Sh’mini Atzeret
Sh’mini Atzeret
the eighth day 
after Sukkot[1]
that closes
the sacred season
of the seventh month.[2]
In ancient times 
the annual cycle of
pilgrimage 
to Jerusalem 
also concluded 
on that day. 
And so
the returning pilgrims
shut down 
for the bare months 
of winter 
shadowed 
by concern 
that the late harvest’s
bounty
might not last
until the spring 
Aviv 
the month of beginnings[3] 
when the full moon 
would coax them
out of their homesteads 
summon them
to lift their spirits 
and ascend 
to Jerusalem 
bearing the blessings
of new life
young lambs
in remembrance 
of their ancestors’
redemption from slavery.[4]
And still 
today 
after centuries 
of change and upheaval 
flight and fruitfulness 
their descendants
across the world 
as in the land
called
to recall 
the rhythms 
of long-gone days 
in the search 
for meaning 
and renewal. 
Elli Tikvah Sarah
- 
‘Booths’ (Leviticus 23.34-43). Also known as Chag ha-Asif, ‘the Feast of Ingathering’ (Exodus 23.16), the festival that celebrates the last harvest of the agricultural year. ↑
 - 
Literally, the ‘Eighth day of Closure’ (Leviticus 23.36; Numbers 29.35). ↑
 - 
Exodus 12.2; 13.4. Later given the Babylonian name, Nisan, the first month of the Jewish year. ↑
 - 
Exodus 12.1-11. ↑