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Judaism

Let go and join the Simchat Torah dance

This weekend’s festival is a time to shed inhibitions

October 8, 2009 09:42
Simchat Torah Dancing

By

Naftali Brawer

3 min read

The scene that plays itself out on Simchat Torah each year in synagogues across the country is invariably the same. A small hard core of dedicated men with Torah scrolls in their arms do their best to circumvent the bimah against a riotous backdrop of noise and out-of-control kids fuelled by too much candy and fizzy drinks. Off to the side stand the rest of the adults, mostly parents and the occasional indulgent grandparent. Some are mildly amused. Most are bored stiff and cannot wait for the whole thing to be over.

Occasionally, an over-eager dancer will try to pull these bystanders in to dance. Most will politely but firmly refuse; a few will go along with it for a few minutes out of sheer sympathy rather than any real conviction. Long before the last hakafah dance, the crowd starts to thin as people lose interest. By the time the Torah is read, the synagogue, now near empty and littered with candy wrappers and crumpled paper flags, bears an uncanny resemblance to a deserted birthday party after the guests have all gone.

For many, Simchat Torah is seen as little more than a cute children’s festival celebrated almost as a postscript to the more serious adult-like festivals of the High Holy Days and Succot. Yet there is nothing childish about Simchat Torah. It is a time of profound connection to the Torah and serves as a crucial bridge between this first month of the Jewish year and the following eleven.

So why is it that we fail to give Simchat Torah its due? What is it about this festival that makes it so difficult to take seriously? I think there are two explanations; one physical, the other psychological.