November this year mostly overlaps with the Hebrew month of Cheshvan. Among Ashkenazi Jews (Jews of Eastern European descent or who follow the customs of that part of the world) this month contains no holidays other than Shabbat. In the Ethiopian Jewish world this month brings Sigd, a festival symbolizing the acceptance of Torah, which takes place on the 50th day after Yom Kippur.
My background is Ashkenazi. (My mother was born in Prague.) Sigd sounds neat, but I’ve never experienced it myself. For me, Cheshvan is the quiet month.
I love the Days of Awe. I love the taste of apples with honey, the lilt of high holiday nusach (melodic modes) and Torah trope, the call of the shofar, our practices of teshuvah. I love spending a day in prayer, contemplation, and song on Yom Kippur, and the way the day’s spiritual intimacy grows as the evening light fades into Ne’ilah. I love sitting in the sukkah, listening to the rustle of cornstalks overhead and admiring the full Sukkot moon…
…and each year I still breathe a sigh of relief when we make it to Cheshvan. After the big spiritual work (and emotional work and vocal work and energetic work) of the High Holidays and Sukkot, Cheshvan brings a sense of respite. The silence in which the song continues to reverberate. A time to integrate everything that’s come before.
Whatever Thanksgiving evokes for us, may we carry some of Cheshvan’s serene stillness into Thanksgiving — and all that follows.
With blessings of rest to all,
— Rabbi Rachel