People who celebrate Yom Yerushalayim don't say tachanun then or the mincha before. Same for Yom Ha'Atzmaut. They are listed with the other relevant days in Dati Leumi siddurim (Koren, Rinat Yisrael, etc.) but not in more charedi siddurim.
PS - the Katamon Shtiblach (where I think you visited when you were last here) has festive davenings in 3 out of the 4 rooms & a regular one in the 4th. Invariably, someone will "cross over", either intentionally or by accident, and some lively "discussion" ensue. My brother was in a "festive" room for Yom Yerushalayim Shacharit & some charedi was refusing to say the Shabbat psukei d'zimra.
7 Comments:
I don't say Tachanun on Yom Yerushalayim or at the Mincha before.
By Veev, at 1:04 AM
Our shul did not say Tachnun. I dunno about mincha obviously.
By Rolling hills of green, at 3:48 AM
Young Isarel didn't which is what, I'm assuming, inspired this post
By Just Shu, at 3:01 PM
People who celebrate Yom Yerushalayim don't say tachanun then or the mincha before. Same for Yom Ha'Atzmaut. They are listed with the other relevant days in Dati Leumi siddurim (Koren, Rinat Yisrael, etc.) but not in more charedi siddurim.
By Shlomo, at 2:16 PM
PS - the Katamon Shtiblach (where I think you visited when you were last here) has festive davenings in 3 out of the 4 rooms & a regular one in the 4th. Invariably, someone will "cross over", either intentionally or by accident, and some lively "discussion" ensue. My brother was in a "festive" room for Yom Yerushalayim Shacharit & some charedi was refusing to say the Shabbat psukei d'zimra.
By Shlomo, at 2:20 PM
The shul I daven at in Ranana said Shabbat pesukei d'zimra, didn't say tachnun, said hallel and lained.
By Air Time, at 3:35 PM
Presumably, laining was for Monday - I'm unaware of a special Yom Yerushalayim laning (same for Yom Ha'Atzmaut, though that does have a Haftara)
By Shlomo, at 12:11 AM
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