Chabad Hebrew School


 
Register Now
practice your prayers!
Chabad of the North Shore Website
Weekly Torah Portion
Chabad Lubavitch Headquarters Website
A great Jewish Library
 
   
 
   
   
Home | Contact us
Account Help / New Users
Educate your child... Educate a generation!
  Daily   Kindness   Household   Shabbat   Holiday   Lifecycle   Other

Post a CommentPrintSend this page to a friendShare thisSubscribe
20 Comments

Jewish Names

Name Calling

Names are more than convenient labels--going by your Jewish name is a statement of pride in your Jewish heritage. The Jews of ancient Egypt, tradition tells, kept their Jewish names. That's one of the ways they remained a cohesive people and merited redemption.

There's more: Your Jewish name is the channel by which life reaches you from Above. In fact, the Kabbalists say that when parents name a child, they experience a minor prophecy--because, somehow, that child's destiny is wrapped up in the combination of Hebrew letters that make up his or her name.

Granting a name in the presence of the Torah infuses the name with blessingA girl gets her name at the Torah reading in the synagogue. The rabbi or Torah reader recites a prayer for the health of mother and child and the father provides the name that the parents have chosen. Since the Torah is the source of all of good things, granting a name in the presence of the Torah infuses the name with blessing.

A boy is named at his brit milah (circumcision), when he enters into the covenant of Abraham and becomes a full-fledged member of the Jewish nation.

Some Details:

  • Never got a Jewish name? Converting to Judaism? Select a Jewish name that resonates with you. Often, people choose a name that is similar in sound and/or in meaning to their non-Jewish name.
  • Traditionally, Jews name their children after relatives or holy people. Sephardi Jews will sometimes name a child after a living ancestor; not so Ashkenazi Jews. Click here for more details.
  • When we pray for someone, we have in mind that person's Jewish name and that of his/her mother. But when we call a man for an aliyah to the Torah, we use his Jewish name and that of his father.
  • A change in name can result in a change of fortune. That's why, if someone is dangerously ill, we might provide him an additional name.
Post a CommentPrintSend this page to a friendShare thisSubscribe
20 Comments

Illustrations by Yehuda Lang. To view more artwork by this artist click here .

The content on this page is copyrighted by the author, publisher and/or Chabad.org, and is produced by Chabad.org. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with the copyright policy.
 

20 Comments Posted  |  Post A Comment
Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: July 20, 2010
To Anonymous in Oakland:
You can select whichever name you like. You may want to choose one that is linguistically or thematically similar to your secular name. Once you chose one that you will want to stick with for the rest of your life, you ask people to start calling you by your new name. It is customary to have a prayer said on your behalf in the presence of the Torah using your new Jewish name, thus cementing it as your identity.
Posted By Menachem Posner for Chabad.org

Posted: July 17, 2010
Jewish Name
How and where can I pick a Jewish name for myself? I am a adult female and I want to know.
Posted By Anonymous, oakland, Ca

Posted: May 2, 2010
While this may appear in many places, I recall seeing this taught in Emek HaMelech (The Valley of the King) 1:4, by Naftali Bachlarach, in the name of his teacher, Rabbi Isaac Luria.
Posted By Michoel HaKohein



 


Lifecycle
Pregnancy
Jewish Birthday
Jewish Names
Circumcision
Pidyon Haben
The Upsherin
Education
Bar and Bat Mitzvah
The Path to Marriage
The Jewish Wedding
Kaddish

 
 

About Us | Parents | Aleph Champ | Curriculum | Hebrew School Gallery

Chabad Hebrew School 44 Burrill Street Swampscott, MA 01907-3457 781-581-3833 Ext. 106

Powered by Chabad.org © 2001-2010 Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center. All rights reserved. Design by Dextel.net
In everlasting memory of Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen, pioneer of Torah, Judaism and Jewish information on the web