בעז"ה
“Dirat Arai”: The
‘Temporary’ Succa
What was it like living in
Gush Katif? I’ve been asked that question countless times. Answering it doesn’t
get any easier. Stories are a good way of relating events so that’s what my
writings commemorating the anniversary of the Expulsion are usually are. Succot
in Gush Katif was a special holiday, in many ways, from the neighbors helping
us buy and transport the succa parts to tear gas meant for rioting Arabs
interrupting our meals to wondering if mortars launched from Dir-el-Balah were
going to prevent us from fulfilling the mitzva of sitting in the succa.
Like many couples my husband
and I married in Elul, not long before the High Holidays. We arrived in Netzer
Hazani about a week after our wedding. Unlike most couples in Israel we
couldn’t pack our bags, catch a ride and spend the holidays with family. We
were ‘alone’ – although one is never really alone in Israel - and celebrating
the holidays with friends who were in exactly our situation didn’t appeal to us
so we decided to stay home. For Rosh HaShana we received more invitations than
there were meals and even we also received an invitation for before the Yom
Kippur fast. All that was left was the matter of building a Succa, known as a
“dirat arai”, a temporary dwelling built especially for only the week of
Succot.
Time passed and we still
hadn’t purchased a Succa. Yom Kippur passed and I began to seriously worry.
Succot would begin in only a few days and I had no idea how we were going to
acquire a Succa. Fortunately immediately after Yom Kippur as we were having the
fast-breaking meal siata d’shaimaya (help from Heaven) arrived. A neighbor
pulled up next to our house, honked his horn and shouted, “Uri! Come! I’ll take
you to Neve Dekalim and you’ll buy yourself a Succa.” He not only took my
husband to Neve Dekalim but also vouched for us. We didn’t have enough cash on
hand and the checkbooks hadn’t arrived yet. I guess the kind neighbor figured
that without family in Israel or a car or checks we wouldn’t be running away
too quickly. They returned from Neve Dekalim, the generous neighbor helped Uri
start the building the succa and then he apologized (!) for having to go home
and build his own succa.
Two years later we headed for
the young community of K’far Darom, once again moving right before Succot. We
packed up the minivan, drove to our caravan and began to unpack. A smiling
grandfather stepped out of the neighboring caravan and greeted us. “Shalom, I’m
Chana Cohen’s father. Welcome! Do you need any help?” We turned down the offer,
not wanting to inconvenience our new neighbors and said that we’d manage. After
about half an hour he returned, looked at us, up and down, and insisted. “Take
care of your home. I’ll build the succa with my grandchildren.” He said and he
did.
Years passed and on the year
celebrating 50 years to the founding of old K’far Darom we sat in the Succa,
“under siege”– roads were closed because of the security situation – thinking
about how the original founders of K’far Darom were literally under siege
during the War of Independence.
Four years later the rioting and attacks began on Rosh HaShana, the attacks that would only increase until the
Expulsion, after which the terrorists would increase their attacks on the rest
of the Negev, once the Jews were forcibly removed from Gush Katif. The Arabs
rioted close to K’far Darom’s fence and the tear gas blew into our yard and our
eyes. As the holiday of Succot drew near neither the riots nor the tear gas had
stopped. During Succot we took wet towels into the succa with us, for relief
from the tear gas until we could run inside. Once we didn’t take wet towels
with us and we started to think that maybe tear gas was wafting in our
direction. I didn’t say a word, but my three year old daughter announced that,
“We should have brought towels!”
By the next year we already
had to keep our ear attuned to the sound of mortar launches and announcements
of “purple rain”, the code for falling mortars. “Color red” warnings were rare.
Almost always the mortars had already been launched before the army could warn
us. We sat in the succa, like anyone else celebrating the holiday, but our
conversations were a bit different.
"A
mortar fell. Let’s go inside”
"No
it didn’t. We’ll stay in the Succa.”
"Ima (mom)! A mortar fell!”
I wasn’t convinced but just
to be on the safe side we went inside. Later I learned that a mortar had
directly hit our neighbor two doors to the left. Their second, completely
unfinished, story suffered a direct hit to a corner, leaving a gaping hole. Fortunately
the family wasn’t home that day.
Years passed and the Arabs of
Dir-el-Balah continued to launch mortars. Not only the security situation but
also our metal frame and nylon walled succa began to heat up too much. “We
should buy a succa in which it’s pleasant to sit,” I suggested. My husband
reminded me that we didn’t have a car – which we didn’t at the time – and how
was he supposed to bring wooden succa walls home. I didn’t back down. “Do we
lack neighbors with large vehicles?” My husband was convinced and bought succa
walls, once again in Neve Dekalim. We waited again for siata d’shamaya, which
wasn’t long in coming.
Several days later the phone
rang and on the line was our closest neighbor. “Shalom, – speaking I’m at – and
I see succa walls with DeYoung marked on them. Would you like them?”
Absolutely. We received our succa walls at our doorstep and our neighbor had
the mitzva of bringing them to us.
We sat in that succa three
times in K’far Darom. Then it, the ‘dirat arai’ was loaded into a shipping
container with the rest of our belongings and our ‘permanent’ house was razed
to the ground. The succa remained in the hot, stuffy container for a bit longer
than a year until in the mountain air of Elon Moreh it was built, once again
according to our custom, by a new neighbor we’d barely met.
We managed to move once more,
to a new house in Elon Moreh, right before Succot and we’re still waiting to
move again, with the succa back to K’far Darom.
At this time of year when we
remember the destruction of Beit HaMikdash and for us the more personal
destruction of Gush Katif and the northern Shomron, particularly K’far Darom I
think about the upcoming Succot holiday. We moved four times right before
Succot, and we have plenty of time to return to K’far Darom, with that
‘temporary’ “dirat arai”, by the holiday, if we don’t merit the rebuilding of
Beit HaMikdash and going up to Jerusalem by then.
Hadassa DeYoung, K’far
Darom/Elon Moreh
3 comments:
1. When the LORD thy God shall bring thee into the land whither thou goest to possess it, and shall cast out many nations before thee, the Hittite, and the Girgashite, and the Amorite, and the Canaanite, and the Perizzite, and the Hivite, and the Jebusite, seven nations greater and mightier than thou;
2. and when the LORD thy God shall deliver them up before thee, and thou shalt smite them; then thou shalt utterly destroy them; thou shalt make no covenant with them, nor show mercy unto them.
- Devarim 7
Shalom!
Shy Guy, I agree with you. I don't quite understand the connection to what I wrote. Since the Expulsion I have been thinking about how we probably won't return to Gush Katif until we as a nation have accomplished what we were commanded to do in the pasukim you quoted. The Gaza area (Azza/oz/azut metzah etc.) has always been a very difficult area for the Jews to even attempt to control, from the time of the Plelishtim (Philistines) until now, when the Arabs who stole their name from the Philistines have established a Hamas stronghold there.
I believe we will soon have a war with the destabilized Egypt as the Sinai and Gaza heat up. We will return to Gaza and Sinai and also (as the Rebbe said during the YK War) Alexandria. But we must have a leader with faith to do it.
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