No Diana, we do not eat the etrog! It's a religious artifact and when everyone is done grabbing and shaking it all week... well it's hardly in a condition to eat it :) If you get hungry there are pleanty of yummy (usually dairy and sweet) foods to be eaten in the sukkah - no need to go munching on Etrogs LOL
No Diana, we do not eat the etrog! It's a religious artifact and when everyone is done grabbing and shaking it all week... well it's hardly in a condition to eat it :) If you get hungry there are pleanty of yummy (usually dairy and sweet) foods to be eaten in the sukkah - no need to go munching on Etrogs LOL
This is related to photo 1 - Sukkah - On each of the seven days of Sukkot, Torah law requires the Jew to take Four Species of plants and to grasp and shake them in a specific manner. These species are: the lulav (date palm frond), hadass (bough of a myrtle tree), aravah (willow branch)— these three are actually bound together and collectively referred to as the lulav—and the etrog (a citron, a lemon-like citrus fruit). These plants are usually sold in religious communities during the days preceding the festival.
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