cellio: (star)
Monica ([personal profile] cellio) wrote2004-10-06 10:52 am

holiday

I'm really glad that the Reform movement follows the Israeli calendar for the festivals. This means that tonight and tomorrow we will combine Sh'mini Atzeret and Simchat Torah, while others in the disapora will have this on two days.

Why do I care in this case? Because I just don't get Sh'mini Atzeret. I mean, it's a torah-mandated holiday so we have to keep it, but all attempts to infuse it with meaning have thus far fallen flat for me. (Yeah, yeah -- an extra day of assembly after the festival of Sukkot, because we're that special to God that he asked us to stick around. Kind of works intellectually but not emotionally or spiritually for me.) It's sort of a naked holiday (similar to the last day of Pesach in that respect) -- you have the holiday liturgy but no ritual specific to this holiday, and it's just kind of... eh.

Simchat Torah, on the other hand, is fun. It's when we complete the annual reading of the torah and immediately start again. We take the torah scrolls out and dance around with them and sing and have fun. My congregation is, I'm told, somewhat staid by comparison (I'm not sure I could really use the word "dance"), and one of these days I'll find a congregation that goes all-out just so I can see what's possible, but my congregation does a pretty good job. And tonight will be the debut of our new in-house band; I'm looking forward to hearing them.

[identity profile] xiphias.livejournal.com 2004-10-06 08:29 am (UTC)(link)
Shmini Atzerit is the "Eighth Bit." Simchat Torah is fun, yes, but so is Sukkot. And I see Shimi Atzerit as an excuse to stretch Sukkot out for just one more day, just one more day of fun and partying. That's all. But to me, that works.

[identity profile] peacheater77.livejournal.com 2004-10-06 10:18 am (UTC)(link)
You say that your congregation is extremely staid when it comes to the dancing and singing and having fun.

I have heard that certain Hasidic congregations are much more centered around the joy of the event and, therefore, are probably not so staid at all

[identity profile] ellipticcurve.livejournal.com 2004-10-06 02:47 pm (UTC)(link)
>It's sort of a naked holiday

Man, Jews really do have more fun.
jducoeur: (Default)

[personal profile] jducoeur 2004-10-07 01:43 pm (UTC)(link)
Because I just don't get Sh'mini Atzeret.

Ah, yes -- the favorite holiday of the secular students at Brandeis. The first year I got there, I'd been there scarcely a month before we got a day off for Sh'mini Atzeret, and not one of my friends had the slightest clue *what* the heck Sh'mini Atzeret was. But for a college student, a day off from classes is cause for celebration all by itself...

interesting...

[identity profile] chaos-wrangler.livejournal.com 2004-10-16 06:57 pm (UTC)(link)
A(n Orthodox convert) friend of mine was saying on the shabbat right after Simchat Torah that while in general she'd be happy to do away with the second day of Yom Tov (and thus the 3-day sequences of Yom Tov, Yom Tov, Shabbat), she wouldn't want to combine Shmini Atzeret & Simchat Torah 'cause all the "extra" things specific to each day would add together to be too much: Shmini Atzeret has Hallel, the prayer for rain, and Yizkor, Simchat Torah has Hallel*, Hakafot, and all the additional Aliyot so every adult male can have one, and if that day fell on Shabbat then there would be megilat Kohelet as well...

*granted we'd only do Hallel once if both days were combined