Holidays 101
Jewish Holidays 101
Here’s a quick run-down of the Jewish holidays with need-to-know information on each. A word on time of year: The Jewish calendar and the secular, Gregorian calendar are not in sync, so sometimes people will have to look at a calendar to know exactly when a Jewish holiday is. This might lead to someone saying that a holiday falls “early” or “late” this year, in comparison to the Gregorian calendar. Also, please note that some dates listed are for the evening when the holiday begins as indicated.
Purim
Hebrew name means: Lots. Refers to Esther 3:7, in which the villain Haman draws lots to set the date for the Jews’ destruction. What’s it about? Celebration of a narrow escape from genocide described in the biblical Book of Esther.
Pronounce it: Poor-im.
When is it: Starts the evening of Monday, March 6, 2023 to Tuesday, March 7, 2023
Jewish Holiday Foods: Triangular pastries called hamantashen (Haman’s pockets), named for the bad guy in the Book of Esther. Some Jews also eat other foods with things hidden inside, like dumplings, other sweets and goodies, and alcohol.
Activities: On Purim we read the Book of Esther, wear costumes, eat triangular cookies and other treats, and use noisemakers. It’s also traditional to give money to charity, send anonymous packages of goodies to your friends (called mishloach manot or shaloch mones) and to get drunk. This is a minor holiday in that there is no traditional obligation not to work.
Symbols of Jewish Holiday: Masks, costumes, noisemakers called graggers, hamantashen.
Purim Greeting? Happy Purim! You can say “Purim Sameah,” which means “happy Purim,” if you can pronounce the heavy gutteral h at the end of Sameah.
Pesach or Passover
Hebrew name means: Pesach means Passover. It refers to Exodus 12:23, when God passed over the Israelites. What’s it about? Passover celebrates God liberating the Israelites from Egyptian bondage and is probably the single most theologically important holiday in the Jewish calendar. (No pressure.) The holiday lasts eight days, though some communities may celebrate only a week.
Pronounce it: If you can’t say the guttural h sound represented by the ch in Pey-sach, say Passover.
When is it: Starts the evening of April 5, 2023 and ends April 13, 2023.
Jewish Holiday Foods: Traditionally, Jews eat no bread or leavened food on Passover, and do eat matzah, an unleavened bread. There are many food traditions that spring from this, including all the many foods made of ground matzah (called “matzah meal”). These include things like matzah balls, gefilte fish and sponge cake. Cookies and cakes made out of nuts, like macaroons, are also big on Passover, as are candies that follow the special rules of keeping kosher for this holiday.
Activities: Observant Jews don’t eat bread or other leavened foods and have big holiday meal called a seder where they retell the story of the Exodus from Egypt. This is a major holiday, meaning that traditional Jews take days off of work at the beginning and end of the eight days of the holiday, but work in the middle.
Symbols of Jewish Holiday: Matzah, lambs (because of the historical Passover sacrifice), eggs, horseradish root, saltwater.
Passover Greeting? It’s fine to say “Happy Pesach” or “Happy Passover.” Some people say “Hag Sameah v’ kasher”—have a happy and kosher holiday
Hanukkah
Hebrew name means: Dedication.
What’s it about? Hanukkah is an 8-day holiday that commemorates
the Jewish recapture and rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem in 164 BCE.
Pronounce it: The initial h in Hanukkah is a gutteral one, like the j in José. So Hhhhhhanooka. You’ll be ne, don’t worry.
When is it: Starts the evening of December 7, 2023, December 15, 2023
Jewish Holiday Foods: Fried foods, especially potato pancakes, called latkes, and jelly doughnuts called sufganiyot.
Activities: The main observance is lighting the candles in a ceremonial lamp called a hanukkiah or Hanukkah menorah. Playing with a top called a dreidel is another fun tradition. Hanukkah is a minor holiday in the sense that there is no requirement to abstain from work.
Symbols of Jewish holiday: Menorah, candles, dreidel.
Hanukkah Greeting: Happy Hanukkah!
Shabbat
Hebrew name means: Sabbath—though the English word actually came from Shabbat!
What’s it about? A day of rest and enjoyment at the end of every week that religious people undertake in imitation of God, who rested on the seventh day of creation.
Pronounce it: Shah-baht. It’s sometimes spelled Shabbos and pronounced shabiss.
When is it: Once a week! Shabbat lasts from 18 minutes before sundown on Friday until an hour after sundown on Saturday evening.
Jewish Holiday Foods: Religious Jews try to eat especially delicious food on Shabbat, so if you are having Shabbat for the first time, the rule is yummy. It’s traditional to have two loaves of special bread—among Jews in the United States, the bread is challah, a braided egg bread.
Activities: Shabbat begins with the lighting of candles. There are special synagogue services and blessings to say at meals. The point of Shabbat is not to work. Shabbat is a great day to hang out with family and friends, eat a lot, take walks, study Torah, sing songs, read stories to children, take a nap, and just generally chill out.
Symbols of Jewish holiday: Candles, hallah, wine, flowers.
Shabbat Greeting? Shabbat shalom, which means peaceful sabbath. Yiddish speakers say gut Shabbos, pronounced goot shabiss.
Jewish High Holidays
Rosh HaShanah
Hebrew name means: Head of the year—idiomatically, New Year.
What’s It About? A solemn holiday beginning the calendar year with repentance from sin and the hope of renewal.
Pronounce it: Some say rashashanuh (like it’s one word) and some rohsh ha-shah-nah.
When is it?: Starts the evening of Fri., September 15 and ends Sunday, September 17, 2023
Jewish Holiday Foods: Apples and honey, round challah with raisins, honey cake, pomegranates, pumpkins and other round foods, sweet foods and foods that are gold-colored, like carrots.
Activities: Many Jews who never show up to synagogue the rest of the year go for the marathon of synagogue services on Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur. One special activity that they don’t want to miss is the sounding of the shofar, or ram’s horn. At home, a special activity is eating apples dipped in honey. Many Jews send New Year’s cards for this holiday. Probably the most important activity associated with this holiday comes between Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur: trying to repair relationships and make apologies for bad behavior in the previous year.
Symbols of Holiday: The shofar or ram’s horn, apples and honey, pomegranates, the Book of Life. Greeting? You can say Happy New Year, or try the Hebrew version, Shanah Tovah. If you want to give a more complete version of the greeting, try L’shanah tovah tikatevu, May you be inscribed for a good year (in the book of life). Yiddish-speaking Jews say “Gut yontev.”
Yom Kippur
Hebrew name means: Day of Atonement.
What’s It About? A fast day of prayer and collective confession.
Pronounce it: Some say yohm kee-poor, and some yohm kipper.
When is it: Starts the evening of Sunday, September 24 to Monday, Sep 25, 2023
Jewish Holiday Foods: None. It’s a fast day! Well, families do have traditions about what to eat when the fast is over, like a dairy meal, but there’s nothing universal. Children under age 13 and other people whose health might be harmed don’t fast.
Activities: In addition to all the negatives involved in fasting—not eating, not drinking, not washing, not wearing leather, not having sexual relations—there are a lot of things to do on Yom Kippur. Mainly there are a lot of traditional prayers and things to read in the synagogue. For a lot of Jews who aren’t very observant, Yom Kippur is special because it’s the day they go to memorial services, called Yizkor, to honor dead relatives.
Symbols of Holiday: White clothing, sneakers worn with dress clothes (because of the prohibition on leather).
Greeting? You can say Happy New Year or “have an easy fast.” Some say Shanah Tovah, which is Hebrew for Happy New Year. The more targeted greeting for Yom Kippur is Gamar hatimah tovah–a good completion to your inscription in the book of life
Sukkot
Hebrew name means: Booths or tabernacles. The singular is sukkah.
What’s it about? In ancient times when the Temple stood in Jerusalem, this was a pilgrimage holiday to celebrate the harvest. In our time it still coincides with the harvest.
Pronounce it: Some say sue coat and some say sukkiss.
When is it: Starts the evening of October 2, 2020, September 20, 2021
Jewish Holiday Foods: No specific special food, just more big sumptuous meals.
Activities: Before the holiday, communities and some individual families build a sukkah or hut in the back yard or on the back porch. The sukkah is open to the elements. During the holiday an important activity is eating in the sukkah. There is also a ritual involving blessing and waving the etrog—a citron—and the lulav—a palm branch bound with myrtle and willow.
Symbols of Holiday: The sukkah, the lulav and the etrog.
Greeting? Hag Sameah (Happy holiday) with a heavy gutteral h at the beginning of the rst word and the end of the second. Or if you are really sophisticated, Moadim l’simcha, which means “festivals for joy.” (The translation sounds like something they would say on Star Trek, doesn’t it?) You may also hear “gut yontev,” which is Yiddish for happy holiday.
Simchat Torah
Hebrew name means: Rejoicing in the Torah.
What’s it about? At the end of Sukkot, there is one more holiday to celebrate finishing the reading of the Torah scroll for the year and starting it over again.
Pronounce it: The ch in Simchat is one of those heavy gutteral ones. Some say simchas to-rah instead.
When is it: Some celebrate Shemini Atzeret (Eighth Day of Assembly) and Simchat Torah on two days, and some on one day. Starts the evening of Friday, September 29 – Friday, October 6, 2023
Jewish Holiday Foods: No specific special food, just more big sumptuous meals.
Activities: This is a synagogue holiday with another long service, but in the middle of it, people get up, process through their building with the scrolls and then dance with them. The more traditional they are, the crazier they get with the dancing. It’s also a chance to honor a lot of people by calling them up to make blessings on the Torah, because there is a reading from the end of the scroll—the death of Moses—and another from the beginning–the creation of the world. In some congregations the assembled people unroll the Torah scroll and stand in the middle of the parchment before they start the cycle again.
Symbols of Holiday: The Torah scroll, flags that children carry, dancing people.
Greeting? Hag sameah (Happy holiday) with a heavy gutteral h at the beginning of the first word and the end of the second. Or if you are really sophisticated, Moadim l’simcha, which means “festivals for joy.” You may also hear “gut yontev,” which is Yiddish for happy holiday.
Thu, November 14 2024
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