Home > MetNews
Jewish mystery machine comes to Auraria
Chabad of Auraria sets up sukkah van on campus for holiday
By Allison Bailey
abaile19@mscd.edu
|
|
| Rabbi Yisrael-Moshe Ort, a member
of the Chabad of Colorado, came to
campus Oct 12 to celebrate with
Auraria's
Jewish
population
and to enlighten all others who were interested in
the tradition. |
|
If you were on campus Oct. 12 between 12:30
p.m. and 3 p.m. you may have passed by the sukkah van parked
near the P.E. building and thought, “What’s a sukkah
van?”
The Chabad of Auraria, a campus Jewish student organization
affiliated with the Chabad of Colorado, set up the van in celebration
of
the Jewish holiday of Sukkot, which means “booths” in
Hebrew.
Sukkot celebrates the beginning of fall and the Biblical
wandering of the Jews during the Exodus. The holiday started
Friday night.
Rabbi Yisrael-Moshe Ort, who is a member of the
Chabad of Colorado, said it is a mitzvah, or Jewish commandment,
to live in a sukkah
for a week.
Rabbi Ort and his family observe the holiday by eating,
drinking and spending time in the sukkah, but do not sleep in
it.
The sukkah van is a mobile, kosher sukkah, Ort said.
The Chabad of Auraria brought the sukkah van to the college in
order to provide Jewish services and activities to students,
to get the word out about the group, and to answer questions
about Judaism that students might have.
“I’m here to give them the kosher information,” he
said.
In addition to the sukkah, Jewish students were able to
participate in another mitzvah called “shaking the lulav
and esrog.” Lulav
is Hebrew for the date palm branch, which is bound together with
myrtle and willow, and the esrog is the citron fruit. The four
plants are shaken three times in six different directions to
make a blessing.
“They represent four personality types of Jews and emphasize
the idea of Jewish unity,” Ort said. “If any of the
types is missing, you can’t make a blessing.”
Regarding
making a blessing, Ort said the idea is best described as revealing
the “sanctity of the infinite in the physical
world.”
Ort said students who aren’t Jewish and who
may have questions about Judaism were welcome to participate
as well, although only
Jews could make blessings.
“Judaism says that a person doesn’t have to be Jewish
to serve God,” he said.
Charles Hoskinson, a student of
theoretical mathematics at UCD and former Metro student, made
a blessing at the sukkah. He said
he usually doesn’t participate in mitzvahs but decided
to today. Hoskinson said he was Jewish on his maternal grandmother’s
side.
“These people put so much effort into representing the
faith,” he
said. “Also, they gave me candy. These gentlemen are very
kind.”
The group served kosher cakes, pastries, candies
and drinks in the sukkah and played Hasidic music. They also
dressed in traditional
Hasidic dress, including hats and kapotas, which are long jackets.
Jessica
Meksin, a Metro student and member of the Chabad of Auraria,
helped to organize the sukkah event. She said the group has been
around for about a year, although they are still working toward
becoming an official campus organization.
Meksin said that other
than the Jews for Jesus, they are the only Jewish organization
on campus.
“Unlike the Jews for Jesus, we aren’t trying to
convert people,” she said.
The group is organizing several
events in the next few months, including a Simchas Torah and
events for Purim and Hanukkah.
According to Aura Ort, Yisrael-Moshe’s wife, UCD is organizing
several speakers of different religions to give a talk on campus.
Meksin
said the Orts are doing outreach work to Jewish students. “Because
of them I’m becoming more Jewish,” she said. “They’ve
opened my eyes to a lot of things.” |