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Selichot (, singular: סליחה, səliḥā) are penitential poems and prayers, especially those said in the period leading up to the , and on fast days. The Thirteen Attributes of Mercy are a central theme throughout these prayers.


Selichot of the High Holidays
In the Sephardic tradition, recital of Selichot in preparation for the begins on the second day of the Hebrew month of . In the , in years where the first day of begins on a Thursday or Saturday, selichot are recited from the Saturday night before Rosh Hashanah. If, however, the first day of Rosh Hashanah falls on a Monday or Tuesday, selichot are recited from the Saturday night more than a week before Rosh Hashanah to ensure that it is recited at least four times. This may be because originally the pious would fast for ten days during the season of repentance, and four days before Rosh Hashanah were added to compensate for the four of the Ten Days of Repentance on which fasting is forbidden – the two days of , , and the day preceding —and, while the fasts are observed by very few today, the Selichot that accompanied them have been retained. Alternatively, the Rosh Hashanah liturgy includes the Biblical phrase "you shall observe a burnt offering", and like an offering which needs to be scrutinised for defects for four days, so too four days of self-searching are needed before the day of judgment.

In the , selichot always begin on a Monday or Thursday shortly before Rosh Hashanah. If Rosh Hashanah falls on Monday, they begin the previous Monday. If Rosh Hashanah falls on a Tuesday, they begin on the Monday eight days before. If Rosh Hashana falls on Thursday, they begin the previous Thursday. If Rosh Hashanah falls on Shabbat, they begin the Monday of that week.Machzor Shadal, Livorno 1856, Volume 2, Folio 1a.

Selichot refers to both the that compose the service as well as to the service itself. In most Sephardic communities, selichot services are identical each day. However, some communities recited different selichot on Mondays, Thursdays and Shabbat, following the order in Siftei Renanot, while keeping the "standard" order on days without Torah Reading. In the Eastern Ashkenazic tradition, although the text and length of specific prayers varies from day to day, the overall format remains the same and is prefaced by () and the Half-. In the Western Ashkenazic tradition, there is similarly an overall format, but it begins with Adon Olam or Lecha Hashem Ha'Tzedaka, and the Half- follows the first set of the thirteen attributes.

Selichot are usually recited between midnight and dawn. Some recite it at night after the prayer, or in the morning before , due to the convenience of synagogue attendance when a prayer is already taking place there.

The most popular night of Selichot in the Ashkenazi tradition is the first night, when many women and girls as well as men and boys attend the late-night service on Saturday night. In some communities, the wears a and sings elaborate melodies. In some congregations, it is not unusual for a to participate in this first night's service. What Are Selichot? In the Eastern Ashkenazic tradition, this night also has more Selichot than any other night prior to Rosh Hashanah eve. The other nights are sometimes more sparsely attended and those services are often led by a layperson, rather than a trained musician, and with melodies that are less elaborate than the first night.

In addition to the Selichot of the High Holiday period, the recitation of Selichot on Yom Kippur itself is the centerpiece and most important part of the liturgy,See Jacob ben Asher, Tur OC 620. recited in all of the prayers of the day. Beginning in the late 19th Century,Daniel Goldschimdt, Yom Kippur Machzor, page 13 if the introduction. many communities in Eastern Europe stopped reciting Selichot except at Maariv and Neilah.A practice very strongly criticized by Rabbi Yechiel Michel Epstein in Aruch Hashulchan OC 620:1. Western Ashkenazic communities, as well as a small number of Eastern Ashkenazic communities, maintain the recitation of Selichot in all of the prayers of Yom Kippur. Italian rite communities recite Selichot on Yom Kippur in all of the prayers except Musaf. Sephardic communities also recite Selichot at all of the prayers of Yom Kippur, although they recite them after the Chazzan's repetition rather than as a part of it.


Categories of Selichot
Categories of Selichot in the Ashkenazic tradition may include:
  • (סליחה 'forgiveness') – This is the default Selichah and comprises the vast majority of the Selichot service. These can be subdivided into categories of Sheinya (with two line stanzas), Shelishiya (with three line stanzas) and Shalmonit (with four line stanzas).
  • (פזמון 'chorus') – These central Selichot vary according to the day and contain a chorus which is repeated after each stanza.
  • (עקידה 'binding', a word which specifically refers to the Binding of Isaac) – This Selichah contains the theme of the Akeidah as a merit for God answering our prayers. In the Ashkenazic selichot rites, these poems are recited on the eve of Rosh Hashanah, during the Ten Days of Repentance, and on Yom Kippur itself (but not during the first days of selichot prior to the eve of Rosh Hashanah). Depending on the specific rite, these poems are recited immediately before or immediately after the Pizmon.
  • (חטאנו 'we have sinned') – Starting on the evening before Rosh Hashanah and and continuing through Yom Kippur, this Selichah is said after the final recitation of the Thirteen Attributes and before the confessional. It contains as its refrain, "חטאנו צורנו סלח לנו יוצרנו" ('We have sinned, our Rock; forgive us, our Creator'). Perhaps the most famous Chatanu Selichah is the from the Midrash Eleh Ezkerah recited in the Eastern Ashkenazic rite during on Yom Kippur or at other times in other rites. The recitation of this refrain has been partially or entirely abandoned in many communities.
  • (תחינה 'petition') – It is recited during at the very end of the Selichot service. In the Ashkenazic selichot rites, these poems are recited on the eve of Rosh Hashanah and during the Ten Days of Repentance (but generally not during the first days of selichot prior to the eve of Rosh Hashanah).


Selichot of Fast Days
On minor fast days (including the Fast of Behav), most communities recite Selichot at some point during the Shacharit service (as opposed to before Shacharit). In contemporary practice, most communities recite these Selichot after the conclusion of the Shacharit . In some communities (especially Western Ashkenazic communities, but also some Eastern Ashkenazic communities), the older practice is maintained to insert the recitation of the Selichot of minor fast days in the middle of the blessing for forgiveness (סלח לנו כי חטאנו) in the repetition of the Shacharit Amidah. The content of many of these prayers is related to the specific fast day.

In Ashkenazic commuinities, Selichot are recited on the Fast of Gedaliah only before the prayer service like the selichot of the High Holidays; in many Sephardic communities, additional selichot are recited after the Amidah just like any other fast day. Selichot are not recited in any community today on the major fast day of Tisha B'Av, although they were recited by the of Babylonia.Daniel Goldschmidt, Kinot, pages 7–8 of the introduction.


Selichot on other occasions
In addition to High Holidays and Fast Days, there were communities that recited Selichot on .See Machzor Kol Bo.

Additionally, in the early modern period, there were "shomerim la-boker societies" which recited Selichot on every day of the year that is recited.See the order of one such group here. See also the Shlomo Zalman Geiger, Divre Kehilot, who describes such a group that had once existed in .


Selichot rites
Until approximately the 15th century, there was no set order for selichot, and the chazzan in each community would pick which piyyutim to recite each day.Daniel Goldschimidt, Selichot according to the Lituanian rite, Jerusalem 1970, page 6 of the introduction. Beginning in the 15th century, each region of the Ashkenazic world developed its own order. There are at least thirteen Ashkenazic printed rites for selichot:

The following eight are variations of the Western Ashkenazic rite:

  1. and its surroundingsFirst printed Augsburg 1536. This edition follows the Italian Ashkenazic rite, but at the end (beginning on page 106a at the bottom), it prints the Selichot in the Frankfurt rite that are not in the Italian Ashkenazic rite. The last three pages contain an index of the order of the Selichot according to both of these rites. For a later, complete printing of this rite see here.
  2. For the first edition Frankfurt 1725 see here. For a later edition, see here.
  3. Italian AshkenazimFirst printing approximately 1475. Goldschmidt mistakenly identifies the first edition as Venice 1600(!), and error of approximately 125 years, with a few editions such as Augsburg 1536 (see the above footnote about this edition regarding the Frankfurt rite) and Venice 1548 in between.
  4. and FürthThe first edition Wilhermsdorf 1714 does not appear to be scanned. For a scan of the Fürth 1756 edition see here.
  5. and For the first edition Wilhermsdorf 1737.
  6. WormsPrinted twice: The first edition (1714) lists the differences between this rite and the Frankfurt rite above, and contains those piyyutim which do not appear in the Frankfrut rite. The second editon (1737) prints the full Selichot in order.
  7. Only one known copy of this printing survives, and it is found in the . The National Library of Israel has a photocopy of the original, and it has been scanned and is available on
  8. FloßPrinted once in Sulzbach 1843.

The following five are variations of the Eastern Ashkenazic rite:

  1. (Polin)First edition Lublin 1603. For a later edition in clearer font, see here.
  2. , , , and First edition Prague 1529. For a later edition in clearer font, see here.
  3. and (Lita and Zamut)First edition Amsterdam 1651 (with no scan available). See here for a scan of a later edition the selichot according to this rite.
  4. Poznań and First edition Prague 1608 (with no scan available). See here for a scan of a later edition the selichot according to this rite.
  5. Old Synagogue in First edition Prague 1605.

Among 21st century Ashkenazi Jewish communities, the Polin and Lita variations are dominant, although Bohemia is the most common in England. Some associate Lita with and Polin with , likely because in early 20th Century most Jews in Poland had adopted Nusach Sefard, whereas most Jews in Lithuania maintained Nusach Ashkenaz. However, the differences between Polin and Lita Selichot have origins over a hundred years before the advent of Nusach Sefard, and the minhagim were geographic rather than ideological. recites Selichot according to Nusach Lita because they are from Lithuania, and there are Polish who recite Selichot according to Nusach Polin.

The poems recited in the major variations, with their assigned numbers, for the days proceeding Rosh Hashanah and the Ten Days of Repentance (but not including the Selichot for the prayers of Yom Kippur itself) as well as for the threefold Fast of Behav, are as follows (page numbers in superscript to the right):

44
BHB1
29
86
30
28
85
27
32
14
46
49
42
81
BHB3 BHB3 BHB3 BHB3
55
66
12
BHB2
15
64
1
24
6
BHB3
2
BHB1
58
31
61
BHB2
33
26
34
83
BHB3 BHB123 BHB123
37
69
62
52
9
BHB3
54
63
78
BHB1 BHB1 BHB1
74
BHB2
5
45
56
25
20
77
11
53
BHB3 BHB3 BHB3
21
18
43
79
70
13
57
4
BHB2
23
82
BHB3 BHB3 BHB3 BHB3
48
40
50
35
19
22
65
87
73
10
BHB1 BHB2 BHB1 BHB2
8
BHB1 BHB1 BHB1 BHB1
7
BHB1 BHB2 BHB1
75
39
84
76
BHB2
67
71
38
68
16
60
36
59
3
BHB1
80
51
72
17
41
47


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