How to Make Shavuot Meaningful & Fun for Your Community

How to Make Shavuot Meaningful & Fun for Your Community

This post provides ideas for how to make Shavuot meaningful and fun for your community and family. Focusing on the themes of social justice and communal responsibility in the Torah and Shavuot, the article encourages communities to mark the holiday by collecting items for charity and feeding the hungry. It also suggests games and activities that can engage children in the holiday in a fun and interactive way. This resource is from the Anshe Emeth Memorial Temple, a Reform synagogue in New Jersey. 

Shavuot Social Justice Guide

Shavuot commemorates the giving of the Torah atop Mt. Sinai, signifying the sacred covenant between God and the Jewish people. The period of the Omer (the 49 days between Passover and Shavuot) and the evening of Shavuot itself are times of preparation for re-living the moment of revelation, and the entire Shavuot season is a time to reengage with Torah.

It has been said that the entire Torah exists to establish justice. Thus, through the study of Torah and other Jewish texts, Shavuot offers us an opportunity to recommit ourselves to tikkun olam, the repair of the world. You can incorporate social action themes into your Shavuot celebration in the following ways

Collect Items for Charity

Jewish scholars took to heart the commandment to set aside a portion of the harvest for the poor. Rabbis connect pei’ah with other actions on which there is no fixed upper measure: the amount of first fruits, acts of loving-kindness and the study of Torah. Rabbi David Polish wrote that this list reveals “the attitudes and practices that the Rabbis considered to be of ultimate value. The [list] reads like an instruction book about how each of us should live our lives and reminds us about what is of limitless importance.”

On Shavuot, make canned goods, new socks and underwear, school supplies or unused toiletries the admission “price” to a Tikkun Leil Shavuot celebration. If collecting items such as school supplies or toiletries, create a station where people can assemble backpacks or toiletry bags throughout the evening. Donate these items to a charity that helps those in need of such items, like a homeless shelter or a shelter for abused women and children.

Feed the Hungry

The holiday of Shavuot is mentioned several times in the Bible. In Leviticus, Shavuot is linked to the commandments of pei’ah (leaving crops at the corners of the field for the poor) and sh’chicha (leaving the fallen grain for the poor). Even as we celebrate the first fruits and the bounty of the land, we are to remember those in need. Jews are commanded to provide for the stranger, the orphan and the widow (Deut. 24:19). Hence, rejoicing on Shavuot is incomplete unless even the poorest and most vulnerable members of society have enough to eat.

Prepare food for those in need. Bake bread or muffins during the night, and deliver them, fresh and hot, to a local soup kitchen for morning breakfast. Or assemble bagged lunches of peanut butter and jelly or tuna sandwiches, fresh fruit or vegetables, juice boxes, and cookies. Deliver them to local soup kitchen to be distributed at breakfast so people have food for lunch.

For the Family

It is a tradition to stay up all night and study Torah on Shavuot. This custom evolved from the story that says that when the Israelites were at Sinai, they overslept and had to be awakened by Moses. As a result, many modern Jews stay up all night to study and celebrate receiving the Torah. In honor of this custom, have a Shavuot-themed slumber party and stay up late. These fun activities can help you pass the time productively:

  • Choose a baking project that takes several hours, such as making a whole wheat challah from scratch. When it is done, go to sleep and eat it for breakfast in the morning.
  • In ancient times, Shavuot was an agricultural holiday, during which Jews brought their first fruits to the Temple. Connect to the land by going berry picking and then use the berries (and wheat) to make a cobbler or berry pie. It’s also traditional to eat dairy foods to remind us of the sweetness of Torah, so enjoy your berries, cobbler or pie with whipped cream.
  • In recognition of the 10 Commandments, play a game of “10s”: Make a “Top 10” list of favorite Jewish activities, come up with 10 jokes, or try to toss a ball into a basket 10 times in a row.