Complete our annual survey—and win a prize? | Join us for more 18Forty in your WhatsApp or right in your email

Feature

LOSS

Passing Through Moed Katan—and Life

In one of 18Forty's Must Reads, Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin writes how, in Tractate Moed Katan, the Talmud teaches us the only life lesson we need.
image_pdf
image_pdf

Tractate Moed Katan centers around two polar-opposite topics: Chol Hamoed, days of moderated celebration, and aveilut, days of mourning. One we associate with trips to the zoo, the other with the shiva house. Their juxtaposition seems almost offensive. Rabbi Dovid Bashevkin shows that the two are more closely related than we may think. He argues that both represent in-between stages—between yomim tovim and between periods of loss. Moed Katan is about “how to live a life that is in between, in flux, and sandwiched between conflicting identities.” 

 

Read More at Tablet Magazine.

EXPLORE MORE Articles

Essay

Rotem was diagnosed with cancer when she was three and a half years old. She died when she was seven.

Poem

Renowned Israeli poet Yehuda Amichai offers profound thought in his poems, "Death of My Father" and "Forgetting Someone."

Talmud Teaching

Our exile impacted God, Jewish society, and the Jewish People. The Talmud explains how.