Tzav (Leviticus 6:1-8:36) March 27, 2021/14 Nissan 5781
This week's reading, Tzav, details the ceremony of ordaining and installing Aaron and his sons as priests. Part of the ceremony involves the slaughter of a ram which was offered as an ordination sacrifice, and the meat of which the newly ordained priests were to eat during their week-long seclusion in the Tabernacle. The description of this slaughtering is unique not in word choice or in spelling, but in the metatextual function of the cantillation. When the Torah is read publicly as part of the synagogue service, it's chanted using a system of notation developed in the tenth century (different communities developed different musical motifs, but the symbols are consistent). In addition to indicating the melodies used for the words, the markings - called "ta‘amim" in Hebrew, which means something like "sense" or "meaning" - indicate where the stress in a word falls and also function as a sort of punctuation. There's a whole taxonomy of different...