A Lament for Yom Kippur

We have no high priest
to atone for us;
how shall we be expiated
on account of our misdeeds?

We have no Urim and Thummim1
to inquire;
how can we have light
while our desire lies in darkness?2

We have sinned . . .

The service has been abolished
from the place of service;
how can we serve the Righteous One
while in servitude to a…
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“’En lanu kohen gadol” is a lament, a penitential poem for the Yom Kippur liturgy, written by the only poet known by name from the preclassical period, Yosi ben Yosi. Most of his fifteen surviving pieces are for Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. Whereas “’Az be-’en kol” is remarkable for the scope of its content, “’En lanu kohen gadol” and Yosi ben Yosi’s other compositions are renowned for their form, displaying masterful wordplay, puns, alliteration, and poignant refrains within the framework of the alphabetical acrostic.

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