Sukkot at YM&YOG

Why I Love Sukkot

There is no other holiday on the Jewish or Gregorian calendar that combines child-like adventurism with semi-pro carpentry, alongside radical hospitality all shaded by an emotional imperative. Just as the weather gets colder and the skies begin to get darker earlier, this holiday, deep in symbolism around the preciousness of life, comes to push pause on our lives for eight days.

If you boil it down, Sukkot is a celebration of a few basic human truths, including “impermanence, change, and faith.” Sukkot is the quintessential holiday for rejoicing. How is this expressed? Through building and then dwelling inside flimsy, elaborate outside forts. In these sukkahs, which are completely and deliberately exposed to the elements, we share as many meals as possible and even sleep in them. As Rabbi Pesach Stadlin once said, “On Sukkot we are commanded to sit in huts and be happy!” That’s basically the point of it. The tradition actually commands us to be happy and share that happiness with guests.

There are so many things I love about Sukkot. I love it as a religious holiday. The prayer is highly celebratory as if to put us in the right frame of mind for entering into the sukkah. But religious people do not have a monopoly on this holiday. Done in the right contexts, Sukkot can become a song-filled jam fest and anyone can participate. Song, txawm li cas los xij, is not the only way joy can be expressed. Sharing food, telling stories, making art to decorate the sukkah – whatever moves the particular sukkah dwellers to fulfil the commandment to be joyous – it counts. For some it is more quiet and contemplative. For others it is a communal feast. At its core Sukkot is a deep acknowledgement of the gift of life. And yet, the holiday is celebrated outside, often in the cold, sometimes damp conditions. I take this to symbolize a joy that is based in reality. The message I hear is that we don’t need to escape our reality to find joy and meaning. We merely need to slow down, spend time huddled together and notice how lucky we truly are to be alive.

txawm li cas los peb yuav tsis ua ib lub zej zog thoob plaws, lub zej zog Y tau tsa & lub zej zog Y tau tsa

Upcoming Sukkot Programs at the Y

  • Hnub Sunday, nyob rau hauv kev ua koob tsheej ntawm Memorial Day 16. PJ Library Cooks and Creates, thiab Chav Bubbie: Sukkot Family Celebration. Open to all families.
  • Hnub Monday, nyob rau hauv kev ua koob tsheej ntawm Memorial Day 17. Ua Kuv: Kev Kawm Tom Qab Tsev Kawm Ntawv: Soirée in the Sukkah. Open to all Be Me families.
  • Hnub Thursday, nyob rau hauv kev ua koob tsheej ntawm Memorial Day 20. Y Pib Saib Xyuas Niam Txiv Lub Chaw: Moms Support Pab Pawg Tshiab. Open to all moms and babies.
  • Hnub Thursday, nyob rau hauv kev ua koob tsheej ntawm Memorial Day 20. Center for Adults Living Well at the YCoffee Hour. Open to all CALW members.
  • Hnub Friday, nyob rau hauv kev ua koob tsheej ntawm Memorial Day 21. Y Pib Saib Xyuas Niam Txiv Lub Chaw: Ukulele Shabbat. Open to all parents and caregivers with children three and under.

Txog Y
Tsim nyob rau hauv 1917, ua YM&YWHA ntawm Washington Heights & Ntoo (tus Y) yog Sab Qaum Teb Manhattan qhov chaw tseem ceeb hauv zej zog neeg Yudais-ua haujlwm rau haiv neeg thiab kev sib raug zoo hauv zej zog kev xaiv tsa-txhim kho lub neej zoo rau tib neeg ntawm txhua lub hnub nyoog los ntawm cov kev pabcuam tseem ceeb hauv zej zog thiab cov phiaj xwm tshiab hauv kev noj qab haus huv, kev noj qab haus huv, kev kawm, thiab kev ncaj ncees hauv zej zog, thaum txhawb kev sib txawv thiab suav nrog, thiab saib xyuas cov uas xav tau.

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Sukkot at YM&YOG

Why I Love Sukkot

There is no other holiday on the Jewish or Gregorian calendar that combines child-like adventurism with semi-pro carpentry, alongside radical hospitality all shaded by an

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