Renewing the Year at Home
Customs and suggestions for bringing the messages of Rosh Hashanah home
from synagogue.
By Rabbi Jill Jacobs
More than any other Jewish holidays, the High Holidays take
place in the synagogue. While most Jews associate Passover, Hanukkah, and
Shabbat primarily with home celebrations, Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur conjure
up memories of hours spent in services.
But these synagogue-based holidays can be enhanced through
home rituals that add meaning to the messages of the day. Here are some ideas,
old and new, for bringing the lessons and themes of Rosh Hashanah into your
home.
Foods for a Sweet Year
As with most Jewish holidays, food is the focus of home
celebrations of Rosh Hashanah. Families and friends gather for extended meals,
which include traditional foods, such as apples and challah dipped in honey.
Honey, a symbol of the wish for a sweet new Year, also appears in other holiday
foods, such as tayglach----a honey
and nut pastry----and honey cake. The challah, normally braided, is round, as a
reminder of the never-ending cycle of life.
Like other festival and Shabbat meals, the Rosh Hashanah
meal begins with Kiddush, the sanctification of the day over the wine. Both at
dinner and at lunch, the Rosh Hashanah Kiddush includes a reference to the
shofar, the most prominent symbol of the holiday.
In some families, it is traditional to serve the head of a
fish or lamb (though meat substitutes would also do the trick for vegetarians)
in the hope that everyone at the table will be at the "head" and not
at the "tail" of whatever they do in the new year. You might add
personal meaning to these rituals by asking everyone at the table to offer a
wish for the new year as he or she dips the apple or challah in honey.
New Fruit
On the second night of Rosh Hashanah, it is common to eat a
"new fruit"--a fruit that participants have not tasted for a long
time. This tradition has become a way literally to taste the newness of the
year, by enjoying an unfamiliar food. Often, a pomegranate is used as the new
fruit, as the pomegranate is said to have 613 seeds, corresponding to the 613 mitzvot. The pomegranate has also long
been a symbol of fertility, and thus of the unlimited possibilities for the new
year.
The tradition of eating a new fruit need not, however, be
restricted to pomegranates. Instead, this ritual can be an excuse for scouting
out the "exotic fruit" section of the produce department, or
exploring fruit markets to find fruits that family members have not before
tasted. (Interestingly, the custom developed as a technical solution to a legal
difficulty surrounding the recitation of the shehehiyanu blessing on the second day of the holiday. The
blessing, usually recited to commemorate a new situation, is said on the second
day of Rosh Hashanah both in honor of the day and the new fruit.)
Pun Food
A number of other food-based rituals can also enliven the
home celebration of Rosh Hashanah. Sephardic communities (which trace their
ancestry to Mediterranean lands) have developed a Rosh Hashanah seder, which
revolves around the eating of symbolic foods and the recitation of prayers that
transform these foods into wishes for the coming year.
Many of these prayers are based on Hebrew puns involving the
food in question. For instance, the prayers before eating a date (tamar in Hebrew) includes the phrase
"yitamu hataim"--may the wicked cease. Before eating pumpkin
or squash (k'ra'a in Hebrew),
Sephardim say "yikaru l'fanekha z'khuyoteinu"--may
our good deeds call out our merit before you--. Alternatively, they might use
the resemblance between the word "k'ra'a"--"pumpkin"
and the word "kara"--to
cut or rip--to express the hope that any bad deeds will be ripped out of God's
book.
Other symbolic foods include leeks and onions, which are
associated with the exodus from Egypt; beets, whose Aramaic name "silka,"
similar to the Hebrew "salak"--go
away-- is used to express the hope that our enemies disappear; and peas or
beans, mentioned in the Talmud as "ruviah,"
a word that sounds like the Hebrew "to increase," and therefore
indicates a desire for increased blessings in the new year.
The foods eaten and puns used change from community to
community, according to the types of vegetables available and the inherited
traditions. In planning your own Rosh Hashanah menu, you can be creative in
developing your own English puns. For instance, you might eat raisins to commit
to "raisin' your expectations for the new year" or peas in the hope
of increased peace. Your salad might be a chance to say, "Lettuce find
happiness in the new year," or "We will beet any obstacles that come
our way," or to remind yourself to say "Olive you" to family and
friends. Children can be involved in creating puns and devising a menu based on
these newly-symbolic foods.
Repenting
Preparation for Rosh Hashanah, as well as the days between
Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, can also include discussions of the meaning of teshuvah [repentance] and family
resolutions for the new year. This may be a time for siblings, parents, and
children to apologize to one another for incidents during the previous year and
to make promises for the coming year. Children may also make up lists of
classmates, friends, and family members to whom they wish to apologize, and
adults may make similar lists of friends, co-workers, family members and
others.
Many people have the custom of sending Rosh Hashanah cards
to loved ones. Children can be involved in choosing or drawing these cards, and
older children may also write personal messages in some of the cards. Children
may also create their own cards for family members and for their own friends.
In some families, it is traditional to take family pictures before each Rosh
Hashanah. Comparing this picture to the picture from the previous year can
serve as an opportunity to talk about what has changed over the course of the
year.
The first day of Rosh
Hashanah (or the second day if the holiday begins on Shabbat) includes the tashlikh ceremony, in which we
symbolically toss away our sins by throwing bread crumbs into a body of running
water. To make this ritual more concrete, you might help your children to make
a list beforehand of the things they want to throw away. As part of tashlikh,
you can throw this piece of paper in the trash (not in the water, where the
paper will just be a pollutant.) You can also turn the preparation for tashlikh
into an art project. Children can paint, with watercolors, what they wish to
get rid of in the coming year. When you float the drawings in water, these
unwanted habits will magically disappear.
To emphasize the newness of the year, you might try doing
something new right before or after the holiday. For instance, you might learn
a new game, visit a place you've never been, or try a new hobby. Many people
buy new clothes for the holiday and wear these clothes for the first time on
Rosh Hashanah. Enjoying a new experience or acquiring new knowledge can spark a
conversation about what else new might happen in the coming year.
Rosh Hashanah can be an opportunity for reflecting on the
year that has passed and setting goals for the year to come. Taking time for
such reflection can make the themes of the holiday come alive for the entire
family.
Rabbi Jill Jacobs is the Rabbi-in-Residence for the Jewish FundS for
Justice.