A new year,
holidays are over,
and blue skies after rain.
שבת שלום
Jerusalem, Israel – what is really happening
Intense.
Exhausting.
Sukkot are special,
we even found one in the fields of a moshav.
However, in Jerusalem, Israel,
there was much more happening.
Birkat Kohanim, the Priestly Blessing,
attracted tens of thousands as it does every year.
Not just on Wednesday morning,
but on other days of the holiday
thousands walked to the Old City,
and to the Kotel, the Western Wall.
This way or that way,
on Friday of Sukkot,
thousands of Jews and Muslims
were walking toward the Old City together.
The annual Jerusalem Parade again
attracted thousands of international participants
with thousands of Israeli spectators.
The feel-good event started in Gan Sacher,
Sacher Park. where flags and flowers lined the street.
The Israeli Museum held its annual Kite Festival,
but you had to provide your own wind most of day,
so we did not get to see the huge kites in the air this time.
The musical events seemed endless,
with way too many to list.
However, a few of them
we wished we could have attended include:
Chabad had Yishai Lapidot at the Great Synagogue,
and at the Yellow Submarine were
our friends Moshe Hendel and Zusha.
Every night of chol hamoed
a large show was staged at the Sultan’s Pool.
Also, those Simchot Beit Hashoeva with music and more
at homes, yeshivas and places too many to recount.
Then there were the fairs!
A street fair on Derech Beit Lechem,
had this unusual dancer/s.
The only carved pumpkin I saw this week was at the fair.
There was everything from carved vegetables
to live musicians and more.
Thousands turned out for the evening fun.
Another new fair was held at Mamilla Mall,
where the young and not-so-young could purchase
Israeli products at a Mini-Market set up in the mall.
First Station had its stalls ready to sell goods.
For holiday tourists,
Octoberfest beer and food were also ready.
A parade of very different type,
Women Walking for Peace also ended
in Jerusalem, Israel, near the Prime Minister’s house.
Here four women are carrying a banner from the march.
Sukkot comes to an end with Hoshana Rabba.
Signs were up all week for classes
and all-night study programs
of all types and locations.
For those more into sport than study,
the Harlem Globetrotters were at the Sports Center.
I wanted to be sure that I had a photo of that sign
towering near the walls of the Old City.
And more sports,
new oleh and former NBA basketball star,
Amar’e Stoudemire came out to support charities
for his new Hapoel Jerusalem basketball team.
What next?
AniNation, an international celebration
of animation meets in Jerusalem, Israel.
I have no idea what that will be,
but first we have Simhat Torah.
Tonight the streets will be filled with thousands
celebrating, singing and dancing with the Torah.
Soon it will be after the chagim,
universities will begin their classes,
and children will go back to school and “normal.”
But first, for the last time for a while,
chag sameach.
I love Sukkot in Jerusalem, Israel.
Whether it is one large sukka
tucked away in a courtyard,
or many standing on the porches of new buildings.
How many can you count hereת
and here, seven or eight?
Some are small and inconspicuous,
some on roof tops.
The sukka in the Israel Museum next to the children’s wing
is simple, and with branches for supports and on top.
This rooftop sukka wins the prize for
the least elaborate and inexpensive sukka.
A pizza shop put up a white sukka on the sidewalk,
while the King David Hotel
has one large colorful sukka on its veranda.
Outside on King David Street
there is this plain white one.
All you had to do was look up,
to see these on King David Street.
On the porches of the Waldorf Astoria Residences
one sukka even had a bed standing by.
The Jerusalem Waldorf Astoria Hotel sukka in the atrium,
is always a favorite.
Mamilla also has its share of sukkot.
The Old City is in background
of this view from inside the Citadel Hotel.
Its main sukkot were huge,
but if you look more closely
you can see this wooden sukka perched
on a ledge high above these below.
The Citadel also has dining tables in the sukka on top.
Thousands of visitors are here for the holidays,
and the Inbal Hotel also has private sukkot above,
and the elegant atrium sukka below,
and more along the side of the hotel as well.
I also like the sukka at the neighboring Liberty Bell Park.
Every year the Beit Hanasi, the Israel President’s residence
has an open sukka day,
when the public is invited inside.
This year the time was extended to 4:00 pm,
but I was late.
As on Yom Kippur at the conclusion of the Neilah Service,
the gates were closed.
This was as close as I could get to the presidential sukka this year.
However,
I was in Hevron today.
So instead of my annual Presidential sukka photo
here is the sukka of Avraham Avinu,
where Jewish voices
and sounds of prayer and song for Sukkot
were heard both inside and outside the burial places
of the Patriarchs and Matriarchs.
OOPS,
I almost forgot!
Our family sukka is pretty special too!
The multitude of holiday events happening this week
will have to wait for next time,
meanwhile, hope you are enjoying.
חג שמח