Typical Jewish response - answer a question with another question - What year?
The Jewish calendar follows the lunar cycle with months of 29 or 30 days. As a result, it's only once every 19 years or so that the solar calendar and the lunar calendar collide.
Having said that, the typical holidays during that period would either be Rosh Hashana (the Jewish New Year which falls on 1st and 2nd Tishrei), or Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement which falls on 10th Tishrei) or Succos (Tabernacles) which falls runs from 15th Tishrei for 8 days.
Rosh Hashana, the Jewish new year holiday, is celebrated in September or October (depending on the Jewish calender). Rosh Hashana 2008 (5769 in the Jewish calendar) begins at sunset on Monday, September 29, and ends at nightfall on Wednesday, October 1.
The Jewish New Year ... Rosh Hashana, the traditional anniversary of the creation of
the universe ... is observed on the first two days of the Hebrew month of Tishrei. In
2010, those days correspond to Thursday and Friday, September 9 and 10. Therefore,
the Holiday begins at sunset on Wednesday, September 8, 2010.
September 30, 2015, was one of the intermediate days (middle days) of the Jewish festival of Sukkot (Leviticus ch.23). See also:
September 30th has no meaning for the Jews.
This year (2008) however, the first day of Rosh HaShana(The Jewish New Year) falls on September 30th.
Shabbat on September 3, 10, 17, and 24.
Rosh Hashana on September 29 and 30.
None. Jewish holidays are not attached to dates on the Western (Gregorian) Calendar.
That date is the first intermediate day of Sukkot.
a jewish holday
The holiday in september is Rosh Hashanah (jewish religion) it begins at sunset.
Sukkot, the Jewish harvest holiday lasts for 7 days. It usually falls out in September or October.
No, it was a regular day on the Jewish calendar (23 Elul 5761). Since it was perpetrated by Islamist Terrorists, it makes sense that it should have no correlation with any Jewish date.
There is no such month on the Jewish calendar as September-October. The Jewish calendar is an ancient lunar based calendar which does not coincide with our modern calendar. Hence, Jewish holidays fall at different times each year when compared to the modern calendar. The months of Elul and Tishrei usually fall around September and October. This year, for example, the Jewish month of Elul began on August 21, 2009 and ended on September 29, 2009. The Jewish month of Tishrei bega on September 30, 2009 and will end on October 18, 2009. The Jewish month of Chesvan then begins on the 19th of October.Answer:Tishrei contains 30 days and corresponds to late September-mid October.
A Jewish Holiday,known as the Holiday of Ingathering.
Kwanzaa is a Jewish holiday celebrated in december.
A Jewish Holiday,known as the Holiday of Ingathering.
Hanukah.
NO it is a Jewish holiday
a jewish holiday
It's the Jewish New Year