Prayers and Supplications.
Thus, not only is an effort made to improve human relationships:
With the approaching Days of Awe, it is customary to set the mood of self-reflection
that will culminate in days of prayer and supplication.
This period is marked by the recitation of numerous selichot
(penitential prayers) with some people rising in the middle of the night
throughout the month of Elul or, at least, the few days preceding Rosh
Hashanah, to pour out their hearts to Heaven.
The Shofar
is Sounded
Like a warning bell, from the second day of the month, the shofar (usually
a ram's horn) is customarily sounded after the morning prayers. This recalls
the blasts blown when Moses ascended the mountain for the second time:
it was a reminder to Jews not to fall into temptation again. As it is
written: "Shall a shofar blow in the city and the people not tremble?"
(Amos 3).
Click here
to hear the Shofar being blown!
A Special
Psalm
Also, from the 2nd Elul, Psalm 27 is recited after prayers
in the synagogue. The author acclaims: "A psalm of David - the Lord is
my light and my salvation... for he will hide me in his tent."
The Midrash explains the appropriateness of this recitation
during this period: "The Lord is my light" - on Rosh Hashanah; "and my
salvation" - on Yom Kippur; "for he will hide me in his tent" - on [the
festival of] Sukkot.