Information Regarding Shofars

(Shofarim)

 

The Shofar and Its Sounds

    The Shofar is a ram's horn, a reminder of the ram offered by Abraham instead of his son Isaac (Genesis 22:13).  The horn of a cow or steer may not be used (it might serve as a reminder of the golden calf).  The animal from which the horn is to be taken must be kasher.  The horn is softened by boiling for several hours; then the cartilage is removed, a hole is drilled into the end that will serve as a mouthpiece, and the hole is then enlarged.

    The root of the term Shofar is sh-p-r, hollow.  It must, therefore, consist of a perfect, hollow shell, coming to life by the breath of man.  No mouthpiece of any material may be added, nor may the Shofar be decorated with any foreign matter, though carvings on the horn itself are permitted.  A Shofar should be obtained only from a reliable Jewish dealer and should have a certificate of Kashrut.  The Shofar is a symbol of revelation and of redemption.  It was sounded at Sinai:

 
It will be heard on the day of Israel's final ingathering.
    Tradition links the Shofar to the Binding of Isaac, the Akedah, which is read from the Torah on Rosh Hashanah.  The ram that Abraham substituted as a sacrifice in Isaac's place had two horns, which God preserved.  The smaller horn was sounded at Sinai, but the great Shofar will initiate redemption.

    The Shofar is also the herald of freedom.  By its sound, the year of the Jubilee was initiated, when slaves went free and property was restored to its original owners.  We read in Torah: 

The last verse of this Torah section was aptly chosen as the inscription on the American Liberty Bell.

    As the blasts on Rosh Hashanah are to be identical to the Shofar sound of the Jubilee, the notes to be sounded have been derived from that Biblical passage.  We read in Torah:

    Ve-haavarta, "transmit," signified to the Rabbis a straight, long sound.

    Teruah, a blast, must then mean a modified or broken sound.  The Rabbis ordained two different forms of broken sound, one a three-break sound, the sigh of a broken heart, and the other a nine-break sound, the whimpering of a weeping soul, and finally both combined.  Thus they were sure to have captured the meaning of the injunction.  As the term Teruah appears three times in Torah, they decided that the broken blast should be sounded three times, each time preceded by a straight sound and followed by a straight sound.

    We call the straight sound Tekiah; the three-break sound Shevarim, and the nine-break sound Teruah.  On Rosh Hashanah we sound:

three times:    Tekiah/Shevarim=Teruah/Tekiah
three times:    Tekiah/Shevarim/Tekiah
three times:    Tekiah/Teruah/Tekiah
stretching the last Tekiah into Tekiah Gedolah, a grand Tekiah.

 
    The three sounds in each group must always be of equal length.

This information is an excerpt from
The Complete Book of Jewish Observance: A Practical Manual For The Modern Jew
by Rabbi Leo Trepp, New York, Behrman House, Inc., 1980, pgs. 94-96.

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