To commemorate the upcoming Jewish High Holidays:
The Temple in Jerusalem is gone. The priests who walked its halls are gone. The smoke that rose from the sacrificial alter has long since dissipated. Sadly, even the sacred Ark of the Covenant has disappeared.
Along with the Torah, there is a link to those biblical days that still survives. One instrument that has remained unchanged from those ancient days. A piece of Jewish ritual in use today that served the priests in Solomon’s Temple thousands of years ago. It is the shofar, the trumpet of ancient Israel, that to this day provides the same ritual notes heard through centuries of Jewish history.
So much has happened to Jews since the destruction of the Temple. Many tears, some triumphs; yet through all those hundreds of years the shofar remains unchanged. The sound of the shofar today is the same sound that Israelites heard over two thousand years ago. The way the shofar is held to the lips is the same way that the Israelite priests blew their shofars. The sounds of the shofar today are the same haunting notes heard long ago. So much is gone from ancient Israel, yet the shofar remains the same
The sound of the shofar is auditory history. A tradition of sound that was heard by Jews as they traveled through the ages and lands of the Diaspora. As the notes of the shofar – tekiyah, shevarim, teruah – ring in your ears, close your eyes and imagine yourself back in the Temple of Solomon listening to the sound of tradition.