The Five Scrolls Article Index for
The
Website Links For
Five
 

Information About

The Five Scrolls




For other uses of the word "Megillah," see Megillah (disambiguation) .


The Five Scrolls or '''The Five Megillot''' ( ( Tanakh ), which is Ketuvim ("The Writings"). These five relatively short biblical books are grouped together in Jewish tradition.

The Five Scrolls are:

# The Song Of Songs
# Book Of Ruth
# Lamentations
# Ecclesiastes
# Book Of Esther


HISTORY


An early testimony that these five scrolls were grouped together is in the ''Midrash Rabba''. This Midrash was compiled on the Pentateuch and on the Five Scrolls.


LITURGICAL USE


All five of these ''megillot'' ("scrolls") are traditionally read publicly in the synagogue over the course of the year in many Jewish communities. In common printed editions of the Tanakh they appear in the order that they are read in the synagogue on holidays (beginning with Passover), thus:

#. In most Eastern Jewish communities it is read publicly each week at the onset of the Sabbath. There is also a widespread custom to read it at the end of the Passover Seder .
# Book Of Ruth (רות) is read in some communities, especially by Ashkenazim, before the reading of the Torah on the morning of Shavuot . Others read it in the ''Tikkun'' at night, or not at all.
# in all Jewish communities.
#. In other communities it is not read at all.
# Book Of Esther (Hebrew אסתר) is read in all Jewish communities on Purim . The public reading is done twice, on the evening of Purim and once again the next morning.

When read in the synagogue, these five books are sung with Cantillation (see below). In most communities, Esther is the only book accompanied by blessings before and after. But certain communities adopted the custom of the Vilna Gaon to recite blessings before the other four ''megillot'' (besides Esther) as well.

Similarly, the very term ''megillah'' ("scroll") is most widely used for the book of Esther, even though it is applied the rest as well. (As noted in Leo Rosten 's ''The Joys of Yiddish'', the term ''megillah'' is also used in a joking way, in reference to any lengthy story).

As indicated above, however, only two of the ''megillot'' are traditionally read in '''all''' Jewish communities, namely: Esther on Jews, but many Sephardic Jews do not associate the three books with the three festivals. The association is thus weaker also among Hasidic Jews who were influenced by Sephardic customs.


CANTILLATION

The actual notes written in the printed texts of the Five Scrolls (though absent from the actual handwritten scrolls) are the same as the notes in the Humash . However, the tune in which they are read varies depending on the scroll. Esther is read in a happier tune than the sad tune of Lamentations. Traditionally, Ecclesiastes, Ruth, and Song of Songs are read with the same festive tune.


SEE ALSO



EXTERNAL LINKS

  • Recordings:

  • --- Cantor Rabinovicz - with cantillation and free to download (bottom of list; missing Kohelet).