Home  / 3676

Turn to Traditions – Calls for Change: Negotiations over Liturgy in the Synagogues of Finland

Author(s)

Publication Name

Publication Date

Abstract

This article explores how Jews in Finland relate to the musical traditions of their synagogues and the changes that have occurred in the customs over time and as the result of various cultural and spiritual influences. Based on ethnographic data, it focuses on rituals, liturgy, and music as contexts for negotiating relationships between the institution and the individual, memory practices, and contemporary innovation – being and doing Jewish, to use concepts from the vernacular religion framework. The article outlines the historical development of Minhag Finland, the vernacular liturgical customs. It concludes that the “turn to traditions” should be stated in the plural, as several Jewish customs, cultures, and context are engaged in the negotiations around liturgy. This is not just a way to freeze time and preserve the status quo. Instead, seeking for meaningful models in the past paves the way for change – especially when turning toward a broad range of traditions.

Topics

Genre

Geographic Coverage

Copyright Info

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC BY 4.0 license

Original Language

Volume/Issue

70(5-6)

DOI

Link

Link to article including link to pdf, Turn to Traditions – Calls for Change: Negotiations over Liturgy in the Synagogues of Finland

Bibliographic Information

Muir, Simo, Illman, Ruth, Tuori, Riikka Turn to Traditions – Calls for Change: Negotiations over Liturgy in the Synagogues of Finland. Numen. 2023:  https://archive.jpr.org.uk/10.1163/15685276-20231706