Nigun: (ni-gun) n., plural: nigunim,
a song of the Kabbalistic/Chassidic tradition, generally without words.
Considered a path to higher consciousness and transformation of being.
● "If words are the pen of the heart," taught Rabbi Schneur
Zalman of Liadi, "then song is the pen of the soul." The soul's pen,
however, writes in the opposite direction from the heart's. While words carry
light downwards from the Primal Consciousness to the minds of sages and the
lips of prophets to inscribe them upon human hearts, song carries the soul
upwards to be absorbed within the Infinite Light.
That is why nigunim generally have no words. Words limit and define, but
the nigun tears the soul beyond all bounds. Beyond words.
● A tzaddik ("righteous person") is
one who has mastered the animal inside and achieved a higher state of being.
In a nigun, a tzaddik encodes his soul. When we sing a nigun of a tzaddik,
we connect with the innermost garments of the tzaddik's soul and from
there come to union with the light that tzaddik has found.
That is why each note and nuance of a nigun must be precise. As the words
of a sacred text, they must be learnt and repeated in perfect form. Because
the tzaddik's mind and soul is held within them.
● The parts of the nigun are called "gates" -- entrances from
one spiritual world to a higher one. Each demands not only new breath but a
new state of consciousness. The fifth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom Dovber,
taught, "Each gate must be repeated twice. The first time only traces a
form, the second time carves deep into the soul."
That is why a nigun must never be rushed. The pace, the silence, the
mindfulness -- all must be preserved in order that the nigun reach deep
inside.
● The holy Rebbe Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak
of Lubavitch taught: "A nigun opens windows in the
soul." First, there must be deep contemplation, focusing the mind upon
the oneness of the cosmos and its Creator, to see that unity within each thing
until it becomes more real than even your sense of self. But the contemplation
may remain frozen in the realm of cold intellect. With a nigun, what is held
imprisoned deep in the soul pours down into the mind and from the mind to the
heart. Meditation may enlighten the intellect, but a nigun can uplift and
transform all of your being.
That is why the ancient prophets would sing and play musical instruments as
they awaited the gift of prophecy. In this way, they would strip themselves of
the barriers of body and mind, opening themselves as channels of the Infinite
Light. Not for the sake of transcendence alone, but to draw that transcendence
down to earth, to awaken the hearts of humankind the inner truths of life on
earth.
● "Song," wrote the second
Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Dovber, "lies at the core of life; its source
is in the most supernal ecstasy." And he explained:
"A river went out from Eden to water the garden…" (Genesis 2:10)
-- from the source of all delight, the river of life flows downward, branching
outward to each world and every created being. Each thing thirsts to rejoin
with its source above, and from that yearning comes its song and with that
song it comes alive. The heavens sing, the sun, the planets and the moon; each
animal, each plant, each rock has its particular song, according to how it receives life. Until the entire cosmos pulsates with a symphony of countless angels and souls and animals and plants and even every drop of water and molecule of air singing the song that gives it life.
That is why a nigun brings a surge of new life and healing, sweetens the
bitter soul and fills a home with light -- as the songs sung by David for King
Saul which healed his bitter spirit.
● A song is oneness. A song turns around upon itself in a circle of oneness, until there is no beginning or end. And, as the third Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch (1789-1866), taught, a song unites those who sing and hear it: When words are spoken, we each hear the words according
to our understanding. But in song, we are all united in a single pulse
and a single melody.
That is why it is said, "all the world will sing a new song," in the
messianic era coming very soon upon us --a song of the essential oneness
expressed throughout our world.