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Sukkah

Yad

A temporary booth erected during the holiday of Sukkot.

Translations

  • Hebrewסוכה
  • GermanLaubhütte
  • RussianСукка
  • FrenchSoucca
  • DutchLoofhut
  • ItalianSukkah
  • CzechSuka
  • HungarianSzukkoti sátor
  • SpanishSucá
  • GreekΣουκά
  • PolishSzałas na święto Sukot
  • Arabicعريشة
  • Yiddishסוכּה
  • LadinoSuka

Bibliography

Barkai, Dani. Sukkahs from Around the World. Jerusalem: The Israel Museum, 2003.

Doron-Dolev, Gania, editor. 7 Omanim be-7 Sukkuot [7 Artists in 7 Sukkot]. Tel Aviv: Eretz Israel Museum, 1995.

Feuchtwanger-Sarig, Naomi. “Fischach and Jerusalem: The Story of a Painted Sukkah.” Jewish Art, edited by Aliza Cohen-Mushlin, vol. 19/20, 1993-1994, pp. 6-21.

Hartray, John F., and Olga Weiss, editors. The Chicago Booth Festival: Architects Build Shelters for Sukkot. Chicago: Spertus Museum, 1994.

Laderman, Shulamit. “The Sukkah as Sacred Architecture.” Jewish Religious Architecture: From Biblical Israel to Modern Judaism, ed. Steven Fine, Leiden: Brill, 2020, pp. 352-68.

Ottolenghi, Luisa Mortara, and P.L. Fantelli. “Tavole Ebraiche [Sukkah panels].” Midor Ledor: Di Generazione in Generazione: Vita e Cultura Ebraica nel Veneto, Teolo: Abbazia di Praglia, 1988, pp. 65-85.

Sperber, Daniel. “[On the Laws and Customs of the Sukkah].” Minhagei Yisrael: Mekorot ve-Toldot [Israeli Customs: Origins and History], edited by Daniel Sperber, vol. 6, Jerusalem: Mosad ha-Rav Kook, 1998, pp. 155-72, 375-90.

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