How can you decorate your sukkah with Shana Tova
greetings received by phone and email?
My mobile phone buzzed to announce an incoming text message.
“To all the residents of the Mate Yehuda Regional Council: The coming year
should be a year of health and success, prosperity, peace, security, and…”
The message was cut off, but then my phone buzzed again as I
received the second part. “Always at your service,” the message concluded,
listing the head of the council in the signature.
It’s a simple task to reply, but somehow I don’t feel the
need to wish a Shana Tova to my bank or to the head of the local regional
council.
Shana Tova greetings have been arriving in my email inbox as
well, some of them from people I care about and others from companies with
which I have done business in the past. Some of the mails are personal, almost
like letters, while others are family newsletters and include photographs of
children and grandchildren. Some send a simple graphical image of apples and
honey. And then there are the musical cards that render the favorite Rosh
Hashanah liturgy in the annoying tones of elevator music.
Facebook friends wish each other a Shana Tova on a one by
one basis, or en masse; the best images are shared by hundreds, if not by
thousands. One can chat or text a Shana Tova, but the advance of technology
leaves me with a serious problem – how to decorate my sukkah.
Back in the olden days, before all of this digital nonsense,
the many colorful cards my family received in the mail during the holiday
season would be pinned to the fabric walls of the sukkah on our back
patio. The ink and colors would run in the autumn rains, but nevertheless the
cards would be carefully packed away, year by year, to bring back memories of
previous holidays each time we reconstructed our sukkah.
Surely the Internet age can offer some new technology for
decorating a sukkah. Perhaps a digital album strung carefully from the sechach
would be halachically acceptable, as long as its display is not visible on
Shabbat and holiday.
Alternatively, the Biblical verse can be interpreted with a
nod to the modern age. “For a seven day period you shall live in Internet
booths…“ That should solve the problem.
The image of a Shana Tova card is by Rabbi Shmuel Iuzefov of Butoshan - Haifa and is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Originally published on The Times of Israel.
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