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Jewish
Festivals in Israel |
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Jewish festivals, originating in
antiquity, are observed in Israel
intensively and in many ways. They are
manifested in traditional and
nontraditional customs and practice, and
they leave their imprint on diverse
aspects of national life. The Jewish
festivals are the "landmarks" by which
Israelis mark the passing of the year.
They are very much a part of daily life:
on the street, in the school system and
in synagogues and homes around the
country.
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Shabbat,
the weekly day of rest, on Saturday, is
marked in Israel with most people
spending the day together with family
and friends. Public transport is
suspended, businesses are closed,
essential services are at skeleton-staff
strength, and leave is granted to as
many soldiers as possible. The secular
majority take advantage of their weekly
day of rest for leisure time at the
seashore, places of entertainment and
excursions in outdoor settings. The
observant devote many hours to festive
family feasts and services in synagogue,
desist from travel and refrain from
working or using electrical appliances.
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Rosh
Hashanah marks the
beginning of the Jewish new year. Its
origin is Biblical (Lev. 23:23-25): "a
sacred occasion commemorated with loud
blasts [of the shofar, the ram's horn]."
The term Rosh Hashanah,
"beginning of the year," is rabbinical,
as are the formidable themes of the
festival: repentance, preparation for
the day of Divine judgment and prayer
for a fruitful year. The two-day
festival falls on 1-2 Tishrei in the
Jewish calendar,
usually September in the Gregorian
calendar, and starts at sundown of the
preceding evening, as do all Jewish
observances. Major customs of Rosh
Hashanah include the sounding of the
shofar in the middle of a lengthy
synagogue service that focuses on the
festival themes, and elaborate meals at
home to inaugurate the new year. The
prayer liturgy is augmented with prayers
of repentance.
In
many senses, Israel begins its year on
Rosh Hashanah. Government
correspondence, newspapers and most
broadcasts carry the "Jewish date"
first. Felicitations for the new year
are generally tendered before Rosh
Hashanah. |
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Yom
Kippur, eight days
after Rosh Hashanah, is the Day of
Atonement, of Divine judgment, and of
"affliction of souls" (Lev. 23:26-32) so
that the individual may be cleansed of
sins. The only fast day decreed in the
Bible, it is a time to enumerate one's
misdeeds and contemplate one's faults.
The Jew is expected, on this day, to
pray for forgiveness for sins between
man and God and correct his wrongful
actions against his fellow man. The
major precepts of Yom Kippur - lengthy
devotional services and a 25-hour fast -
are observed even by much of the
otherwise secular population. The level
of public solemnity on Yom Kippur
surpasses that of any other festival,
including Rosh Hashanah. The country
comes to a complete halt for 25 hours on
this day; places of entertainment are
closed, there are no television and
radio broadcasts (not even the news),
public transport is suspended, and even
the roads are completely closed. It is
reinforced in Israel by memories of the
1973 war,
a surprise attack launched by Egypt and
Syria against Israel on Yom Kippur.
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Five days later falls
Sukkot,
described in the Bible (Lev. 23:34) as
the "Feast of Tabernacles." Sukkot is
one of the three festivals that were
celebrated (until 70 CE) with mass
pilgrimage to the Temple in Jerusalem
and are therefore known as the
"pilgrimage festivals." On Sukkot, Jews
commemorate the Exodus from Egypt
(c.13th century BCE) and give thanks for
a bountiful harvest. At some kibbutzim,
Sukkot is celebrated as Chag Ha'asif
(the harvest festival), with the themes
of the gathering of the second grain
crop and the autumn fruit, the start of
the agricultural year, and the first
rains.
In
the five days between Yom Kippur and
Sukkot, tens of thousands of
householders and businesses erect
sukkot - booths for temporary
dwelling, resembling the booths in which
the Israelites lived in the desert,
after their exodus from Egypt - and
acquire the palm frond, citron, myrtle
sprigs and willow branches with which
the festive prayer rite is augmented.
All around the country, sukkot line
parking lots, balconies, rooftops,
lawns, and public spaces. No army base
lacks one. Some spend the festival and
the next six days literally living in
their sukkot.
In
Israel, the "holy day" portion of Sukkot
(and the other two pilgrimage festivals,
Passover and Shavuot) is celebrated for
one day. Diaspora communities celebrate
it for two days, commemorating the time
in antiquity when calendation was
performed at the Temple and its results
reported to the Diaspora using a tenuous
network of signal fires and couriers.
The
prayer liturgy is augmented with
additional prayers, including the
Hallel, a collection of blessings and
psalms, recited on Rosh Hodesh
(the beginning of each lunar month) and
on the pilgrimage festivals.
After
the festive day, Sukkot continues at a
lesser level of sanctity, as mandated by
the Torah (Lev. 23:36). During this
intermediate week - half festival, half
ordinary - schools are closed and many
workplaces shut down or shorten their
hours. Most Israelis spend the interim
days of Sukkot and Passover at
recreation sites throughout the country.
The intermediate week and the
holiday season end on
Shemini Atseret, the
"sacred occasion of the eighth day"
(Lev. 23:36) with which
Simhat Torah is combined.
Celebration of Shemini Atseret/Simhat
Torah focuses on the Torah - the Five
Books of Moses - and is noted for public
dancing with a Torah scroll in one's
arms and with recitation of the
concluding and beginning chapters of the
Torah, renewing the yearly cycle of
Torah reading. After dark, many
communities sponsor further festivities,
often outdoors, that are not limited by
the ritual restrictions that apply on
the holy day itself.
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Hanukkah,
beginning on 25 Kislev (usually in
December), commemorates the triumph of
the Jews, under the Maccabees, over the
Greek rulers (164 BCE) - both the
physical victory of the small Jewish
nation against mighty Greece and the
spiritual victory of the Jewish faith
against the Hellenism of the Greeks. Its
sanctity derives from this spiritual
aspect of the victory, and the miracle
of the flask of oil, when a portion of
sacramental olive oil meant to keep the
Temple candelabrum lit for one day
lasted for eight days, the time it took
for the Temple to be rededicated.
Hanukkah is observed in Israel, as in
the Diaspora, for eight days. The
central feature of this holiday is the
lighting of candles each evening - one
on the first night, two on the second,
and so on - in commemoration of the
miracle at the Temple. The Hanukkah
message in Israel focuses strongly on
aspects of restored sovereignty; customs
widely practiced in the Diaspora, such
as gift-giving and the dreidl
(spinning top), are also in evidence.
The dreidl's sides are marked
with Hebrew initials representing the
message "A great miracle occurred here";
in the Diaspora, the initials stand for
"A great miracle occurred there."
Schools are closed during this week;
workplaces are not.
Tu B'Shevat,
the fifteenth of Shevat
(January-February), cited in rabbinical
sources as the new year of fruit trees
for sabbatical, tithing, and other
purposes, has almost no ritual impact.
But it has acquired secular connotations
as a day when trees are planted by
individuals, especially by
schoolchildren and it serves as the time
when intensive afforestation is
undertaken by the Jewish National Fund
and local authorities. During this
month, the fruit trees begin to flower,
starting with the almond tree, although
it is still cold.
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Purim,
another rabbinical festival in early
spring, occurs on 14 Adar (15 Adar in
walled cities), commemorating the
deliverance of beleaguered Jewry in the
Persian Empire under Artaxerxes, as
recounted in the Scroll of Esther. This
festival compensates for the solemnity
of many other Jewish observances by
mandating merriment. Schools are closed,
public festivities abound, newspapers
run hoax items reminiscent of April
Fools' Day, children (and adults) don
costumes, and a festive reading of the
Scroll of Esther is marked by
noisemakers sounded whenever Haman's
name is recited. The Orthodox indulge in
inebriation, within limits, and carry
out an exacting list of duties: giving
of alms, evening and morning readings of
the Scroll of Esther, exchange of
delicacies and a full-fledged holiday
feast. |
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In the spring, beginning on 15
Nisan, is Passover (Pessah),
the festival of the Exodus from Egypt
(c. 13th century BCE) and liberation
from bondage. Freedom is, indeed, the
dominant note of Passover. The rites of
Passover begin long before the festival,
as families and businesses cleanse their
premises of hametz - leaven and
anything containing it - as prescribed
in the Bible (Ex. 12:15-20). The day
before the festival is devoted to
preparatory rituals including ceremonial
burning of the forbidden foodstuff. On
the holiday evening, the seder is
recited: an elaborate retelling of the
enslavement and redemption. At this
festive meal, the extended family
gathers to recite the seder and
enjoy traditional foods, particularly
matza (unleavened bread). The
following day's observances resemble
those of the other pilgrimage festivals.
Passover is probably second only to Yom
Kippur in traditional observance by the
generally nonobservant. In addition, a
secular Passover rite based on the
festival's agricultural connotations is
practiced in some kibbutzim. It serves
as a spring festival, a festival of
freedom, and the date of the harvesting
of the first ripe grain. Passover also
includes the second "intermediate" week
- five half-sacred, half-ordinary days
devoted to extended prayer and leisure -
and it concludes with another festival
day.
Modern rites of public bereavement
are in evidence on Holocaust Martyrs'
and Heroes' Remembrance Day, less
than a week after Passover, when the
people of Israel commune with the memory
of the six million martyrs of the Jewish
people who perished at the hands of the
Nazis in the Holocaust. On this day a
siren is sounded at 10 a.m., as the
nation observes two minutes of silence,
pledging "to remember, and to remind
others never to forget." |
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Remembrance
Day for the Fallen of Israel's Wars
is commemorated a week later, as a day
of remembrance for those who fell in the
struggle for the establishment of the
State of Israel and in its defense. At 8
p.m. on the eve of Remembrance Day and
11 a.m. in the morning, two minutes of
silence, as a siren sounds, give the
entire nation the opportunity to
remember its debt and express its
eternal gratitude to its sons and
daughters who gave their lives for the
achievement of the country's
independence and its continued
existence.
Remembrance Day is directly followed
by Independence Day (5 Iyar), the
anniversary of the
Proclamation of
the Establishment of the State of Israel,
on May 14, 1948. This is not a
centuries-old celebration, but a day
that means a lot to many citizens who
have physically and actively
participated in the creation of a new
state and its struggle for survival, and
have witnessed the enormous changes that
have taken place since 1948.
On
the eve of Independence Day
municipalities sponsor public
celebrations, loud-speakers broadcast
popular music and multitudes go
"downtown" to participate in the holiday
spirit.
Many
synagogues also hold special services of
thanksgiving, where Hallel is recited
marking Israel's national deliverances.
On
Independence Day, many citizens get to
know the countryside by travelling to
battlefields of the War of Independence,
visit the memorials to the fallen, go on
nature hikes and, in general, spend the
day outdoors picnicking and preparing
barbecues.
Israel Prizes for distinction in
literary, artistic and scientific
endeavor are presented and the
International Bible Contest for Jewish
Youth is held. Army bases are opened to
the public and air force fly-bys, as
well as naval displays, take place.
Lag B'Omer
(18 Iyar), the thirty-third day in the
counting of the weeks between Passover
and Shavuot, has become a children's
celebration featuring massive bonfires,
commemorating events at the time of the
Bar-Kochba uprising against Rome
(132-135 CE).
Jerusalem Day is
celebrated on 28 Iyar, about a week
before Shavuot, commemorating the 1967
reunification of Jerusalem, capital of
Israel, after it was divided by concrete
walls and barbed wire for nineteen
years. On this day, we are reminded that
Jerusalem is "the focal point of Jewish
history, the symbol of ancient glory,
spiritual fulfillment and modern
renewal." Hallel is recited in some
synagogues. |
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Shavuot,
the last of the pilgrimage festivals,
when enumerated from the beginning of
the Jewish year, falls seven weeks after
Passover (6 Sivan), at the end of the
barley harvest and the beginning of the
wheat harvest. The Bible (Deut. 16:10)
describes this occasion as the festival
of weeks (Heb. shavuot), for so is it
counted from Passover, and as the
occasion on which new grain and new
fruits are offered to the priests in the
Temple. Its additional definition - the
anniversary of the giving of the Torah
at Mt. Sinai - is of rabbinical origin.
Shavuot is observed among the Orthodox
with marathon religious study and, in
Jerusalem, with a mass convocation of
festive worship at the Western Wall. In
the kibbutzim, it marks the peak of the
new grain harvest and the ripening of
the first fruits, including the seven
species mentioned in the Bible (wheat,
barley, grapes, figs, pomegranates,
olives and dates).
The lengthy summer until Rosh
Hashanah is punctuated by the Ninth
of Av (Tisha B'Av,
falling in July or early August), the
anniversary of the destruction of the
First and Second Temples. On the day
itself, numerous rules of bereavement
and the Yom Kippur measures of
"self-denial," including a full-day
fast, are in effect.
Ethnic communities observe further rites
and celebrations of their own. Some
better-known celebrations include the
Mimouna, unique to Moroccan
Jewry, on the day after Passover,
celebrating the renewal of nature and
its blessings; and the Saharana
of Kurdish Jewry, after Sukkot, which
was the national holiday of the Jews in
Kurdistan. Another event is the
Sigd holiday of the Ethiopian
Jewish community, in mid-November, a
celebration which began in Ethiopia,
expressing their yearning for Zion, and
continues in Israel today as an
expression of their thankfulness.
Thus, with its diverse population and
multiple lifestyles and attitudes,
Israel celebrates the cycle of Jewish
festivals and observances in a public
manner that underscores the country's
Jewishness and its centrality to
Judaism. |
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Calendar
of Jewish holidays |
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Name of Festival |
Hebrew
Date |
Gregorian
Date |
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5762 |
2001 |
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Rosh Hashanah |
1-2
Tishre |
18-19 Sept |
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Fast of Gedaliah |
3
Tishre |
20
Sept |
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Yom
Kippur |
10
Tishre |
27
Sept |
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Sukkot |
15-21 Tishre |
2-8
Oct |
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Shemini Atzeret-Simchat Torah |
22
Tishre |
9
Oct |
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Hannukah |
25
Kislev - 2 Tevet |
10-17 Dec |
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2002 |
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Tu
B'Shevat |
15
Shevat |
28
Jan |
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Fast of Esther
recalling Queen Esther's
three-day fast in her efforts to
persuade Artaxerxes to rescind
the genocidal designs of his
advisor, the evil Haman (6th
century BCE) |
13
Adar |
25
Feb |
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Purim |
14
or 15 Adar |
26
or 27 Feb |
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Passover |
15-21 Nisan |
28
Mar - 3 Apr |
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Holocaust Martyrs' and Heroes'
Remembrance Day |
27
Nisan |
9
April |
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Remembrance Day |
4
Iyar |
16
April |
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Independence Day |
5
Iyar |
17
April |
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Lag
B'Omer |
18
Iyar |
30
April |
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Jerusalem Day |
28
Iyar |
10
May |
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Shavuot |
6
Sivan |
17
May |
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Seventeenth of Tammuz
designating the occasion when
the Babylonian army (586 BCE)
and later Roman forces (70 CE)
breached the walls of Jerusalem,
in preparation for the
destruction of the First and
later the Second Temple |
17
Tammuz |
27
June |
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Ninth of Av |
9
Av |
18
July |
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5763 |
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Rosh Hashanah |
1-2
Tishre |
7-8
Sept |
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Fast of Gedaliah |
3
Tishre |
9
Sept |
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Yom
Kippur |
10
Tishre |
16
Sept |
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Sukkot |
15-21 Tishre |
21-27 Sept |
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Shemini Atzeret-Simchat Torah |
22
Tishre |
28
Sept |
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Hannukah |
25
Kislev - 2 Tevet |
30
Nov - 7 Dec |
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TEMPLE BETH MASHIACH
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Celebrate Shabbat Service with
us
at Temple Beth Mashiach every
Friday evening at 8:00 PM |
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THE
FEASTS OF THE LORD
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Learn
about the Feasts of the Lord
as given
to the people of Israel---and to every
believer. |
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MESSAGES AND DEVOTIONS
Messages to inspire, comfort, and encourage you |
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