This year, the Jewish holiday of Sukkot begins at sundown on October 16 (Tishrei 14 in the Hebrew calendar.) If you're not sure what Sukkot (pronounced "soo-coat") is, Rauner happens to have a text that explains it in vivid, poetic detail. Written by Henry Ware, Jr., and published in 1837, "The Feast of Tabernacles: A Poem for Music" is set in ancient Jerusalem during the Temple period on the final day of Sukkot. Ware prefaces his poem with a short "Advertisement" in which he lays out his intentions for writing the poem and explains the holiday for a gentile audience:
The Feast of Tabernacles was one of the three great festivals of the Jewish people... It took place in the autumn, at the gathering-in of the corn harvest and the vintage, and continued for seven days; during which time the people dwelt in booths, formed of branches of trees, to commemorate their ancestors' dwelling in tents in the wilderness.
Though Ware writes in the past tense, Sukkot still is very much a major Jewish holiday that takes place in the harvest season and involves temporarily living in a sukkah or booth.
"The Feast of Tabernacles" describes the scene at the Temple on Sukkot, with the ancient Israelites waving symbolic plants, burning incense, and preparing an animal sacrifice:
Wave the willow and the palm !
Bow the knee, and chant the psalm !Throng the holy altar round !
Bid the lofty courts resound !
Now let the morning sacrifice begin !
Fire the rich censer ! Let the incense rise
In rolling clouds of fragrance, till it fill
The Holy Place
Another book of ours includes depictions of some Sukkot customs. Printed by the Stinehour Press in 1995, Maḥzor = Mahzor Corfu is a partial facsimile of an illustrated 18th century prayer book produced by the Jewish community of the Greek island of Corfu, containing the liturgies for the three major festivals (Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot) and Shabbat. It also contains some charming illustrations of Sukkot scenes. On the left is a man holding a lulav (palm, willow, and myrtle branch) and etrog (citron). On the right are four men sharing a meal under the thatched roof of a sukkah.
To see "The Feast of Tabernacles," come to the reading room and request
Smith J pam.vol. 35:12. To see
Maḥzor = Mahzor Corfu, request
Presses B667mahz