(Jewish Group) Ethiopian Jewish holiday of Sigd gets a boost US with picture books and new resources
Synagogues and Hebrew schools in the United States looking to help their communities celebrate Sigd, an Ethiopian Jewish holiday, have gotten a helping hand this year, thanks to Sigal Kanotopsky.
Kanotopsky is the first Ethiopian Jew to hold a regional leadership position at the Jewish Agency for Israel, a nonprofit agency associated with the Israeli government that promotes immigration to Israel. Now overseeing the agencys operations in the northeastern United States, she was 7 when her family arrived in Israel in 1983, part of a wave of Ethiopian immigrants who had made their wave largely by foot, through Sudan and countless hardships.
The wave of Ethiopian immigration brought Sigd, which takes place 50 days after Yom Kippur and celebrates yearning for Israel to the Jewish state. (This year, the one day festival begins Tuesday night.) Advocacy from within the community led to Israel adopting Sigd as a national holiday in 2008. But it remained largely under the radar in other countries and even to many in Israel until the last few years, amid a growing appreciation for Jewish diversity.
In a year that saw renewed and widespread understanding of the importance of the Movement for Black Lives, celebrating Sigd provides American Jews with a unique opportunity to activate our sense of the racial diversity of the Jewish community, Ruth Abusch-Magder and Beza Abebe wrote in 2020 on Kveller. By celebrating Sigd here in the U.S., we send a powerful message that we are all part of the global Jewish peoplehood.
more...