Join us for a Socially-Distanced Sukkah Drop-In Experience
You and your family are invited to come on over for an in-person, socially-distanced Sukkot experience. We'll say the blessing on the Lulav + Etrog, eat a prepackaged/boxed snack in the Sukkah, and celebrate Sukkot.
Service Schedule
Sukkot Kids Party
Simchat Torah Dancing
What Is Sukkot?
Sukkot is a weeklong Jewish holiday that comes five days after Yom Kippur. Sukkot celebrates the gathering of the harvest and commemorates the miraculous protection G‑d provided for the children of Israel when they left Egypt. We celebrate Sukkot by dwelling in a foliage-covered booth (known as a sukkah) and by taking the “Four Kinds” (arba minim), four special species of vegetation.
Weekly Tanya Class. A small book with an oversized impact, the Tanya distills deep Kabbalistic ideas into practical advice, charting a doable roadmap for any person attempting to serve G‑d. The ...
On every day of the holiday of Sukkot (with the exception of Shabbat), there’s a mitzvah to take the “Four Kinds”—a lulav (date palm frond), an etrog (citron), at least three hadassim (myrtle branches) and two aravot (willow branches). In the words of the verse (Leviticus 23:40), “You shall take for yourselves on the first day the fruit of the hadar tree [citron], date palm fronds, a branch of a braided tree, and willows of the brook, and you shall rejoice before the L‑rd your G‑d for a seven day period.”