So here’s the question. What is the only building that is authentically Jewish? The only real, true Jewishly Jewish structure? If our answer is “synagogue,” or even “temple,” then we’ve run into a problem.
Think about synagogues you’ve seen. Some are built in the round, others are
square. In the Museum of the Diaspora in Tel Aviv there is a synagogue display
– tiny miniatures of synagogues from all over the world. There you can see
Spanish synagogues designed in the Moorish style, western models that come from
Germany and bold and experimental types from Australia and America.
Why all the different architectural forms? Because nowhere
in the Torah or in any other of our holy books is there any explanation of just
exactly what a synagogue should look like.
So, if the answer to our question about the most Jewishly
Jewish building is NOT the synagogue, then what is it. What’s the most Jewishly Jewish building you
could ever have? It’s the Sukkah.
In all of the Torah, the Sukkah is the only building we are
told we absolutely must build. And as
far as buildings go, the sukkah is kind of strange. For one thing we are told to build it so that
you can see through the roof and look straight up to the stars. That’s not all. The sukkah has to be made so
that its sides aren’t very sturdy. Open space is gently corralled within its
wispy walls.
The sukkah is a building, if you can even call it that – a
building that, more than it separates us from the outside, a building that
links us with the outside. For eight
days a year our sukkah makes us one with the great outdoors.
Our sukkah calls us back to the time when we lived in the
wilderness. It is a building that
reminds us how fragile and temporary all buildings really are -even those made
out of bricks or cement.
That’s why, once every year, we go out of our “permanent”
buildings into our temporary shelters so that we get a hands-on experience with
how fragile all life really is. If you
don’t believe that just talk to anyone who lost a home to the ravages of
“Sandy” or the tsunami in Japan.
As Jewish families build their sukkahs and spend time eating,
maybe even sleeping in them, these little temporary huts seem to be saying to
each of us … don’t shut yourself off
from the world outside. Because the
walls are wide open, our sukkah demands that we connect with each other. Our
sukkah asks us to remember the words of our sages; “The closest that anyone on
this earth ever gets to God is our relationships with other people.”
So as we Calabresi enjoy our mountain top sukkah, built beneath the “pergola,” the
grape arbor where we regularly make our Shabbat Kiddush blessings, even we
Italian B’nei Anousim, who are only now reclaiming our Jewish roots, understand
that regardless of where we live, our homes and our hearts need wide open
spaces. We need to remember that regardless of the structure, we live under
roofs that are gentle and fragile, just like the roof of our sukkah.
The Jewish holiday of Sukkot says to us that we need to stop
for a moment and take time to look up.
It’s curious how, in shaky temporary lean-tos, we can feel God’s
presence even more keenly. And how
important it is for us to know that when we sit in our ancient flimsy sukkah,
it is here where we can truly see the stars.
No comments:
Post a Comment