Exact matches only
//  Main  //  Menu

 
⤷ You are here:   Contributors (A→Z)  🪜   Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)
Avatar photo

Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation)

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 authors his own original works and transcribes Hebrew and Aramaic text, adding niqqud and t'amim as needed.) 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 | Additional Preparatory Prayers | After the Aliyot | Weekday Amidah | 🌐 Armistice Day Readings | Arvit l'Shabbat | Asarah b'Tevet | Asarah b'Tevet Readings | Ashrei | Morning Baqashot | Barekh | Barkhu | Bedtime Shema | Before the Aliyot | Blessings After Eating | Birkhot haTorah | Tehilim Book 5 (Psalms 107–150) | Tehilim Book 4 (Psalms 90–106) | Tehilim Book 1 (Psalms 1–41) | Tehilim Book 3 (Psalms 73–89) | Tehilim Book 2 (Psalms 42–72) | Brit Milah & Simḥat Bat | 🇺🇸 National Brotherhood Week | Sefer Devarim (Deuteronomy) | the Dry Season (Spring & Summer) | Eikhah (Lamentations) | Epidemics & Pandemics | Erev Pesaḥ | Erev Shabbat | Extracanonical Megillot | Ezra-Neḥemiah | Rosh haShanah la-Behemah | Rosh haShanah la-Ilanot (Tu biShvat) | Rosh haShanah la-Melakhim | Pogroms & Genocide | 🇩🇪 Germany | Government & Country | Ḥabaquq | Ḥag haBanot (Eid el Benat) Readings | Ḥaggai | Hallel for Festivals & Rosh Ḥodesh | Hallel | Ḥanukkah | Ḥanukkah Readings | Imminent Communal Danger & Distress | Incantations, Adjurations, & Amulets | 🇺🇸 Independence Day (July 4th) | 🇮🇪 Ireland | Rosh Ḥodesh Iyyar (אִיָּר) | 🇺🇸 Juneteenth (Emancipation Day) Readings | Ḳaddish | Learning, Study, and School | 🇺🇸 Abraham Lincoln's Birthday (February 12th) | Magid | Rosh Ḥodesh Marḥeshvan (מַרְחֶשְׁוָן) | 🇮🇱 Medinat Yisra'el (the State of Israel) | Melakhim (Kings) | Midrash Aggadah | Midrash Halakhah | Mimouna | Modern Miscellany | Mourning | Mussar (Ethical Teachings) | Nirtsah | Rosh Ḥodesh Nisan (נִיסָן) | Nittel Nacht Readings | Parashat b'Shalaḥ | Parashat Devarim | Parashat Noaḥ | Parashat va'Etḥanan | Parashat Vayera | Parashat Yitro | Pesaḥ | Haggadot for the Seder Leil Pesaḥ | Pesaḥ Readings | Pesaḥ Yamei Ḥag | π Day Readings | Psalm of the Day | Psuqei d'Zimrah/Zemirot l'Shabbat ul'Yom Tov | Purim | Purim Sheni Readings | Ḳabbalat Shabbat | Ḳadesh | Qedushah | Reading Schedules | Repenting, Resetting, and Reconciliation | Rosh haShanah (l’Maaseh Bereshit) | Rosh Ḥodesh | Rosh Ḥodesh Readings | Rūt (Ruth) | Samaritan Prayerbooks | Saturday | Second Temple Period | Seder al-Tawḥid | Seder Mimouna | Seder Seliḥot and Tefilot l'Taaniyot | Sefirat haOmer Readings | Seudat Purim | Shabbat haGadol | Shabbat Kallah Readings | Minḥah l'Shabbat | Musaf l'Shabbat | Shabbat Readings | Shabbat Siddurim | Social Justice, Peace, and Liberty | Shavuot | Shavuot Readings | Shemini Atseret (and Simḥat Torah) | Shemini Atseret & Simḥat Torah Readings | Sefer Shemot (Exodus) | Shir haShirim (the Song of Songs, Canticles) | Shirat ha-Yam | Shiv'ah Asar b'Tamuz | Shiv'ah b'Adar | Shiv'ah b'Adar Readings | Sigd Festival | Sigd Festival Readings | Special Haftarot | Torah Study | Symbolic Foods | Ta'anit Esther | 🤦︎ Taḥanun (Nefilat Apayim) | Tehilim (Psalms) | Tishah b'Av | Tishah b'Av Readings | Rosh Ḥodesh Tishrei (תִּשְׁרֵי) | 🌐 Transgender Day of Remembrance (November 20th) | 🌐 Transgender Day of Visibility (March 31st) | Travel | Tsom Gedalyah | Tu b'Av | Tu biShvat Readings | 🇺🇸 Veterans Day Readings | War | Engagements & Weddings | Well-being, health, and caregiving | the Wet Season (Fall & Winter) | Yaḥats | Yeshayah (Isaiah) | Yirmiyah (Jeremiah) | Yishtabaḥ Shimkha | 🇮🇱 Yom ha-Atsma'ut (5 Iyyar) | 🇮🇱 Yom ha-Atsma'ut Readings | Yom haḲeshet (27 Iyyar) Readings | Yom Kippur | Yom Meturgeman | Yom Simḥat Kohen | Yotser Or | 7th Day of Pesaḥ | Khaf Sivan | Psalms 149 | Psalms 150

Filter resources by Tag

Abraham Lincoln | acrostic | Acrostic signature | phonetic alphabetic acrostic translation | addenda | אדיר במלוכה Adir Bimlukhah | אדיר הוא Adir Hu | אדון עולם Adon Olam | Aharon | Akkadian | על הגתית Al HaGitit | על הנסים al hanissim | על נהרות בבל Al naharot Bavel | Alef b'Elul | Aleph-Bet | Algiers | Alphabetic Acrostic | alphabetic mesostic | alternate timeline | Slaveholders' Rebellion (1861-1865) | American Jewry of the United States | עמידה amidah | Amoraic prayers | קמעות qame'ot (amulets) | political and religious anarchism | angelology | Angels | animals | anti-karaite | anti-predatory | anti-soporific | Antiquity | apocryphal psalms | apotropaic rituals of protection | אקדמות Aqdamut | Arabic translation | Aramaic | Aramaic translation | Arba Kehillot | ascetic practice | Ashmodai | אשרי Ashrei | assassination | Assassination of Abraham Lincoln | Assassination of Fuad Shukr | Assassination of Ismail Haniyeh | Assassination of Mohammed Deif | Assassination of Saleh al-Arouri | Atah Hu | Avignon | Avraham Avinu | אז רוב נסים Az rov nisim | אז ישיר Az Yashir | Babylonian | Baghdad | במה מדליקין bameh madliqin | בקשות Baqashot | Bar Kochba Rebellion | Barkhi Nafshi | בהמות behemot | Bene Israel | Beta Esrael | bikkurim | ברכת המזון birkat hamazon | Black Lives Matter | blessings | blessings following the shema | Break Fasts | ברית brit | brit milah | British Jewry | burial service | Byzantine Empire | Cairo Geniza | calendar announcements | call to prayer | candle lighting | cantillated liturgy | cantillation | captive animals | captives | Carpentras | cemetery prayers | centos | childbirth | children's education | circle drawing | circumcision | civil declarations and charters | civil rights | Classical Antiquity | Classical Reform | Closing Prayers | Colleyville synagogue hostage crisis | Colonialism | colonization | combating anti-Jewish oppression | commencement | constructed languages | cosmological | cosmology | counting | counting songs | Curaçao | Daily Hallel | דיינו Daiyenu | Daniel | Darija | Dead Sea Scrolls | Decalogue | Defter | demonstrations | derivative work | desperate pleas | deuterocanonical works | devotional interpretation | diaspora | Djerba | domesticated animals | dragons | Droit du seigneur | early Judaism | Early Middle Ages | eating animals | Ecclesiasticus | eco-conscious | ecoḥasid | ecumenical prayers | education | Egyptian | Egyptian Jewry | אחד מי יודע eḥad mi yode'a | אין כאלהינו Ein kEloheinu | אל מלא רחמים El Malé Raḥamim | elegies | Elephantine | Emancipation | English piyyutim | English Translation | English vernacular prayer | the Enlightenment | entering magical territory | entification | epithalamion | ארץ ישראל Erets Yisrael | Esperanto translation | Ethiopian Jewry | Ethiopic translation | ethnobotany | Exilic Period | fasting | First Crusade | first fruits | First Order of Fustat | First Shabbat of Admonition | Five Megillot | food | Fortune | Four Questions | four worlds | הקפה ד׳ fourth haḳafah | Full Hallel | fundamental principles of rabbinic judaism | Fustat | Game of Thrones | gender identity | geonic period | Geonic prayers | German Jewry | German vernacular prayer | גשם geshem | גלגול נפשות gilgul nefashot | glitchposting | Gothic translation | graduation | Grief | חבקוק Ḥabaquq | חד גדיא Ḥad Gadya | האל בתעצימות ha-El b'taatsumōt | הפטרות haftarot | חג הבנות Ḥag HaBanot | haggadah supplements | Haketía | הלל hallel | Hallelu | הללו־יה hallelu-yah | חנוך Ḥanokh (Enoch) | Har Sinai | חתימות ḥatimot (concluding prayers) | היום תאמצנו Hayom T'amtsenu | Healing | Hebrew translation | heikhalot literature | Hermes Trismegistus | High-Elven | High Middle Ages | Himyar | הושענות hoshanot | human solidarity | humor | חורבן Ḥurban | hymns | hymns of creation | iconoclastic | in the merit of Aharon haKohen | in the merit of Yitsḥaq | interfaith prayer | interfaith tolerance | interpretive translation | interspecies relationships | Iranian support for Hamas | Irish vernacular | Irish War of Independence | Israelite-Samaritan | Italian Jewry | Italian vernacular prayer | ירושלם Jerusalem | Jewish Antiquities | Jewish-Christian relations | Jews of Alexandria | Jews of India | Judaean Desert Scrolls | Judeo-Arabic | Judeo-Greek | Judeo-Spanish | קבלת שבת kabbalat shabbat | קדיש דרבנן Ḳaddish D'Rabanan | קדיש שלם Ḳaddish shalem | קדיש יתום Mourner's Ḳaddish | Kaifeng | קלנדס Ḳalends | Kavkazi Jewry | קרובות ḳerovot | כתובה ketubbah | קידוש ḳiddush | kindling | King Richard I | kol nidrei | Ladino Translation | Ladino vernacular prayer | lamentation | למנציח Lamnatse'aḥ | lamp lighting | Late Antiquity | Late Bronze Age | Latin translation | Latin vernacular | לכה דודי Lekhah Dodi | LGBTQIA+ | liberation | liberty | Libyan Jewry | Life of David HaMelekh | Light | Liturgical customs of Kabbalists | livnei Qoraḥ | Livorno | local communal deliverance commemorations | love | love your fellow as yourself | לוח lu'aḥ | Lurianic Kabbalah | מערבות maaravot | מגן אבות magen avot | Maghrebi Jewry | Magic | magical recipes | Mainz | מעוז צור Maoz Tsur | Marathi translation | Mar'eh Kohen | Marqeh son of Amram | martyrdom | Masekhet Soferim | Mäṣḥäf Ḳədus | Maskil | Mathematics | medieval megillot | מדינת ישראל Medinat Yisrael | Megillat Antiokhus | מגילת אסתר Megillat Esther | Memorial prayers | מאורה meorah | mesostic | מי כמוך Mi Khamokha | מי שברך mi sheberakh | mid-first millennium CE | Middle-Earth | Middle Egyptian | Midrashic interpretation | Mikhtam | military | Minhag Aleppo Musta'arabi | Minhag Iraq | מזמור Mizmor | Mizraḥi Jewry | Morocco | Mosheh Rabbenu | mourning | Mourning this Broken World | mysterious fish | mytho-historical chronicles | naming ceremonies | Needing Attribution | Needing citation references | Needing Decompilation | Needing Source Images | Needing Vocalization | new moon | נרצה Nirtsah | נשמת כל חי Nishmat kol ḥai | Noaḥide covenant | North African Jewry | North American Conference on Ethiopian Jewry | North American Jewry | Nusaḥ Ashkenaz | nusaḥ baladi | Nusaḥ Comtat Venaissin | Nusaḥ Erets Yisrael | Nusaḥ Farsi | Nusaḥ Ha-Ari z"l | Nusaḥ Romaniote | occidental Jewry | ofanim | Old English translation | Old Norse translation | אומץ גבורתיך Omets G'vuratekha | oral torah | otiyot | Ottoman Egypt | אױ חנוכה Oy Khanike | Papiamentu translation | parabiblical aggadah | paraliturgical | paraliturgical barkhu | paraliturgical kol nidrei | parody | Partial Hallel | particularism and universalism | peace | Pedagogical songs | People's Crusade | פסוקי דזמרה pesuqei dezimrah | Openers | Philadelphia | 3.14159... | π day | פיוטים piyyuṭim | פזמונים pizmonim | pleas for help | polemic | polyglot | שבח praise | Prayers before Torah Study | prayers following pogroms | Prayers for leaders | Prayers for Precipitation | prayers for pregnant women | Prayers in the Babylonian Talmud | pre-rabbinic judaism | predation | pregnancy | Presidents Day | Prohibition in the United States | prophetic revelation | prostration | תהלים Psalms | Psalms for Fast Days | pseudepigrapha | Public Amidah | Purim parody | purimspiel | קבלה ḳabbalah | Ḳ.Ḳ. Beth Elohim (Colleyville Texas) | קדושה Qedushah | קפיצת הדרך ḳfitsat haderekh | קינות Ḳinōt | Queens | Quenya translation | rahit | Rain | Rainbow Day | rainfall | reconstructed text | reincarnation | Religious Zionism | religious Zionist prayers | הוצאת ספר תורה Removal of the Torah from the Ark | Renewal | רשות reshut | Rhineland Massacres | rhyming translation | ritual power | Roman minhag | Romaniote | romanticism | Ruth | Sabaic translation | Sabbath Queen | salvation | Samaria | Nusaḥ haSamerim | Samaritan | סנדלפון Sandalfon | Without a Minyan | סטרנורא Saturnalia | school of the ARI z"l | second Purims | Second Temple Period | Seleucid Greek Occupation | סליחות səliḥot | סעודות seudot | sexual predation | sexual violence | שבת shabbat | שבת הגדול Shabbat haGadol | שבת חזון Shabbat Ḥazon | שבת נחמו Shabbat Naḥamu | פרשת בשלח parashat B'shalaḥ | פרשת נח Parashat Noaḥ | פרשת תולדת parashat Toldot | שבת שקלים Shabbat Sh'qalim | שבת שירה shabbat shirah | שבת זכור Shabbat Zakhor | Shabbatot of Admonition | shelo asani ishah | שבע ברכות sheva brakhot | שדים sheydim | שיר Shir | שיר המעלות Shir haMa'alot | שירת הים Shirat haYam | Solo | Song of Ice and Fire | Spanish-Portuguese | spirituals | Spring | stimulant | Syriac | Tannaitic | תרגום targum | תשלומים tashlumim | Te'ezaza Sanbat | תחינות teḥinot | the Furnace | the Holocaust | the KA | the Pit | theophany | Third Reich | Three Weeks of Mourning | tithing | Tobit | tolerance and intolerance | tolerance of difference | traditional egalitarian | transgender prayer | transtropilation | Trees | tropified texts | Tsfat | ציון Tsiyon | Tunisia | Ugaritic translation | ultraviolence | ונתנה תקף unetaneh toqef | United States | Universal Peace | universalist | universalist prayers | ובמקהלות uvMaqhalot | Valyrian translation | vengeance | via negativa | wedding | Western Aramaic | Wine | ימי השובבים Yemei haShovavim | Yemenite Jewry | Yeshayahu | יציאת מצרים Yetsiat Mitsrayim | יציב פתגם Yetsiv Pitgam | Yevanic | Yiddish translation | Yiddish vernacular prayer | ישתבח Yishtabaḥ | ישראל Yisrael | יוצר אור yotser ohr | יוצרות yotsrot | יובל Yovel Jubilee | זמירות zemirot | זמן תשובה Zman teshuvah | Zoharic prayers | Even Boḥan | Maḥzor Aram Tsoba (1560) | Neḥemyah | Nusaḥ Cochin | Nusaḥ Italḳi | Nusaḥ Roma | Nusaḥ Šingli | Nusaḥ Yeb | Poteaḥ et Yodekha | pre-Pesaḥ | Rosh Ḥodesh Elul (אֶלוּל) | Psalms 4 | 5th century B.C.E. | אין אדיר Ayn Adir | חצי קדיש ḥatsi ḳaddish | טל tal | יום זה מכובד yom zeh mekhubad | יום שבתון yom shabbaton | כל מקדש שביעי kol meqadesh shevi'i | סעודת פורים seudat purim | שוכן עד shokhen ad | Psalms 8 | 16th President of the United States | 17 Shəvat | Psalms 20 | Psalms 27 | 28 Adar | 29 Tevet | Psalms 60 | Siege of Jerusalem (70 CE) | Psalms 79 | Psalms 84 | Psalms 85 | Psalms 92 | 100 blessings a day | Psalms 104 | Psalms 111 | Psalms 113 | Psalms 114 | Psalms 115 | Psalms 116 | Psalms 117 | Psalms 118 | Psalms 121 | Psalms 122 | Psalms 133 | Psalms 135 | Psalms 136 | Psalms 141 | Psalms 142 | Psalms 143 | Psalms 144 | Psalms 145 | Psalms 149 | Psalms 150 | Psalms 151 | Psalms 152 | Psalms 153 | Siege of Jerusalem (597 BCE) | Blois Incident of 1171 | York Massacre of 1190 | Chmielnicki massacres of 1648–1649 | 2023-2024 Israel–Hamas war | 2024 Iran–Israel conflict | 6th century B.C.E. | 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. | 8th century C.E. | 9th century C.E. | 10th 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. | 24th century C.E. | 32nd century A.M. | 33rd century A.M. | 34th century A.M. | 36th century A.M. | 37th 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

Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Unknown Author(s) | Yehudah ben Shmuel haLevi | Amram ben Rav Sheshna | Shlomo ibn Gabirol | Elazar ben Killir | Yisrael Najara | Shimon bar Isaac | Pádraig Pearse | the Masorti Movement in Israel | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | Benjamin Franklin | the Masoretic Text | Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils | Yeruḥam ben Meshullam | Akiva Sanders (translation) | Unknown Translator(s) | Aharon N. Varady (translation) | Avraham Menaḥem Mendel Mohr | Menaḥem ben Aharon | Ẓvi Hirsch Sommerhausen | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer | Avraham Khalfon | Woody Guthrie | Moshe Tanenbaum | Leonard Bernstein | Stephen Schwartz | Shmuel haDayan | Yirmiyah ben Ḥilkiyah haKohen | Barukh ben Neriyah | Eleazar ben Yehudah ben Ḳalonymus of Worms | Moses Gaster | Yeraḥmiel ben Shlomo | Yosef ben Asher (of Chartres) | Christopher S. Morrissey (translation) | Mordecai ben Yitsḥok ha-Levi | Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans | Yequtiel ben Yosef | Marqeh ben Amram | Yosef ibn Abitur | Menaḥem ben Makhir | Meshullam ben Ḳalonymus | Joseph Ezekiel Rajpurkar (translation) | Saadiah ben Yosef Gaon | Bnei Qoraḥ | Samuel Freund | Mosheh ben Yeshayah Menaḥem Bachrach | Yanai haPayetan | Sabato Morais | David ben Yishai (traditional attribution) | Asaph ben Berechiah | Avi Shmidman | Wolf Leslau (translation: English) | Abba Tsabrah (traditional attribution) | Yiḥya Tsalaḥ | Hillel ben Yaaqov of Bonn | Yaaqov ben Meir | Yonatan ben Uziel | Ḥabaquq haNavi | Johann Stephan Rittangel (Latin translation) | Yaaqov Mosheh Ḥai Altarats (translation) | Shmuel haPaytan | Yeḥezqel ben Būzi haKohen | Yehudah ben Hillel haLevi | Avraham Kahana (Hebrew translation) | Septuagint (translation/Greek) | Ḥaggai haNavi | Robert Henry Charles (translation) | Jospeh Ziegler (translation) | Emmanuel Tov (Hebrew reconstruction) | Paltiel Birnbaum (translation) | Eliyahu ben Shlomo Zalman | Abraham Lincoln | Shimon ben Yeshua ben Eliezer ben Sira | Theodotion (translation/Greek) | David Asher (translation) | Jacques Faïtlovitch (translation) | Yeshayahu ben Amōts | Aharon N. Varady | Mosheh ben Yehudah ibn Makhir | Nir Krakauer (translation) | Steven Greenberg | Ḳalonymus b. Ḳalonymus ben Meir | Mordecai Kaplan | Tsvi Hirsch Filipowski (translation) | Anat Hochberg (translation) | Uri DeYoung | Benyamim Tsedaka | Jack Kessler (trōpification) | Zalman Schachter-Shalomi (translation) | Arthur Waskow | Elat Chayyim Center for Jewish Spirituality | the Shalom Center | Anonymous Author(s) | Abe Katz (translation) | Isaac Goldstein | Jacob Chatinover (translation) | David Seidenberg

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: “11th century C.E.” (clear filter)

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

אֲדוֹן עוֹלָם (מנהג הספרדים במזרח) | Adōn Olam (Ladino translation from the Sidur Tefilat Kol Pe, 1891)

Contributed by Unknown Translator(s) | Shlomo ibn Gabirol | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The Seder Tefilat Kol Peh was printed in 1891 in Vienna, and features a full Ladino translation of the entire siddur. The Ladino translation here is found on the left side of pagespread №145. Along with a full transcription of the Ladino text, Isaac Gantwerk Mayer has also prepared a full romanization of the Ladino. . . .


שְׁנֵי זֵיתִים | Shnei Zeitim (Two Olive Branches) — a meorah piyyut for Shabbat Ḥanukkah, by Shlomo ibn Gabirol

Contributed by Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) | Shlomo ibn Gabirol |

Shnei Zeitim, by Shlomo ibn Gabirol, was once the most beloved song for Ḥanukkah. Though in recent years it has largely been replaced in popular consciousness by Maoz Tsur, in rites which preserve the customs of piyyut recitation within the Shema service it is still a beloved part of the holiday. The piyyut, a meorah — intended to introduce the ḥatimah for the Ahavah Rabbah blessing before the Shema, is included here with an original translation. Interestingly enough, Shnei Zeitim has an anti-Hasmonean focus, with emphasis on the importance of separation of powers between priest and king. For further discusson of this aspect, I’d recommend Yitzhak Szyf’s article on The Lehrhaus. . . .


בִּמְתֵי מִסְפָּר | BiM’tei Mispar, a seliḥah for Taanit Esther by Meshullam ben Ḳalonymus (11th c.)

Contributed by Meshullam ben Ḳalonymus | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

A reverse alphabetic acrostic seliḥah piyyut for Taanit Esther in Hebrew with English translation . . .


אָדָם בְּקוּם עָלֵֽינוּ | Adam B’qum ‘Alenu, a seliḥah for Taanit Esther by Menaḥem ben Makhir (ca. 11th c.)

Contributed by Menaḥem ben Makhir | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

An alphabetic acrostic seliḥah piyyut for Taanit Esther in Hebrew with English translation . . .


Maaravot for the first night of Shavuot, by Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils

Contributed by Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The maaravot-cycle of piyyutim for the first night of Shavuot, by Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils. In normative maaravot fashion, it is one extended cycle with an overarching structure (the first words of each of the Ten Commandments) throughout the whole of the kriat shema, with additional piyyutim incorporated into the first blessing after the shema. . . .


אֶזְכְּרָה מָצוֹק | Ezkerah Matsōk (“I remember the distress”), a seliḥah for the Fast of Tevet attributed to Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils (11th c.)

Contributed by David Asher (translation) | Joseph ben Samuel Bonfils | Aharon N. Varady (transcription) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

“Ezkera Matsok” (I remember the distress) is a seliḥah in alphabetic acrostic recited on the Fast of Tevet in the Ashkenazi nusaḥ minhag Polin. . . .


שׁוֹמְרוֹן קוֹל תִּתֵּן (אשכנז) | Shomron Qol Titein, a qinah for Tishah b’Av by Shlomo ibn Gabirol (ca. 11th c.)

Contributed by Shlomo ibn Gabirol | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This is a variation of the qinah for Tishah b’Av, “Shomron Qol Titein” in its Ashkenazi nusaḥ. Isaac Gantwerk Mayer first shared this translation via his Facebook page on Tishah b’Av, 2022. . . .


קרובות לראש שנה לאילנות | Ḳerovot for Tu biShvat, by Yehudah ben R’ Hillel haLevi (ca. 11th c.)

Contributed by Yehudah ben Hillel haLevi | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

Ḳerovot for Tu biShvat, a celebration of Divine verdancy, which namedrops a stunning array of flora from throughout the land of Israel. . . .


אִזֵל מֹשֶׁה | Izel Mosheh (Arise, Moses) — 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, Izel Moshe (Arise, Moses), the fifth in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited after the second verse of the song proper, as an elaboration on God’s strength. The English translation preserves the Hebrew acrostic of the original. . . .


אֱלָהָא תַּקִּיפָא רַבָּא וְגִבָּרָא | Elaha Taqifa (Mighty God) — a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of the 7th Day of Pesaḥ by Yequtiel ben Yosef

Contributed by Yequtiel ben Yosef | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This piyyut, Elaha Taqifa (Mighty God), the third in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited after the concluding verse of the second aliyah (third on Shabbat). The translation preserves the alphabetical acrostic, as well as the authorial tag — Jequtiel son of Joseph. . . .


אֱלָהָא עָלַם | Elaha Alam (Ageless God) — a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of the 7th Day of Pesaḥ by Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans (ca. 11th c.)

Contributed by Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This piyyut, Elaha Alam (Ageless God), the fourth in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited after the first verse of the Song of the Sea proper as an introduction to the targum of the text. . . .


אֲבוּנָן דְּבִשְׁמַיָּא וּבָרְיַן | Abunan D’biShmaya (Our Parent in Heaven) — a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of the 7th Day of Pesaḥ by Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans (ca. 11th c.)

Contributed by Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This piyyut, Abunan D’biShmaya (Our Parent in Heaven), the second in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited after the fifth verse of the first aliyah (or second verse of the second aliyah on Shabbat). . . .


אִילּוּ פּוּמֵּי נִימֵי | Ilu Pume Nima (If Our Mouths Were Thread) — an introductory a piyyut for the Seder Meturgeman of the 7th Day of Pesaḥ by Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans (ca. 11th c.)

Contributed by Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (transcription & naqdanut) | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

This piyyut, Ilu Pume Nima (If Our Mouths Were Thread), the first in a series of Aramaic piyyutim from the seventh day of Pesaḥ, is meant to be recited after the first verse of the first aliyah, as an introduction or ‘reshut’ to the seder meturgeman as a whole. . . .


אָב הָרַחֲמִים שׁוֹכֵן מְרוֹמִים | Av haRaḥamim Shokhein Meromim, a prayer for the martyred during the First Crusade & Rhineland massacres

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

A prayer for those martyred in the First Crusade and Rhineland Massacres, and by extension, all subsequent pogroms up until and including the Holocaust. . . .


קרובות לתענית אסתר | Ḳerovot for Taanit Esther by Yosef ibn Abitur (ca. 10th c.) with other seliḥot arranged by Isaac Gantwerk Mayer

Contributed by Yosef ibn Abitur | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The poetic genre known as qerovot, brief poems woven throughout the repetition of the weekday Amidah, is nowadays most closely associated with Elazar haḲalir’s Purim “Ḳrovetz“, a majestically interwoven piece of piyyut if ever there was one. But there are many other ḳerovot that have historically been recited, many of which were discovered in the Cairo Geniza. This set of ḳerovot, composed by the prolific Spanish paytan Yosef ibn Abitur, is meant to be included within the Shaḥarit amidah for Ta’anit Esther, the fast day before Purim. Consequently, it only goes up to the sixth blessing (the blessing for forgiveness) and concludes by leading directly into Seliḥot, which (before R. Yosef Karo’s standardization of the liturgy, and even now among some Western Ashkenazim) were inserted into the aforementioned blessing. In order to demonstrate this structure on a large scale, the editor here has compiled a full Shaḥarit repetition, nusaḥ Ashkenaz, incorporating the qerovot of Yosef ibn Abitur as well as the three seliḥot piyyutim of the Ashkenazi rite. . . .


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 . . .


אַקְדָמּוּת מִלִּין | The Aḳdamut, a piyyut for introducing the Decalogue by Meir ben Yitsḥaq Nehorai of Orléans (acrostic translation by Isaac Gantwerk Mayer)

Contributed by Meir ben Isaac Nehorai of Orléans | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The piyyut read as an introduction to the Decalogue during the Torah reading on Shavuot. . . .


מִי כָמֽוֹךָ וְאֵין כָּמֽוֹךָ | Mi Khamokha v’Ein Kamokha, a retelling of Megillat Esther in a piyyut for Shabbat Zakhor by Yehudah ben Shmuel haLevi (ca. 11th c.)

Contributed by Yehudah ben Shmuel haLevi | Isaac Gantwerk Mayer (translation) |

The poem Mi Khamokha v-Ein Khamokha, an epic retelling of the book of Esther in verse, was written for Shabbat Zakhor, the Shabbat before Purim, by the great paytan Yehuda ben Shmuel haLevi. It was originally written as a “geulah,” meant to be inserted into the prayer after the Shema in place of the verse beginning with “A new song…” But later Sephardic poskim ruled that it was forbidden to insert piyyutim into the Shema blessings, so in the communities that recite it today it is generally either read after the Full Kaddish as an introduction to the Torah service, or (for instance, in most Spanish and Portuguese communities) within the verse “Kol atzmotai tomarna” in the Nishmat prayer. Wherever you include it in your service, it’s a beautiful and intricately rhymed piyyut, and surprisingly easy to understand at that. It is presented here in a gender-neutral translation with all the Biblical verses cited, alongside a new translation that preserves the fourfold acrostic, two alphabetical and two authorial. –Isaac Gantwerk Mayer . . .


קדיש דרבנן (נוסח ארץ ישראל) | Ḳaddish d’Rabanan variant from the Cairo Geniza (nusaḥ Erets Yisrael, ca. 11th c.)

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

A unique Nusaḥ Erets Yisrael variant of the Qaddish found in the Cairo Geniza, most well known for including the names of the leading rabbis of the community in its text. . . .