The Jewish prayer shawl
A prayer shawl called a Tallith.
Tzitzit.
It's the Yiddish word for the Jewish prayer shawl.
There are no beads on a Tallit or Jewish prayer shawl. There are knots and strings called Tzitzit on each corner that represent the 613 commandments found in the Torah.
The Jewish prayer shawl, the tallit.
Most traditionally, the groom would wear the skull cap during a Jewish wedding. In certain Jewish communities the prayer shawl is draped over the bride and groom while they are under the Chuppa (wedding canopy).
The Hebrew name for the 'prayer shawl' is 'tallit'. Many Jews of European decent also refer to the tallit as a 'tallis'. Jewish people do not call it a prayer shawl.The tallit is traditionally worn only by men (and in some synagogues, only married men) for morning prayer services. The only time when a tallit is worn for evening prayers is on Yom Kippur.
A tallith is a fringed shawl traditionally worn by Jewish men at prayer.
shawl-tallit cap -kippah
The prayer shawl, or Tallith, is draped over the shoulders. It symbolizes God's encompassing nearness.
Some believe that the dark stripes on the tallit (prayer shawl) are in memorial of the destruction of the Holy Temple.