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Comments on I've already made a siyum on a work. Can I make a full siyum a second time?

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I've already made a siyum on a work. Can I make a full siyum a second time?

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As a personal example, I completed learning all of Shas Mishnayot (with the Kehati commentary) for my thirteenth birthday. At the time, I made a siyum; with the Hadran Alach, the special Kaddish, the works.

I've been considering learning the whole thing again - to brush up on it and refresh my knowledge (I was fairly young when I learned it, after all). This would potentially include a second siyum, since I do plan on, well, finishing it a second time.

Can I make a complete siyum again, with the Kaddish for a siyum and everything else, for the same text that I've already made a siyum on?

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Yes, you are absolutely encouraged to do this. This is the common practice when reviewing one's learning, however regularly that may be. In fact, the colloquial (though not universally accepted) translation for the words "Hadran Alach" are "We shall return to you"

A rather famous example of this was reported of Rabbi Aryeh Leib Ginzburg, who made a Siyum not long before his death upon completing the Talmud one thousand times.

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General comments (4 comments)
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Lev‭ wrote almost 4 years ago · edited almost 4 years ago

One thousand times!?

PinnyM‭ wrote almost 4 years ago · edited almost 4 years ago

@Lev indeed. I am not aware of an authoritative source for this, but I have seen this in print numerous times. Online as well, for example: here (see 15 Tammuz), and here .

AA ‭ wrote almost 4 years ago

That would mean he studied 100 daf a day for 75 years straight.

PinnyM‭ wrote almost 4 years ago · edited almost 4 years ago

He lived to around 90. I would presume he reviewed faster as he went along, so the average of the last few cycles would be more pages/day than that. Considering avid readers can polish a 1000 page (500 daf) novel in a day, this doesn't seem very outlandish to me.