Now it can.
Rosh Hashanah, which marks the Jewish New Year, begins Monday night. Even if you’re not Jewish, it’s a way to immerse yourself in parts of these rituals of renewal. Maybe God knows we all need a little renewal now.
“It’s a time for people to sort of take stock of their year and their life and what they want the next year to bring,” she added. “Unless people are very focused and mindful of how they live their life, sometimes we just don’t really stop and say, ‘What kind of person am I?'”
It features a celebrity lineup, including US Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, US Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, CNN political commentator Bakari Sellers, comedian Judy Gold and actress Alysia Reiner, from Netflix’s “Orange Is the New Black.”
Bringing in a New Year in September
Rosh Hashanah, which means “head of the year” in Hebrew, is a two-day celebration marking the beginning of the Jewish High Holy Days each autumn.
The New Year inaugurates 10 days of repentance, also known as Days of Awe. They lead into Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, which this year is on Wednesday, September 15. That’s followed by Sukkot, of the Feast of Tabernacles, commemorating how God protected the Israelites as they wandered the desert in search of the Promised Land.
Rosh Hashanah begins Monday at sundown, customarily with the blowing of the shofar, the ram’s horn, a sound traditionally meant to wake up people from their slumber, or perhaps in this year’s case, quarantine.
Last year, then-senior Rabbi Joshua Lesser — who was leading Congregation Bet Haverim in Atlanta — created a Facebook group called “Dreaming Up High Holy Days 2020,” which gathered more than 2,700 rabbis, cantors and laypeople in a conversation about how to adapt Jewish traditions to the present pandemic. That group, now called “Dreaming Up 5782,” has become a vibrant ground for creative ideas.
One way Lesser’s congregation adapted in 2020 was by creating high-holiday boxes for congregants that included holiday candles, apple snacks, honey and notebooks for people to jot down reflections as they marked the high holidays wherever they were.
A holiday of reflection
Traditionally, Rosh Hashanah is about acknowledging where we might have fallen short in the previous year and how to repair ourselves and the world in the coming year.
“You are invited to be publicly private, to be publicly present and say ‘I’m here to work on my personal stuff,'” Lau-Lavie said. “It’s true every year, but it’s especially true this year given the pandemic and the political moment.”
During the high-holiday season, he enrolled hundreds in various challenges related to spiritual readings and personal commitments on topics including racial justice and immigration reform.
“These are the questions that you ask in therapy or with a coach or when you sweat your a** off in yoga,” Lau-Lavie said. “Who am I? Who do I want to be?”
Whether or not you’re Jewish, he explained, there’s value in the spiritual and emotional exercise of honestly contemplating your actions this year, and what you want most out of your life.
An opportunity to apologize
Maybe you’ve been fighting with someone, neglecting them or been dishonest to others, yourself or to the universe.
The Jewish High Holy Days are a chance to say you’re sorry, Stacy Stuart, cofounder of JewBelong, explained.
Or you can share it on Facebook or Twitter, making your personal expression of sorrow or remorse public for your whole community to see.
Cast off those sins
One major theme of Rosh Hashanah is the tradition of Tashlich, in which people symbolically cast off their sins, often by throwing morsels of bread into a flowing body of water.
“Kids remember throwing sins into the river, or they may not remember anything else but they go to do tashlich — which is casting their sins — they remember that,” Stuart said. “Physical rituals really last.”
If finding a body of water nearby is too hard, you could just use your bathtub or sink, Gottesman added.
The English word “sin” isn’t necessarily the best translation of the concept, Lau-Lavie explained. A better way of thinking of it might be to examine where we are hitting the mark in our lives, and where we are falling short of the best version of ourselves.
It includes a prayer from the Rabbi Rachel Barenblat:
“I’m ready to let go of my mistakes. Help me release myself from the ways I’ve missed the mark, lift my troubles off my shoulders. Help me to know that last year is over, washed away like crumbs in a current. Open my heart to blessing and gratitude. Renew my soul as the dew renews the grasses.”
Congregation Bet Haverim is hosting two in-person Tashlich events Tuesday afternoon, and limiting occupancy to 30 and 60 people, respectively.
What’s your legacy?
It could be as simple as “He pet every puppy” or “She always took time to listen.”
Then you have a chance to add what you can do right now to start enacting that reality.
“It’s about ‘How do you want to be spending your life?'” Stuart said. “This is not a dress rehearsal.”
Another way of understanding the spirit of Rosh Hashanah, for believers and nonbelievers, is to think of it as a rigorous self-analysis of your past, present and future.
Lau-Lavie recommended making a list of habits from your past that are no longer serving you, figuring out what you can do in the present to course-correct and then making a commitment to live better going forward.
“It’s an invitation for reflective honesty,” he said. “The bottom line is not Jewish. The bottom line is human.”
This story is updated from a story published in September 2020.
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