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    SUKKOT: A COMMUNITY NEVER DIES IS IT NOT INSENSITIVE TO INTERRUPT SHIVAH FOR A HOLIDAY?

    Interruption of
    Shivah
    A teaching in the
    Mishna defines the
    duties of a Jew who is
    in mourning at the
    outset of a festival.
    “Regalim mafsikim,”
    state the sages, “festivals interrupt shivah,” the
    seven-day period of mourning following the
    death and burial of a close relative (Moed
    Katan 3:5).
    In one of the most brilliant psychological
    responses to death, mourners, in the Jewish
    tradition, are supposed to step out of normal
    life when they have suffered the loss of a loved
    one. They don’t pretend to be brave and go on
    as if nothing had happened. They take time to
    grieve; their normal pattern of behavior is
    disrupted as a way of recognizing that a
    profound change has occurred in their life.
    Thus the custom is that they stay home during
    shivah, and people come to be with them, to
    share in their grief. Jewish law recognized that
    life will never be the same again, and the
    dramatic transition requires time off.
    But the Mishna is saying that if one of the
    major Jewish festivals (Shavuos, Passover, or
    Sukkos) begins while you are in the shivah
    period you are supposed to put aside shivah
    and join with the community in celebrating the
    festival. So for example, if someone lost a
    loved one on Sunday and buried them on
    Monday, Shivah would only go till Saturday
    night, when Shavuos begins. The mourner
    takes part in a Shavuos celebration, attends a
    Passover seder, goes out to eat in the Sukkah,
    etc.
    Why? At first glance this law seems insensitive.
    Seeing how sensitive Jewish law is to someone
    who suffered a loss, requiring them to stay
    home for seven days, why suddenly in this case
    do we display such brute insensitivity? How
    can we be expected to put aside our grief and
    go to a celebration? How can halacha command
    us to suppress natural human emotions for the
    sake of going through the motions of a ritual?
    The Talmud, the commentary on the Mishna,
    explains the reason for this ruling: “aseh
    d’rabim” – a positive mitzvah incumbent on
    the community, overrides “aseh d’yachid” – a
    positive mitzvah incumbent on the individual”
    (Talmud Moed Katan 14b). Celebration of the
    festivals is a mitzvah of the entire community;
    mourning is a mitzvah on the individual who
    suffered the loss. The communal time of joy
    overrides the individual’s time of grief.
    But this does not seem to answer the question.
    After all, if someone lost a loved one, how do
    we ask of them to transcend their individual
    state of mourning because of the communal
    state of joy? Let the community celebrate, but
    let the individual mourn!
    If I Am Only For Myself…
    Each and every Jew can experience himself or
    herself in one of two ways, and they are both
    equally true. We are individuals. Each of us has
    our own “pekel,” our own baggage, our own
    unique story and narrative. I got my issues, you

    got yours; I got my life, you got yours. You
    fend for yourself, I fend for myself. In the
    words of Hillel: “If I am not for myself, who
    will be for me?”
    Together with this, we are each also an
    indispensable part of “klal Yisroel,” of the
    community of Israel. We are not only
    individuals; we are also an integral part of
    “keneset Yisroel,” the collective soul of the
    Jewish people. Like limbs in a body, each limb
    has its own individual character and chemistry,
    but it is also a part of a single organism we call
    the human body.
    The difference between these two components
    is critical. The individual life can die. But, in
    the words of the Talmud, “tzebor lo mas,” the
    community does not die (Talmud Horayos 6a).
    The collective body we call “the Jewish
    people” never dies, it only changes hands. The
    very same “body” of “klal Yisroel” that existed
    3000 years ago still exists today. Moshe was a
    Jew and you are a Jew. Rabbi Akiva was a Jew
    and you are a Jew. The Baal Shem Tov was a
    Jew and you are a Jew. An individual can die; a
    nation does not die (unless the entire nation is
    obliterated.) Again in the words of Hillel: “But
    if I am only for myself, what am I?”
    The tyrants and Anti-Semites in history could
    sadly wipe out individual Jews, but never the
    Jewish people. “Tzebor lo mas.” The
    community of Israel never dies.
    Eternity
    Now we will understand the explanation of the
    Talmud, that shivah gets interrupted for a
    holiday because the mitzvah of the community
    takes precedent over the mitzvah of the
    individual. This is not saying that the individual
    who suffered a loss must forget about his or her
    own pain because the community is celebrating.
    That would be unfair. Rather the Talmud is
    telling us something deeper.
    When the community of Israel is experiencing
    a celebration, a festival, marking a watershed
    moment in the history of our people—that
    celebration of the “tzebur,” of the collective
    body of the Jewish people, includes also the
    person who passed away, because that aspect
    of us which is part of the community of Israel
    never ever dies. The “Jew” in the Jew cannot
    die, because it lives on in the collective body of
    the Jewish nation.
    When the mourner interrupts his shivah to
    celebrate the holiday of Passover, Shavuos or
    Sukkos, he is not diverting his heart from his or
    her beloved one; rather he is given the ability
    to connect to the central defining moments
    defining Jewish history and eternity, and it is in
    that drama that his loved one still lives on. In
    the collective life of the Jewish people, and in
    our collective celebrations of Jewish faith and
    history, our loved ones continue to live.
    A Lost Child
    This may be of the reasons we recite Yizkor on
    each of the three holidays. During Yizkor, we
    don’t only remember our loved ones who
    passed on; we also ensure that a part of them
    never dies, by insuring that the collective
    organism of Am Yisroel—the people of
    Israel—survives and thrives.

    A moving story is told by the Yiddish writer
    Shalom Asch, about an elderly Jewish couple
    in Russia forced by the government to house a
    soldier in their home. They move out of their
    bedroom, and the young man, all gruffness and
    glares, moves in with his pack, rifle and
    bedroll. It’s Friday night, and the couple
    prepares to sit down for Shabbat dinner. The
    soldier takes his place at the table. Only now is
    it apparent just how young he is. He sits and
    stares with wide eyes as the old woman kindles
    the Shabbas candles. And he listens as the old
    man chants the Kiddush and Hamotzie. He
    quickly devours the hunk of challah placed
    before him, and speaking for the first time, he
    asks for more. His face is a picture of
    bewilderment. Something about this scene —
    the candles, the chant, the taste of the challah,
    captures him. It touches him in some
    mysterious way.
    He rises from his seat at the table, and beckons
    the old man to follow him, back into the
    bedroom. He pulls his heavy pack from the
    floor onto the bed, and begins to pull things
    out. Uniforms, equipment, ammunition. Until
    finally, at the very bottom, he pulls out a small
    velvet bag, tied with a drawstring. “Can you
    tell me, perhaps, what this is?” he asks the old
    man, with eyes suddenly gentle and imploring.
    The old man, takes the bag in trembling fingers
    and opens the string. Inside is a child’s tallis, a
    tiny set of tefillin, and small book of Hebrew
    prayers.
    “Where did you get this?” he asks the soldier.
    “I have always had it…I don’t remember
    when…”
    The old man opens the prayer book, and reads
    the inscription, his eyes filling with tears:
    “To our son, Yossel, taken from us as a boy,
    should you ever see your Bar Mitzvah, know
    that your mama and tata always love you.”
    You see, this boy was one of the cantonists. On
    August 26, 1827, Tsar Nicholas published the
    Recruitment Decree calling for conscription of
    Jewish boys between the ages of twelve and
    twenty-five into the Russian army. These boys
    were known as Cantonists; derived from the
    term ‘Canton’ referring to the ‘districts’ they
    were sent, and the ‘barracks’ in which they
    were kept. Conscripts under the age of eighteen
    were assigned to live in preparatory institutions
    until they were old enough to formally join the
    army. The twenty-five years of service required
    that these recruits be counted from age
    eighteen, even if they had already spent many
    years in military institutions before reaching
    that age.
    Nicholas strengthened the Cantonist system
    and used it to single out Jewish children for
    persecution, their baptism being of a high
    priority to him. No other group or minority in
    Russia was expected to serve at such a young
    age, nor were other groups of recruits
    tormented in the same way. Nicholas wrote in
    a confidential memorandum, “The chief
    benefit to be derived from the drafting of the
    Jews is the certainty that it will move them
    most effectively to change their religion.”
    During the reign of Nicholas I, approximately

    seventy thousand Jews, some fifty thousand
    who were children, were taken by force from
    their homes and families and inducted into the
    Russian army. The boys, raised in the
    traditional world of the Shtetle, were pressured
    via every possible means, including torture, to
    accept baptism. Many resisted and some
    managed to maintain their Jewish identity. The
    magnitude of their struggle is difficult to
    conceive.
    This thirty-year period from 1827 till 1856 saw
    the Jewish community in an unrelieved state of
    panic. Parents lived in perpetual fear that their
    children would be the next to fill the Tsar’s
    quota. A child could be snatched from any
    place at any time. Every moment might be the
    last together; when a child left for cheder
    (school) in the morning, parents did not know
    if they would ever see him again. When they
    retired at night after singing him to sleep, they
    never knew whether they would have to
    struggle with the chappers (kidnapper, chap is
    the Yiddish term for grab) during the night in a
    last ditch effort to hold onto their son.
    These kids were beaten and lashed, often with
    whips fashioned from their own confiscated
    tefillin (phylacteries.) In their malnourished
    states, the open wounds on their chests and
    backs would turn septic and many boys, who
    had heroically resisted renouncing their
    Judaism for months, would either perish or
    cave in and consent to the show of baptism. As
    kosher food was unavailable, they were faced
    with the choice of either abandoning Jewish
    dietary laws or starvation. To avoid this horrific
    fate, some parents actually had their sons’
    limbs amputated in the forests at the hands of
    local blacksmiths, and their sons—no longer
    able bodied—would avoid conscription. Other
    children committed suicide rather than convert.
    All cantonists were institutionally underfed,
    and encouraged to steal food from the local
    population, in emulation of the Spartan
    character building. (On one occasion in 1856 a
    Jewish cantonist Khodulevich managed to
    steal the Tsar’s watch during military games at
    Uman. Not only was he not punished, but he
    was given a reward of 25 rubles for his display
    of prowess.)
    This boy in our story was one of those
    cantonists.
    Let Them Live
    At Yizkor, our mama and tata, our zeide and
    babe, our great grandparents for many
    generations, whisper to us how deeply they
    love us and believe in us. No matter how many
    years have passed, the bond is eternal and
    timeless.
    And when we embrace and continue their
    story, we ensure that every single Jew who
    ever walked the face of this earth is still, in
    some very real way, alive.