Page 133 - Advanced Biblical Backgrounds Revised
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Exodus 13:7 Unleavened bread shall be eaten for seven days; no leavened bread shall be seen with you,
and no leaven shall be seen with you in all your territory.
Pentecost
Pentecost (Hebrew: Shavuot) commemorates the time when God gave the Torah to the Children of
Israel in the Sinai desert. Shavuot eve is celebrated with the family, usually having a dairy dinner with
much cheese-related food, including cheesecakes. This one-day holiday is also called the Festival of
Weeks or the Festival of Reaping.
Dates: early June, exactly seven weeks (49 days) after the start of Passover.
Season: late spring.
Tisha Be’av
Tisha Be’av is a fast that commemorates the destruction of both the First and Second Temples in
Jerusalem. It is held for one day only.
Date: mid-July to early August.
New Year
This is the Jewish New Year (Hebrew: Rosh Hashanah which literally means “the head of the year”).
New Year's eve (Hebrew: Erev Rosh Hashanah) is traditionally celebrated with a grand dinner, usually
with the extended family. To symbolize a sweet New Year, apples and honey are eaten on New Year’s
Eve. Pomegranates that have many seeds are eaten or used in cocking during this holiday. The common
greeting is “Shana Tova,” which literally means in Hebrew “good year.” The New Year lasts for two days.
Dates: anywhere between September 5th and October 5th, the exact Gregorian date changes every year
like the rest of the Jewish holidays.
Day of Atonement
The Day of Atonement (Hebrew: Yom Kippur or Yom Hakkipurim) is the holiest day of them all, where a
lot of prayer services are held, and the religious ones fast for 25 hours. This one day also intermingles
with an unofficial Memorial Day to the war that broke on Yom Kippur in October 1973. A common
tradition is asking one another for forgiveness for the sins of last year and wishing for an easy fast
(about 60% of Israelis fast on that day, most of them are not religious). Non-religious kids are pedaling
bicycles on the streets.
During the Day of Atonement, all of Israel has a rest day; all public and private services and businesses
are closed, including radio and TV, and airports are closed. Public transport does not operate (trains,
buses, taxis), and driving a private car is traditionally not allowed, so do NOT plan on driving anywhere
with your rental on that day (you may see scarce emergency vehicles). Visitors are asked to please
respect others and refrain from eating or talking on your cellphone in public places.
Date: late September to early October, exactly ten days after New Year.
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