Sukkot Festival

Sukkot is a Jewish festival, it comes from Israel for every autumn, the date varies from late of September to late of October. It is a joyful festival, prayed people have health and prosperity. Sukkot is last of three pilgrimage festival, it has a dual significance: historical and agricultural. For Agriculturally, Sukkot is a harvest festival and is sometimes referred to the Festival of Ingathering. Historically, Sukkot commemorates the forty-year period during which the children of Israel were wandering in the desert, living in temporary shelters. The word sukkot means booths, and refer to temporary dwelling. So, the name of the holiday is frequently translated "Feast of Tabernacles," People dwell in a temporary shelter, just like their ancient did when wandering period. The temporary shelter is called sukkah, (the singular word of plural word sukkot). The process of building a sukkah is great fun for children, which satisfies the common childhood fantasy of building a fort. Normally, people eating in sukkah, which is the commandment to ‘dwell’ in a sukkah. However, r, if the weather, climate, and one's health permit, one should spend as much time in the sukkah as possible, including sleeping in it.