According to the rabbis, there are specific requirements for
a sukkah including a minimum size. Our Kitah Daled students constructed the
footprint of the smallest kosher sukkah (28” square) and then brainstormed over
45 activities that one could do in this very small space. One could eat, drink, sleep (with
difficulty), pray, shake a lulav, talk to friends, play electronic games, read,
write, draw, sing, laugh, sit, dream, kneel,
breathe, do a ‘sit-dance,’ do math, do homework, tie one’s shoes, blow
shofar, look outside, smell an etrog, brush one’s teeth, put on a kippah, get
dressed, play Hangman, pack a backpack, pet one’s cat or dog, play music, relax
and smile.
We saw this article today and questioned whether a sukkah could be on wheels.
ReplyDeletehttp://i1.wp.com/www.jewishpress.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/sukkot-A-fleet-of-pedi-sukkahs-cruise-through-New-York-City.jpg?zoom=2&fit=475%2C317