sauronnaise: Otis the scribe, waving his hand (Default)
sauronnaise ([personal profile] sauronnaise) wrote2023-09-16 03:14 pm

Happy New Year!

I didn't count, but I know there are a few Jewish people following my blog, and vice-and-versa, so Shanah Tovah to you guys!

(I'm one day late, am I not? <_<)
independence1776: Tallit (Jewish prayer shawl) (Jewish)

[personal profile] independence1776 2023-09-20 12:23 am (UTC)(link)
That definitely does make a difference; even my iPhone doesn't sync properly the Hebrew date with the sundown times. I really do think that tech is capable of keeping up with the change but somehow...

So. The history of the holiday is this: Jewish months begin with the sighting of the new moon. (We have a lunisolar calendar that means we have a leap month every couple of years to keep the holidays in their proper seasons.) In old-old days, the new moon sighting in Jerusalem was spread with signal fires. This quickly became unworkable in the diaspora. So the rabbis went, "Rosh Hashanah is a Very Important Day. To ensure we celebrate on the correct date, we will celebrate two days in a row in one ritually long 'day.'" As time went by and communication got improved, etc. we know very obviously know what day the new moon is on. But a couple thousand years worth of tradition is valuable, so the Conservative/Masorti movement and all varieties of Orthodoxy in the diaspora celebrate Rosh Hashanah as a two-day holiday. Those in the Reform movement and those in Israel celebrate it as a one-day holiday.
independence1776: Tallit (Jewish prayer shawl) (Jewish)

[personal profile] independence1776 2023-09-27 11:56 pm (UTC)(link)
Nope! It entirely depends on whether you're in the diaspora (aka outside of the land of Israel) or not, with the exception of the Reform movement which even in diaspora celebrates as a single day. I'm sure there are exceptions, but that is the general rule.