Photo Credit:
Rabbi Shlomo M. Brody

Simchat Torah’s unique reading arrangement and the joyousness of the occasion gave rise to the practice of honoring communal figures by having them chant the major readings. Ashkenazic communities also repeat Vezot Haberachah continually until every man has received an aliyah. While joyful dancing has been a feature from the beginning, other modes of celebration have varied, including special poems and meals, games for children, and – on a few controversial occasions – the use of musical instruments.

Unfortunately, this joy has sometimes turned into frivolity, and today select communities face problems of drinking and licentiousness. Such behavior reflects a digression in the evolution of this holiday, which has sought to instill a love for Torah and its values. One hopes that a greater understanding of the day’s history will help people appreciate the genuine joy of Torah.

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Rabbi Shlomo M. Brody teaches at Yeshivat Hakotel, directs the Tikvah Overseas Seminars, and is a columnist.  He is also a presidential graduate fellow at Bar Ilan University Law School and a junior scholar at the Israel Democracy Institute.  Author of "A Guide to the Complex: Contemporary Halakhic Debates" (Maggid Books), winner of a 2014 National Jewish Book Award.