The following are traditionally sung in the
Nirtzah, the last of the 15 sections of the seder, devoted almost exclusively to singing.
L'shana Haba'ah "
L'Shana haba'ah bi'Yerushalayim": The whole line means "
Next year in Jerusalem!" In Israel, many have started to recite "L'Shana haba'ah bi'Yerurshalayim habenuyah" ("Next year in rebuilt Jerusalem"). This line is used both as the conclusion of the Passover Seder and after the
Ne'ila (Concluding) service on
Yom Kippur.
Adir Bimlukha Adir Bimlukha (also known as Ki Lo Na'eh): This song makes no mention of Passover but recites, in each stanza, two majestic descriptions of God, followed by the designation of a multitude (scholars, the faithful, the angels, etc.) who praise Him, the three lines being in a continuing alphabet acrostic, with the refrain, "Thine and thine, thine yes thine, thine only thine. Thine, Lord, is the kingship." And the stanza concludes with כִּי לוֹ נָאֶה, כִּי לוֹ יָאֶה׃ – (''ki lo no'eh, ki lo yo'eh'') – "For Him praise is due, for Him praise is fitting." The song apparently is inspired by Psalm 74:16 ("Yours is the day, Yours is the night") and by a Midrashic passage (Genesis Rabbah 6:2) which enlarges on those words. The authorship and date of composition are unknown, it was originally sung year-round at meals, it was not part of the Seder in the 11th century but came to be part of the Seder by the time of Rabbi Meir of Rothenburg in the 13th century.
Adir Hu "Adir Hu" (Mighty is He): a hymn naming the virtues of
God in order of the Hebrew alphabet, expressing hope that God will rebuild the
Holy Temple speedily. Most of the virtues of God are adjectives (for instance, Holy (Kadosh) is he); however, a few are nouns (for instance, Lord is he). The traditional melody is a bouncy, major one. Other melodies, however, have been composed for the alphabetical song. There is also a feminist variant of the song by Rabbi Jill Hammer which calls God "She" and, quoting Rabbi Hammer, "emphasizes God’s sharing in human joys and griefs, and God’s ability to renew life through the strength of the earth."
Echad Mi Yodea "Echad Mi Yodea" (Who Knows One?): Starting at one and going up to thirteen, each verse describes a different religious or worldly concept associated with its number. For example, the fifth verse is about the
five books of the Torah whereas the ninth verse describes the nine months of
pregnancy. After singing each new verse, all the preceding verses are repeated in decreasing order back down to one.
Chad Gadya "Chad Gadya" ("One Kid" 'i.e., baby goat]) is an
Aramaic song describing the consuming of each entity by the next, from a goat, through a cat, dog, a stick, fire, water, an ox, a butcher, and the angel of death, all the way up to God. Many think it
metaphorically tells the history of the Jews from their beginning to the future
Messianic time. ==References==