{4F805597-AC32-42F4-9EE2-BAD88CE3B8B2} 09.09.07 New Year in the Fall
Search Advanced
Home Aliyah & Absorption Partnerships with Israel Jewish Zionist Education Regions 
You are here :   Jewish Zionist Education About Us Blogs 09.09.07 New Year in the Fall
About Us
Our Mission
Leadership
News
Blogs
Contact Us
Training Programs
Educational Shlichut
Experiences In Israel
Focus Areas
Regional Partnerships
Educational Resources
Compelling Content
R & D

The Education Department holds no liability for the views expressed in this blog , which are personal to the author or authors. They do not necessarily reflect the views of the Education Department or those of the Jewish Agency for Israel.

New Year in the Fall
09.98.2007

What does it mean to live in a country where the New Year is Rosh Hashana rather than January 1?  Of course, if you are Jewish and care about Jewish traditions, Rosh Hashana in Israel will provide you with a powerful sense of "group feeling" that comes from living in the only country in the world where Judaism is the majority culture.  I would argue, though, that one doesn't have to be a religious Jew or even Jewish at all to reap some of the benefits from living in a country where the New Year is in the early fall rather than in the winter.

One of the great things about Rosh Hashana is that it makes sense of one's experience of the rhythm of the year.  Whether you are a student or the parent of a student, or whether you are in the work world, there is a sense of something finished at the end of summer and something beginning again in September.  And the change in seasons from summer to fall  underscores one's experience of an ending and a beginning (okay, all right, for those who live in cities like Miami as I did before making aliyah, where summer ends in early November, you can just go on to my next point).  Part of Rosh Hashana's power, then, lies in the fact that at the exact time when we are predisposed toward ritualizing a new beginning, we have the Jewish New Year. 

A major aspect of living in Israel during the fall holiday period is the very fact that the 3 weeks between Rosh Hashana and Simchat Torah is a culturally recognized period.  (Indeed, while the school year in Israel begins on September 1, the university and work year do not begin until "after the holidays," aharay ha-hagim, a phrase that starts to come into play in August and is designed to put off any major professional decision for two months--until after Simchat Torah).  In America, with the exception of children attending day school, the Jewish holidays are experienced as interruptions of one's work life and one's school life.  Your classmates and work colleagues are doing their everyday thing, and you know that you will have to play catch-up after each holiday.  In other words, whereas the holidays abroad are experienced as a disruption of one's regular life, in Israel during this time school and work are experienced as disruptions of the holiday period. 

A key difference between experiencing the New Year in Israel as Rosh Hashanah and experiencing it in America as January 1 pertains to the ritualization of the process of turning over a new leaf in one's life.  In America people speak about this as making a New Year's resolution, but because this is not anchored in ritual, it hardly packs any meaning.  You don't have to be religious to understand that ritual has a function in human society—any sociologist and anthropologist will tell you as much.  Ritual has a way of concentrating one's attention and underscoring the significance of what one is doing.  In Israel, it is hard to escape from some kind of ritualization of the New Year.  Phrases such as "may the curses of this past year disappear and the blessings of the New Year begin" are alive in the culture throughout this period.  That is, one may come across phrases like this in advertisements for dishwashers, in holiday greeting cards from one's employer, and on a late-night radio talk-shows.  Special symbolic foods for the New Year abound at your local supermarket—pomegranates, beets, leeks, carrots, sesame, pumpkin, and apples & honey, encouraging one to treat this period with special attention.  A family Rosh Hashana meal, utilizing some or all of the symbolic foods, serves to ritualize the day for most Israelis.  Rosh Hashana reflections facilitated by ritual are more anchored in Israeli culture than are New Year's resolutions in American culture, and hence, one is more apt to experience Rosh Hashanah as a new start than one does January 1. 

At the risk of going off topic, I cannot end this column without noting one other difference between counting down to Rosh Hashanah in Israel and counting down to January 1 in America: In America, the primary countdown in December is not towards January 1 but towards Christmas.  There are psychic and emotional benefits for a Jew to live in a country whose culture counts down to Rosh Hashana.  Shana Tova.

Copyright 2007, Teddy Weinberger


Send to A Friend
  
Print
Back to Top
Blogs
Blogs
03.06.08 American Jews and the Law of Return
05.05.08 A Hopeful Story
29.04.08 Yad Vashem in My Backyard
27.04.08 Aliyah and the "Push"
25.03.08 The Chancellor's Visit
12.03.08 Children in the Study Hall
28.02.08 Obama 3, Clinton 2
12.02.08 Spotlight on Israel
31.12.06 Heleni hamalka
15.02.07 Mother of All Purims
4.03.07 Hebron
18.03.07 Kosher for Passover in Israel
10.04.07 Some Passover Observations
12.04.07 Yad VaShem
17.04.07 Remembering the Fallen
25.04.07 Trial By Fire: Lag Ba’omer
13.05.07 Shavuot by Tnuva
20.05.07 Shavuot Reflections
30.05.07 In Nitzan With the Evacuees from Gaza
06.06.07 The 2+ 2 and High School Graduation
04.07.07 My Tisha B’Av Problem
25.07.07 Tu B’Av
31.07.07 Ten Years of Aliyah
15.08.07 Aluminum Foil and Aliyah
29.08.07 Sephardim and Jewishness
09.09.07 New Year in the Fall
09.19.07 Yom Kippur as Bicycle Day
15.10.07 Time On
31.10.07 Shmitah
02.12.07 Just Hanukah
19.11.07 Where Every Friday Night is Thanksgiving
11.12.07 Santa Claus and Zionism
23.12.07 People of the Book?
01.02.08 Religious and Secular Extremism
24.01.08 "The Mikado" Can Wait
29.01.08 The Annual Hike
28.08.2006 Reflections on a Visit to Israel
22.08.2006 International Arts and Crafts Fair
Info Center Resources Ask us Issues that matter
Home Site Map Privacy
Wednesday 07 January, 2009 (c) All rights reserved to the Jewish Agency יום רביעי י"א טבת תשס"ט