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Judaism

When a temporary shelter gives us our best hope of security

Lord Sacks celebrates the joy of Succot in an extract from the final volume of his edition of the festival prayerbooks

October 13, 2016 11:08
13102016 iStock 52871292 LARGE
4 min read

Of all the festivals, Succot is surely the one that speaks most powerfully to our time. Kohelet (Ecclesiastes) could almost have been written in the 21st century. Here is the ultimate success, the man who has it all - the houses, the cars, the clothes, the adoring women, the envy of all men - who has pursued everything this world can offer from pleasure to possessions to power to wisdom and yet who, surveying the totality of his life, can only say, in effect, "Meaningless, meaningless, everything is meaningless".

Kohelet's failure to find meaning is directly related to his obsession with the "I" and the "Me": "I built for myself. I gathered for myself. I acquired for myself." The more he pursues his desires, the emptier his life becomes. There is no more powerful critique of the consumer society, whose idol is the self, whose icon is the "selfie" and whose moral code is "Whatever works for you".

This is the society that achieved unprecedented affluence, giving people more choices than they have ever known, and yet at the same time saw an unprecedented rise in alcohol and drug abuse, eating disorders, stress-related syndromes, depression, attempted suicide and actual suicide. A society of tourists, not pilgrims, is not one that will yield the sense of a life worth living. Of all things people have chosen to worship, the self is the least fulfilling. A culture of narcissism quickly gives way to loneliness and despair.

Kohelet was also, of course, a cosmopolitan: a man at home everywhere and therefore nowhere. This is the man who had seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines but in the end could only say, "More bitter than death is the woman". It should be clear to anyone who reads this in the context of the life of Solomon, that Kohelet is not really talking about women but about himself.