By Yanki Tauber
Were Adam and Eve Jewish?
The reason I ask is that the Jewish calendar seems to be exclusively about Jewish history and the Jewish experience: Passover celebrates our liberation from Egypt, Shavout our receiving the Torah at Sinai, Yom Kippur is when G‑d forgave us for the sin of the Golden Calf and Sukkot recalls the divine protection during our wanderings through the desert. The list goes on: Simchat Torah, Chanukah, Purim, Lag BaOmer, Tishah B’Av–virtually all our holy days, festivals and special dates are distinctly Jewish affairs, concerned with our lives as Jews.
One very significant exception: the festival of Rosh Hashanah, which marks the birthday of the first two human beings, Adam and Eve, who walked the earth some 2,000 years before the first Jew was born and nearly 2,500 years before we were proclaimed a people at Mount Sinai.
Rosh Hashanah is clearly more than a token “Goyim Appreciation Day.” But how?
And Rosh Hashanah is clearly more than a token “Goyim Appreciation Day.” As its name proclaims, it’s the head of the Jewish year. And as the Chassidic masters point out, the head of a thing is its primary and most encompassing component.
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