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Upholding the Art of Chazanut

Students of All Stripes Find Their Voice at YU’s Belz School of Jewish Music Once a week for the past seven years, New York State Supreme Court Justice Martin Schulman has made the trip from his courthouse chambers in Jamaica, Queens to Yeshiva University's Philip and Sarah Belz School of Jewish Music on YU's Washington Heights Wilf Campus.
Belz_10006 Cantor Joseph Malovaney provides instruction to Judge Martin Schulman. (Photo: David Khabinsky)
Joined in a classroom by students who run the gamut from undergraduates and aspiring rabbis to doctors, lawyers, security guards and bus drivers, Schulman studies nusach ha-tefillah [prayer chants] and the theories, music and techniques of chazanut [cantorial singing], a critical Jewish skill which is fast being forgotten. But it’s not just about singing: at its core, chazanut is about channeling the voice of a community. That skill is the main emphasis at Belz, a division of YU-affiliated Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. Traditionally, cantors have played a central role in synagogue life, where their responsibilities often included much more than the soulful and resonant chanting of prayer services in accordance with communal custom for which they are usually known, such as teaching children to read Hebrew or acting as a scribe. In recent decades, however, their presence in shuls [synagogues] across the United States has become increasingly rare, often limited to conducting services at special times such as the upcoming High Holidays, as fewer and fewer communities have the resources to employ a cantor full-time. With this change, the art of chazanut, its history and its customs are at risk of being lost to time, as fewer and fewer people are trained for the role. “Belz seeks to preserve Jewish musical tradition and counter the shortage of professionally educated cantors and ba’alei tefillah [prayer service leaders] by providing courses in every aspect of Jewish prayer and music to prepare students to serve communities across the world,” said Cantor Bernard Beer, the school’s director since 1985. “Its holistic curriculum includes not only courses in nusach ha-tefilla [prayer chants] and chazanut, but also in biblical cantillation, shofar blowing, choral and instrumental ensemble, congregational singing and group leading—all designed to give cantors a full appreciation for their role in their communities and all the skills they need to fulfill it.” Over the last few years, however, cantors and rabbis in training have been joined at the Belz school by another kind of student—the layman, like Schulman, seeking to keep the cantorial tradition alive.
sac Yeshiva College graduate Zachary Bienenfeld continues his studies at Belz. He will lead the High Holiday services at a Mount Vernon synagogue.
“In any classroom, we have students who take our courses because they want to go into the field, undergraduates or semicha [rabbinic ordination] students looking to round out their education, and also the baaleh batim [laymen] who want to contribute to the shul davening,” said Beer. “They may come to us because they want to be able to daven [pray] properly for the amud [podium] for their parents’ yahrtzeits or even just to know a basic mincha, maariv, or shacharit, and they usually end up taking it very seriously.” According to Beer, there’s a good reason even professionals not interested in a cantorial career are coming to Belz to get grounded in the basics: there’s no other place to learn it. “In the old days, people knew how to daven just by coming to the synagogue and listening to the baalei tefillah,” he said. “That generation has dwindled and gone. People don’t have that knowledge anymore.” That’s one of the reasons Schulman began attending classes at Belz seven years ago. “A lot of people who learn in so much depth about everything else in Judaism don’t know basic nusach anymore,” he said. “But I believe tefillah has to be done in a specific way. The nusach that we’ve inherited conveys not only the spirit of the particular prayers but also of the day on which they’re said.” Zachary Bienenfeld, a recent Yeshiva College graduate now working as a technology analyst at JP Morgan Chase, agreed. As a student, he began taking classes at Belz not with a cantorial career in mind, but the goal of being able to better lead prayer services. Bienenfeld so enjoyed the classes he took as an undergraduate that he is continuing them this semester, post-graduation. He has also begun leading High Holidays services in the Fleetwood Synagogue in Mount Vernon, NY, where he follows the Belz nusach to the note. “The nusach replicates the European style of davening and hearing it takes you back to the roots of your Jewish identity in Europe,” he said. “Belz is the only school in America that teaches it—that teaches the musical component which most people really don’t know about.” That European style isn’t the only one offered at Belz. Students can also take Sephardic tefillah, classes that samples different styles of davening from around the world, and a course about the history of Jewish music and prayer.
Belz-Schwezoff and Beer Rabbi David Schwezoff and Cantor Bernard Beer. (David Khabinsky)
According to Cantor Beer, that history has undergone a sea change over the last century. “A cantor prays on behalf of the congregation—his goal is to bring their prayers to heaven on the wings of his song,” Beer said. “But the responsibility now is also to inspire the people, to get them to sing along.” He believes that trend began 40-50 years ago, when individual participation became more important to communities; before that, many shuls had choirs that sang along instead. Rabbi David Schwezoff, a native of Budapest, Hungary, takes the responsibility to move others with his davening especially seriously. “Even during my high school years I was asked to daven for the amud quite frequently, since not many people in my community knew how to do it,” he said. “But when I do something, I want to do it my best.” Schwezoff initially came to the United States to study at Yeshiva Shaarei Torah in Rockland County, NY, but he was also searching for a place to learn nusach and real cantorial techniques to take back to his shul in Hungary. When he discovered Belz, he was ecstatic. “What’s wonderful about the Belz school is that anyone can give you a CD at a Jewish bookstore about nusach, any cantor could record davening for you, but to get the spirit and understanding of how to stand there in front of Hashem [God] and have wonderful people who want you to help them push through the gates to Hashem and become more involved in the davening—that’s what Belz teaches you,” Schwezoff said. “They impress upon you what it means to be a shaliach tzibor [prayer service leader], how someone in that role must feel and behave, understanding the meaning and background of the prayer.” Schwezoff is now a full-time cantor in one of the largest communities in Budapest, where his duties include everything from teaching young children to read Hebrew to translating new siddurim and machzorim [prayer books] into Hungarian. Schwezoff also recently launched a European Cantors Association, where he is an executive member. “[Distinguished Professor of Liturgical Music] Cantor Joseph Malovaney came to the launch of our organization and gave a few classes,” he recalled. “Even though it was a few years after we’d studied together, he remembered the way I davened so well that he was able to come up to me and say, ‘I think you should sing this piece for the group and show them how you worked on it in Belz.’ It is a very personal school that way—they really know what fits you best and always seek your professional and spiritual growth.” In Schulman’s case, that meant adapting a special niggun [tune] passed on from Malovaney’s own teacher, Shlomo Ravitch, which Schulman uses to daven Shabbat Mussaf for his mother’s yahrtzeit each year. “Instead of just using the general nusach, I’m able to incorporate certain things from my Belz classes to make the davening meaningful,” he said. He also enjoys the diversity of his fellow classmates: “I may be a judge and 65 years old, but the camaraderie in the class, the mix of professionals like me and the college-age students who are there, really brings me back to my own college experience.” At the end of the day, however, they’re all there for the same reason. “When people walk into a synagogue they expect to hear a certain sound, and that sound is an aura that envelopes them in a particular holiday, event or prayer,” said Cantor Sherwood Goffin, outreach coordinator at Belz. “Our job here is to uphold the musical heritage of our synagogue and our people.”