- Chanukah - Shed the light of the menorah on the traditions of Chanukah and learn programming ideas for the Festival of Lights.
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- Lag B'Omer - Lag B'omer is the thirty-third day of a fifty-day counting season between Passover and Shavuot. In modern day Israel, both traditional and secular Jews celebrate Lag B'Omer with campfires.
- Passover - The most widely celebrated Jewish holiday, Passover retells the Biblical story of the Israelite Exodus from Egypt. To help you learn more about this complex and beautiful holiday, we offer a comprehensive Passover Guide and many programming resources.
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- Purim - Based on the Biblical Book of Esther, Purim celebrates the profound reversal of fortune when the Jewish community of Persia was rescued by the heroic intervention of Esther and Mordecai.
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- Rosh Hashanah begins the High Holiday season and marks the Jewish New Year. Learn how to enrich your Rosh Hashanah experience.
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- Shavuot - Originally an agricultural festival in the month of Sivan, Shavuot was celebrated by pilgrimages to the Temple in Jerusalem, where Jews offered the first fruits of their harvest.
- Shemini Atzeret comes at the end of Sukkot and calls for Jews to pray for rain.
- Simchat Torah celebrates the completion of the yearly cycle of Torah study.
- Sukkot - The harvest festival commemorates the Israelites' wanderings in the desert following their Exodus from Egypt.
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- Tisha B'Av - Ninth day of the Hebrew month Av, is a fast day commemorating the destruction of both the First and Second Temples in Jerusalem. Tisha B'Av has been adopted as a day of national mourning for all tragedies that have befallen the Jewish people throughout our history.
- Tu B'Shevat is the Jewish New Year of the Trees. Create your own mystical celebration of Israel through nature with a Tu B'Shevat Seder.
- Yom Haatzma'ut - Israel Independence Day (Iyar 5) celebrates the state of Israel's establishment on May 14, 1948.
- Yom HaShoah - Commemorates the six million Jews who died during the Holocaust. At the same time, it marks the anniversary of the heroic Warsaw Ghetto uprising of 1943.
- Yom Hazikaron - On this Memorial Day, the fourth of Iyar in the Hebrew calendar, we commemorate the soldiers who have fallen fighting for Israel's independence and defending its security.
- Yom Kippur is one of most widely observed holidays on the Jewish calendar. Learn more about The Day of Atonement and how to make it meaningful for you.