12021-01-08T13:22:21-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0377133plain2021-01-08T13:44:57-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0Kehila Kedosha Janina - Seth Kofinas Bar Mitzvah
These distinctive shofars come from Ioannina. They were donated to Kehila Kedosha Janina from the estate of Rabbi Bechoraki Matsil. The blowing of the shofar – a ram’s horn – dates to Biblical times. It was used as a bugle in battle and blown to indicate the times of services (like the running of church bells) in the time of the Jerusalem Temple. Today, the shofar is blown multiple times on Rosh Hashanah – the Jewish New Year – and at the close of Yom Kippur (The Day of Atonement). Because of its distinctive history and associations, the shofar is often depicted in Jewish art as a symbol of God’s Covenant with Abraham and with the Jewish people.
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1media/000 0 KKJFACADE.jpg2020-07-29T10:04:24-07:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0Kehila Kedosha Janina SynagogueQueens College Special Collections and Archives23splash10128202021-01-08T13:32:27-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Archivese5d75124350046eec0e648a38e4b73292f02c4b0
These distinctive shofars come from Ioannina. They were donated to Kehila Kedosha Janina from the estate of Rabbi Bechoraki Matsil. The blowing of the shofar – a ram’s horn – dates to Biblical times. It was used as a bugle in battle and blown to indicate the times of services (like the running of church bells) in the time of the Jerusalem Temple. Today, the shofar is blown multiple times on Rosh Hashanah – the Jewish New Year – and at the close of Yom Kippur (The Day of Atonement). Because of its distinctive history and associations, the shofar is often depicted in Jewish art as a symbol of God’s Covenant with Abraham and with the Jewish people.
These distinctive shofars come from Ioannina. They were donated to Kehila Kedosha Janina from the estate of Rabbi Bechoraki Matsil. The blowing of the shofar – a ram’s horn – dates to Biblical times.…
media/Section1_12A.jpegplain2021-01-10T15:13:37-08:00Queens College Special Collections and Hellenic American Projectcirca 1999-2010Vincent Giordano Collection on the Greek-Jewish Community in New York City and Ioannina, GreeceShared under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial 4.0 License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/Lower East Side, (New York, N.Y.)Giordano, Vincent20080101133332Picasa 2.020080101133332+0000