Chicago Sukkah Design Festival seeks to unite North Lawndale communities: ‘the heart of our efforts’

Sharhonda Clark lives in North Lawndale and has driven by James Stone Freedom Square where the Chicago Sukkah Design Festival takes place, but came to see the exhibit up close for the first time Saturday.

“Each piece is different, but tells a story in some type of way,” Clark said. “I think it’s something that unifies our neighborhood. I never really had this growing up. … It’s a beautiful sight to see.”

That’s the goal of the Chicago Sukkah Design Festival — bringing communities of different faiths and races together through experimental art. The festival takes place every year to celebrate Sukkoth, one of the three major festivals in Judaism.

The festival, now in its third year, highlights the importance of neighborliness Sukkoth represents, said Joseph Altshuler, artistic director and co-founder of the festival.

“That’s sort of the heart of our efforts,” Altshuler, 37, said. “Our fundamental mission is to build solidarity and relationships between many of Chicago’s diverse communities.”

This year’s festival starts on Sunday and runs until Oct. 26 at the James Stone Freedom Square, 3615 W. Douglas Blvd. The festival pairs community organizations in North Lawndale with architectural designers to design and construct sukkahs.

Sukkahs are temporary huts built for the Jewish holiday of Sukkoth, which is both an agricultural festival of thanksgiving and a commemoration of the 40-year period during which children of Israel wandered in the desert after leaving slavery in Egypt, living in temporary shelters as they traveled, according to the American Jewish Committee.

Five sukkahs will be on display throughout the festival, and each one is paired with a sign providing context behind the importance of the sukkahs. One of the sukkahs feature a chalkboard with an inspirational message about strength through dreaming.

On Saturday morning, Palmyra Geraki and Jordan Campbell scrambled back and forth from a UHaul truck to a picnic table at the site as they worked to piece together the sixth and final exhibit of the festival.

Geraki is a founding principal at architecture practice Palmyra PLLC and Campbell is co-founder and executive director of Alt Space Chicago, which focuses on healing Black trauma through art. Community and collaboration are some of the reasons they chose to participate in the exhibit.

“[It’s] seeing problems, but coming up with solutions together and allowing ourselves to feel what we feel because it’s part of the human experience,” Campbell, 33, said. “That only happens with community and collaboration, which has been powerful in the process for us.”

Campbell added: “We’re kind of creating a bridge through art and design.”

Their exhibit, titled “By the Book,” uses vibrant colors and floating book pages to emphasize the understanding that “reading doesn’t have to come from a book all the time,” Geraki, 39, said. “It’s a lot of fun.”

Lindsey Krug (right), a designer with the “Overstory sukkah,” helps flip a sculpture that is part of the “By the Book” sukkah by Palmyra Geraki and Alt Space Saturday at the James Stone Freedom Square in North Lawndale as part of the Chicago Sukkah Design Festival.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

It is traditional for observers to eat and sometimes sleep in sukkahs for seven days to commemorate Sukkoth, also known as the “time of happiness,” which begins at sunset Oct. 16 and ends at nightfall Oct. 23.

After the festival, each sukkah is relocated and permanently added to the facilities of the community organizations that co-designed them as new program spaces, including a communal table, seed library, garden material recycling station, literacy landmark and hospital campus stoop.

Some of the organizations include the Chicago Street Vendors Association, Mount Sinai Hospital just south of the main campus and the community garden at Douglass branch of the Chicago Public Library.

The festival takes place in a lot that was once grassy and vacant across the street from Stone Temple Baptist Church.

“Each year, incrementally, we build and enhance this place,” Altshuler said. “More recently, [this] was a seemingly vacant lot but now is a vibrant public space and one that is open to the full community.”

Festival organizers have added a pathway and picnic tables in the previous two years.

This year’s festival carries more importance as the one-year mark of the war in Gaza approaches, Altshuler said.

“This festival is an opportunity to sort of take a piece of my own culture and elevate it as a platform for broader community building,” Altshuler said. “I think it’s more essential now more than ever before that we find ways of coming together, regardless of faith or background, in denouncing war and thinking about peaceful, more vibrant futures.”

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