Yom Kippur begins tonight at
sundown.
For Jews
around the world, this is the holiest time of the year, the time where we pause
to reflect on what we did the past year and how we can begin anew in the new
year.
Even many
non-observant Jews follow this holiday, and this is the only time that they
venture into a synagogue during the entire calendar year.
Prayer and
reflection are paramount here, as is refraining from drinking or eating
anything for the duration of the holiday.
Some Jews
don't even bathe, watch television, drive cars or do anything but pray and fast
during this period, which ends tomorrow night at sundown, or when the shofar is
blown at Yom Kippur services.
I,
personally, don't go to that extreme. I do go to synagogue, even if it is for a
very short period of time, and I do fast.
Fasting is
not hard to do. Sure, it takes you out of your routine, but it really isn't
that difficult to do for a day.
What is
difficult is doing it while you are in synagogue. The constant getting up and
sitting down--when the Torah is displayed--makes it very difficult.
I remember
in the old days, you would hear women crying in the back of the synagogue. Not
eating can do that to you.
I am the
only one in my family who can fast like this, and I probably shouldn't continue
to do it either. I do take a pill for cholesterol each day, and if I skip a
day, who knows what it is doing to my insides. My wife said that I really
shouldn't do it anymore, but I will do it until I can't, I guess.
As far as my
family, my wife has tried and can't do it, my son the same, my daughter, I know
she has tried but she lives 300 miles away in her own world, and my parents
just can't do it anymore because of all the pills they take.
So it is
left to me in my family to carry on this tradition. Alas, when I have to stop
doing it, that will probably be it for my family.
I have to
tell you, after I fast I feel very, very good. It is almost as if everything
bad in my body has been cleansed out of it by fasting. I might have a little
buzz headache, but this is something I have been doing continually since I was
12 or 13, so I am pretty much used to it.
(I admit,
during two years I couldn't fast because I was sick.)
So to all my
Jewish friends, and to all of those people I know who aren't, Happy New Year to
everyone.
And it makes
me feel good to say that.
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