KIBBUTZ FESTIVALS

KIBBUTZ FESTIVALS
Kibbutz celebrations originated in the 1920s and 1930s as an attempt to recapture the "ancient Hebrew" – mainly the agricultural – character of Jewish holidays. (See Table: List of Published Texts of Kibbutz Festivals and Special Occasions.) Over the years they acquired a tradition of their own, as nearly two generations of kibbutz children grew up celebrating them. When the first kindergarten and school were established in each kibbutz, the settlers became aware of a need for festive occasions, both as an educational experience for the children and to relieve the monotony of daily life. The traditional Jewish festivals thus served as the basis for a revival enriched by biblical and mishnaic sources. -Passover Passover (Pesaḥ) was the first festival to be revived in its seasonal context, as it is both the Spring Festival and the Festival of Freedom. The kibbutz haggadah – the Haggadah compiled at kibbutz Yagur was the prototype – was based on the theme of the Exodus from Egypt, but included events of a similar nature pertinent to modern Jewish history and kibbutz life, as well as appropriate passages from modern Hebrew literature. The seder was held in public and became an elaborate function, with music and dancing, for members, children, and guests. The 1985 Haggadah of the Kibbutz ha-Me'uḥad movement reflected a tendency to return to traditional materials. -The Counting of the Omer The counting of the Omer (Sefirat ha-Omer). An omer festival based on biblical and mishnaic sources was inaugurated, symbolizing the harvesting of the first ripe grain. On the eve of the first day of Passover, kibbutz members and their children formed a procession and went singing and dancing to the fields. A number of ears of grain were ceremonially cut, to be placed in the communal dining hall as part of the Passover decorations. -The Festival of the First Fruits The Festival of the First Fruits (Ḥagigat ha-Bikkurim) takes place during the Feast of Weeks (Shavuot) and marks the peak of the first grain harvest and the first ripe fruits. The seven species mentioned in the Bible (wheat, barley, vines, pomegranates, olive trees, fig trees, and honey; Deut. 8:8) are represented graphically and through song and dance. There were also mass rallies to bring offerings of first fruits to the jewish national fund . -The Sheepshearing Festival The Sheepshearing Festival (Ḥagigat ha-Gez) originated in the 1920s in the Valley of Jezreel, and is based on biblical   sources. It was celebrated only in kibbutzim that own flocks, and symbolizes the joy of the shepherd when the shearing is finished. The last sheep is ceremonially sheared to the accompaniment of singing and dancing. Short plays are performed, usually on the theme of I Samuel 25 (the story of Abigail and Nabal), and displays of woolen goods and art on pastoral themes are held. -The Festival of the Vineyards The Festival of the Vineyards (Ḥagigat ha-Keramim). Several attempts were made to revive this festival, mentioned in the Mishnah (Ta'an. 4:8) and held on the 15th of Av. Festivities combined music, choreography, poetry, and love songs. -The Harvest Festival The Harvest Festival (Ḥagigat ha-Asif), which was added in the 1950s to Tabernacles (Sukkot), has as its themes the gathering of the second grain crop and the autumn fruit, the start of the agricultural year, and the first rains. Based on the Water-Drawing (Bet ha-Sho'evah) Festival (Mish. Suk. 5:1–4), it is celebrated in some kibbutzim at night around the swimming pool. Anniversaries of events important in the history of a particular kibbutz inspire many pageants, acted by the members and their children. Marriage and bar mitzvah ceremonies are celebrated, as are Children's Day, and the day on which the young people of the kibbutz become members. Martyrs and Heroes Day on the anniversary of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising (the 27th of Nisan) commemorates the victims of the Holocaust and is marked by memorial ceremonies and dramas on the subject of the Warsaw Ghetto and other Jewish resistance. Other festivals, such as the 15th of Shevat, Hanukkah, and Israel Independence Day (the 5th of Iyyar) are celebrated, but they do not take a form peculiar to the kibbutz. Kibbutz festivals symbolize the new life and farming background of the settlers, and are a rich treasure of Jewish folklore and culture. Providing outlets for the talents of those kibbutz members who are artists, poets, composers, producers, and choreographers, the festivals are a distinct contribution to Israel culture. An archive housed in Kibbutz Beit ha-Shitah contains extensive information about kibbutz festivals and cultural life. \<!   \> \!list of published texts of kibbutz festivals and special occasions List of Published Texts of Kibbutz Festivals and Special Occasions   Name of Work Author Composer Publisher Yagur Haggadah (for Passover) Yehudah Sharett (ed.) Yehudah Sharett The Center for Education and Culture of the Histadrut Zikhron Hava'at ha-Omer (Omer Celebration) Shalom Postolsky Mo'adim series, "Pesah," (5.3.1946) JNF and Ommanut magazine (M. Lipson, ed.) Hava'at ha-Omer (Omer Celebration) Matityahu Shelem Matityahu Shelem The Center for Education and Culture of the Histadrut kibbutz festivals Massekhet ha-Omer (Omer Celebration) Anadad Eldan Avraham Daus Reprint, Kibbutz Hefẓibah Bi-Sedeh Koẓerim (pageant for the First Fruits Festival) Ḥanan Shadmi Yekutiel Shor The Center for Education and Culture of the Histadrut Koveẓ Ḥag ha-Gez (Sheepshearing Festival) Matityahu Shelem (ed.) Matityahu Shelem Aguddat ha-Nokedim be-Israel Shirim le-Tu be-Av (15 of Av) Dov Shay Yiẓhar Yaron in Y. Yaron, Rinnot, the Center for Education and Culture of the Histadrut Shirim u-Meḥolot le-Tu be-Av (pageant) (15 of Av) Efrayim ben Ḥayyim Reprint, Kibbutz Kiryat Anavim Simḥat Beit ha-Sho'evah u-Mo'adei ha-Mayim (Water Festival) Yehudah Sharett Onot, no. 4, Ha-Kibbutz ha-Me'uḥad Simḥat Beit ha-Sho'evah (pageant for Water Festival) Yiẓḥak Asher Karel Salmon Kibbutz ha-Dati (1958) Tekes Ḥag ha-Asif (Harvest Festival) Anadad Eldan David Zahavi The Center for Education and Culture of the Histadrut Yalkut Bar Mitzvah (bar mitzvah ceremony, anthology) Yehudah Sharett Yehudah Sharett Aryeh Ben-Gurion (ed.), Va'adat ha-Ḥaggim ha-Bein-kibbutzit Massekhet ha-Sho'ah ve-ha-Gevurah (anthology for Holocaust Memorial Day) Va'adat ha-Ḥaggim ha-Bein-kibbutzit Kovez "B" le-Yom ha-Zikkaron, "Ha-Sho'ah ve-ha-Mered" (Holocaust Memorial Day) Ẓevi Shua, Israel Guttman Va'adat ha-Ḥaggim ha-Bein-kibbutzit and Moreshet (1968) "Kelulot" (for kibbutz weddings) Matityahu Shelem Ha-Va'adah ha-Bein-kibbutzit le-Havvai u-Mo'ed (1968) 4"> Kibbutz festivals for Israel's 20th anniversary: "Yerushalayim" (choreographic play) Leah Yisre'eli David Ori Ha-Musikah ha-Yisra'elit, Ltd. (1968) "La-Ḥag Mizmor" (Cantata for choir and orchestra) Yehudah Engel Yehudah Engel Ha-Merkaz le-Tarbut u-le-Ḥinnukh (1968) Songs for Miscellaneous Festivals The Music Committee of Kibbutz Arẓi – ha-Shomer ha-Ẓa'ir 2"> Anniversary celebrations (playlets) Various kibbutzim (Matityahu Shelem) -WEBSITE: www.chagim.org.il

Encyclopedia Judaica. 1971.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • SABBATH AND FESTIVALS — <! > !shavuotfestival of the first fruitscelebrated in a kibbutz in israel with the presentation of first fruits. Shavuot festival of the first fruits celebrated in a kibbutz in Israel with the presentation of first fruits. In the Temple… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • SHELEM (Weiner), MATTITYAHU — (1904–1975), Israeli composer. Born in Zamoscz, Poland, Shelem went to Palestine in 1922, worked in agriculture and road building and in 1927 joined kibbutz Bet Alfa. For a time he was a shepherd, and the shepherds and shearing festival songs… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Pessa'h —  Pâque redirige ici. Pour les autres Pâques, voir Pâque (homonymie) Pessa h …   Wikipédia en Français

  • SHAVUOT — (Heb. שָׁבוּעוֹת; weeks, Pentecost, the 50th day ), the festival celebrated on the sixth of Sivan (and also on the seventh outside Israel). The biblical names for the festival are: Ḥag Shavuot ( Feast of Weeks, Ex. 34:22; Deut. 16:10); Yom ha… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • Korban haomer — Le fauchage de l’omer au kibboutz Guivat Hayim Meou had, entre 1935 et 1945 Sources halakhiques Textes dans la Loi juive re …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Souccot —  Pour le lieu biblique appelé Soukkot, voir Soukkot (lieu) Souccot Vous demeurerez dans des souccot durant sept jours; tout indigène en Isr …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Tou Beav — Les jeunes filles dansaient dans les vignobles, toutes de blanc vêtues Nom officiel Ha …   Wikipédia en Français

  • CULTURAL LIFE — Introduction The movement for the return to Zion which emerged as a force at the end of the 19th century was based on a variety of motivations, including the political – the demand for an independent homeland where the Jews could forge their own… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • WOMAN — This article is arranged according to the following outline: the historical perspective biblical period marriage and children women in household life economic roles educational and managerial roles religious roles women outside the household… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • RELIGIOUS LIFE AND COMMUNITIES — Jews UNDER OTTOMAN RULE The Jews of the pre Zionist old yishuv, both sephardim (from the Orient) and ashkenazim (of European origin), dedicated their lives to the fulfillment of religious precepts: the study of the torah and the meticulous… …   Encyclopedia of Judaism

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”