One year away!
(Crossposted to Mah Rabu.)
One (solar) year from today, Wednesday, April 8, 2009, is birkat ha-chamah, the blessing for the sun that is said only once every 28 years!
Why every 28 years?
The short version: It’s based on bad science, but it’s still cool to have something like this that only happens a few times per lifetime. We should brainstorm about how to take advantage of this opportunity!
The longer version:
There are two Jewish calendars. One is the lunar calendar (with leap months added to keep it generally in sync with the solar year), which determines the dates of all the holidays. The other, much less well-known one is the Jewish solar calendar, which is used for only two purposes: birkat ha-chamah (the subject of this post), and the date to begin praying for rain in Babylonia and by extension the rest of the Diaspora (in this century, December 4).
The Jewish solar calendar is in essence the Julian calendar: it assumes that a solar year is exactly 365 1/4 days (thus adding a leap day every 4 years). This approximation is off by about 3 days every 400 years, which is why the world has switched to the Gregorian calendar, which eliminates 3 leap days every 400 years to account for this discrepancy (1600 was a leap year; 1700, 1800, and 1900 were not; 2000 was; 2100, 2200, and 2300 will not be; etc.).
This error in the Julian calendar is the reason that the date to begin praying for rain in the Diaspora is on December 4, despite the statement on Ta’anit 10a that it should be 60 days after the equinox (which would be around November 20): because of the error that has crept in over the centuries, “November 20” on the Julian calendar is now December 4 on the Gregorian calendar. In 2100, the error will increase by one day, so the date to begin praying for rain in the next century will be December 5, and after 2200, it will be December 6, and so on.
So, birkat ha-chamah.
According to the biblical creation story, the sun was created on the fourth day of creation, i.e. Wednesday. What time? At sunrise, of course. What time of year? The vernal equinox (according to Abaye on Berachot 59b).
So we say birkat ha-chamah every time the sun returns to the position it was in when it was created, at the anniversary of its creation: Wednesday at sunrise on the vernal equinox. Let’s calculate that anniversary, using the Jewish solar calendar, in which 1 year = 365 1/4 days = 52 weeks 1 1/4 days. If we start with Wednesday at sunrise and add 1 year, we can disregard the complete weeks and just add 1 1/4 days, so we get Thursday at noon. Add another year and we get Friday at sunset. Add a third year and we get Saturday night at midnight. Add a fourth year and we get Monday at sunrise. So now (after 4 years) we’re back at sunrise, but on the wrong day of the week. We have to cycle through all 7 days of the week before we can get back to Wednesday. So we get back there every 4 x 7 = 28 years!
The “vernal equinox” currently occurs on April 8 on the Gregorian calendar, due to the aforementioned error that increases over the centuries. So during the 20th and 21st centuries, birkat ha-chamah is always on Wednesday, April 8, at sunrise. The last one was on Wednesday, April 8, 1981, and the next one will be Wednesday, April 8, 2009! After 2100, it will be on Wednesday, April 9; after 2200, it will be on Wednesday, April 10; and so on.
There’s no way to “fix” this error in regard to birkat ha-chamah, because once you get rid of the fiction that a year is exactly 365 1/4 days, you lose the entire premise (outlined above) for the 28-year cycle. In real life, there’s no reason to think that the number of days in a year (i.e. the ratio of the earth’s revolution around the sun to the earth’s rotation about its axis) is any simple rational number. So birkat ha-chamah is what it is.
So the reason I’m posting this now is so that we can start thinking about what we’re going to do next year to celebrate this once-in-a-generation occurrence. What are your plans for birkat ha-chamah? If you did anything for it in 1981 or 1953, what did you do? What are your creative ideas? What are our communities going to do? Start commenting away!
Things get a little bit sticky when we cross-reference Wednesday, April 8, 2009 with the normal lunar Jewish calendar. Turns out it’s Erev Pesach. (Not surprising, given the connection to the vernal equinox.) So the Jewish community will be busy. But we should see this, too, as an exciting opportunity. (Say the blessing over the sun, and then take out a magnifying glass and use it to burn our chameitz? Anything is possible!) So if we’re traveling for Pesach, we can participate in the awesome birkat ha-chamah event we’re going to come up with in the city where we live early in the morning, and then hop a plane to wherever we’re going for Pesach. (Heck, some of us will have to take the day off anyway to accommodate Pesach travel, which frees us up to do birkat ha-chamah stuff in the morning.)
Bonus question: For those who observe Ta’anit Bechorot (I don’t, for various reasons, though I’m a firstborn), is birkat ha-chamah itself sufficient justification for a se’udat mitzvah so that people can break the fast? This question would have last come up three cycles ago, on Wednesday, April 8, 1925, which was also Erev Pesach.
I knew it was coming but didn’t realize it was erev Pesach this time.
I’m old enough to remember 27 years ago. We were on the observation deck of the Empire State Building (they opened it specially for us at that hour), about two hundred of us, dovening shacharit with Reb Zalman. He is so well scheduled that we began the Shema just as the sun poked over the horizon.