Why do people raise their pinky finger toward the Torah after the reading?
Why do people raise their pinky finger toward the Torah after the reading?Answer: When the Torah reading is over during the prayer service and is about to be returned to the holy ark (Aron Kodesh), the Torah is lifted (hagba) and a prayer is sung. As the Torah is raised, it is customary for people in the congregation to raise their pinky finger up toward the Torah just as the words “This is the Torah that God gave to Moses” are being recited (sung) in the prayer. Some people then kiss their finger. There is no known source in Jewish literature for this widespread Jewish custom. Perhaps it is one of those customs that has just developed and survived over time because it is so fitting. Many see lifting the pinky toward the Torah as a nice way to point (nicer than using the index finger), and they see the pointing as a way to emphasize the words “This is the Torah” being recited. The custom is mentioned in writing as far back as the early eighteenth century. Rabbi Yaakov Kuli, in Yalkut M