Edit: *Not counting Rosh Chodesh and Shabbat
Does your birthday ever fall on a Jewish holiday?
Yes - I was born on a Jewish holiday
Yes - more than half the years
Yes - occasionally
Yes - very rarely
No but it's near one
No
See results
seen from Canada
seen from T1
seen from Russia
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye
seen from Türkiye
seen from France

seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from United States

seen from Hong Kong SAR China
seen from Canada

seen from United States
seen from Canada

seen from Australia

seen from United States
seen from India
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Malaysia
Edit: *Not counting Rosh Chodesh and Shabbat
Does your birthday ever fall on a Jewish holiday?
Yes - I was born on a Jewish holiday
Yes - more than half the years
Yes - occasionally
Yes - very rarely
No but it's near one
No
See results
chag sameach and moadim l’simcha in advance lmao
sukkotttt 💙💙💙
After My last post, I was thinking a bit about how various Chagim represent specific Emotions and Ideals:
Sukkot/Shmini Atzeret is Joy.
Rosh Hashana is Personal Memory and Action (ish).
Yom Kippur is obviously Regret.
Pesach is Collective Memory and Thanks.
Shavout is Duty (kinda).
(skipping the d'rabannans for now)
And I am sure that several brilliant drash's have been made on the topic, so before I write my own, I would love it if anyone who knows of one could pass it along to me!
Sentir o Zohar - Shavuot
do you guys also have special judaica jewelry that you only wear on (high) holidays ?? just curious, shana tova 🍎🍏🍯
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I'm going to be camping with mostly goyim for 3 days in the middle of pesach, and as far as I can tell there are 3.5 categories of meals I can eat
1. Boring food (matzo and cheese, vegetables, etc)
2. "Wtf are you eating?" food (charoset, matzo pizza/lasagna)
3. 'Confuse the goyim (chamets edition)' anything that Looks Like Bread but is made from matzo meal and sure as hell doesn't taste like bread
3.5 'confuse the goyim (kitniyot edition)' (quinoa. It is the fault of the quinoa.)
Hey, could you post a guide on how to pronounce jewish holiday names? I want to be able to get it right when I bring it up.
Hi there!
Thank you so much for your thoughtful question. Depending on which part of the Jewish world you are living in, folks are going to pronounce them differently. To give you a mainstream answer, here are how I would write the names of the holidays in English and how I pronounce them in Hebrew.
But first-- there is a special Hebraic sound that you will see here reprsented as “ch”. It is not pronounced like the “ch” in cheese, but rather is a hard “h” sound. This is the sound sound you hear as the first sound in the words Chanukkah and Challah.
Rosh Hashanah (Roshe Ha-sha-nah)
Yom Kippur (Yome Kee-poor)
Sukkot (Soo-kote)
Shemini Atzeret (Sheh-minnie Etz-eh-ret)
Simchat Torah (Seem-chaaht Toe-rah)
Hanukkah (Chan-oo-kah)
Tu B’shvat (Too b’shvat)
Purim (Poo-reem)
Pesach [AKA Passover] (Peh-sahch)
Lag b’Omer (laag b’Oh-meir)
Shavuot (Shah-voo-ote)
Tisha ba’Av (Tee-shah-ah ba-av)
Tu b’Av (Too b’Av)
For more information about each of the holidays and special days, please check out this great link.
Thank you!
Josh
Freedom The four cups of wine drunk on seder night symbolize four distinct stages of freedom from Egypt. The ascent from a dark place is very rarely achieved in one step and often involves a long journey of self-discovery and growth. Check up out at judaikaart.com
#judaikaart #judaicaart #judaica #judaism #jewishart #modernart #spiritualart #conseptualart #jewish #artist #artwork #passover #pesach #jewishfestivals #chagim https://www.instagram.com/p/CEUM8oUJTf-/?igshid=1oy14bnzzyx0y