Sukkot - Feast of Tabernacles
(Sabbath October 19th, there is not a service at the 25900 US Highway 27, Leesburg Fl 34748 location)
Tishrei 15-21, 5785 - Wednesday October 16, 2024 - Wednesday October 23, 2024 begins
Sukkot/Feast of Tabernacles
Sukkot/Feasts of Tabernacles/( Leviticus 23:34)
"The fifteenth day of this seventh month shall be the Feast of Tabernacles for seven days unto the Lord."
For forty years, as our ancestors traversed the Sinai Desert prior to their entry into the Holy Land, miraculous "clouds of glory" surrounded and hovered over them, shielding them from the dangers and discomforts of the desert. Ever since, we remember G-d's kindness and reaffirm our trust in His providence by dwelling in a sukkah--a hut of temporary construction with a roof covering of branches--for the duration of the Sukkot festival (Tishrei 15-21). For seven days and nights, we eat all our meals in the sukkah and otherwise regard it as our home.
Another Sukkot observance is the taking of the Four Kinds: an etrog (citron), a lulav (palm frond), three hadassim (myrtle twigs) and two aravot (willow twigs). On each day of the festival (excepting Shabbat), we take the Four Kinds, recite a blessing over them, bring them together in our hands and wave them in all six directions: right, left, forward, up, down and backward. The Midrash tells us that the Four Kinds represent the various types that comprise the community of Israel, whose intrinsic unity we emphasize on Sukkot.
Sukkot is also called "The Time of Our Joy" indeed, a special joy pervades the festival. Nightly Water-Drawing Celebrations, reminiscent of the evening-to-dawn festivities held in the Holy Temple in preparation for the drawing of water for use in the festival service, fill the synagogues and streets with song, music and dance until the wee hours of the morning.
The seventh day of Sukkot is called Hoshaana Rabbah ("Great Salvation") and closes the period of Divine judgment begun on Rosh Hashanah. A special observance is the Aravah--the taking of a bundle of willow branches.