Extra Festival Days in the Diaspora
Israelis and liberal Jews observe fewer days for some holidays than
traditional Diaspora Jews.
By Rabbi Daniel Kohn
In
the Torah, major Jewish holidays are shorter than what most traditional Jews
outside Israel celebrate now. So we read, "Seven days you shall eat
unleavened bread" (Exodus 12:15) and celebrate eight days of Passover. The
festivals of Shavuot, Yom Kippur, Rosh Hashanah, and Shemini Atzeret are listed
as single days in the Torah.
How
did Diaspora practice diverge from the Torah's instructions? The answer lies in
our history, during the time of transition from biblical to rabbinic Judaism
around the beginning of the common era.
The Calendar Needed Witnesses, Beacons, and Messengers
The Jewish calendar is lunar. Over 2,000 years ago, a
council of rabbis from the Sanhedrin, the ancient legislative and judicial
body, held special sessions in Jerusalem at the end of each lunar month to
receive witnesses to the first sliver of the new moon. Because a lunar cycle is
approximately 29 days long, it was no mystery when the new moon should appear,
but the Sanhedrin still declared months and holidays only on the basis of these
witnesses. To encourage ordinary people to take the time to come and testify,
they were fed and honored. The rabbis questioned every witness for credibility:
'Where
did you see [the new moon]? Was it before or after sunset? Was it in the north
or the south? How high was it? How high was it? Which way was it tilted?"
(Mishnah Rosh Hashanah 2:6).
Once
the sighting was legitimated, the rabbis declared the next day Rosh Hodesh, the
beginning of the new month. Originally, beacon fires would be set on
mountaintops to spread the word to distant Jewish communities already living in
far away places such as Egypt and Babylon. Watchers on faraway hills set their
beacon fires as soon as they saw them, continuing the relay "until one
could behold the whole of the Diaspora before him like a mass of fire"
(Mishnah Rosh Hashanah 2:4).
But
relations with neighboring sects such as the Samaritans worsened, and they
deliberately harassed the Jews by lighting beacon fires at erroneous times. As
a result, the Sanhedrin substituted messengers to alert the Diaspora
communities, but they could take a long time to arrive from Jerusalem.
Only the Sanhedrin
was able to make pronouncements about the new moon, so Diaspora communities could not do this for
themselves. The proclamation of each new moon was significant as an alert about
the exact dates of holidays. Jewish communities always knew approximately when
a festival would fall, but waited until the date of the new moon had been
established to decide when festivals would fall. As most holidays fall around
mid-month, they could--generally--afford some delay in receiving the Jerusalem
news. But celebrating festivals for an extra day would ensure that, regardless
of whatever confusion reigned about the exact start of the new month, at least
one day of their celebration would be on the correct day.
The Rosh Hashanah Exception
One biblical holiday
does not fall in mid-month: Rosh Hashanah.
Rosh Hashanah is set
by the Torah "on the first day of the month" of Tishrei (Leviticus
23:24) beginning both the new calendar year and a new month. Delay in receiving
word of this new moon would lead distant communities to miss the day and violate
Torah law. To address this issue, the ancient Rabbis introduced yom tov sheni shel galuyot, "a
second Diaspora festival day." Residents of distant communities were
instructed to observe two days of Rosh Hashanah--on the 30th day of the month
of Elul, which precedes Tishrei (and which they could establish from the
previous month's new moon) and the first day of the new month of Tishrei. This
was a safety measure, to ensure that these communities would celebrate at least
one day of Rosh Hashanah on the proper day. With the official news from
Jerusalem, they could not know if the new moon had been sighted on the first or
the second of these days, but observing two days ensured they would not violate
the holiday.
As this custom of yom tov sheni spread through the Diaspora,
it began to be observed even in the land of Israel and Jerusalem. This also
started as a safety measure, because late-day testimony that the new moon had
been seen might leave no time for observing the holiday. Therefore the next day
would be observed as Rosh Hashanah as well. The second day of Rosh Hashanah
became a more integral part of the celebration of the Jewish new Year. Despite
the fact that the second day of Rosh Hashanah is nearly identical to the first
(with the exception of a different Torah reading), the Talmudic rabbis declared
the second day of Rosh Hashanah is identical in its sanctity to the first. They
called the combined two days of Rosh Hashanah Yoma Arikhta--a long or extended day.
This unique
understanding of the two days of Rosh Hashanah is universally accepted, in
Israel as well as the Diaspora. Gradually, the custom of yom tov sheni was applied outside of Israel to all of the biblical
festivals--Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot--while in Israel, only Rosh Hashanah
was extended. Yom Kippur, as a fast day, was not extended to two days due to
concerns over physical hardship and health safety.
The Witness System Ended, But the Custom Persisted
Establishing the Jewish calendar by witnesses survived the
destruction of the Second Temple by the Romans, continuing until the middle of
the fourth century C.E., when the Byzantine Christian empire, hostile to the
remaining community in the land of Israel, forbade the proclamation of the
calendar. The last Jewish patriarch in Palestine, Hillel II, therefore
published the calculations that the Sanhedrin had always used as back-up. At
this point, the Jewish calendar became fixed and perpetually calculable.
Although the calendar was now fixed, the Diaspora custom of observing the extra
Diaspora days was retained, although technically no longer necessary.
The original biblical prescriptions for each of the
holidays were modified as well, as formerly intermediate days (hol hamo'ed) became yom tov (full holidays). Thus on Passover, the Torah states,
"You shall celebrate a sacred occasion on the first day and a sacred
occasion on the seventh day" (Exodus 12:16); the "sacred
occasions" included prohibitions against working and attendant rituals and
celebrations. These days of "sacred occasion" were doubled to include
the first two days and the last two days. One significant outcome of these
changes is that Diaspora Jews observe two seder nights. The only real
development for the extra final day of Passover is found in Hasidic
communities, which associate the redemption of the Israelites in Egypt with the
future Messianic redemption, referring to the eighth day of Passover as Mashiach Day.
Shavuot, originally a one-day festival, was expanded to
two days, both full holidays. Sukkot's "sacred occasion," was
extended to become two initial holy days.
Sukkot continued to be a seven-day holiday. Its close was
bracketed by a unique one-day holiday called Shemini Atzeret, the "eighth
day of assembly," understood to be separate from Sukkot. Shemini Atzeret
was expanded to two days with the addition of the yom tov sheni shel galuyot.
The completion and new beginning of the yearly cycle of Torah readings became
associated with this day and acquired a new name, Simchat Torah (Rejoicing of
the Torah), and unique customs and rituals. Nonetheless, it is still,
technically, the second festival day of Shemini Atzeret.
A Comeback for the Biblical Calendar
As the Jewish community of the land of Israel grew in
modern times Jewish authorities decided to mark the return of the Jewish people
to its ancestral homeland by returning to the original biblical calendar,
restoring the one-day observance of biblical holy days as a testimonial to the
biblical sanctity of the land of Israel, while re-establishing a distinction
between the Diaspora and Israeli communities consistent with Zionist
ideology.
In Israel, Passover is celebrated for seven days, with a
single seder and only the first and last as special holidays. Shavuot is a
one-day holiday in Israel, and only the first day of Sukkot is a full holiday.
Shemini Atzeret does double duty as a single, packed day of Shemini Atzeret and
Simchat Torah. Rosh Hashanah alone retained its two-day format.
Many Diaspora Jews Follow Israeli Practice
The resurrection of the original custom in Israel strongly
influenced the liberal denominations of American Judaism. The Reform Movement
has officially abrogated the extra days--again, except for Rosh Hashanah--for
all of its congregations in the United States. Reconstructionist and Jewish
Renewal communities are free to autonomously choose the practice for their
congregations, and some Conservative congregations do likewise.
The idea of exile no longer seems meaningful to many
Diaspora Jews, and the United States especially was and is considered by many
liberal Jews not to be a place of exile. They feel it is proper to continue the
process of re-adapting the tradition to contemporary reality in societies where
they are well integrated, and to synchronize the religious calendar of Diaspora
and Israeli Jews in a time of nearly seamless communications.
But Orthodox and (most) Conservative congregations
continue the traditional Diaspora practice, from a desire to honor the
traditions and customs of the past and to maintain a historical continuity with
previous Jewish communities throughout history.
Cross-Calendar Situations
The restoration of a Diaspora-Israeli split in festival
practice results in interesting situations, especially as more people travel
back and forth for various periods of time and with different intentions. If
Diaspora Jews are only visiting Israel temporarily, should they observe the
extra day or follow local Israeli practice? If Israeli Jews visit another
country over the holidays, should they practice Israeli or Diaspora customs?
The
Talmud advises following the calendar of the place you live, wherever you find
yourself. Most (but not all) tourists and temporary Jewish residents of Israel
follow Israeli practice as a matter of self-definition during their stay,
although there are communities of visitors and newcomers in Israel that observe
the longer festivals. Israelis
temporarily visiting other countries often continue to observe the Israeli
custom. An Israeli settling in the Diaspora should adopt the customs of the
Diaspora (Shulkhan Aruch, Orah Hayyim 496:3). Many tourists adhere to a
rabbinic idea that the decisive factor is where gufo (literally "his body") is, which in this case refers
not just to the individual, but to the "family body": If a whole family is together in Israel, they would observe
one day, but if one family member is in Israel and the remainder of the family
is in the U.S. than all would observe two days.
Rabbi Daniel Kohn, a native of St. Louis, Missouri, was
ordained at the Jewish Theological Seminary of America in 1991. He is the
author of several books on Jewish education and spirituality, and currently
writes and teaches throughout the San Francisco Bay area.