Return of the Brooklyn Chickens

Advertisement

I still have mixed feelings about Kaparot

On one hand, the pre-Yom Kippur ritual where we transfer our sins onto some unsuspecting other is completely spiritual. We’re purging ourselves — but, more than that, we’re taking the bad parts from ourselves and doing some good with it. By transferring our sins to a five-dollar bill (me) or a chicken (the in-laws) and then giving it to a poor family for Sukkot dinner, we’re embodying all three stages of repentance in one: teshuvah (saying we’re sorry), tefilah (praying), and tzedakah (charity).

On the other — well, what did that poor chicken do to you?

Read the rest of my kapparot commentary from last year — and check out some righteous photos of Hasidim and chickens — right here.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Discover More

The Purim Spirit of Medieval Frankfurt

The choice to create a second Purim speaks volumes about how our people value resilience.

We Will Speak and We Will Hear

How to regain the courage to say what we think and hear what we don't want to hear.

Seeing in the Dark

Could it be that in our yearning for light, we fail to recognize the gifts of darkness?

Advertisement