Friday, August 10, 2012

SUKKOT ARTICLE

Hey all! So to add to my ever increasing schedule, my husband and I officially became Jewish Lay Leaders here at Fort Rucker. Check out the article that I wrote (yet to be edited by the head chaplain so suggestions welcome) about Sukkot. It's going to be printed in the Army Flier newspaper!


SEASON OF OUR REJOICING


Believe it or not, the month long sequence of Jewish High Holidays is almost upon us! You may have heard of the Jewish New Year (Rosh Hashanah) and the Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur), but have you ever heard of Sukkot (pronounced Sue-coat)? Explaining the holiday of Sukkot makes Judaism sound like the craziest religion in the world. Jews gather together and build sukkahs (little huts) outside their homes, synagogues, and even restaurants. These sukkahs have a roof made of natural materials through which one can see the stars, making them leaky, and at a time when much of the Northern hemisphere is beginning to become bitterly cold, Jews will eat and some will even live in these temporary shelters. During the seven-day holiday of Sukkot, people will also see Jews shaking a lulav (branches from a palm tree, a willow tree, and a myrtle tree) and etrog (essentially an oversized lemon with a nub on one end) up and down and in each of the cardinal directions.

Crazy, right? Yet this holiday is described in Leviticus in the Torah. It is a tradition that historically symbolizes the 40 year period when the Jews wandered in the desert and is agriculturally significant as the harvest festival. The holiday of Sukkot is one of the Shalosh Regalim – the Three Pilgrimage Festivals (also including Passover and Shavuot) where Jews would come from all over the biblical lands to the Temple in Jerusalem in order to make offerings to the temple in honor of these holidays. The sukkahs are like those used by farmers who needed to live in their fields while harvesting their crops, and this modest shelter teaches humility as well as hospitality as Jews invite guests and come together for meals and Jewish learning. The lulav and etrog are shaken in every direction as a reminder that G-d is all around us, and they are also carried in a procession around the Torah during religious services, mimicking a similar procession in Temple times.

Reality Check. So what does all that significance and history mean? Here is a story. I was eighteen and living in Jerusalem, Israel for one year. We had just returned from 4 days of desert survival training in the Negev Desert where my group would awaken each morning, pray and shake our lulavs, surrounded by a land untouched by modern society or conveniences. It felt like we had been brought through time into biblical Israel and were celebrating with others of our faith from a time long past. Now we were back in today’s world and I was with a group of my friends walking down the very popular touristy street called Ben Yehudah. At that time there was a kosher Burger King on that street, and because it was Sukkot, the Burger King had built a sukkah outside their restaurant so that observant Jews could do the mitzvah (commandment) of sitting and eating in a sukkah. It was such a strange meeting of old and new. I still had that overwhelming sense of connection to the Jewish past from our week in the desert, and now I was observing these ancient commandments and traditions while simultaneously being a twenty-first century teenager looking for some fast food. It made me feel a sense of continuity between the Torah and myself, and from the history of the Jewish people all the way to the present. It made the holiday of Sukkot relevant in a way I had never before experienced. It is also absolutely amazing to have lived in a place where it was that easy and simple to follow the commandment to sit and eat in a sukkah. I could go anywhere and eat anything, and yet my Jewish observance was provided for. That sense of history, of connection, and of being normal is one of the things that made my time in Israel so special to me.

That experience on Ben Yehudah really touched me and has made sukkot, also know as the Season of our Rejoicing (and who doesn’t love having that in their lives?), one of my favorite holidays. This year, at Fort Rucker, we are going to build a sukkah and I invite each and every one of you to come and sit and eat in our sukkah. We will be having a dessert potluck on Sunday August 30 at 7:00. Kids welcome and they can even help us to decorate our sukkah with paper chains and drawings! You can even bring your neighbors! Please contact me, Jenn Kalik, at (203) 314-4196 if you are even thinking about coming (no R.S.V.P. necessary but we need some idea of numbers) or want to be a part of a Jewish community here at Fort Rucker. I have no idea how many of you this will reach, but if any of you are like me, and missing that Jewish something in your life down here in the Bible Belt, I truly hope you will come and celebrate this amazing holiday with us and help us to create a Jewish community here at Fort Rucker.

Helpful Holiday Dates:
Rosh Hashanah: Sunset of September 16 through nightfall of September 18
Fast of Gedaliah: September 19
Yom Kippur: Sunset of September 25 through nightfall of September 26
Sukkot: Sunset of September 30 through sunset of October 7
Shmini Atzeret:  Sunset of October 7 through nightfall of October 8
Simchat Torah: Nightfall of October 8 through nightfall of October 9

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