Uva letzion

Uva letzion (ובא לציון "and [a redeemer] shall come to Zion") are the Hebrew opening words, and colloquially the name, of the closing prayer of the weekday morning service. The prayer is also recited during Mincha on Shabbat and Yom Tov as well as during Ne'ila on Yom Kippur.

Contents

The prayer consists of a series of scriptural verses which include the Kedusha and its Aramaic translation, and two ancient prayers embodying an aspiration for enlightenment and messianic Redemption. It is always preceded immediately or closely by Ashrei (Psalm 145).

Practice

Shulchan Aruch rules that in shacharit, one should not leave the synagogue before Uva letzion.[1]

Uva letzion is not chanted at length; the greater portion is read in an undertone after the Chazzan has intoned the introductory lines. The chant for these, in the ritual of the Ashkenazim, is founded on the prayer-motive of Shabbat afternoon service. In Sephardic tradition, there is employed a special chant, of which a variant is used for Psalm 16, recited shortly afterward, at the expiration of Shabbat. In the frequent repetition of a short phrase, and the modification of it to fit the text, it reproduces the chief peculiarity of the worship-music traceable to a Spanish source earlier than 1492.

References

  1. Orach Chaim 132

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Singer, Isidore; et al., eds. (1901–1906). "U-BA LE-ẒIYYON". The Jewish Encyclopedia. New York: Funk & Wagnalls.

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