5774 Torah Parashiyot - Weekly Torah Portions

Monday, September 23, 2013 · Posted in , , , ,


To begin all over again!  
5774 Torah Parashiyot

The book of Bereishit (Genesis), which is not merely an account of the beginning, a narration of how it went, but it is the very blueprint for the beginning that G-d Himself, as it were, consulted when He chose to begin the creation. Its letters, their shapes and sounds, and the words and verses that they form, are the very DNA of the world of darkness and light, day and night, rivers and streams and oceans and mountains, livestock and wildlife, fish and fowl, stars and planets, moon and sun, that we live in.

The main purpose of Torah study is to enable one to keep the commandments.  These letters are the stuff of our very souls, and to study, to examine, to ponder, to immerse ourselves in the depths of the Torah, is not only an immensely satisfying and gratifying endeavor, but it is part and parcel of the fulfillment of our purpose on this earth.... 

        ...to behold G-d's wonders and to praise Him and draw near to Him, B"H.


Four Ideas

First Idea - One must first think about the wonder of G-d's creation. Absolutely nothing existed before G-d created the world. 

G-d is concerned with all the world, and He looks into each detail.  Not only does He direct the universe as a whole, but He also examines each individual, rewarding or punishing him for every deed.


Second Idea - One also must think about the Torah and its commandments.  This obviously means the Written Torah.  But it also includes the Oral Torah, which consists of the laws, commandments and rules which were given to Moshe on Mount Sinai, but not actually written in the Torah.  These must also be observed.


Third Idea - One must constantly meditate on the commandment, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself" (VaYikra 19:17).  These few words form the basis for the entire Torah.

If a person understands this, he will not envy his more successful neighbor.  He will not say, "Why does he have the good luck to become wealthy?"  He will not be happy to take another's money, and will not trouble his neighbor to come back again and again to collect money that is owed.

Such an individual will give everyone the benefit of the doubt.  If he sees another doing some good that also brings benefit to the doer, eh will not rejudge that it is being done for ulterior motives.  Even when there is reason for suspicion, he will not consider it. Instead, he will say, "It is possible that I am mistaken.  This person is certainly not doing good so as to show off or gain money.  He is not giving charity to gain the praise of others.  Everything is being done for the sake of heaven, to fulfill G-d's will."

When a person gives others the benefit of the doubt, then he is given the benefit of the doubt by G-d.

In general, when a person properly fulfills the commandment, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself," he will not do to another anything that he would not want done to himself.  Through this, he will keep the entire Torah and not sin.

Fourth Idea - A person must constantly meditate on the fact that he is mortal and will eventually die. (Berachot, Chapter 1)  He should consider that life eventually ends for all men, rich or poor, young and old.  Thus, he will avoid sin, and overcome the evil urge which attempts to lead him astray each day.  Contemplating one's mortality is a tested method of destroying the power of the Evil Inclination.

Our Sages also advised that one should make a declaration during his lifetime.  When a person is about to die, the Angel of Death tries to make him sin, saying, "If you recite the Shema, I will deal harshly with you and torture you.  But if you deny the Torah, I will protect you from all troubles."  When a person is near death, his will is weak, and out of fear, he feels obligated to heed the advice of the Angel of Death (who is identified with ha-satan), but if he does so, he loses both this world and the next.

One should therefore make an annual declaration in the presence of ten men, either on the first of the month of Elul, or on the day before Rosh HaShanah.  One should not wait until he is sick or on his deathbed, since he may die suddenly or lose the ability to speak.  This is the declaration that one should make:

O HaShem, my G-d and G-d of my fathers, great and mighty G-d, in whose hands are the souls and spirits of all creatures:  When, after many long years, the time comes for me to pass away, may it be Your will that my mind be clear when my soul leaves my body.  May my soul be at ease, and may my mind be healthy and alert.  Do not take away my love and fear for You, so that they may remain with me when my soul departs my body. 
And if, heaven forbid, it is fitting that I experience pain, suffering, confusion, or loss of my mental faculties at the time of my death, I acknowledge the righteousness of Your judgement. You are just in all that comes upon us, for You have done it, and we have been wicked.
I do not, heaven forbid, deny any commandment of the holy Torah.  I do not deny any detail of the rules of Judaism that our Sages have taught, and that we are obligated to keep.  I believe with perfect faith that G-d lives and exists for eternity.  Besides Him, there never was, and never will be, another.  He is trusted to give good reward to the righteous in the World to Come, and to punish the wicked.
I believe with perfect faith that the dead will be resurrected at the time that G-d so wills.  He has the power both to kill and to give life.  He will also send us the true Mashiach.
May it be Your will, O HaShem, my G-d, and G-d of my fathers, Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov, that You protect me from the Evil Inclination, and inscribe me in the book of good life.  Give me strength, fortitude and health to serve You, to study Your holy Torah, and to keep Your commandments.
May the words of my mouth and the meditations of my heart be acceptable to You, O HaShem, my Rock and Redeemer. 
When a person mediates on all this, and makes himself aware of the mortality of men, he will be sure to be adequately prepared when he time comes.  When a person goes on a journey, he must make sufficient preparation and be certain to have the necessary supplies.  If he does not do so before he leaves, he will not be able to later.

The parashah commentaries provided at this blog are mostly from two major works, Yalkut MeAm Lo'ez (Torah Anathogy) by Yaakov Culi, and Torah Commentary by Rabbi Bachya ben Asher (Bachya).  There is anthology of the teachings of the Midrash, Talmud and other major Jewish classics.  Included will be pertinent laws, adhering to merely the simple obligations binding on every Jew, from the works of Rambam and Rabbi Yosef Caro's Shulchan Aruch.

There are ten fundamental benefits that you gain from studying these anthologies of the Torah:

  1. You will be aware of the commandment which you must keep, as well as the sins and prohibitions which must be avoided.  There are many things which you might have done without being aware that they are forbidden; and once you learn about them, you will refrain.
  2. You will have a clear understanding of the miracles that G-d has wrought for our ancestors.  There are recorded in Scripture in a highly concise form, often by mere allusion.  You might know that Noach was saved from the flood, that Avraham was rescued when Nimrod cast him into the fiery furnace, and that the Reed Sea was split during the Exodus from Egypt; yet, you might have little idea of exactly how these miracles occurred.  There are other miracles of which even minor details are not generally known, and there are yet other miracles which are not recorded in the Torah at all.  When you read these anthologies, you will be able to visualize all these miracles, just as if you had personally experienced them.
  3. It is well known that the Torah portion must be reviewed each week, "twice Scripture and once Targum."  This means that one must first read the Scripture twice, and then read the Aramaic Targum translation once.  Even if the Torah is heard in Synagogue, it must be personally reviewed each week.  This rule was legislated so the average person would be able to understand the weekly parashah.  In those days, even people who did not understand Hebrew spoke Aramaic as their vernacular.  The Targum was given to Moshe on Sinai.  It was later forgotten, and then reconstructed by Onkelos, a convert to Judaism, based on the teachings of Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Yehoshua.  Today, since many people do not understand Hebrew, and Aramaic is even more foreign to them, they are not careful to review the weekly portion.  It is obvious that one who understand neither Hebrew, Aramaic, nor Rashi, must read a commentary that he can comprehend.  It is advisable to divide the weekly parashah into seven parts, reading one each day.  Some should be read in the morning, before business, and the rest in the evening, before bedtime.  In the course of a week, each portion is then completed.
  4. There are many questions that can be asked about each portion in the Torah.  There are words that appear superfluous, ideas that seem contradictory, and concepts that are difficult to understand.  In every case, you will find satisfactory answers in these anthologies.  It is important to realize that Moshe wrote the Torah with very precious ink.  Nothing is superfluous, not even the smallest letter.
  5. In some of these anthologies, especially within Yalkut MeAm Lo'ez, the relationships among the various prophets and kings of Yisrael, the interplay among them, the letters they sent one another, the reasons why some were killed and even the years in which events took place are explained.
  6. These anthologies are also of great help to businessmen who wish to conduct their affairs according to the standards of the Torah.
  7. In these anthologies, you will find many anecdotes from the Talmud, Midrash and other Jewish classics.  You will learn things that happened since the time of creation, without resorting to secular histories.  Many things found in such books are false, and it is forbidden to read them even during the week, and certainly not on the Shabbat and Festivals.
  8. From these anthologies you will also learn how the Holy Temple (Beit HaMikdash) appeared, how the sacrifices were offered, the order of the service recited on Yom Kippur, and the reasons for each detail.  Also the order for the daily sacrifice, as well as those offered on Shabbat and Festivals.  Although these sacrifices are no longer offered now that the Temple has been destroyed, the Talmudic Sages have taught us that when a person studies the laws of sacrifice in order to understand the Biblical references, it is counted as if he had actually offered the sacrifice.  This is a special advantage unique to the laws of sacrifice.  If a person studies the laws of Shabbat, it is not counted as if he had observed the Shabbat.  There are five types of sacrifice: Olah (burnt offering), Minchah (meal offering), Chatat (sin offering), Asham (guilt/crime offering), and Shelamim (peace offering).  When a person studies the Book of Bereishit (Genesis), it is counted as if he sacrificed an Olah.  The Book of Shemot (Exodus) is considered like a Minchah; the Book of VaYikra (Leviticus) is like a Chatat; the Book of BaMidbar (Numbers) is like the Asham; and the Book of Devarim (Deuteronomy) is like a Shelamim. When a person studies all five Books of the Torah, it is counted as if he had brought all the sacrifices.  In general, when a person studies the Torah so as to know which laws he must keep, it is considered as if he had observed the entire Torah.  This is still true even though there are laws that cannot be kept, or no opportunity to keep them ever arises, since his intent is good.  This is true of course, only when it is impossible to actually keep the commandment.
  9.  These anthologies explain the greatness of our holy Torah.  All the stories found in the Tanach (Bible), especially in the Torah, are not to be considered as mere legends.  In the Zohar, Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai said, "Woe is to the man who says that the Torah merely comes to teach us worldly stories and history."  One who says this has no portion in the World to Come.  If the Torah were a mere history book, we could write better history today.  If the Torah had such mundane purpose, how could we recite a blessing, thanking G-d for "choosing us from all nations and giving us His Torah?"  Such a blessing is said before and after reading the Torah.  Each morning we also recite a blessing to cover what we intend to study that day.  Some people do not know anything else, but only read the Bible stories. How is it fitting for them to recite a blessing, if these stories are merely legends?  Furthermore, if there is even the slightest error in the writing of a Torah scroll, it is invalid and cannot be used.  This is true even if the mistake is in the name of Pharoah or Balaam.  For mere stories, what difference would a minor variation make?  There is a reason why the Torah uses stories as a vehicle for its teachings. When angels visit the physical world, they disguise themselves as human beings.  Thus, when the three angels visited Avraham, he thought they were ordinary wayfarers.  He prepared a meal for them, they sat at his table, and Avraham watched them eat.  The same was true when Yaakov wrestled with the angel.  Angels must clothe themselves in a mundane form, since if they did not, the world could not endure their radiance.  If this is true of an angel, how much more so must it be true of the worlds of the Torah, for whose sake heaven and earth were created.  When the Torah was given on Mount Sinai, it was therefore necessary that all of its secrets and mysteries be disguised in the form of stories.  If the Torah had remained in its true spiritual form, the world could never have accepted it, and the human intellect could never comprehend it.  It was for this reason that King David prayed, "Uncover my eyes that I may behold the wonders of Your Torah" (Tehillim 119:18).  He was saying, "Master of the universe, open my eyes that I may see the secrets of the Torah which are clothed in the obvious stories found in the Scripture."
  10. Our Sages teach us, "When a person engages in Torah and deeds of kindness, all of his sins are atoned." (Berachot, Chapter 1)  This is based on the verse, "Through love and truth, sin is atoned" (Mishlei 16:6), where the Torah is "love," and kind deeds are "truth."  Even though Torah study is highly important, one must also keep the commandments and do good deeds.  It is written, "For a commandment is a lamp, and the Torah is light" (Mishlei 6:23). This indicates that without observance of the commandments, study of the Torah is not sufficient. (Zohar, Terumat)  The main reason why the Torah must be studied is that the commandments be kept properly.  Neither a lamp without a wick, nor a wick without a lamp, is adequate.  Each commandment provides the doer with a "lamp," while Torah study gives him a wick so that it will produce light.  This is the meaning of the above verse.  Our Sages liken one who studies Torah but does not keep the commandments to one who spends much money building a house, but then neglects to install a door.  As long as the house remains open, it is little better than an open field.

Torah - Man's True Wealth

G-d, Who is King and Patron of this world, sends souls from heaven to sojourn here in the physical world.  Here, they can amass observances and good deeds so as to be worthy of high status in the Future World.  The physical body is like the ship which transports the soul, while the Torah reveals the commandments which will be rewarded in the Future World.

The only advantage of the physical world is that it is a place where one can observe G-d's commandments and thus fulfill His will.

There are some people who pursue only physical pleasures, such as eating, drinking, travel and parties.  Since they cannot satisfy their desires, they become sick and die.

Others wish to amass fortunes, and these are also never satisfied.  

Wise are the people who are masters of their souls.  They eat and drink moderately, nourishing themselves so that they have the strength to discover G-d.  When they find a rare jewel, they "place it under their tongue" (i.e. like honey and milk, [Torah] lies under your tongue, Shir HaShirim / Song of Songs 4:11).   Since they cannot study Torah all the time, they engage in some business, but their intent is to place their money in a safe place, through giving charity and keeping the commandments meticulously.  Their only intent in earning money is to have the opportunity and peace of mind to study Torah and to contemplate the Future World.  

This is man's true wealth.


- MeAm Lo'ez; Bachya
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Parashat Bereishit
Bereishit [Genesis] 1:1 - 6:8

1:1 In the beginning... (Begin the mastering of your soul here - Parashat Bereishit)




Hoshana Rabbah

Hoshana Rabbah - 7th Day of Sukkot - September 25

Tradition is that on Hoshana Rabbah (7th day of Sukkot) the judgment of G-d, passed on Yom Kippur, is sealed by a written verdict. During Sukkot the world is judged for water and for blessings of the fruit and crops.

It is tradition, since it is a day of judgment, to stay awake all night, studying Devarim, Tehillim, the Zohar and recite Tikkun. Some go during the night and immerse in the mikveh and to inject extra Kedusha (holiness) into the night.  One of the reasons for reading Tehillim is because of the impending finalization of the judgment. (When reciting the book of Tehillim one should say the Yehi Ratzon after each of the five books.)
The minhag of the Sefardim is to gather in family groups at home instead of in the synagogues. They read the Tikkun is turn one man after the other.

On Hoshana Rabbah eve, the women are busy baking long wheat loaves with braided ladders on top, such as are made and served the day before Yom Kippur and serves as a reminder during the pre-fast Yom Kippur meal that G-d decides who will ascend and descend the ladder of life. Similarly, for Hoshana Rabbah, the ladder is meant to help our prayers reach heaven. A lesser-known tradition is embellishing the round challah with birds or shaping the entire challah in this form, recalling the phrase of Yeshayahu 31:5 "As hovering birds, so will HaShem protect Yerushalayim."  Yet another theme is shaping the challah like a hand beseeching Heaven, or adding a motif of hands to the top of a round challah..  During this time dough is also rolled out which will be filled with meat for kreplech, a dish traditionally served during this time.

On Hoshana Rabbah morning, the attitude in the synagogue is a varied one.  It is still part of the semi-holiday period, yet the services are as rich as on a full holiday.  In addition the day is a mixture of Yom Kippur and Sukkot; there are the etrogim and willow branches of Sukkot, together with the candles, the white robes (kittels) and the chants of Yom Kippur.

A tradition (passed down from the Baal Shem Tov) was that as much as one exerts himself in the tefillot (prayers) of Hoshana Rabbah, Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah, it will help him in his kavanot (intention) in prayer during the rest of the year.

A very ancient custom that was observed even in the time of the First Temple, and the highest point in the ceremonial of Hoshana Rabbah, is the procession around the bimah.  During the first six days of Sukkot the procession winds around the bimah only once and there is but one Torah-scroll on the bimah.  On the seventh day, however, on Hoshana Rabbah, the procession makes seven circuits around the bimah, on which every Torah-scroll from the ark is held by members of the congregation.  It differs from the Simchat Torah procession in that it is earnest and serious.  The procession winds its way around and around, the men bearing the lulavim and etrogim in their hands and chanting their prayers earnestly and fervently.

After the procession the lulav and the etrog are laid aside and the willow branches are taken up, five of them bound with a leaf of the lulav.  At the close of the Hoshanot prayers, the worshipers beat their willow branches on the ground and chant a ritual passage.  According to the ritual law it is necessary to beat the branches only five times, but the mass of the congregation beats and beats, until all the leaves have been knocked off the twigs.  Anciently in the Temple, the Kohanim marched around the altar seven times and they would beat the earth with their willow branches.

Everyone performs this ceremony, including the women in their section of the synagogue, but none enjoy it as much as do the children.  They keep beating their branches long after the others are through and continue until their elders tell them to cease!  Many carry their bundle of branches home and save them for Pesach, to use in the yearly search for the leaven.

After the services a festive meal is served and eaten in the sukkah for the last time.  There is usually soup with kreplech served, exactly as the meal on the day before Yom Kippur.  But after the holiday services and the festive meal the day becomes again a part of the semi-holiday period and all go about their regular tasks.

This is the happy day in general for the children.  They carry around the long palm leaves of the lulav and braid themselves rings and bracelets from them.


Hoshana Rabbah on a Deeper Level

A person's life hangs in balance until Hoshana Rabbah, which is the final day that the judgment is sealed.  The circuits that one makes around the bimah allude to the running around that a person does in this world when he wastes time earning money for vanities.  It is all a continual circuit, as is a water wheel in the garden.  The buckets on one side lift the water up, while the buckets on the other side spill it out.  Similarly, some people are on the upswing where their buckets are full, but they can come to the other side of their cycle where they are turned upside down and their "buckets" are emptied.

Therefore, no person can be sure of his wealth, his goods, or his property.  If a box is tuned over, everything spills out.  Similarly, when the wheel reaches it apex and is on the downswing, all the water spills out.  From one moment to another, a person does not know what will be happening to him.

The seven circuits made on Hoshana Rabbah allude to the seven judgments which must be passed on a person when he leaves this world.

The seven circuits also have the power to protect a person from the seven great archangels who are in charge of the seventy nations, where each archangel is in charge of ten nations.  These archangels are constantly denouncing us.  However, each time we make a circuit we destroy the power of one of these archangels, and on Hoshana Rabbah we destroy the power of all seven.

The aravah which we take and beat on Hoshana rabbah, alludes to the person subjugating his heart on this day.  On this day, the account books of each person are given to those in charge, whether for life or for death.  A person should say to himself, "Just as the willow has neither taste nor fragrance I too have neither mitzvot or good deeds."  What a person must do is shake all worldly vanities form himself and not waste his time with them.

A person must also think about the fact that a willow's leaves look like human lips, and they dry out very quickly.  If a person's lips are accustomed to speaking maliciously or maligning or scoffing at his neighbor, they will dry up quickly and be cut off.  It is thus written, "G-d shall cut off all smooth lips, every tongue speaking big things" (Tehillim 12:4).  If a person subjugates his heart he will certainly be inscribed for life. (Sheyarei Kenesset HaGedolah; Chemdat Yamim)

-Bachya; MeAm Lo'ez 



פתקא טבא
Pitka Tava
(Aramaic for "a good note", a wish for a final good verdict) 

(A Yiddish equivalent - Gut Kvitl)

Sukkot - Huts & The Four Species

Tuesday, September 17, 2013 · Posted in , , , , , , , , , , ,

Sukkot - begins evening of September 18th; ends evening of September 25th

The Torah speaks of the commandments of dwelling in a Sukkah and taking the Lulav (VaYikra 23:33-44).  The festival is known as Sukkot and is called this because during this festival we must live in a thatched hut known as a sukkah.

G-d commanded us to dwell in a sukkah to remind us of the Clouds of Glory that G-d sent to the Benei Yisrael when they left Egypt.  Six clouds surrounded them on all four sides, with one above and one below.  This was so that they would not suffer from the sun, wind, rain, or dew.  A seventh cloud went in front of them to straighten out the path.  The Benei Yisrael were enclosed by the clouds, as is a person in a ship.  A person in a ship can live there as he does in his house and it is of no concern to him when the ship moves.  The Benei Yisrael were just like that in the seven Clouds of Glory.

In commemoration of the Clouds of Glory, G-d commanded us to dwell in a sukkah.  This was so that we would remember the wonders and miracles that He did for our ancestors when they left Egypt.

G-d commanded us to make the sukkah in the month of Tishrei, in the fall.  This is the time when people usually come into their houses.  We do the opposite. We go out of our houses to the sukkah.  This makes it obvious that we are doing this to commemorate G-d's miracles.

There is also another allusion in this commandment.  At this time we have just completed Yom Kippur - the Day of Judgment.  G-d has forgiven our sins because we have repented.  When we leave our houses for the fields and live in sukkot, we show that, until now, we were hiding in our houses because we were full of sins; we were afraid of the denouncing forces created from our sins.  But now that we have atoned for them, we go out to the fields without any fear at all.

This is alluded to in the verse, "On the day Esav returned to his journey to Seir and Yaakov journeyed to Sukkot..." (Bereishit 33:16,17)  Esav alludes to the Evil One.  Seir denotes a goat in Hebrew and this alludes to the goat sent to Azazel.  After the Evil One, who is Esav, sees the goat sent to the desert, he no longer denounces the Benei Yisrael.  He leaves them and returns to his place in the desert.  When Yaakov - Yisrael - sees that Esav has left them, the Benei Yisrael go out to the Sukkah.  This shows that they no longer have any fear.

G-d therefore commanded us to dwell in a sukkah in the month of Tishrei.  This is a time when people bring their grain in from the field; their houses are filled with all sorts of goods.  It is precisely at this time that one must desert his house and go out to the field, to the sukkah.  This should teach him the lesson that he should not pay attention to worldly vanities and goods, but think only about Torah and good deeds.

The seven days allude to the seven judgments through which a person must pass.

The sukkah alludes to a person's dwelling in this world, which is a temporary place.

The seven days also allude to the human life-span, which is seventy years.

the person's true dwelling place is the Olam HaBah (World to Come). Therefore, a person should not pay attention to worldly vanities, but should immerse himself in the Torah and the commandments.


Laws of the Sukkah

It is a mitzvah to make the sukkah right after Yom Kippur.  When a person has the opportunity to do a mitzvah, he should not delay in performing it.

Furthermore, there is no person who is not completely purified on Yom Kippur.  One should begin this mitzvah immediately after Yom Kippur so as to be able to keep this great mitzvah with a pure, clean body.

Therefore, as soon as one completes his meal after Yom Kippur, he should begin making the sukkah.  If one is weak because of the fast and cannot make it completely, he should make half of it or part of it.  At the very least, he should begin making the preparations so that he can erect the sukkah the next day.

It is a mitzvah for a person to make his own sukkah and not to have someone else do it.

One should carefully choose the site for the sukkah to make sure that it is not a place where there is a bad odor nor too close to the latrine.  Some people are not careful regarding this and make the sukkah in a place which has a foul odor.

Many people do not realize that the sukkah is a very holy dwelling. It is the place where the Divine Presence rests.  It is also the place to which one invites the seven Holy Guests (Ushpizin): Avraham, Yitzchak, Yaakov, Moshe, Aharon, Yosef and David.

The covering of the sukkah is known as sechach.  The sechach must be made from something that grows out of the ground.  It must also be plucked from the ground and be something that cannot accept ritual defilement (tumah).

If one makes the sechach from animal hide, places them on top of the sukkah, he does not fulfill his obligation.  Animal hides do not grow from the ground.

If one stretches tree branches or vines over the sukkah while they are still growing, he similarly cannot fulfill his obligation.

If one takes wooden bowls or other wooden vessels and makes them into a roof for the sukkah, he also does not fulfill his obligation.  Since these are vessels, they cannot accept tumah.

It is also forbidden to make the sechach out of grass that will dry out and fall.

The sechach may not be made out of something that has a bad odor, since this may cause one to leave the sukkah.

The sechach must be thick enough so that the shadow it casts covers more area than the sunlight that is let through.  However, it should not be too thick.  The stars should be visible through it.

When we say that certain things may not be used for a sukkah, we are only speaking of the sechach, the roof of the sukkah.  The walls may be made out of absolutely anything.

It is a mitzvah that the sukkah should have four complete walls.  It should be enclosed on all four sides and have a regular door.  However, if one only makes two walls, with a third wall at least a handbreadth wide, the sukkah is valid.

One must be careful first to erect the walls and then place the sechach.  If one makes the roof first and then sets up the walls underneath it, the sukkah is invalid.

If one makes the walls out of reeds, he must be careful to put no more distance of three handbreaths (9-12 inches) between one reed and another.  If there is a greater distance than that between the reeds, it is not considered a wall.

One should not make the walls out of sheets or canvas.  Since they are not rigid, but move in the wind, they are not considered walls.  Even if one places the sukkah in a place where there is no wind, sheets are not considered walls.


Dwelling in a Sukkah

It is a commandment to dwell in a sukkah all seven days, both day and night.  We must eat, drink and sleep in the sukkah, living in it as we do our own homes all year.

It is forbidden to eat a regular meal outside of the sukkah.  If one does now wish to eat at all, he need not do so.  However, if one wishes to eat a meal, he must do so in the sukkah.

This, however, applies only on days other than the first. On the first night, and also on the second night outside the Holy Land, one is obligated to eat bread in the sukkah.  On must eat a piece of bread at least the size of an olive.

It is therefore a custom to make a sukkah at the synagogue for those who cannot make their own sukkah.  Each person must eat an olive size piece of bread in the sukkah and thus fulfill his obligation.

Here we see the error of those who have the opportunity to make a sukkah, but depend on the sukkah made at the synagogue, merely eating an olive-sized piece of bread the first and second nights.  The rest of the week they eat in their homes.  As we have said, the congregational sukkah is only useful for eating the olive-sized piece of bread the first and second nights.  However, when the people eat the rest of their meals in the house, they are in violation of a commandment.  They are violating the positive commandment to live in a sukkah.

It is through the commandment of sukkah that G-d will overcome the nations of the world in the ultimate future.

The Torah says,

"Everyone included in Yisrael shall dwell in sukkot" (23:42).  This indicates that everyone who is a true Israelite lives in the sukkah and does not care about the heat or cold.

From all this we learn how great is the punishment for those who neglect the commandment of the sukkah.  This is an easy commandment to keep.  Therefore, if a person does not keep it, he obviously takes G-d's commandments lightly.

If a person cannot build a sukkah before the holiday because of some unexpected emergency, he can build the sukkah during the intermediate days (Chol HaMoed).

It is permissible to drink water or wine or to eat fruit outside the sukkah.  It is also permissible to have a snack outside the sukkah, one may even eat a piece of bread smaller than an egg.  However, it is forbidden to eat a regular meal outside the sukkah.

When it rains, one need not remain in the sukkah.  He may go into his house and eat his meal.  However, this is only true if it is raining so hard that if as much rain dripped into his house he would leave his house and go out.  If it is only a light drizzle that does not bother a person, he is not exempt and he must remain in the sukkah.

This is only true during the week.  On the first night one must make Kiddush over wine and eat an olive-sized piece of bread in the sukkah even if it is raining hard.  One also must do this on the second night.

If it is raining very hard, one should recite Kiddush and eat an olive-sized piece of bread in the sukkah and complete his meal in his house.

However, if it is raining on the second night, one should not recite the blessing "Leshev ba-sukkah" (To dwell in a sukkah).  The only time that one recites a blessing in the sukkah is when he eats there.

On the first night, one recites Kiddush, then the sukkah blessing, and then the blessing Shehechyanu (Who has kept us alive).

On the second night, one recites Kiddush, then Shehechyanu, and finally, the blessing "to dwell in a sukkah."

During the rest of the week, one recites the blessing, "to dwell in a sukkah" before saying HaMotzi over bread. (Ashkenazi custom is to recite HaMotzi first, and then the sukkah blessing).

On a day when one says Kiddush, he recites the blessing "to dwell in a sukkah" after Kiddush.

A bridegroom and the members of his party are exempt from a sukkah all seven days of the festival.  Some authorities, however, maintain that they are obligated to eat these meals in a sukkah.

A circumcision feast must be held in the sukkah.

If a person is sick he is exempt from the sukkah.

It is forbidden to make any mundane use of the sukkah throughout the entire holiday. It is thus forbidden to take a reed from the wall and hang a garment on it or the like.  It is also forbidden to take a branch from the sechach and use it for anything.

If fruit is hung in the sukkah for beauty it is forbidden to use this fruit all Sukkot, even if the fruit falls down.  However, if one makes a condition before the festival and says, "I will eat this fruit whenever I want," the condition is valid and he may eat any fruit that falls.  However, such a condition is of no use regarding any integral part of the sukkah.  Even if one makes a condition, he may not make any use of any parts of the sukkah.

If a person is in the middle of a journey he is exempt from the sukkah.

A person should make every effort to keep the commandment of the sukkah according to its law. If a person does this, G-d says, "You have kept the commandment of the sukkah. I will also make a sukkah on the great Day of Judgment to protect you on this day."  Regarding this it is written, "He shall protect me in a sukkah on a day of evil" (Tehillim 27:5)


The Four Species

Sukkot is called the "ingathering festival" (chag ha-asif).  This is because it comes in the month during which a person gathers into his house all the produce he has in the field.  It is a time of great joy, when a person is happy because of the crops in his house which is full and brimming over with all good.

It is therefore impossible that a person not sin because of all the good that he has.  The Evil Inclination exists primarily in places where there is great joy, not in places where there is humility and contrition.

G-d therefore commanded us to take the four species during these days.  The four species allude to the four most important parts of man's body: the spine, the eyes, the heart and the mouth.

The lulav (palm frond) alludes to the human spine.  This teaches that at this time of joy a person should straighten his body and attach himself to the fear of G-d.

Th etrog (citron) alludes to the heart.  This is the seat of the emotions.  A person should not let his emotions go too far at a time of joy.

The hadas (myrtle) looks like eyes.  This teaches a man not to follow his eyes.  One must not look at starnge women or other forbidden things when he is in a state of joy or elation.

The aravah (willow) looks like the lips.  This teaches that even when a person feels joy he should watch his mouth not to speak too much, since this can cause malicious speech, frivolity, and profanity.

There is also another reason for this commandment.  If a person has sinned with one of these parts of the body, keeping this commandment should be an atonement for him.  This is a great act of love that G-d has done for man.

Moreover, if a person gazes at these four species, he will not sin with these parts of the body; and if he sins, these commandments are a remedy.

G-d therefore said, "You shall take for you on the first day the fruit of a beautiful tree..." (VaYikra 23:40). G-d is saying, "I am giving this commandment to you for your benefit so that it will be a remedy for your sins."

The three myrtle branches allude to the three patriarchs, Avraham, Yitzchak and Yaakov.  Just as the three patriarchs were united in their service to G-d and did not take their minds off their Creator for even a moment, we, too, who come from these holy roots, must be unified and bound to G-d's service.

This is alluded to in the word for the palm frond which is lulav.  This can be broken into two words, lo lev, which means "to Him is the heart."  This indicates that our hearts are only attached to Him.

We should also be bound together and unified just as the lulav is bound with the other species.  There should be no hatred among us.  It is because of hatred that the Temple was destroyed.  How can we expect the Temple to be rebuilt if we still have this evil trait.

The Torah says, "You shall take on the first day a beautiful fruit of the tree, fronds of dates, a branch from braided trees and willows of the brook" (23:40)

The Torah literally says, "You should take the beautiful fruit of a tree."  The Torah does not designate what kind of tree it is.  Our Sages, however, know by tradition that this is the etrog (citron).

One reason is that there is no fruit as beautiful as the etrog.

Furthermore, the Torah speaks of it literally as "fruit tree beautiful" (pri etz hadar).  If the Torah had meant that one should take a fruit of a tree and not the fruit of the ground it would have said, "a fruit from a beautiful tree." But the Torah literally says, "a fruit of a tree."  This teaches that the fruit must be like the tree and the tree must be like the fruit; the wood of the tree should have the same taste as the fruit.  Our Sages determined that no tree has wood resembling its fruit except for the etrog.

When the Torah speaks of the myrtle, it says that it should be a "branch of a braided tree."  This indicates that the leaves on the branch should look like braids.  Many trees have this appearance, but the Torah also says, "a branch which is a leafy tree."  This can be interpreted, "a branch which is a braided tree" and not " a branch from a braided tree."  This teaches that it is a branch with leaves that completely cover the wood.  No tree does this in the same manner as the myrtle does.

When the Torah speaks of "fronds of a date," it is obvious that the Torah is speaking of the date palm.  This is the lulav.

"Willow of the brook" is the simple willow.

The four species also allude to the four types of Jews. Some people study the Torah and accumulate good deeds. Some study the Torah without accumulating good deeds.  Others accumulate good deeds but do not study the Torah; still others are empty, neither studying the Torah nor accumulating good deeds.

The four species parallel these four types.

Those who both study the Torah and accumulate good deeds are like the etrog, which has both good taste and a pleasant fragrance.

Those who study Torah but do not accumulate good deeds are like the lulav, which produces fruit dates, that are good to eat, but have no fragrance.

The group that has good deeds but does not study Torah are like the myrtle, which as a fragrance but not taste.

Finally, there is a group that neither has good deeds nor studies Torah.  This is like the willow, which has neither taste nor fragrance.

G-d says that all four species must be bound together; they must be like one body, totally unified. The merit of one shall stand up for the others.

Therefore, regarding this commandment it is said, "You shall take for yourselves on the first day..." (23:40).  This teaches that just as the four species must be bound together, so all Yisrael must be bound together and unified in one group.

G-d furthermore says, "Through the commandment of 'You shall take for yourselves on the first day...' I will allow My Divine Presence to rest among you.  I am also called First, as it is written, 'I am First' (Yeshayahu 44:6)."  (The verse can thus be read, "You shall take for yourselves on the day of the First, the beautiful fruit of the tree..")

"Also, because of this commandment, I will take vengeance from 'Esav, who is called first, as it is written, 'The first came out red' (Bereishit 25:25).  I will build the Holy Temple, which is called first, as it is written 'The Throne of Glory on high from the first is the place our Sanctuary' (Yirmeyahu 17:12).

"I will send you the Mashiach, who is called first, as it is written, 'They are first to Tziyon and the news will be given to Yerushalayim' (Yeshayahu 41:27).'

Amein, may this be G-d's Will.

-MeAm Lo'ez, Vol. 12

Chag Sameach!

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