From Chabad:
“What Is
Sukkot?”
Sukkot is a weeklong Jewish
holiday that comes five days after Yom Kippur. Sukkot celebrates the gathering
of the harvest and commemorates the miraculous protection G‑d
provided for the children of Israel when they left Egypt. We celebrate Sukkot
by dwelling in a foliage-covered booth (known as a sukkah) and by taking the “Four Kinds” (arba
minim), four special species of vegetation. The first two days (sundown on
October 16 until nightfall on October 18 in 2024) of the holiday (one day in
Israel) are yom tov, when work is forbidden, candles are lit in the evening,
and festive meals are preceded by Kiddush and include challah dipped in honey.
This is immediately followed by Shabbat, which begins on Friday evening, Oct.
18, and concludes at nightfall the following day. The intermediate days
(nightfall on October 18 until sundown on October 23 in 2024) are quasi
holidays, known as Chol Hamoed. We dwell in the sukkah and take the Four Kinds
every day of Sukkot (except for Shabbat, when we do not take the Four Kinds). The
final two days (sundown on October 23 until nightfall on October 25 in 2025)
are a separate holiday (one day in Israel): Shemini Atzeret / Simchat Torah.
The Significance of Sukkot Of
all the Jewish holidays, Sukkot is the only one whose date does not seem to
commemorate a historic event. The Torah refers to it by two names: Chag HaAsif
(“the Festival of Ingathering,” or “Harvest Festival”) and Chag HaSukkot
(“Festival of Booths”), each expressing a reason for the holiday. In
Israel, crops grow in the winter and are ready for harvest in the late spring.
Some of them remain out in the field to dry for a few months and are only ready
for harvest in the early fall. Chag HaAsif is a time to express appreciation
for this bounty. The name Chag HaSukkot commemorates the temporary
dwellings G‑d made to shelter our ancestors on their way out of
Egypt (some say this refers to the miraculous clouds of glory that shielded us
from the desert sun, while others say it refers to the tents in which they
dwelled for their 40-year trek through the Sinai desert).
Dwelling in the Sukkah For
seven days and nights, we eat all our meals in the sukkah and otherwise regard
it as our home. Located under the open sky, the sukkah is made up of at least
three walls and a roof of unprocessed natural vegetation—typically bamboo, pine
boughs or palm branches. The goal is to spend as much time as possible
in the sukkah, at the very minimum eating all meals in the sukkah—particularly
the festive meals on the first two nights of the holiday, when we must eat at
least an olive-sized piece of bread or mezonot (grain-based food) in the
sukkah. The Chabad practice is to not eat or drink anything outside the sukkah.
Some people even sleep in the sukkah (this is not the Chabad custom).
Taking the Four Kinds On
each day of the festival (except Shabbat), we take the Four Kinds, recite a
blessing over them, bring them together and wave them in all six directions:
right, left, forward, up, down and backward. The sages of the Midrash tell us
that the Four Kinds represent the various personalities that comprise the
community of Israel, whose intrinsic unity we emphasize on Sukkot. Every
day of Sukkot we say Hallel, a collection of psalms of praise (Psalms 113-118)
as part of the morning prayer service. Every day aside for Shabbat, we recite
Hallel while holding the Four Kinds, waving them in all directions at certain
key points in the service, which are outlined in the siddur (prayerbook). Afterward,
we circle the bimah (the podium on which the Torah is read) holding the Four
Kinds, reciting alphabetically arranged prayers for Divine assistance known as
Hoshanot. The seventh day of the holiday is known as Hoshanah Rabbah.
This is the day when our fates for the coming year—which were signed on Rosh
Hashanah and sealed on Yom Kippur—are finalized. On this day, we circle the
bimah seven times. We also say a short prayer and strike the ground five times
with bundles of five willows (also known as Hoshanot)
Sukkot in the Holy Temple In
the days of the holy Temple in Jerusalem, there was a special regimen of
sacrifices that were to be brought on the altar. On the first day, no less than
13 bulls, two rams, and 14 lambs were to be sacrificed. Every day, the number
of bulls was depleted by one. All in all, 70 bulls were brought, corresponding
to the 70 nations of the world. Along with Passover and Shavuot, Sukkot
is one of the Shalosh Regalim, the three annual pilgrimages, when every male
Jew was to be in Jerusalem. Every seven years, on Sukkot, the king would read
aloud from the Torah to the entire nation—men, women and children. This special
gathering was known as Hakhel.
Water and Joy On Sukkot, G‑d
determines how much rain will fall that winter (the primary rainy season in
Israel). Thus, while every sacrifice in the Temple included wine libations
poured over the altar, on Sukkot, water was also poured over the altar in a
special ceremony. This ritual engendered such joy that it was celebrated with
music, dancing and singing all night long. This celebration was called “Simchat Beit Hasho’evah.” Even today, when there is no Temple, it is customary
to hold nightly celebrations that include singing and dancing (and even live
music during the intermediate days of the holiday). This holiday is so
joyous that in Talmudic times, when someone said the word chag (“holiday”)
without specifying which one, you could know that they were referring to
Sukkot. The Torah tells us that after the seven days of Sukkot, we
should celebrate an eighth day. In the diaspora, this eighth day is doubled,
making two days of yom tov. On the final day, it is customary to conclude and
then immediately begin the annual cycle of Torah reading, making this day
Simchat Torah (“Torah Celebration”). Although the eighth day follows
Sukkot, it is actually an independent holiday in many respects (we no longer
take the Four Kinds or dwell in the sukkah). Diaspora Jews eat in the sukkah,
but without saying the accompanying blessing (there are some who eat just some
of their meals in the sukkah on the eighth day but not the ninth). The
highlight of this holiday is the boisterous singing and dancing in the
synagogue, as the Torah scrolls are paraded in circles around the bimah.
Final Note By the time
Simchat Torah is over, we have experienced a spiritual roller coaster, from the
solemn introspection of the High Holidays to the giddy joy of Sukkot and
Simchat Torah. Now it is time to convert the roller coaster into a locomotive,
making sure that the inspiration of the holiday season propels us to greater
growth, learning and devotion in the year ahead.
https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/4784/jewish/What-Is-Sukkot.htm
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