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Where will we go on Rosh Hashanah now my parents have died?

When your last links with childhood are lost, it’s time to make choices that you’ve put off for years

September 30, 2024 08:55
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Amsterdam's Portuguese synagogue - the picture was taken during a secular event (Photo Getty Images)
3 min read

The High Holy Days are nearly here again – a time for apple and honey, for big meals and babka, family and friends, new clothes and resolutions, catch-ups and contemplation. And shul. It’s the season for long, long hours of prayer.

For some of us, synagogue is a second home, a familiar place. My father was like that, the rituals of Judaism gave him comfort and strength and the reassurance that he was doing his duty, as the descendant of Levites, by washing the hands of the priests among us.

But for others, shul doesn’t come naturally at all. It was never a regular week-by-week thing for my husband. He’s all about family and tradition, he’s very proudly Jewish. But synagogue-wise, he’s a definite three-times-a-year man.

In the first years of marriage, we split High Holy Days between our family homes in Manchester and Hertfordshire. It was a strange thing for me to get used to my husband’s family traditions, like breaking the fast on hot coffee, olives and gherkins instead of honey cake and honeydew melon.

Topics:

Judaism