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Gazeta Krakowska.
There is a wooden shelter in the Galicia Jewish
Museum on Dajwor Street. It is part of the traditional celebration of Sukkot,
the Feast of Tabernacles, which is taking place as we speak.
Five days after Yom Kippur, the Day of
Atonement, Jews have for centuries entered a joyful period which ends with
Simchat Torah, the Joy of Torah. The name of the festival recalls the forty
years of the Chosen People's wandering through the wilderness, during which Jews
lived in hastily-erected shelters.
Before the war, many sukkah were erected in
Krakow's Kazimierz, built by individual families. Up to the present day the
obligation for the religious Jew is to spend as much time as possible in the
sukkah. Often this is made difficult by the caprice of the weather, as the roof,
made most often of branches, does not entirely hide the stars.
In the Galicia Jewish Museum the sukkah,
traditionally erected with branches,is placed on the patio, where it is warm and
does not rain. Yiddish lessons are conducted there, and one can also drink tea
or coffee, or, with custom, sit and reflect...
The sukkah will stand until 11
October.
Malgorzata
Huzarska-Szumiec |