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Month of Elul

The month of Elul leads up to the High Holidays. It is a month of introspection. The shofar, the ram's horn blown during the High Holidays, is sounded every morning at morning prayer services and people begin to wish each other shana tova, a good year. During the last week of Elul, selichot  special penitential prayers are said, usually early in the morning. These prayers ask forgiveness for sins committed over the previous year.

Jewish tradition holds that, on the High Holidays, one atones for sins committed against God. However, for wrongs committed against one's neighbor, one's co-worker, one's parent, one's children, one'e spouse ... one must seek forgiveness directly from the offended. Many Jews devote the month of Elul to taking this practice seriously, seeking, through introspection, conversation, and correspondence, to make ammends. Elul provides us with the opportunity to think about the previous year and make plans for what we would like to do differently, to look at where we have lost track of ourselves over the past year, and to reset our course.



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