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Kaddish and also
* Kaddish ahar Hakk ' vura ( קדיש אחר הקבורה ) Literally " Kaddish after a Burial ", also called Kaddish d ' Ithadata ( קדיש דאתחדתא ) named after one of the first distinguishing words in this variant.
In 2006, a message was also delivered on behalf of Kofi Annan, Secretary-General of the United Nations, by his representative, Francis Martin O ' Donnell, who added a Hebrew prayer Shalom, from the Mourners ' Kaddish.
She also sang in and contributed material to the album Kaddish by Towering Inferno ( Richard Wolfson and Andy Saunders, 1993 ).
Kaddish also featured a cover song in Hebrew called " Ha ' ayara Bo ' eret " (" the small town is burning ").
Kaddish actually means " Sanctification " ( or " Prayer of Making Holy ") which is a prayer " In Praise of God "; or other special remembrances known as Yizkor ; and also a Hazkara which is said either on the annual commemoration known as the Yahrzeit as well on Jewish holidays.
A special Kaddish, the Kaddish Hagadol, is also said.

Kaddish and known
The prayers offered on behalf of the deceased consist of: Recitation of Psalms ; Reciting a thrice daily communal prayer in Aramaic which is known as " Kaddish ".
El Molai Rachamim is the actual Jewish prayer for the dead, although less well known than the Mourner's Kaddish.

Kaddish and for
Then Meltzer's voice, quiet, calm, strong, started the Kaddish, the prayer for the dead.
Despite this, the tradition of most Ashkenazi Orthodox synagogues is to use Hebrew ( usually Ashkenazi Hebrew ) for all except a small number of prayers, including the Kaddish, which had always been in Aramaic, and sermons and instructions, for which the local language is used.
The central line of the Kaddish in Jewish tradition is the congregation's response: י ְ ה ֵ א ש ְׁ מ ֵ ה ּ ר ַ ב ָּ א מ ְ ב ָ ר ַ ך ְ ל ְ ע ָ ל ַ ם ו ּ ל ְ ע ָ ל ְ מ ֵ י ע ָ ל ְ מ ַ י ָּ א ( Yehei shmëh rabba mevarakh lealam ulalmey almaya, " May His great name be blessed for ever, and to all eternity "), a public declaration of God's greatness and eternality.
The Mourners ', Rabbis ' and Complete Kaddish end with a supplication for peace (" Oseh Shalom ..."), which is in Hebrew, and is somewhat similar to the Bible.
It differs from the regular Kaddish because of its inclusion of a prayer for rabbis, scholars and their disciples.
While anyone may say this Kaddish, it has become the custom for mourners to say the Rabbinical Kaddish in addition to the Mourner's Kaddish.
The Half Kaddish is used to punctuate divisions within the service: for example, before Barekhu, between the Shema and the Amidah and following readings from the Torah.
* Kenneth Slessor Prize for Poetry: Fay Zwicky, Kaddish and Other Poems
** Leonard Bernstein ( conductor ) & the New York Philharmonic for Bernstein: Symphony No. 3 " Kaddish "
** Leonard Bernstein ( conductor ) & the New York Philharmonic for Bernstein: Symphony No. 3 " Kaddish "
When her father died, Abzug, then 13, was disallowed to say the Mourner's Kaddish for her father in synagogue, where that privilege was reserved for sons of the deceased.
Lighting memorial candles and reciting the Kaddish — the prayer for the departed — are common.
For this day, it recommended traditional Jewish ways of remembering the dead, such as the study of the traditional Mishnah section about ritual baths, saying Psalms, lighting a yahrzeit candle and saying Kaddish for those Holocaust victims whose date of death remains unknown.
Correctly interpreted it refers to the repeating of " Kaddish " and " Barechu " at the synagogue for the benefit of late comers, and declares that in Israel such a repetition is permitted only when seven ( according to others, when six ) men are present who have not yet heard these responsive readings.
* Kaddish for cello and orchestra ( 1987 )
While the Kaddish does not mention death but rather affirms the steadfast faith of the mourners in God's goodness, El Molai Rachamim is a prayer for the rest of the departed.
* In the 1996 Broadway musical Rent and its 2004 film adaptation, at the beginning of the number " La vie Boheme ", Collins and Roger quote the text of the Kyrie along with the text of the Dies Irae and the Mourners ' Kaddish ) as part of a mock requiem for " the death of Bohemia ".
In Orthodox Judaism, it was not the norm for women to recite the Mourners ' Kaddish.

Kaddish and Ginsberg
Ginsberg mentions Shelley's Adonais at the beginning of Kaddish, and cites it as a major influence on the composition of one of his most important poems.
Carl Solomon introduced the work of Antonin Artaud to Ginsberg, and the poetry of André Breton had direct influence on the poem Kaddish.
Ginsberg wrote a part of his moving and mature poem Kaddish at the hotel and Corso wrote the mushroom cloud-shaped poem Bomb.
The poetry of Allen Ginsberg often touches on Jewish themes ( notably the early autobiographical works such as Howl and Kaddish ).
# Allen Ginsberg, Kaddish and Other Poems, 1961

Kaddish and is
Kaddish ( קדיש, Qaddish Aramaic: " holy "; alternate spellings, qaddish, ḳaddish ) is a prayer found in the Jewish prayer service.
The central theme of the Kaddish is the magnification and sanctification of God's name.
The term " Kaddish " is often used to refer specifically to " The Mourners ' Kaddish ", said as part of the mourning rituals in Judaism in all prayer services as well as at funerals and memorials.
When mention is made of " saying Kaddish ", this unambiguously denotes the rituals of mourning.
Along with the Shema and Amidah, the Kaddish is one of the most important and central prayers in the Jewish liturgy.
" The Kaddish is in origin a closing doxology to an Aggadic discourse ".
This " Rabbinical Kaddish " ( Kaddish d ' Rabbanan ) is still said after studying midrash or aggadah or after reading them as part of the service.
The oldest version of the Kaddish is found in the Siddur of Rab Amram Gaon, c. 900.
Shira Schoenberg observes that " The first mention of mourners saying Kaddish at the end of the service is in a thirteenth century halakhic writing by Isaac Ben Moses of Vienna and called the Or Zarua literally, " Light is Sown ".
The Kaddish d ' Rabbanan is used after any part of the service that includes extracts from the Mishnah or the Talmud, as its original purpose was to close a study session.
This is included in the Siddur of Amram Gaon, but is a meditation taking the place of Kaddish rather than a Kaddish in the normal sense.
Kaddish is recited during the services ; the mourner, if eligible, may recite kaddish.
It is second only to the Kaddish ( counting all its forms ) as the most frequently recited prayer in current synagogue liturgy.

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