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SHABBAT TIMES
Candle
Lighting & end of Shabbat times are for the Cape Peninsula area only. For
times elsewhere in South Africa please email
us. Service times are for the Constantia Hebrew Congregation.
Shabbat morning at 8:30 am every week
Shabbat Times NB:
Never light candles after sunset on a Shabbat.
HAVDALA By
Rabbi Berel Wein The
ceremony that concludes the Sabbath day, as well as the conclusion of the
holidays of the year, is called "Havdala" - separation. The central
idea that this ceremony signifies is the clear message of Judaism that as far as
spiritual matters are concerned, not everything is to be treated equally. One
of the glaring weaknesses of current Western society and politics is its
tendency towards moral equivalency. The victim and the perpetrator, the
aggressor and the one who defends one's self, the normal and the abnormal, are
all somehow to be treated equally. There is no standard of right and wrong, good
and bad, justified behavior and unwarranted actions present in much of our
modern world. Everything is purely relative. This absence of differences flies
in the face of Jewish traditional values that are careful to delineate levels of
morality, goodness and holiness. It is this ability to separate and delineate,
to judge carefully and recognize differences that lie at the basis of Judaic
practice, ritual, Torah study and worldview. And
it is the "havdala" ceremony that most clearly illustrates this facet
of Jewish thought and behavior. The "havdala" ceremony contains a text
that expresses this idea simply and completely. It remarks upon the differences
between light and dark, between the holy and the profane, between the sanctity
of the Sabbath day and the days of the workaday week. It also refers to the
uniqueness of the Jewish people and acknowledges the concomitant uniqueness of
the covenant that binds Israel to its God. It strengthens the idea of the
Sabbath by separating it from the other days of the week and emphasizing its
special status as the basis of the Jewish concept of time and of God as the
Creator of the universe. This understanding of the Sabbath day as the center
point of Jewish time and as the source of the holiness of time itself is further
reinforced by the inclusion in the "havdala" service of the ritual of
smelling sweet spices in order to "restore our souls." The
Jewish tradition is that on the Sabbath each of us receives an extra measure of
spirituality - "an extra soul" - and sanctity. When the Sabbath
departs, so does this "extra soul." To alleviate this sense of loss,
which I can personally attest to as many times being real, and restore our
spirits, the rabbis promoted the custom of introducing the fragrance of the
sweet smelling spices into the "havdala" service. As with many other
Jewish rituals, the "havdala" service and blessings are conducted over
a cup of wine. Wine is the drink of importance in Jewish tradition and therefore
lends an aura of solemnity and importance to the accompanying ritual itself. Another custom that forms part of the "havdala" service is the blessing of thanks for fire. This blessing is recited over a multi-wicked candle commonly marketed as a "havdala candle." This candle is currently available in a great variety of shapes and colors and has lately become the object of much creative artistry, especially in Israel. Jewish legend tells us that the invention of fire by man, the basic requirement for any sort of technical progress in civilization, occurred on the night after the first Sabbath. Thus the "havdala candle" also symbolizes man's unending and innate drive to create, invent, and attempt to make life physically more comfortable. As such, it serves as the proper introduction to the week of work and labor that follows the end of the Sabbath day. It is the harbinger of the "good week" to come. The traditional Jewish greeting one person to another on Saturday nights is "Good Week." Thus, the Jewish greetings for the week's events are two - "Good Sabbath/Shabat Shalom" and "Good Week." And in reality that pretty much sums up the cycle of time of the week, if not even of Jewish life itself.
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