Exact matches only
//  Main  //  Menu


Category Index

   
⤷ You are here:   Contributors (A→Z)  🪜   Page 2   —⟶   Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)
Avatar photo

Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

From a family of musicians, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer believes that creative art is one of the most powerful ways to get in touch with the divine. He composes music and poetry in Hebrew and English. (He also translates and authors his own original works.) Isaac runs a Jewish music transcription service, which will transcribe and set any Jewish music in any language, recorded or written. Contact his service on Facebook or via his music blog.

https://igmjewishcreativeworks.com
Filter resources by Category

🇺🇸 Abraham Lincoln's Birthday readings | Addenda | Additional Fast Days | After the Aliyot | 🌐 Armistice Day Readings | Asarah b'Tevet | Asarah b'Tevet Readings | Barkhu | Before the Aliyot | Blessings After Eating | Birkhot haTorah | Tehilim Book 3 (Psalms 73–89) | Congregation & Community | Earthquakes & Tsunamis | Epidemics & Pandemics | Erev Pesaḥ | Erev Shabbat | Extracanonical Megillot | Rosh haShanah la-Ilanot (Tu biShvat) | Ḥabaquq | Ḥag haBanot (Eid el Benat) Readings | Ḥanukkah | Ḥanukkah Readings | Imminent Communal Danger & Distress | Incantations, Adjurations, & Amulets | Rosh Ḥodesh Iyyar (אִיָּר) | 🇺🇸 Juneteenth (Emancipation Day) Readings | Ḳaddish | Learning, Study, and School | Magid | Melakhim (Kings) | Midrash Aggadah | Mimouna | Modern Miscellany | Nirtsah | Nittel Nacht Readings | Parashat b'Shalaḥ | Parashat va'Etḥanan | Parashat Yitro | Haggadot for the Seder Leil Pesaḥ | Pesaḥ Readings | π Day Readings | Purim | Purim Sheni Readings | Ḳadesh | Qedushah | Rosh haShanah (l’Maaseh Bereshit) | Second Temple Period | Seder Mimouna | Seder Seliḥot and Tefilot l'Taaniyot | Seudat Purim | Shabbat haGadol | Musaf l'Shabbat | Shabbat Readings | Shavuot | Shavuot Readings | Shemini Atseret (and Simḥat Torah) | Shemini Atseret & Simḥat Torah Readings | Shir haShirim (the Song of Songs, Canticles) | Shiv'ah Asar b'Tamuz | Shiv'ah b'Adar | Sigd Festival | Torah Study | Symbolic Foods | 🤦︎ Taḥanun (Nefilat Apayim) | Tishah b'Av | Tishah b'Av Readings | Engagements & Weddings | Well-being, health, and caregiving | the Wet Season (Fall & Winter) | Yaḥats | 🇮🇱 Yom ha-Atsma'ut Readings | Yom Kippur | Yom Kippur Readings | Yom Meturgeman | Yom Simḥat Kohen | Yonah | Yotser Or | 7th Day of Pesaḥ | Khaf Sivan

Filter resources by Tag

ABABCCDD | Abraham Lincoln | acrostic | Acrostic signature | phonetic alphabetic acrostic translation | addenda | על הנסים al hanissim | Alef b'Elul | Aleph-Bet | Algiers | Alphabetic Acrostic | alphabetic mesostic | Slaveholders' Rebellion (1861-1865) | American Jewry of the United States | עמידה amidah | קמעות qame'ot (amulets) | angelology | Angels | anti-karaite | anti-predatory | anti-soporific | Antiquity | apocryphal psalms | Arabic translation | Aramaic | Aramaic translation | Arba Kehillot | ascetic practice | אשרי Ashrei | Avignon | Avraham Avinu | Baghdad | במה מדליקין bameh madliqin | בקשות Baqashot | Bar Kochba Rebellion | Bene Israel | Beta Esrael | bikkurim | ברכת המזון birkat hamazon | Black Lives Matter | blessings | British Jewry | Bukharan Jewry | Bukhori | Byzantine Empire | Cairo Geniza | calendar announcements | call to prayer | candle lighting | cantillated liturgy | cantillation | Carpentras | centos | childbirth | children's education | circle drawing | civil declarations and charters | Classical Antiquity | Classical Reform | combating anti-Jewish oppression | constructed languages | cosmology | counting | counting songs | Crimean Tatar | dairy foods | דיינו Daiyenu | Daniel | Darija | Dead Sea Scrolls | Decalogue | Defter | derivative work | deuterocanonical works | Disputation of Paris | Djerba | early Judaism | Ecclesiasticus | education | Egyptian Jewry | אחד מי יודע eḥad mi yode'a | אין כאלהינו Ein kEloheinu | Elephantine | Emancipation | English Translation | English vernacular prayer | entering magical territory | entification | epithalamion | ארץ ישראל Erets Yisrael | Esperanto translation | Ethiopian Jewry | ethnobotany | fasting | first fruits | First Shabbat of Admonition | Five Megillot | food | Fortune | Four Questions | Fustat | geonic period | Geonic prayers | German Jewry | German language | German Reform Movement | German-speaking Jewry | German vernacular prayer | גשם geshem | גלגול נפשות gilgul nefashot | Greek speaking Jewry | Greek translation | חד גדיא Ḥad Gadya | Haftarah supplement | הפטרות haftarot | חג הבנות Ḥag HaBanot | haggadah supplements | Haketía | Har Sinai | Healing | Hebrew translation | Hermes Trismegistus | heroic women | High Middle Ages | הושענות hoshanot | humor | חורבן Ḥurban | in the merit of Aharon haKohen | Israelite-Samaritan | Italian Jewry | Italian translation | Italian vernacular prayer | Jamaica | Jeremiah | Jewish-Christian relations | Jews of Alexandria | Jews of India | Judeo-Arabic | Judeo-Berber | Judeo-Georgian | Judeo-Greek | Judeo-Spanish | Judeo-Tajik | Judeo-Tamaziɣt | Judezmo | Judith | קבלת שבת kabbalat shabbat | קדיש דרבנן Ḳaddish D'Rabanan | קדיש שלם Ḳaddish shalem | קדיש יתום Mourner's Ḳaddish | קלנדס Ḳalends | Kavkazi Jewry | קרובות ḳerovot | כתובה ketubbah | קידוש ḳiddush | kindling | King Richard I | Krymchak | L.L. Zamenhoff | Ladino Translation | Ladino vernacular prayer | lamentation | למנציח Lamnatse'aḥ | lamp lighting | Late Antiquity | liberation | Libyan Jewry | Life of David HaMelekh | Light | Liturgical customs of Kabbalists | Livorno | local communal deliverance commemorations | love | לוח lu'aḥ | Lurianic Kabbalah | מערבות maaravot | המקבים Maccabees | Maghrebi Jewry | Magic | magical recipes | Mainz | מעוז צור Maoz Tsur | Marathi translation | Mar'eh Kohen | Marqeh son of Amram | martyrdom | Mäṣḥäf Ḳədus | Mathematics | medieval megillot | מדינת ישראל Medinat Yisrael | Megillat Antiokhus | Megillat Yehudit | מאורה meorah | מי כמוך Mi Khamokha | מי שברך mi sheberakh | mid-first millennium CE | Midrashic interpretation | military | Minhag Aleppo Musta'arabi | Minhag Iraq | מזמור Mizmor | Mizraḥi Jewry | Morocco | Mosheh Rabbenu | mourning | Mourning this Broken World | mytho-historical chronicles | naming ceremonies | national anthems | Needing Attribution | Needing citation references | Needing Source Images | nine days | נרצה Nirtsah | Noaḥide covenant | North African Jewry | Nusaḥ Ashkenaz | nusaḥ baladi | Nusaḥ Comtat Venaissin | Nusaḥ Erets Yisrael | Nusaḥ Romaniote | O Tag des Herrn | occidental Jewry | oral torah | otiyot | Ottoman Egypt | parabiblical aggadah | paraliturgical | paraliturgical barkhu | paraliturgical kol nidrei | parody | particularism and universalism | Patriotic hymns | Pedagogical songs | 3.14159... | π day | פיוטים piyyuṭim | פזמונים pizmonim | polemic | polyglot | Prayers after meals | Prayers before Torah Study | Prayers for Precipitation | prayers for pregnant women | pre-rabbinic judaism | predation | pregnancy | Progressive Zionism | prophetic revelation | תהלים Psalms | pseudepigrapha | Public Amidah | Purim parody | purimspiel | קבלה ḳabbalah | קדושה Qedushah | קינות Ḳinōt | Rain | rainfall | reconstructed text | reincarnation | Religious Zionism | הוצאת ספר תורה Removal of the Torah from the Ark | רשות reshut | resistance | rhyming translation | ritual power | Roman minhag | Romaniote | romanticism | Sabbath Queen | salvation | Samaria | Nusaḥ haSamerim | Samaritan | סנדלפון Sandalfon | Without a Minyan | סטרנורא Saturnalia | second Purims | Second Temple Period | סליחות səliḥot | סעודות seudot | שבת הגדול Shabbat haGadol | שבת חזון Shabbat Ḥazon | פרשת תולדת parashat Toldot | שבת שקלים Shabbat Sh'qalim | שבת שירה shabbat shirah | Shabbatot of Admonition | שירת הים Shirat haYam | Solo | soporifics | Spanish-Portuguese | Spanish Translation | stimulant | Syriac | תרגום targum | תשלומים tashlumim | Te'ezaza Sanbat | the Furnace | the Holocaust | the KA | הקהל the ḳahal | theophany | Third Reich | Three Weeks of Mourning | traditional egalitarian | transtropilation | Trees | tropified texts | ציון Tsiyon | Tunisia | ונתנה תקף unetaneh toqef | United States | wedding | Western Sepharadim | Wine | women | Yemenite Jewry | Yeshayahu | יציאת מצרים Yetsiat Mitsrayim | יציב פתגם Yetsiv Pitgam | Yevanic | Yiddish translation | Y'mei Bein haMitsrim | יוצר אור yotser ohr | יובל Yovel Jubilee | זמירות zemirot | Maḥzor Aram Tsoba (1560) | Nusaḥ Cochin | Nusaḥ Italḳi | Nusaḥ Yeb | pre-Pesaḥ | Rosh Ḥodesh Elul (אֶלוּל) | חצי קדיש ḥatsi ḳaddish | יום זה מכובד yom zeh mekhubad | יום שבתון yom shabbaton | כל מקדש שביעי kol meqadesh shevi'i | סעודת פורים seudat purim | 16th President of the United States | 17 Shəvat | 28 Adar | 29 Tevet | Siege of Jerusalem (70 CE) | Psalms 85 | 100 blessings a day | Psalms 121 | Psalms 152 | Psalms 153 | Siege of Jerusalem (597 BCE) | York Massacre of 1190 | 1843 Guadeloupe earthquake | 2nd century B.C.E. | 2nd century C.E. | 4th century C.E. | 5th century C.E. | 6th century C.E. | 7th century C.E. | 9th century C.E. | 11th century C.E. | 12th century C.E. | 13th century C.E. | 14th century C.E. | 15th century C.E. | 16th century C.E. | 17th century C.E. | 18th century C.E. | 19th century C.E. | 20th century C.E. | 21st century C.E. | 34th century A.M. | 36th century A.M. | 40th century A.M. | 41st century A.M. | 43rd century A.M. | 44th century A.M. | 45th century A.M. | 46th century A.M. | 47th century A.M. | 48th century A.M. | 49th century A.M. | 50th century A.M. | 51st century A.M. | 52nd century A.M. | 53rd century A.M. | 54th century A.M. | 55th century A.M. | 56th century A.M. | 57th century A.M. | 58th century A.M.

Filter resources by Collaborator Name

Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) | Yehudah ben Shmuel haLevi | Amram ben Rav Sheshna | Shlomo ibn Gabirol | Elazar ben Killir | Yisrael Najara | Unknown Translator(s) | Mordecai ben Yitsḥok ha-Levi | Moses N. Nathan (translation) | Isaac Lopez | Yeshayahu ben Amōts | Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils | Yeruḥam ben Meshullam | Avraham Menaḥem Mendel Mohr | Menaḥem ben Aharon | Ẓvi Hirsch Sommerhausen | Avraham Khalfon | Shmuel haDayan | the Masoretic Text | Yosef ben Asher (of Chartres) | Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans | Marqeh ben Amram | Yeraḥmiel ben Shlomo | Joseph Ezekiel Rajpurkar (translation) | Saadiah ben Yosef Gaon | Bnei Qoraḥ | Samuel Freund | Mosheh ben Yeshayah Menaḥem Bachrach | Isaac Mayer Wise | Leopold Stein | Yanai haPayetan | Erin Piateski (translation) | Shimon ben Eliyahu Hakham | Reuven Enoch (translation) | Tamari Lomtadze (translation) | Frederick de Sola Mendes | Wolf Leslau (translation: English) | Abba Tsabrah (traditional attribution) | Yaaqov ben Meir | Yonatan ben Uziel | Ḥabaquq haNavi | Nisim haLevy Tsahtsir | Yehudah ben Hillel haLevi | Tsvi Hirsch Filipowski (translation) | Paula Schwebel (translation) | Gershom Scholem (translation) | Meir ben Barukh of Rothenburg | Abraham Lincoln | Shimon ben Yeshua ben Eliezer ben Sira | David de Sola Pool | Aharon Zisling | Moshe Sharett | Yehuda Leib Maimon | David ben Gurion | Pinchas Rosen | Zvi Eli Baker | Uri Yadin | Zvi Berenson | Mordechai Beham | Gabriel Kretzmer Seed (translation) | Isaac Leeser (translation) | Susan Weingarten (translation) | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | Moshe Shmi'el Dascola

Filter resources by Language
Filter resources by Date Range

Enter a start year and an end year. BCE years are preceded by a hyphen (e.g., -1000).

Resources filtered by TAG: “פיוטים piyyuṭim” (clear filter)

Sorted Chronologically (new to old). Sort oldest first?

קרובות למוסף שבת שקלים | Ḳerovot for Musaf Shabbat Sheqalim

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The traditional Ashkenazi qerovot added to the Musaf repetition for Shabbat Sheqalim, alongside a new gender-neutral translation . . .


קִילוּס לְפּוּרִים לִלְמְגִלָּה | Qillus l’Purim lil’Megillah — an enconium for Purim, for Megillat Esther

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

A Byzantine-era Aramaic piyyut for Purim, perhaps written as an introduction to the Megillah reading. It tells the narrative of the Jewish people from Abraham to the final redemption, focusing on the foes who sought to destroy us and their inevitable failure to do so. Uniquely among early-medieval poems, this one actively mentions the Romans (read: Christians) and Saracens (read: Muslims) and prays for their downfall in non-coded language. This translation loosely preserves the couplet rhyme scheme, as well as the alphabetical acrostic — perhaps with a phonetic punning reference to the name “Shlomo” at the end. . . .


אֲזַלַת יוֹכֶֽבֶד | Azalat Yokheved, a lamentation on the death of Mosheh (SYAP 42a, ca. 7th c.)

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

Azalat Yokheved is part of a whole genre of midrashic works suggesting Yokheved lived to see her son die — a concept even found in the Ethiopian literature. With repeated refrains, it emphasizes the desperate search of a mother trying to find her son, retracing all her steps and desperately asking everyone she can. But just as Moshe’s journey to the Promised Land ends without a conclusion, so too Yokheved never finds her Moshe. It’s been translated preserving monorhyme scheme. Taken from Sokoloff and Yahalom’s Jewish Palestinian Aramaic Poetry from Late Antiquity (2018), it is presented here vocalized with an original translation. . . .


אֲזַלַת בְּכִיתָא | Azalat Bekhita, a lamentation on the death of Mosheh (SYAP 41, ca. 7th c.)

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

Azalat Bekhita, is probably incomplete, extending only to ḥeth in known manuscripts. It features multiple people, places, and things important in Moshe’s life taking turns to eulogize him. It’s been translated preserving the acrostic and monorhyme scheme. Taken from Sokoloff and Yahalom’s Jewish Palestinian Aramaic Poetry from Late Antiquity (2018), it is presented here vocalized with an original translation. . . .


אֲמַר קִירִיס לְמֹשֶׁה | Amar Kiris l-Mosheh, a lamentation on the death of Mosheh (SYAP 40, ca. 7th c.)

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

Amar Kiris l-Moshe, is a midrashic narrative of Moshe going to Adam to ask why he cursed humanity with death. It’s been translated preserving the acrostic and monorhyme scheme. Taken from Sokoloff and Yahalom’s “Jewish Palestinian Aramaic Poetry from Late Antiquity,” it is presented here vocalized with an original translation. . . .


קרובות לתשעה באב | Ḳerovot for Tishah b’Av, by Elazar ben Kilir (ca. 7th c.)

Contributed by Elazar ben Killir | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

Many communities recite a series of poems interwoven with the Amidah on Purim. These poems, known as the “krovets,” were written by Elazar b. Rabbi Kalir, the greatest of the early paytanim. But lesser known than the krovets for Purim are the krovets for Tisha b’Av, written as well by Elazar b. Rabbi Kalir. A fine example of Elazar’s intricate poetry, the krovets for Tisha b’Av is rife with Biblical citations, finally culminating with the prayer for Jerusalem. Each stanza begins with five tightly rhymed lines beginning with a constant א followed by a quintuple half-acrostic on the second letter, then a poetic volta on the word אֵיכָה, followed by a Biblical citation, a verse starting with the last word in the citation, a letter from Elazar’s name, and a final Biblical citation. The krovets for Tisha b’Av is meant to be part of the morning service, tied into the cantorial repetition for Tisha b’Av. . . .


תָּנוּן שְׁבָחֵיהּ | Tanun Shvaḥeih (Tell the Praise) — a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of the 7th Day of Pesaḥ

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) |

This piyyut, Tanun Shvaḥeih (Tell the Praise), the eighth in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited as an introduction to the Targum of Exodus 15:18, the famous verse “Adonai yimlokh l-‘olam va-‘ed.” The English translation preserves the Hebrew acrostic of the Aramaic. . . .


אַעֲדִיף כׇּל־שְׁמוֹנָה | A’adif Kol Shmona — Qerovot and Qedushtah for Ḥanukkah, by El’azar biRabbi Qallir

Contributed by Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) | Elazar ben Killir |

The poetic genre known as ḳerovot, brief poems woven throughout the repetition of the weekday Amidah, is nowadays most closely associated with Elazar biRabbi Qallir’s Purim “Qrovetz“, a majestically interwoven piece of piyyut if ever there was one. But there are many other ḳerovot that have historically been recited, and this one is by the same author! The weekday qerovot cycle for Ḥanukkah, retelling the story of the Greek oppression using intricate poetic language. Included within is a qedushtah that instructs us on some of the halakhic requirements for the Ḥanukkah lights. . . .


מַן־כְּוָתָךְ | Man K’vatakh (Who is Like You) — a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of the 7th Day of Pesaḥ

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This piyyut, Man K’vatakh (Who is Like You), the seventh in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited as an introduction to the Targum of the verse that includes “Mi Khamokha.” The English translation preserves the Hebrew acrostic of the Aramaic. . . .


אָמַר אוֹיֵב | Amar Oyev (The Enemy Said) — a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of the 7th Day of Pesaḥ

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This piyyut, Amar Oyev (The Enemy Said), the sixth in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited as an introduction to the targum of Exodus 15, verse 9. . . .


עַד אָנָה בִּכְיָּה בְצִיּוֹן | Ad Ana Bikhya b’Tsiyon (How Long Will Crying Be In Zion), a qinah for Tishah b’Av (ca. 7th c.)

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

‘Ad Ana Bikhya B’Tsiyon, is one of the oldest qinot of the cycle, dating to the period before rhyme schemes were the norm for Hebrew poetry. It describes the heavenly luminaries themselves as sympathizing with and lamenting for Israel. It goes through the entire zodiac, beginning with Ares and ending with Pisces. It is traditional to stand and recite the last few lines aloud before transitioning into the Ḳedusha d’Sidra. . . .


אַזְכִּֽירָה יָמִים עִם יָמִים | Azkira Yamim Im Yamim, a piyyut for the First Shabbat of Admonition by Rabbi Yannai (ca. early 6th c.)

Contributed by Yanai haPayetan | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The works of the great paytan Yannai were, with the exception of a small handful of poems, almost completely lost until their rediscovery in the Cairo Geniza. This poem, an acrostic comparison of the days of Moses and Jeremiah, was written by Yannai to serve as part of the Musaf Ḳedushah on the first Shabbat after 17 Tammuz, on which the opening section of Jeremiah is recited. It bears structural and linguistic similarities to the later famous ḳinah Esh Tuqad. In its liturgical context, it was intended to introduce the final few verses of the Ḳedushah . Nowadays the custom of poetic inserts into the ḳedushah is nearly extinct, but the poem stands as a moving and powerful work nonetheless. . . .


אֲשֶׁר בִּגְלַל אָבוֹת בָּנִים גִּדֵּל | Asher Biglal Avot Banim Gidel — an archaic piyyut on Mosheh’s Death for Simḥat Torah

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This piyyut of unknown authorship is certainly ancient, showing the lack of a rhyme scheme characteristic of the REALLY old piyyutim (see also Aleinu or El Adon). It is still found in some Ashkenazi and Teman maḥzorim, with many different mostly minor variants (which have been combined together somewhat eclectically into one text here). It is presented here along with an English translation attempting to preserve the Hebrew acrostic. Originally it was recited before the Ashrei leading into musaf, but perhaps for those who follow Ashkenazi customs a more appropriate location would be as an introduction to the Yizkor service on Shmini ‘Atzeret — which for those who don’t keep second-day yontef is the same day. It could also be adapted as part of the liturgy for the seventh of Adar, although the final verse (the old Western rite berakha for finishing a full Torah cycle) would have to be elided. . . .


אַצִיתוּ לִי אִילָנַיָּא | Atsitu Li Ilinaya | The Argument of the Trees — a debate-poem for Purim in Aramaic from the Targum Sheni

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This Aramaic poem, written in the early Byzantine era by an unknown author, can be found in its entirety within the Targum Sheni for Esther 7:9. It features an argument between an assortment of trees over which one is required to bear the great dishonor of having to be the one to hold Haman. It’s also chock-full of anti-Christian polemic and references to Toledot Yeshu. . . .


אתי בשלם | ࠀࠕࠉ࠰ࠁࠔࠋࠌ | Itti Bishlam (Come in Peace), a Samaritan Aramaic Poem for the Festival Season by Marqeh ben Amram (ca. 4th c.)

Contributed by Marqeh ben Amram | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

Itti Bishlam is a sixteen-hundred year old Samaritan Aramaic poem attributed to the great Samaritan sage Marqeh son of Amram. In twelve stanzas it tells the story of the night of the tenth plague and the Exodus. Samaritans traditionally recite it on the night before the holidays, the Sabbaths before the holidays, and the evening before the first day of the first month (the Samaritan new year, fourteen days before Passover). Largely a half-alphabetical acrostic, the fifth stanza of Itti Bishlam begins with an īt (ḥeth) rather than the expected īy (her), understandable considering the loss of guttural distinctions in Samaritan phonology. (See the number of Jewish poems which confuse sin and samekh for a parallel occurrence.) Itti Bishlam is, interestingly enough, lacking polemic or sectarian content — it never calls upon the Samaritan holy mountain of Aargaarizem (Mt. Gerizim), nor does it include any context that contradicts the traditional Jewish interpretation of the paschal narrative. It is worthwhile for Jews to learn about and understand the liturgical practices of their sister religion, and this poem is a great place to start! . . .


אֵין כֵּאלֹהֵֽינוּ | Non È Come lo Ded Nostro (נוֹן אֵי קוֹמְי לוֹדֵּיד נוֹשְׁטְרוֹ) — a Renaissance Judeo-Italian translation of Ein Keloheinu (1483)

Contributed by Unknown Author(s) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The text of the piyyut Ein Keloheinu from a 1483 Judeo-Italian translation of the siddur (British Library Or. 2443), along with a transcription into Italian script, a normative Italian modernization, and the Hebrew and English. . . .