Niggun Tzeinah Ureinah: Difference between revisions
Created page with "'''Tzeinah Ureinah''' is a devekus niggun that was sung by the Alter Rebbe. The name of the niggun is taken from a verse in Shir HaShirim (Chapter 3, verse 11):<blockquote>"Tzeinah ureinah b'nos Tziyon bamelech Shlomo ba'atarah she'itrah lo imo b'yom chasunaso uvyom simchas libo"</blockquote>This niggun is one of the ten niggunim of the Alter Rebbe. On one occasion, the Alter Rebbe explained the meaning of the words "Tzeinah Ureinah" in avodas Hashem; '''Tzeinah''' - by..." |
No edit summary |
||
| (3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
| Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Tzeinah Ureinah''' is a devekus | '''Tzeinah Ureinah''' is a nigun of devekus — cleaving to G‑d — sung by the [[Alter Rebbe]]. The nigun takes its name from the verse in [[Song of Songs]] (3:11): | ||
{{quote|Go forth and gaze, O daughters of Zion, upon King Solomon, upon the crown with which his mother crowned him on the day of his wedding, and on the day of the gladness of his heart.}} | |||
This | This nigun is one of the [[Ten Niggunim]] of the Alter Rebbe. | ||
This | On one occasion the Alter Rebbe explained the meaning of the words ''tzeinah ureinah'' in the service of G‑d: '''Tzeinah''' — "go forth" — means that when a person goes forth from his own self-centeredness, he merits '''ureinah''' — "and see" — to perceive G‑dliness. | ||
This nigun has an additional passage that was only discovered shortly before the publication of [[Sefer HaNiggunim]], Volume II (Part I). This additional passage was recorded from the Chassid R' [[Dovid Leib Marozov]], who received it from his father R' [[Elchanan Dov Marozov]], who had learned the [[Ten Niggunim]] directly from the [[Rebbe Rashab]] himself. | |||
This nigun is Nigun No. 4 in [[Sefer HaNiggunim]] (the additional passage appears as Nigun No. 176). | |||
== External Links == | == External Links == | ||
* [http://www20.chassidus.com/audio/nigun/03-04-Tze-enoh-u-Re-enah-from-The-Alter-Rebbe-Heichal-Neginah.htm Listen to the nigun] — at the Heichal Neginah website | |||
* [http://old2.ih.chabad.info/php/audio.php?action=playsong&id=423 Listen to the nigun] — arrangement by R' Elior Valner | |||
* R' Lev Leibman, [http://nichoach.blogspot.com/2015/12/blog-post.html '''Niggun Tzeinah Ureinah'''] — at the Kir HaNiggunim website | |||
* [https://chabad.info/video/kids/rebbekids/%d7%a8%d7%91%d7%99-%d7%9c%d7%99%d7%9c%d7%93%d7%99%d7%9d-%d7%a6%d6%b0%d7%90%d6%b6%d7%99%d7%a0%d6%b8%d7%94-%d7%95%d6%bc%d7%a8%d6%b0%d7%90%d6%b6%d7%99%d7%a0%d6%b8%d7%94-%e2%80%a2-%d7%9c%d7%a0%d7%92/ '''Which Rebbe composed the nigun "Tzeinah Ureinah"?'''] — Rebbe for Children | |||
[[Category:Niggunim of the Alter Rebbe]] | |||
[[he:ניגון צאינה וראינה]] | |||
Latest revision as of 11:59, 25 June 2026
Tzeinah Ureinah is a nigun of devekus — cleaving to G‑d — sung by the Alter Rebbe. The nigun takes its name from the verse in Song of Songs (3:11):
Go forth and gaze, O daughters of Zion, upon King Solomon, upon the crown with which his mother crowned him on the day of his wedding, and on the day of the gladness of his heart.
This nigun is one of the Ten Niggunim of the Alter Rebbe.
On one occasion the Alter Rebbe explained the meaning of the words tzeinah ureinah in the service of G‑d: Tzeinah — "go forth" — means that when a person goes forth from his own self-centeredness, he merits ureinah — "and see" — to perceive G‑dliness.
This nigun has an additional passage that was only discovered shortly before the publication of Sefer HaNiggunim, Volume II (Part I). This additional passage was recorded from the Chassid R' Dovid Leib Marozov, who received it from his father R' Elchanan Dov Marozov, who had learned the Ten Niggunim directly from the Rebbe Rashab himself.
This nigun is Nigun No. 4 in Sefer HaNiggunim (the additional passage appears as Nigun No. 176).
External Links[edit | edit source]
- Listen to the nigun — at the Heichal Neginah website
- Listen to the nigun — arrangement by R' Elior Valner
- R' Lev Leibman, Niggun Tzeinah Ureinah — at the Kir HaNiggunim website
- Which Rebbe composed the nigun "Tzeinah Ureinah"? — Rebbe for Children