Gleanings
Preparing for Shabbat
Two contemporary
authors touch on different aspects of Shabbat preparation. One surveys the
technical preparations, the other the spiritual side of preparedness for the
Sabbath. Each adds a personal note about the way his or her household gets
ready for the arrival of "the Sabbath Queen."
Shabbat Preparation
is a Weeklong Activity
One prepares for the
Sabbath all week. In Hebrew the days of the week do not have names; they are
all a launch pad for Shabbat. Sunday is the first day, Monday the second, and
so on until Friday, which is both the sixth day and "the eve of
Shabbat."
In anticipation of the Friday night meal, observant Jews
tend to eat lighter meals during the daytime on Friday. There is also much to
do. In fact, the more observant you are of the details of Shabbat, the more you
have to prepare before it arrives. The late eminent scholar Rabbi Joseph B.
Soloveitchik used to say that the true mark of a pious Jew is not that he or
she is a shomer Shabbat (a Sabbath
observer) but is shomer erev Shabbat
(one who properly prepares on the eve of the Sabbath). By traditional Jewish
law, one cannot shop on the Sabbath, so marketing is usually done during the
day on Friday. Cooking is prohibited on the Sabbath, so that must be done in
advance, too. Foods prepared beforehand can be kept warm on a hot plate or on
the stove, a condition that has led to a preference for certain hearty dishes
like a meat-bean-and-potato stew called cholent.
In our home, we try to give our children special Sabbath eve
responsibilities. Of course, there's cleaning up their own rooms, but we also
divide up family responsibilities like sweeping, or setting up the Sabbath
candles. My daughter, Emma, loves art projects, so she is always willing to
write and decorate place cards if we are having company for Shabbat dinner. My
son Adam vacuums.
-- Ari Goldman, a
former New York Times reporter, is
the author of The Search for God at Harvard. Reprinted with permission from Being Jewish, published by Simon &
Schuster.
Friday: Spiritual Preparation as Well
Some Jewish men,
Chasidim in particular, go to the mikvah
(ritual bath) on Friday afternoon. It is a lovely custom, for mikvah not only symbolizes a spiritual
cleansing, it also offers a few moments of private time to reflect, to relax,
to disengage from the past week, to think about the coming experience of
Shabbat. However, if their wives are home frenziedly preparing for Shabbat,
caring for eight kids, it's not altogether fair, nor is it in the spirit of the
day. Similarly, in those families where a woman has the leisure to sit in a
beauty parlor for three hours on a Friday afternoon, while her husband is
frantically winding up a hard week, there might be a better distribution of
responsibility so that a man will have the time to come a bit more restfully
into Shabbat.
Before Shabbat begins, it is a custom to put some money into
a pushke, a charity box. Nowadays, tzedakah (charity) being a bigger
business, what with appeals, dinners, guests of honor, checks, and IRS
deductions, this custom of slipping a few coins into a slotted tin box is of less impact. Yet, it is a sweet thing for
children to observe, to do, and to learn from. And it's one more act associated
with the special preparations for Shabbat.
Some people also are able to set aside time to meditate, or study quietly
before Shabbat. These are wonderful ways to prepare spiritually for the day.
My husband often studies his daily quota of Talmud right before Shabbat.
Somehow, I never have the time or discipline to distance myself this way until
the very last minute. Perhaps this is my conditioning as a woman who, like most
women, has been largely responsible for the physical preparations in the home,
and who gleans the sense of sacredness and holiness from those endeavors; but
for those who can get themselves spiritually as well as physically ready, there
is a different foretaste altogether of Shabbat.
Inasmuch as one should review the biblical portion of the week at least
once before it is read in shul
[synagogue] on Shabbat morning, this is an excellent subject for quiet study on
a Friday afternoon.
-- Blu Greenberg, a writer and
lecturer on contemporary Jewish issues, is the author of On Women and Judaism. Reprinted with permission from How to Run a Traditional Jewish
Household, published by Simon & Schuster.