Welcoming in the Ushpizin: Poems for Sukkot

Published: Oct. 16, 2019, 1:25 p.m.

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We\\u2019re currently in the days of Sukkot, in which Jews everywhere dwell (or at least take their meals) in a temporary structure called a Sukkah to commemorate the forty years of wandering in the desert, and also because Sukkot is an agricultural festival as well, and in ancient times people lived in temporary shelters as they harvested.

One of the customs of Sukkot is inviting guests for meals into the Sukkah, close friends or needy strangers, as well as the supernatural \\u2014\\u201cUshpizin\\u201d is Aramaic for \\u201cguests.\\u201d

Today we\\u2019ll hear poems that feature these ushpizin, from Orit Gidali\\u2019s book, Twenty Girls to Envy Me. The Selected poems of Orit Gidali.

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Text:

Twenty Girls to Envy Me. Select Poems of Orit Gidali. Translated from the Hebrew by Marcela Sulak. University of Texas Press, 2016.

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