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Jonathan Freedland

ByJonathan Freedland, Jonathan Freedland

Opinion

Too much out in the cold

October 7, 2014 14:36
2 min read

It is the festival of exile. I know the notion of wandering and of a temporary home is built into the very idea of Succot, but that's not what I mean. Rather, it's the weather. The prospect of eating and sleeping outdoors, with only the slimmest canopy of leaves between you and the stars - and doing that in October - makes no sense in most parts of the world where Jews live. It's a stiff test of endurance in Stamford Hill or Brooklyn.

But there's one place where it feels easy and comfortable: Israel. Which is why Succot is a reminder that the Jewish calendar is designed for collective life in a specific terrain, the place where most Jews still don't live.

Not for the first time, Succot has seemed to bring a change in the weather and the start of autumn. Which prompted, perhaps inevitably, a last, lingering look back at the summer. I've been thinking in particular about my summer holiday.

It was in Greece, a week on an island, another week in the mountains and forests of the north. Perhaps it's my own lack of imagination, but the place kept reminding me of somewhere else. The heat, the dusty roadsides, the sparkling Mediterranean, the salads: it was, I decided, Israel without the conflict.