Aharon's Jewish
Books and Judaica
600 South Holly Street Suite 103
Denver, Colorado 80246
303-322-7345
800-830-8660
JudaicOnline store
that provides a wide selection of all types of Judaica, Jewish
gifts, Jewish books, Jewish ritual items and more
www.judaic.com
The
Prayer Shawl - tallit (Modern Hebrew: טַלִּית) or tallet(h) (Sephardi
Hebrew: טַלֵּית), also called talles (Yiddish), is a prayer shawl
that is worn during the morning Jewish services (the Shacharit
prayers) in Judaism, during the Torah service, and on Yom Kippur and
other holidays. It has special twined and knotted fringes known as
tzitzit attached to its four corners. The tallit is sometimes also
referred to as the arba kanfot, meaning the "four wings" (in the
connotation of four corners).
While some other Jewish garments or objects might be
treated more casually, the tallit is a special personal effect,
generally used for many years or a lifetime and never discarded.
Most Jewish men (and some women) own very few tallitot in their
lifetimes. A threadbare tallit is treated with great respect, as if
it had a mantle of holiness, acquired from years of use.[citation
needed] Although there is no mandatory tradition, in Conservative,
reform, and otherwise non-religious families a tallit, as well as
tefillin, is likely to be given as a special gift, from father to
son, from father-in-law to son-in-law, or from teacher to student.
It might be purchased to mark a special occasion, such as a wedding,
a bar/bat mitzvah, or a trip to Israel. When a man dies, it is
traditional that he be buried dressed only in his kittel, with his
tallit is draped over him. Otherwise, a religious Jew is required to
have his own tallit (Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim, Chapter 2).
Since wearing a tallit at certain times is considered
an obligation for men, a synagogue will usually have a rack
available with extras, for visitors and guests, or for those who
forgot to bring their own with them. The extras that a synagogue has
available to lend are usually plain and simple, but sufficient to
fulfill the obligation. Although non-Jewish male visitors are
expected to wear a
kippah (headcovering) when visiting a synagogue,
it would be frowned upon for a non-Jew to put on a tallit, unless he
is studying or preparing for conversion to Judaism.