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Sukkos: Ushpizen

Some people have the tradition to hanging a Magen David in their Sukka. Perhaps the six sides allude to the six "Ushpizen" guests who visit during the first six days of Sukkot: Avraham, Yitzchak, Ya'akov, Moshe, Aharon, and Yosef. The star as a unified whole symbolizes the seventh "Ushpizen " -- David -- the "king" who unifies the whole. Furthermore, the Magen David has 12 sides: David as king unified the 12 tribes.

The Ushpizin are the seven hidden hosts who, according to Jewish lore, visit each succah during the seven-day festival. This refers to Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, Aaron and David. The origin of this visitation can be found in a verse of Zohar,

"When a person is seated in his succah, Abraham and six distinguished visitors partake of his company." (Zohar 5:103b)

Each in turn ushers the others into the succah during the subsequent days of the holiday.

The custom prescribes that every evening the attending host be approached with a different request:

"May it be Your will, my G-d and the G-d of our forefathers that the Divine presence rest upon us...I hereby invite our most valued hosts, Abraham...."

This custom, originally practiced by the kabbalists, and later by the Hassidim, has been adopted by numerous orthodox groups. The sages specified that to merit these seven distinguished hosts, one must invite other "hosts" of flesh and blood from among the poor as well.

Thus developed the tradition of inviting a needy student from the local yeshiva to partake of a meal in the succah--as much an act of general goodwill as a reminder of the heavenly counterpart above. Furthermore, it has become common practice to include in the succah decorations a plaque bearing the names of the seven holiday visitors.


OU Torah Insights Project

Sukkot
September 25, 1999
Rabbi Ephriam H. Sturm


Mankind, recognizing the frailties of life, seeks security. In the state of Israel, diplomats, politicians and citizens demand secure borders. On these shores, we seek economic stability. Our parents and grandparents drummed into us the need to save for the "elterer yurin." Airlines, government buildings—even some elementary schools—have security checks.

We seek medical security through insurance plans (which in some cases are like hospital gowns—giving one only the illusion of being covered.) Old timers look back with nostalgia at an earlier age when people did not need deadbolt locks and alarm systems to feel secure in their own homes.

To appreciate the message of Succos in our age of insecurity we turn to two themes: the joy of the harvest and the acknowledgment of the clouds of glory that shielded the Jewish nation in the wilderness.

In an agricultural society the farmer plows the land, seeds it, tends it, fertilizes it and weeds it to achieve fiscal security. His fellow men do the same in other endeavors and through other methods.

But after all human efforts have been expended, the crops and their profits, which represent security, are only achieved through the beneficence of the Creator who controls the rain, the sun and the world market. Succos tells us that after doing all that is expected of us, real security remains a special gift from Above.

"Not with strength and not with power, but with My Spirit," G-d tells us through the prophet: Physical security cannot be achieved exclusively through might. In addition to courage, sacrifice, and sophisticated weaponry we need the catalytic factor of G-d’s Spirit.

Succos addresses this issue by reminding us that for forty years of desert wandering amid hostile nations and marauding bands we were protected and given physical security by the annanei hakavod, the clouds of glory.

Today, though we are not privileged to physically perceive these clouds of glory, we see them through the eyes of faith and belief. When a chassid told the Kotzker Rebbe that another Rebbe is visited in his Succah by the seven giants of Jewish history known as the Ushpizen, the Kotzker told him that he, too, clearly sees these guest in his Succah—through eyes of faith.

King David attests to the protective powers of the invisible clouds of glory: "Let all the nations praise Hashem, let all the people laud Him, for His kindness to us." The sweet singer of Israel tells the nations of the world that they and they alone know all the secret plans that they made to destroy us which were frustrated and aborted by G-d’s intervention—by the hidden clouds of glory.

Therein lies the secret of Succos. A festival attesting to the Jewish faith in Hashem to provide a comprehensive package of security which we symbolize by leaving our homes, our citadels of security, to live under the stars and the protection of the invisible clouds of glory.

Rabbi Ephriam H. Sturm

Rabbi Sturm, Executive Vice President Emeritus, National Council of Young Israel.




High Holidays resources:
Month of Elul What is it? (Russian)
About Teshuvah (Russian)
Fall Holidays (Russian)
Teshuva & Simcha: Can They Coexist? (English)
Why Slichoth? (Russian)
Rosh HaShanah What is it? (Russian)
Traditions (Russian)
Hearing the Shofar (Russian)
Apple in the Honey (Russian)
What is it? (English)
Traditions (English)
Laws of Rosh HaShanah (English)
Rosh HaShanah recipes (English)
Yom Kippur What is it? (Russian)
Preparing to Yom Kippur (Russian)
The Jewish Prayer (Russian)
Elegy about Yom Kippur (Russian)
The book of Yonah (Russian)
What is it? (English)
Preparing to Yom Kippur (English)
Kol Nidrey & Yizkor (English)
Day before Yom Kippur (Russian)
Sukkoth What is it? (Russian)
Themes of Kohelleth (Russian)
Shmini Atzereth & Simchath Torah (Russian)
What is it? (English)
Arbah Minnim - 4 species (English)
Ushpizen (English)
Simchas Bais HaShoevah (English)


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