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ב"ה

Sukkot & Simchat Torah 5767 - October 6-15, 2006

The Bleeding Hat

We danced and sang in the sukkah, the transformative rain a mikvah-like immersion in G‑d’s presence and will . . .
A Sixth Dimension

They were carrying branches and fruit. They wanted me to wave them in the air, to shake them in all directions. For G‑d. For world peace. For unity . . .
The Secret of the Fifteen Steps

At the call of the dawn, two priests sounded their trumpets and began to descend the fifteen steps that led down from the Men’s Courtyard to the Women’s Courtyard . . .
Story
Hakafot in Liozna

“Fire consumes fire,” said the Rebbe. “The ‘fiery law’ of Torah will consume the fever induced by the frost . . .”
In a Nutshell

The Sukkah, the Four Kinds, the "Water-Drawing Celebrations," the meaning of unity, the dynamics of joy, the Kabbalah of the willow, the "eighth day of retention," the Torah's dancing feet -- concisely summarized and liberally linked
Parshah
V’Zot HaBerachah in a Nutshell
Moses blesses each of the twelve tribes. He ascends the mountain where he sees the Land of Israel and passes away, and the Torah tells us, “There arose not a prophet since in Israel like Moses…”.
"His left arm is under my head, and His right arm embraces me" (Song of Song 2:6). "His left arm under my head"--this refers to the "Days of Awe" of Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur; "His right arm embraces me"--this refers to the seven days of Sukkot.
— Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (Likkutei Torah)
Print Magazine

Due to the limitations of your reality, some of your best friends can enter only incognito.

In fact, the really big ones sometimes sneak in disguised as ugly monsters and vicious enemies. Otherwise, the guards at the gate would never permit them entry.

These are the events optimists call “blessings in disguise.”

Here’...

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