sauronnaise (
sauronnaise) wrote2023-09-16 03:14 pm
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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? <_<)
(I'm one day late, am I not? <_<)
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thank you! shanah tovah and happy new year! (if you posted this before sundown in your locality, you're technically on time - in the jewish calendar, days start at sundown, so rosh hashanah started yesterday evening and ended at sundown this evening (except for how tomorrow is also rosh hashanah but for complicated calendar reasons and USUALLY rosh hashanah is only one day long).)
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(Echoes the "not late". Rosh Hashanah is ritualistically a two-day holiday, but that has to do with historically making sure we got the day right when modern communication did not exist. Whether or not it's a two-day holiday now depends on which movement you're a part of and where you live.)
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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.
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Me too. Not a programmer but I'm sure it's possible to enter code and functions to synchronise the two calendars. It doesn't look undoable.
Ohh, that explains why Google said it was two days. Does it also change country per country? E.g. Ethiopian Jews vs Indian Jews, or the country of origin isn't so much an influence as the branches/movements are?
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