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S U K K O T:   T H E   C L I M A X
A *Gal Einai Insight*
for the Month of Tishrei by
**Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh**
[The following is the first part of an unedited excerpt from
the Gal Einai "Glossary of Kabbalah and Chassidut," presently
in preparation.]
According to Sefer Yetzirah, each month of the Jewish year has
a letter of the Hebrew alphabet, a zodiac sign, one of the
twelve tribes of Israel, a sense, and "controlling" limb of the
body that corresponds to it. Tishrei's festivals have their unique correspondences too.
Tishrei
Tishrei is the seventh of the twelve months of the Jewish
calendar. The month of Tishrei begins the autumn season
(tekufah), whose three months--Tishrei, Cheshvan,
Kislev--correspond to the three tribes of the camp of
Ephraim--Ephraim, Menashe, Benjamin-who were situated to the
west in the desert encampment of the Jews.
In the Bible, Tishrei is called "yerach ha'eitanim," "the month
of the strong" or "the month of the ancients." With respect to
the reckoning of years, Tishrei is the beginning of the new
year. (Before the giving of the Torah, Tishrei was considered
the beginning of the year in all respects.) "Tishrei" permutes
to "reishit," "beginning," as it is said of Divine providence
over the land of Israel and the entire world: "The eyes of G-d
your G-d are always on it, from the beginning of the year until
the end of the year" [Deuteronomy 11:12]).
As the seventh month from Nissan (the month of Jewish
redemption and independence), Tishrei is the "dearest" of
months, as is said: "All sevens are dear" (Vayikra Rabbah
29:11). The word "seven" is cognate to "satiated," and so is
the month of Tishrei referred to as "the most satiated of
months," for more than any other month of the year it is "full"
of mitzvot and holidays. Tishrei begins the six months of the
winter, which correspond to six levels of "reflected light" (in
Divine service-"arousal from below"). This is alluded to in the
name Tishrei which begins with the three letters tav, shin,
reish, in the"reflected" order of the alef-beit (from end to
beginning).
Letter: lamed.
Lamed is the only letter of the alef-beit whose shape
ascends above the upper boundary of the letters. This is understood
to reflect its great existential longing and aspiration to return
to its ultimate and absolute source in the essence of G-d's
Infinite Being. This is the experience of the true teshuvah
("return") of Rosh HaShanah and Yom Kippur. G-d's infinite
light descends and becomes manifest in the two lameds of the
lulav on the festival of Sukkot.
Mazal (zodiac sign): moznayim (Libra-scale).
The scale symbolizes the Divine judgment of Rosh HaShanah
and Yom Kippur. All of the deeds of man are weighed in judgment.
Moznayim, from the word "oznayim" (ears), implies equilibrium and
balance (the inner sense of the ears). In Kabbalah, equilibrium is
the prerequisite state for marital union, "face to face." This is
the spiritual state achieved on the month of Tishrei. In the
360-degree cycle of the year, Tishrei "faces" Nissan. Tishrei
receives and integrates into nature (and its fixed laws) the
"redemption" of Israel (the "light" of Nissan). Due to this itself,
G-d judges Israel on Tishrei with mercy.
Tribe: Ephraim.
The tribe of the month of Tishrei is Ephraim. Ephraim is the son of Joseph,
the archetypal soul of the power to procreate in marital union. The
name Ephraim derives from G-d's first commandment to Adam on the day
of his creation-the first of Tishrei, Rosh HaShanah: "be fruitful and
multiply" (Genesis 1:28), the all-inclusive mitzvah to procreate.
Spiritually, this mitzvah is performed in ongoing stages
throughout all the holidays of Tishrei, from Rosh HaShanah to
Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah:
The Ten Days of Repentance
correspond to "His left hand is under my head" (Song of Songs
2:6); the first six days of Sukkot correspond to "His right
hand embraces me;" the seventh day of Sukkot, Hoshana Rabah,
corresponds, in particular, to "He shall kiss me with the
kisses of His mouth" (Song of Songs 1:2); Shemini Atzeret and
Simchat Torah correspond to the actual union itself, which
begins the Divine state of "pregnancy" until the Divine birth
of new souls of Israel on the seventh day of Pesach, the day of
the splitting of the Red Sea to give birth to new souls-new
Divine consciousness.
Sense: touch (contact, marriage).
The sense associated with the month of Tishrei is touch.
In Hebrew, the word for "touch" is cognate to the word for
"marital relations." This is the sense which directly relates
to the name Ephraim, as explained above. The sense of touch is
the only of the five common and general senses which is not
centered in the "face" of man (but rather in the tips of his
fingers). The procreative "touch" takes place in an
existentially balanced state of "face to face" but "in the
dark" (in modesty, tzeniut), for its ultimate source is in the
"unknowable head" of keter.
Controller: gall.
The controlling limb associated with this month is the gall.
The "green humor" resides in the gall. It is the source of all
sexual arousal, as taught in Kabbalah. The green humor
represents the well-balanced or "blended" state (the state of
"mizug," cognate to "zivug," marital union) between the white
humor (which resides in the lungs) and the red humor (which
resides in the liver). So is the month of Tishrei, the
beginning of the autumn, a "blend" between summer and winter.
And so are we taught, that the procreative "touch" (of Tishrei)
functions best when "balanced" between hot and cold, most
preferably at midnight, between the two halves of the night,
etc. Through the intense spiritual service of Tishrei, the
green humor of the gall becomes rectified and well-balanced in
order to control and permeate all of man's activities
(throughout the coming year) with Divine procreative energy.
The above Torah insight by Rabbi Yitzchak Ginsburgh is
presented by Gal Einai Institute of Israel, a non-profit
organization dedicated to disseminating and implementing the
inner wisdom of the Torah in the land of Israel and the
Diaspora.
Gal Einai Institute
POB 1439 Kiryat Arba 90100 Israel
Tel: 02-996-1123
Fax: 02-996-2888
(Outside of Israel, replace 02 with 9722)
email: inner@inner.org
web: http://www.inner.org
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