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  1. 18. Apr. 2014 · We say “Next Year in Jerusalem” on Yom Kippur and on the night of Passover because of the centrality of the Temple service to these days. After concluding the prayer services of Yom Kippur, which substitute for the biblically mandated mussaf service, we proclaim, “Next Year in Jerusalem.”. After finishing the Passover seder, in which we ...

  2. 30. Dez. 2016 · And that moment may occur next year. This is the happiness all Christians desire. Next Year in Jerusalem! May it be, Lord! Finish the work and return! You promised, “Surely I am coming soon.” We all say, “Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!” (Revelation 22:20) And to you, my friend and fellow earth-weary exile: “Next year in Jerusalem!”

  3. The History of “Next Year”. In a poem for the conclusion of Yom Kippur, the twelfth-century poet Judah ha-Levi asks God, as the sun sets and the day wraps up, to forgive Israel and assist those who are suffering. He ends the stanza with the hopeful phrase “Next year in Jerusalem!”. For ha-Levi, traveling to Jerusalem was more than a ...

  4. 29. März 2023 · Jews traditionally pray “Next year in Jerusalem!” as the Passover Seder approaches its conclusion. This year, though, some are asking whether they can still use that phrase in good conscience.

  5. Dieses Jahr sind wir hier, nächstes Jahr werden wir im Lande Israel sein. Dieses Jahr sind wir Sklaven, nächstes Jahr werden wir frei sein. Nächstes Jahr in Jerusalem ... wortwörtlich. von Aron Moss. Rabbiner Aron Moss lehrt Kabbala, Talmud und praktisches Judentum an der „Foundation for Education“ in Sydney, Australien.

  6. Next Year in Jerusalem. Traditionally, Jerusalem has been the focus of longing for Diaspora Jews who were forced from their land and the Temple of their God. Psalm 137 is the well-known lament of the Babylonian Jews who wept "by the rivers of Babylon" and declared, "If I forget you, O Jerusalem, let my right hand wither."

  7. Next year in Jerusalem” is the Birds’ Head Haggadah, dated around 1300 – image courtesy Sara Offenberg The reason for such a longing is obvious: Wherever they lived, Jews were almost always seen as an alien people, subject to special taxes, required to wear clothing that marked them as different, and often forced to convert to Christianity or Islam.