the synagogue and Beit   Medrash to learn  Torah later than usual at night. Rebbe Nachman said, “The  niggun  with which the  Tikkunei Zohar  is recited, and the strain and fatigue produced by staying late in the Beis Medrash , are all made into great and lofty things on high” ( Sichos haRan  294).

* * *

Reb Nosson praises the custom of reading the entire  TaNaKH during the days of Elul and Tishrei, finishing on Hoshanah Rabbah (See  Otzar haYirah, Teshuvas haShanah, Elul ).

* * *

However, not everyone can do this. Once, while recovering from surgery, Rabbi Elazar Kenig mentioned that he hoped to complete the Rebbe’s  Sippurei Ma’asiyos  before Rosh Hashanah. This is an example of how we must adjust our goals to our abilities and circumstances at every stage of life, and how more modest avodahs  are also meaningful .

* * *

Breslover Chassidim recite Psalm 27 ( LeDovid HaShem Ori ) immediately after  Tachanun , or after  Shemoneh Esreh  when there is no  Tachanun , prior to  Kaddish . This seems to have been a regional custom, which is also observed by the Chassidim of Chernobyl/Skver.

* * *

Reb Noson  darshans  on the common custom to sound the Shofar every day at the end of Shacharit from Rosh Chodesh Elul until Erev Rosh Hashanah (See  Likkutei Halakhos, Birkhas ha?Re’ah 5:18).

* * *

It is customary to recite additional  Tehillim  during Elul and the Ten Days of Repentance. ( Likkutei Moharan  II, 73. According to the mesorah  of Chabad/Lubavitch, this also was the custom of the Baal Shem Tov, who would recite three chapters a day until Yom Kippur, when he would finish the rest of  Tehillim ; cf.  Sefer Minhagim Chabad,  Elul, p. 54 ff. citing  Kovetz Mikhtavim leTehillim,  p. 207.  Matteh Ephraim  581:8 cites the widespread custom of reciting ten chapters per day beginning on Rosh Chodesh Elul, so that one completes  Sefer Tehillim  twice before Rosh Hashanah, and one more time during the  Aseres Yemei Teshuvah ; similarly Rabbi Chaim Elazar Spira of Munkatch, Darkhei Chaim viShalom, Chodesh Elul,  687.)

Selichot

Selichot  for Ashkenazim follow the Polish  minhag . As the  Shulchan Arukh  stipulates, they are recited on the days prior to Rosh Hashanah and throughout the  Aseret Yemei Teshuvah  until Erev Yom Kippur.

Sefardim begin reciting  selichot  immediately after Rosh Chodesh Elul.

( Shulchan Arukh, Orach Chaim  581:1. Reb Noson mentions this custom in  Likkutei Halakhos, Devarim Haba’im beSeudah  4:3; Matanah  5:20)

* * *

In the passages that begin  E-l Melekh yoshev…  the  nusach  of the ARI  zal  is say  u’mitnaheg bachassidut , adding the connecting letter  vav , rather than  “mitnaheg,”  as in most printed texts. When asked about this custom, Rabbi Elazar Kenig replied, “It is not a difficult thing to do, and it does not require a kabbalistic  kavanah [which might be beyond the ken of the average person] − so why not do it?” His answer reflects a general rule regarding the ARI zal’ s customs .  (See Rabbi Chaim Vital,  Pri Etz Chaim, Sha’ar haSelichos  8, citing  Zohar  III, 228a, and  Tikkunei   Zohar, Hakdamah,  11c. Cf.  Siddur ARI Rav Shabbsai; Likkutei MaHaRiCH  III, p. 601;  Sefer Minhagim Chabad , et al.)

* * *

The ARI  zal  recited  vidui  only once during  selichot  (although he did not omit the paragraphs between the other two repetitions of vidui ), while the more common  minhag  is to recite it three times. Rabbi Elazar Kenig remarked that most Breslovers probably follow the common  minhag,  adding “and for some of us, that’s still not enough!” He explained that each time we recite the  vidui,  we should do so with greater sincerity. (For the custom of the ARI, see Rabbi Chaim Vital,  Pri Etz Chaim, Sha’ar haSelichot  8 [end]; similarly the GRA, cited in  Sha’arei Rachamim ; Rabbi Chaim Elazar Spira of Munkatch,  Darkhei Chaim viShalom, Chodesh Elul,  703; Sefer Minhagim Chabad , et al. Re. the threefold recitation of  vidui, see  Likkutei MaHaRiCH  III, p. 602, citing the  Baal haRokeach, Minhagim , and  Levush ; also see the Butchatcher Rov,  Eishel Avraham, Orach Chaim  581.)

Khof Elul

 

The twentieth of Elul is the  Yahrtzeit  of Rabbi Avraham Sternhartz (1862-1955), grandson of the Tcheriner Rav, great-grandson of Reb Noson, and teacher of numerous Breslover Gedolim. An orphan, Reb Avraham was raised by the Tcheriner Rov, and during his youth met all of the living  talmidim  of Reb Noson, including Reb Moshe Breslover. He was  Baal Mussaf  and  Baal Tokei’a  for many decades in Uman, and served as Rav of Kremenchug until he escaped the U.S.S.R. at the height of the Stalinist purges, arriving in Yerushalayim in 1936. Reb Avraham immediately became a key figure in the Yerushalayim community, attracting many  talmidim,  and soon established the Rosh Hashanah  kibbutz  in Meron. After his  histalkut  in 1955, his disciple, Rabbi Gedalia Kenig devoted himself to carrying on his revered teacher’s legacy.

In Eretz Yisrael,  se’udot  are held in Reb Avraham’s honor on the evening of Khof Elul. During the afternoon, many Breslover Chassidim travel to the Har Menuchot Cemetery in Yerushalayim to recite Tehillim and pray beside Reb Avraham’s  kever.  Outside of Israel, many Breslover Chassidim also light a candle, give tzedakah,  share a  se’udoh  in his honor, and learn some of his teachings from  Tovot Zichronot , etc.

(After Reb Avraham passed away Rabbi Gedaliah Kenig published his teacher’s  Tovot Zichronot,  Breslover teachingsrelated to the first ten lessons in  Likkutei Moharan,  together with the Tcheriner Rov’s  Yerach haEisanim, chiddushim  on  Likkutei Moharan  related to Rosh Hashanah, and Reb Avraham’s  Imrot Tehorot  on the importance of traveling to  tzaddikim , particularly Rabbi Nachman, for Rosh Hashanah. Some of Reb Avraham’s letters were published by Reb Noson Zvi Kenig of Bnei Brak as Rinat Tzion . A scholarly biography of Reb Avraham is being prepared for publication in the near future by Rabbi Nachman Burshteyn of Jerusalem.)

Collected and Written by Reb Dovid Sears

http://breslovcenter.blogspot.com/

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