
Abba (Arikha) bar Aybo (traditional attribution)
Abba Arikha (175–247) (Talmudic Aramaic: אבא אריכא; born: Abba bar Aybo, Hebrew: רב אבא בר איבו) was a sage who was born and lived in Kafri, Sassanid Babylonia, known as an amora (commentator on the Oral Law) of the 3rd century who established at Sura the systematic study of the rabbinic traditions, which, using the Mishnah as text, led to the compilation of the Talmud. With him began the long period of ascendancy of the great academies of Babylonia, around the year 220. He is commonly known simply as Rav (or Raḅ, Hebrew: רב).
Amoraic prayers | censored prayers under Christendom | Closing Prayers | devotional interpretation | English Translation | interpretive translation | Jewish identity | Late Antiquity | North America | particularism and universalism | redemptive translation | revisionist translation | Rosh Hashanah | standing posture | testament to divine reality | tolerance of difference | 3rd century C.E. | חתימות ḥatimot (concluding prayers) | מלכויות malkhuyot | עדות witnessing | עלינו Aleinu | על כן נקוה al ken n'qaveh | 21st century C.E. | 40th century A.M. | 58th century A.M.
David de Sola Pool | Joshua Gutoff | Zalman Schachter-Shalomi (translation) | Aharon N. Varady (transcription)
עָלֵינוּ לְשַׁבֵּחַ | Aleinu, interpretive translation by Joshua Gutoff
Contributed by Joshua Gutoff | Abba (Arikha) bar Aybo (traditional attribution) | ❧
A “redemptive translation” of Aleinu emphasizing universalist Jewish values. . . .