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Sun's out after 28-year wait

The weather comes up trumps as Britons rise early for a rare ceremony

April 14, 2009 15:49
Hampstead Garden Suburb chazan Avromi Freilich (left) and Rabbi Leivi Sudak of Edgware Lubavitch lead the ceremony at Kenwood House

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

3 min read

It threatened to be the dampest of squibs. The gloomy weather forecast had suggested that few British Jews would be able to join in one of Judaism’s rarest rituals — birchat hachamah, the blessing over the sun, which is recited just once every 28 years.

As they contemplated the damp dawn on the eve of Pesach last Wednesday, sun-spotters must have felt like cricketers on the first day of the season, who expect to spend it watching the rain from the pavilion yet hope for a break in the clouds.

But putting the meteorologists to shame, the sun had other ideas. Like some aged actor you feared might not show but who proves he still has what it takes, it turned in a blazing performance.

“It’s the same place where they put up the sun,” explained 11-year-old North West London Jewish Day School pupil Ionia Sofer-Yadgaroff, referring to the rabbinical belief that every 28 years the sun returns to exactly the same spot in the heavens that it occupied when God made it on the Fourth Day of Creation.