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Sukkos is probably my favorite holiday...when the weather holds.  The weather has been better in other than the last two years. This holiday has two names, the other being  "Chag Ha'Asif," "The Harvest Festival."  At this time of the year in Israel,  the crops are gathered and the fruits are harvested.  It is is a time of joy (not that I have any crops, other than bamboo).   Sukkos, which runs for six or seven (depending on whether or not you include Shemini Azteret) starts on the 15th day of Tishrei.   Sukkos observances are primarily dwelling in a Sukkah and taking (waving) of the Four Species.  It is immediately followed by two more holidays,  Shemini Atzeres and Simchas Torah.

The Torah says in Vayikra ((LEVITICUS) 23: 42-43 ) "In booths you are to dwell for seven days ...so that your generations will know that I caused the children of Israel to dwell in booths when I took them from the land of Egypt..." The booths are temporary structures with a building code.  Some of the requirements are that the "roof" or S'chach, be totally organic, that it be dense enough that less than 50% of the area allows light through, that stars can be see though it (real ones, It must be outside),  and that it has at least 2 1/2 walls. 

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The first is a picture in two year's ago Sukkah, the second of the exterior last year's.  The walls are outdoor "flake board" nailed to 2x4 frames.  They are re-used every year although enough deterioration has occurred to suggest "a miracle happens here" since it stays up.  Wrong holiday you say? The problem is they are stored outside in the weather, often in the unassembled condition until spring.  The  S'chach is bamboo grown in my backyard for the purpose.

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This is a Sukkah decoration Sharon, my wife made.

Vayikra (23:40) also says "And you shall take for yourself on the first day the fruit of a goodly tree, branches of palm trees, the boughs of thick trees, and willows of the brook, and you shall rejoice before Hashem your G-d for seven days."  To fulfill this mitzvah (commandment), we are required to hold together either fruit or branches from four different species of trees - the date palm (lulav), the myrtle (hadas), the willow (aravos), and the citron (esrog).  The Gemora in the tractate of Sukkah ( 35a) identifies the species.  It is said in the Midrash, that whoever fulfills this mitzvah as required and with proper intention brings about peace and harmony among Jews. 

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5758's Esrog and Luav

 


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movmailb.gif (16634 bytes)Jerold H Feinstein saftyrma@erols.com
Copyright Jerold H. Feinstein, PE 1997 All rights reserved; contact for permission to use
This page was last updated on 11/21/98.