How Simchat
Torah Came To Be
A new identity for
the second day of Shemini Atzeret
By Lesli Koppelman Ross
Excerpted from Celebrate! The Complete Jewish Holiday
Handbook. Reprinted with permission of the publisher. Copyright 1994 by Jason Aronson Inc.
Until sometime between the ninth and 12th centuries
(depending on whose history you accept), different parts of the Jewish world
followed different cycles of reading the Torah. Then the triennial system [of
reading the entire Torah in three-year cycles] ending before Pesach used in
Palestine was dropped in favor of Babylon's annual cycle, with the last portion
of Deuteronomy assigned as the portion for the secondday of Shemini Atzeret.
In connection with the reading, it became customary
to remove the Sifrei Torah from the
Ark and circle around the bimah [pulpit], a ceremony for which hundreds of prayers were composed (also called hoshanahs, forthe last word of each prayer). Named Simchat Torah,
Rejoicing of the Torah, the occasion was soon accompanied by vivacious dancing
and hymn singing in synagogue and lavish festival meals at home.
The impetus for the exuberant support of and adherence to
Torah was provided by persecutions of the 14th century, when expulsions, blood
libels, and Crusades were directed against Jews who refused to forsake the
text.
With symbols and activities of marriage, such as a service
suggesting the wedding of Israel to the law, the celebrations demonstrated that
the Jews' devotion was unflagging and their feeling insuppressible. (The
British diarist Samuel Pepys noted, in rather disdainful terms, the carryings
on in a London synagogue in 1663, in disbelief that he was watching a
"decent" religious community. The congregation later regulated itself
to display greater decorum.)
Soon it became customary to immediately turn to the
beginning of the Torah and start the reading cycle again, expressing the desire
to continually study the sacred guidebook. Due to its nature, the new holiday
superseded the biblically ordained and much more subdued Shemini Atzeret.
Lesli Koppelman Ross is a writer and artist whose works
have appeared nationally. She has
devoted much of her time to the causes of Ethiopian Jewry and Jewish education.