//  Main  //  Menu


Category Index

   
⤷ You are here:   Contributors (A→Z)  🪜   Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)   —⟶   Page 3
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 | the Dry Season (Spring & Summer) | Earthquakes & Tsunamis | Epidemics & Pandemics | Erev Pesaḥ | Erev Shabbat | Extracanonical Megillot | Ḥabaquq | Pesaḥ Yamei Ḥag | Pesaḥ Readings | 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 | Seder Mimouna | Modern Miscellany | Nirtsah | Nittel Nacht Readings | Parashat b'Shalaḥ | Parashat va'Etḥanan | Parashat Yitro | Haggadot for the Seder Leil Pesaḥ | 7th Day of Pesaḥ | π Day Readings | Purim | Purim Sheni Readings | Ḳadesh | Qedushah | Rosh haShanah (l’Maaseh Bereshit) | Rosh haShanah la-Ilanot (Tu biShvat) | Second Temple Period | Seder intro | Seder Seliḥot and Tefilot l'Taaniyot | Seudat Purim | Shabbat haGadol | Musaf l'Shabbat | Shabbat Readings | Shavuot | Shavuot Readings | Shemini Atseret | Shemini Atseret Readings | Shir haShirim (the Song of Songs, Canticles) | Shiv'ah Asar b'Tamuz | Shiv'ah b'Adar | Sigd Festival | Simḥat Torah | Khaf Sivan | 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

Filter resources by Tag

100 blessings a day | 16th President of the United States | 17 Shəvat | 1843 Guadeloupe earthquake | 28 Adar | 29 Tevet | 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 | חצי קדיש ḥatsi ḳaddish | 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 | Judeo-Tunisian | 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 | כל מקדש שביעי kol meqadesh shevi'i | Krymchak | Kurdistan | 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 | Maḥzor Aram Tsoba | 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 | מוריד הטל morid hatal | Morocco | Mosheh Rabbenu | mourning | Mourning this Broken World | mytho-historical chronicles | naming ceremonies | national anthems | Needing Attribution | Needing citation references | Needing Source Images | Neo-Aramaic | nine days | נרצה Nirtsah | Noaḥide covenant | North African Jewry | Nusaḥ Ashkenaz | nusaḥ baladi | Nusaḥ Cochin | Nusaḥ Comtat Venaissin | Nusaḥ Erets Yisrael | Nusaḥ Italḳi | Nusaḥ Romaniote | Nusaḥ Yeb | O Tag des Herrn | occidental Jewry | oral torah | otiyot | Ottoman Egypt | parabiblical aggadah | paraliturgical | paraliturgical barkhu | paraliturgical kol nidrei | parody | particularism and universalism | Passover seder | 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-Pesaḥ | pre-rabbinic judaism | predation | pregnancy | Progressive Zionism | prophetic revelation | תהלים Psalms | Psalms 121 | Psalms 152 | Psalms 153 | Psalms 85 | 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 | Rosh Ḥodesh Elul (אֶלוּל) | Sabbath Queen | salvation | Samaria | Samaritan | סנדלפון Sandalfon | Without a Minyan | סטרנורא Saturnalia | second Purims | Second Temple Period | סליחות səliḥot | סעודת פורים seudat purim | 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 | Siege of Jerusalem (597 BCE) | Siege of Jerusalem (70 CE) | 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 | water cycle | wedding | Western Sepharadim | Wine | women | Yemenite Jewry | Yeshayahu | יציאת מצרים Yetsiat Mitsrayim | יציב פתגם Yetsiv Pitgam | Yevanic | Yiddish translation | Y'mei Bein haMitsrim | יום שבתון yom shabbaton | יום זה מכובד yom zeh mekhubad | York Massacre of 1190 | יוצר אור yotser ohr | יובל Yovel Jubilee | זמירות zemirot | 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

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

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).

original workstranscription & naqdanuttranslation
Resources filtered by LANGUAGE: “Hebrew”” (clear filter)

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

כתובה לחג השבועות | Ketubah for Shavuot, by Yisrael Najara (ca. 16th c.)

Contributed by: Yisrael Najara, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

In many eastern Sephardic and Mizraḥi communities, there is a custom that a poetic “ketubah,” or marriage-contract, is recited before the Torah service on Shavuot. This custom, based on the midrashic idea that the Torah is the ketubah for the marriage between the bride Israel and the groom God, is beloved by the ḳabbalists. By far the most commonly used Shavuot ketubah is that of the great paytan and meḳubal Yisrael ben Moshe Najara, who wrote the following some time in the sixteenth century. This is a new translation of Najara’s poem. . . .


בּוֹרֵא עַד אָנָּה | Borei Ad Anah (“Creator! How long”), a ḳinah after the Spanish Expulsion (ca. 16th c.)

Contributed by: Gabriel Kretzmer Seed (translation), Isaac Leeser (translation), Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

Bore ‘Ad Anah” is a ḳinah recited in a number of Sephardic communities on Tishah b’Av (or in some cases on Shabbat Hazon, the Shabbat preceding Tishah b’Av), particularly in the Spanish-Portuguese and North African traditions. The author is unknown, but his name is likely Binyamin based on the acrostic made up of the first letters of the verses. In the kinah, the Children of Israel are compared to a wandering dove caught in a trap by predators, crying out its father, God. The ḳinah was likely written as a poignant response to the Spanish Inquisition, appropriate to Tishah b’Av since the expulsion of the Jews from Spain occurred on the 9th of Av in the year 1492. The version presented here was likely censored, as many manuscripts have the fifth verse presented in the following manner directly calling out their Catholic oppressors,” יועצים עליה עצות היא אנושה זרים העובדים אלילים שלושה אם ובן ורוח כי אין להם בושה גדול ממכאובי.” “They counsel against her and she languishes, the strangers who worship three idols, father, son and spirit, for they have no shame and great is my suffering.” . . .


💬 מְגִלַּת פִּסְגָּה | Megillat Fustat — a Purim Sheni scroll for the 28th of Adar commemorating the deliverance of Egyptian Jewry from Hain Ahmed Pasha in 1524

Contributed by: Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

Behold, a full text of the Megillah of Fustat, telling a story of a great miracle that happened in 1524 CE (5284 AM). . . .


כָּאנְדְרִי נְדְרִיהוּם | אֶחָד מִי יוֹדֵעַ | Kaanₔdri Nₔdrihom — a Judeo-Moroccan Arabic (Darija) adaptation of Eḥad Mi Yodeaȝ

Contributed by: Unknown (translation), Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

A Judeo-Moroccan Arabic (Darija) adaptation of the Passover counting song Eḥad Mi Yodeaȝ, as found in Mahzor Moȝadé Hashem. . . .


י״ט של ק״ק קארפינטראס לט״ו בחדש כסליו | Poetic Additions for 15 Kislev, for when a heavily armed group of gentiles didn’t commit mass slaughter in Carpentras (1512)

Contributed by: Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation), Unknown

The Seder ha-Tamid, a Provençal (Nusaḥ Comtat Venaissin) siddur published in Avignon in 1766, has liturgical additions for an amazing five different local festivals — one for Avignon, and two each for Carpentras and Cavaillon. Here’s a series of piyyutim for the fifteenth of Kislev in Carpentras. On 15 Kislev 5273 (24 November 1512 Julian), a troop of armed men entered the Jewish quarter in Carpentras. While we don’t know much else beyond that, we do know that this was a terrifying enough occurrence to the Jews of Carpentras that when the armed men left, a holiday was declared with multiple piyyutim and a full recitation of Hallel. . . .


קיו סציאַס אונו? | אֶחָד מִי יוֹדֵעַ | Kiu Scias Unu? — an Esperanto translation of Eḥad Mi Yodéa by Erin Piateski (2010)

Contributed by: Erin Piateski (translation), Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

A translation of Ḥad Gadya into Esperanto by Erin Piateski with a Hebraicization schema for Esperanto by Isaac Gantwerk Mayer. Piateski’s translation first appeared in her כוכב ירוק הגדה של פסח | Verda Stelo Hagado de Pesaĥo (2010). . . .


קְי ווֹלְירַה קְי אְינטְינדְירַה | אֶחָד מִי יוֹדֵעַ | Che volera, che entendera — a Judeo-Sienese translation of Eḥad Mi Yodea

Contributed by: Unknown (translation), Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

Eḥad Mi Yodéa is a counting-song that is a beloved part of Seders the world over. Counting up to 13, it is mostly written in Hebrew, but there are versions that can be found in many different languages. This translation is in the Judeo-Italian dialect of Siena, based on Geremia Mario Castelnuovo’s 1956 recording from Leo Levi’s collection of Judeo-Italian ethnomusicological recordings. A link to the original recording can be found here. . . .


חַד מָה יוּדָא | אֶחָד מִי יוֹדֵעַ | Ḥad Mah Yuda :: Who Knows One?, a counting-song in Aramaic translation

Contributed by: Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

The text of the popular Passover song “Who Knows One?” in Hebrew set side-by-side with an Aramaic translation. . . .


אֶחָד מִי יוֹדֵעַ | Якумин кӣ медонад | Yakumin Ki Medonad :: a Bukhori (Judeo-Tajik) Translation of Eḥad Mi Yodea by Rabbi Shimon ben Eliyahu Hakham (1904)

Contributed by: Shimon ben Eliyahu Hakham, Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

Eḥad Mi Yodéa is a counting-song that is a beloved part of Seders the world over. It is mostly written in Hebrew, counting up to 13, but there are versions that can be found in many different languages. This translation is in Bukhori, also known as Judeo-Tajik, as translated by the great Shimon ben Eliyahu Ḥakham (1843-1910), the chief rabbi of the Bukharan Jewish community in Jerusalem. His full translation of all liturgical additions in the month of Nisan for the Bukharan community can be found in חוקת הפסח Ḥuqat haPesaḥ (1904) – the source for this transcription on page 128-130 (see included). Shimon Ḥakham transcribed it into vocalized Hebrew script, which is included here alongside transliterations into Tajik Cyrillic and a Roman transcription. . . .


חַד גַּדְיָא | ⵢⴰⵏ ⵉⴽⵔⵓ | Yan ikru (יַאן יִכְּרוּ) — a Judeo-Berber translation of Ḥad Gadya

Contributed by: Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

A Judeo-Berber translation of the popular Passover song, Ḥad Gadya. . . .


יַֽיִן טוֹב | Yayin Tov Ratov (Good Fresh Wine) — a love-song piyyut for Shavu’ot in nusaḥ Algiers

Contributed by: Unknown, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

A piyyuṭ sung by the Jews of Algiers on Shavu’ot and Simḥat Torah (and by some Moroccans for baqashot on Parashat Toldot). Yayin Tov Ratov is a love song from the perspective of God that uses a lot of language from Song of Songs. Wine and song, in this case, are both metaphors for the Torah. Of unknown origin, the acrostic spells out the name יצחק, although I can confirm that it wasn’t me who wrote it. . . .


אוֹדֶה אֵל שַדַּי | Odeh El Shaddai, a pizmon for Shabbat Shirah

Contributed by: Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation), Unknown

This is a pizmon for Shabbat Shirah (Parashat B’Shalaḥ) by an unknown author. The text is as transcribed from the pizmonim included in the siddur משמרת הקדש: קול שומר שבת Mishmeret haQodesh: Qol Shomer Shabbat (Pisa 1821), p. 117. . . .


💬 מְגִילַּת יְהוּדִית לְאָמְרָהּ בַּחֲנֻכָּה | Megillat Yehudit, the Medieval Scroll of Judith to be said on Ḥanukkah

Contributed by: Susan Weingarten (translation), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Aharon N. Varady (transcription), Moshe Shmi'el Dascola, Unknown

This is a faithful transcription of the text of the medieval Megillat Yehudith (the Scroll of Judith), not to be confused with the deutero-canonical Book of Judith, authored in Antiquity. We have further set this text side-by-side with the English translation made by Susan Weingarten, and vocalized and cantillated the Hebrew so that it may be chanted. . . .


שַׁאֲלִי שְׂרוּפָה בָּאֵשׁ | Sha’ali Serufah ba-Esh (Question, Burnt in the Fire), a Ḳinah for Tishah b’Av, translated by Gershom Scholem

Contributed by: Paula Schwebel (translation), Gershom Scholem (translation), Meir ben Barukh of Rothenburg, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

A translation in German and English of the ḳinnah “Sha’ali Serufah ba-Esh.” . . .


אֲנָא אַתְקֵינִית | Ana Atqenit (I am the one), a piyyut in Aramaic for introducing the first commandment as read in the Targum

Contributed by: Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

Ana is a poem for the first commandment, that discusses all that God did for the ancestors. . . .


מָעוֹז צוּר | Maoz Tsur (trans. by Frederick de Sola Mendes 1914)

Contributed by: Frederick de Sola Mendes, Mordecai ben Yitsḥok ha-Levi, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

A singable translation of Maoz Tsur by the great ḥakham Frederick de Sola Mendes, here transcribed from the Union Hymnal (CCAR 1914), hymn 190. The translation largely reflects the Hebrew, omitting two verses — the final (and according to some, last added) verse, and the fourth verse about Purim and Haman. . . .


מָעוֹז צוּר | Schirm und Schutz in Sturm und Graus, a German translation of Maoz Tsur by Leopold Stein (1906)

Contributed by: Leopold Stein, Mordecai ben Yitsḥok ha-Levi, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut)

A German translation of Maoz Tsur, by the early Reform rabbi Leopold Stein. This singable German translation was cited as an inspiration for Gustav Gottheil and Marcus Jastrow’s well-known English edition. In some communities in the German Empire, for instance the community of Beuthen (now Bytom, Poland), it was recited during the morning service on Ḥanukkah. It poetically translates the first five verses in their entirety, avoiding the controversial sixth verse (said by some to have been added post-facto, and rejected by the early Reform movement). . . .


מָעוֹז צוּר | Maoz Tsur in a rhyming English translation (1893)

Contributed by: Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Unknown (translation), Mordecai ben Yitsḥok ha-Levi

This is an English translation of Maoz Tsur published by The Hebrew Standard for their 1893 Ḥanukkah issue (vol. 29, no. 12, New York, Friday, 8 December 1893 — 29 Kislev 5654). The Hebrew Standard was one of the biggest English-language Jewish papers in America around the turn of the twentieth century, generally taking a more traditionalist line than the Reform papers and a more moderate line than the leftist ones. This translation, simply titled “Chanukah”, unfortunately goes unattributed in the pages of The Hebrew Standard. The translation follows an ABABCCDD rhyme scheme (for those unfamiliar with rhyme scheme notation, this is the same rhyme scheme as “The Star-Spangled Banner“), unlike the Hebrew’s ABABBBccB. . . .


אַרְעָא רַקְדָא | Ar’a Raqda (And the Earth Danced), a piyyut in Aramaic for introducing the Decalogue as read in the Targum

Contributed by: Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

“Ar’a Raqda,” a piyyut read directly before the Ten Commandments in the Targum, uses wedding imagery and language from the Shir haShirim to paint Sinai as a ḥuppah. . . .


אֱלֹהִים בְּעָלֽוּנוּ | Elohim B’alunu — a seliḥah on the York massacre of 1190 by Joseph ben Asher of Chartres (trans. Isaac Gantwerk Mayer)

Contributed by: Yosef ben Asher (of Chartres), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut), Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

This seliḥah poem, written by R. Joseph of Chartres, commemorates the martyrdom of approximately 150 Jews in Clifford’s Tower, York, England, in the year 1190. A summary of the events of 1190, sometimes referred to as “the English Masada,” can be found here. Like many medieval Jewish poems about massacres, Elohim B’alunu carefully treads the line between assuming guilt and declaring innocence. This poem, interestingly enough, directly calls out the person seen by R. Joseph of Chartres as ultimately responsible — the crusader King Richard Ⅰ. Beloved in Christian memory, this radical zealot of a king has a much darker, more horrific reputation among Jewish and Muslim groups. . . .