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Special Dvar for Sukkot 5778

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Wed, Oct 4, 2017 4:35 PM

This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and
Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar from Rabbi Label Lam...


What is a Sukkah? To fully understand it, let’s see the first reference to
a Sukkah in the Torah: After surviving a threatening confrontation with his
arch enemy Eisav, the Torah records the following: “And on that day Eisav
returned on his way to Seir and Yaakov traveled to Sukkos and built for
himself a house and for his cattle he made Sukkot therefore the name of the
place is called Sukkot.” (Breishis 33:16-17) The verse is a little odd.
Yaakov built himself a house (which sounds normal enough) but because he
made Sukkot for his cattle the place was to become known as “Sukkot.” Is
that the reason to name a place? The Ohr HaChaim answers, “Perhaps because
he did something new by showing his compassion for the cattle…that he did
something that no one had done previously... It was that novelty that
caused that the place should be called so.”

This may help us to gain an insight into the essence of our Sukkot. After a
near head-on collision between two super-powers, the Torah depicts Eisav
going back home and to his old predictable ways. Yaakov, however, did
something beyond the norm, outside his home. He didn’t walk away from his
brush with death the same as he entered. Rather, he became better, and
that’s what the Sukkah represents for us today – a chance for a fresh start
to the new year, a chance to grow and express growth in new and creative
ways.

Shlomo Ressler


Quotation of the Week:
"We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit the changes it
has gone through to achieve that beauty." - Maya Angelou

This Lelamed Dvar is also available in your local App Store (iTunes and Android). I hope you enjoy and share this Dvar from Rabbi Label Lam... _______________________________________________ What is a Sukkah? To fully understand it, let’s see the first reference to a Sukkah in the Torah: After surviving a threatening confrontation with his arch enemy Eisav, the Torah records the following: “And on that day Eisav returned on his way to Seir and Yaakov traveled to Sukkos and built for himself a house and for his cattle he made Sukkot therefore the name of the place is called Sukkot.” (Breishis 33:16-17) The verse is a little odd. Yaakov built himself a house (which sounds normal enough) but because he made Sukkot for his cattle the place was to become known as “Sukkot.” Is that the reason to name a place? The Ohr HaChaim answers, “Perhaps because he did something new by showing his compassion for the cattle…that he did something that no one had done previously... It was that novelty that caused that the place should be called so.” This may help us to gain an insight into the essence of our Sukkot. After a near head-on collision between two super-powers, the Torah depicts Eisav going back home and to his old predictable ways. Yaakov, however, did something beyond the norm, outside his home. He didn’t walk away from his brush with death the same as he entered. Rather, he became better, and that’s what the Sukkah represents for us today – a chance for a fresh start to the new year, a chance to grow and express growth in new and creative ways. Shlomo Ressler _______________________________________________ Quotation of the Week: "We delight in the beauty of the butterfly, but rarely admit the changes it has gone through to achieve that beauty." - Maya Angelou