For the forty years between Egypt and Israel, the Jewish People were sustained by miracles. Every morning, magic food descended from the sky in the form of manna, and they were accompanied by a supernatural well that followed them wherever they went. Apart from food and drink, the camp was also accompanied by miraculous clouds that surrounded and protected them, providing shelter from the harsh elements and guiding their path, the Clouds of Glory – ענני הכבוד.
We don’t have any practices that commemorate the manna or the well, but we remember the clouds with the festival of Sukkos, where the sukkah serves as a reminder of this spiritual and physical shelter.
Why do we only remember the clouds?
The answer lies in what the clouds represent about the human condition and our relationship with the Divine.
Living in the desert is extraordinarily challenging, requiring highly specific adaptations. Basic survival is a constant struggle, especially for people entirely unfamiliar with desert life. The Jewish People, former slaves in Egypt, were not desert nomads. They were utterly unprepared for the harsh realities of wilderness living. The clouds were not just convenient; they were essential for survival. Yet, their importance goes beyond physical protection.
As the Ramban explains, the Clouds of Glory were not just a necessity for survival but a sign of God’s active engagement, accompanying the Jewish people as a visible manifestation of the Creator’s presence.
But there was a moment when the Jewish People stumbled.
They made a Golden Calf, and the clouds vanished.
As the Vilna Gaon teaches, the people got together in an act of contrition and repentance to build the Mishkan, and when Moshe opened the Mishkan on the 15th day of Tishrei, the clouds returned.
That’s when we celebrate Sukkos, that’s why we celebrate Sukkos.
Sukkos isn’t just about remembering the clouds; it’s about how they came back. When all seemed lost, the return of the clouds forever showed that reconciliation with the Creator is always possible, even after great failures.
As the Chiddushei HaRim teaches, this moment signifies being enveloped in the shade of faith – בְּצִלָּא דִּמְהֵימְנוּתָא – a metaphor for God’s shelter that symbolizes the profound spiritual security that comes when we return to faith after error, knowing that God’s presence will never abandon us, that God’s love and forgiveness will always be available even after our worst mistakes. The Nesivos Shalom observes that this is why Sukkos is in Tishrei, the month of closeness, coronation, and ultimate reconciliation with the Creator, not in Nissan when the Exodus happened.
As our sages teach, repentance is special because it brings healing to the world. Sukkos celebrates this healing for our individual souls and our collective relationship in alignment with the Creator.
Generations later, when King Solomon dedicated the Beis HaMikdash, the clouds appeared again and filled the space, signalling God’s approval and a connection established – ‘וְהֶעָנָן מָלֵא אֶת־בֵּית ה. The dedication was celebrated by a forteen day holiday, seven days of Sukkos and seven days for the Beis HsaMikdash, yet the prophet calls it one holiday, in the singular – וַיַּעַשׂ שְׁלֹמֹה בָעֵת־הַהִיא אֶת־הֶחָג וְכל־יִשְׂרָאֵל עִמּוֹ קָהָל גָּדוֹל מִלְּבוֹא חֲמָת עַד־נַחַל מִצְרַיִם לִפְנֵי ה אֱלֹהֵינוּ .שִׁבְעַת .יָמִים וְשִׁבְעַת יָמִים אַרְבָּעָה עָשָׂר יוֹם.
R’ Tzadok haKohen of Lublin explains that these two holidays were one and the same; Sukkos commemorates the clouds returning, and it had just happened again. The clouds came in Aharon’s merit, and it was Aharon and his descendants who served. The clouds, Mishkan, and Beis HaMikdash, represent God’s enduring presence guiding and accompanying the Jewish People.
The cloud in those times marked a divine acceptance and a renewed relationship, and Sukkos celebrates that same divine presence in our lives, reminding us that reconciliation is always possible after alienation.
Unlike the manna or the well, which provided temporary sustenance, we remember the clouds on Sukkos because they represent not only physical shelter but the enduring theme of divine reconciliation.
Reconciliation is the natural consequence of the process we have undertaken on Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur.
In a world dominated by disconnection and uncertainty, stepping into the sukkah reminds us that God’s presence surrounds us, even when it feels distant. We all have moments when we feel disconnected, but, like the sukkah, these moments of fragility are also opportunities to rediscover divine closeness and that real security is to be found in the spiritual world, not the material world.
Sukkos doesn’t just mark the journey of the Jewish people through the desert—it celebrates the home of faith, the ever-present yet unseen hand of God in our lives. On Sukkos, we celebrate the importance of human agency in the spiritual world, the dynamic in which human-driven action or initiative triggers a corresponding divine response, a principle that guides our personal moments of repentance as well – אִתְעָרוּתָא לְתַתָּא. Whether it’s making time for quiet prayer amidst a busy schedule or an act of kindness when it feels hard, these small acts of spiritual initiative invite a divine response.
In the shelter of the sukkah, we rediscover God’s invisible hand, a source of strength and security when we feel most vulnerable, reminding us that, like the clouds, faith is always waiting to embrace us.
