High Holidays 2024/5785 (Hebrew calendar year)
Whether you grew up dunking apples in honey each year or this is the first time you’ve Googled “Simchat Torah,” the High Holidays are a season with all kinds of opportunities for reflection, connection, and gathering. And if you’re looking for ways to celebrate, HMI has got you covered!
Start by exploring this handy Path Through the High Holidays to get the 101 overview on each of the holidays – including Elul, Rosh Hashanah, The Ten Days of Returning, Yom Kippur, Sukkot, and Simchat Torah!
And check out our list of local service options here! If you don’t see your city, reach out to us at info@honeymoonisrael.org, and we’ll share additional resources with you. Be sure to apply for an Alumni Micro Grant below to offset the price of service tickets.
Looking for more? Read on to get the download on each holiday, along with different ways to mark them.
- Check out our High Holiday Alumni Micro Grant opportunities here. We have created 3 options for you to give you some ideas, but you can always design your own experience as well!
. - Decide how you’d like to celebrate, and apply to receive funding to support your holiday gathering.
That’s it! Get started now and reach out to us at info@honeymoonisrael.org if you have any questions.
*Note – this Alumni Micro Grant and the per person funding are only available to Honeymoon Israel alumni.
Read on to find something that helps you bring the holidays into your home and into your soul. Celebrating with kids? Our friends at PJ Library have lots of great family-friendly resources for the High Holidays. We’ve included more of our favorites below, along with other resources to help you make this year’s High Holidays relatable and enjoyable for you and yours.
Elul
Rosh Hashanah
One of the most unique rituals of Rosh Hashanah is to hear the sounding of the shofar (a ram’s horn), which serves as a centuries old alarm clock, giving us a wake-up call for this holy season. It acts as a reminder not to walk through life half-asleep and to take a good look at our lives in this moment. It’s also customary to eat apples dipped in honey to signify the hope for a sweet new year, as well as round challah, which represents the cyclical nature of the year and the continuous cycle of life.
Looking for more meaning this Rosh Hashanah? Find more guidance here.
Kids love baking round challah – check out this great recipe from PJ Library!
Ten Days of Returning
Looking for more guidance? Check out 10Q’s quick and easy guided reflection.
Need something kid-friendly? We love PJ Library’s Family Conversations guide.
Ritual to Know: Tashlich – Tashlich translates to “casting off,” reflecting the central action of this ancient Jewish ritual. If we can’t apologize to someone we’ve hurt, or we’ve done something to hurt ourselves, tashlich offers a physical ritual to help cast off that spiritual baggage. During tashlich, we go near a body of flowing water with a piece of bread or a biodegradable item, reflect on past mistakes, and express remorse. Then we ceremoniously cast the bread or symbolic item into the water, allowing it to be carried away. Tashlich can be performed by an ocean, river, stream, or even your bathtub!
Yom Kippur
When’s Yom Kippur this year? Sundown on Friday, October 11 – sundown on Saturday, October 12
How can we celebrate? Yom Kippur often includes a 25-hour fast, which means abstaining from food and drink. The fast is an attempt to redirect focus from our physical needs and instead to concentrate on the spiritual aspects of the day. The holiday ends with a special “break-fast” meal with friends and family. Click here for a guide to hosting your own Yom Kippur break fast meal.
We recognize that fasting isn’t for everyone. Want an alternative? Check out our self-guided tashlich ritual.
One of the stories read on Yom Kippur is Jonah. Teach kids about forgiveness this year by reading the Story of Jonah with PJ Library.
Phrase to Know: The Book of Life – One term you might hear during the holidays is the idea of the Book of Life. It’s the concept that God has a book with the names of those who will thrive in the next year, and that we can alter our fate based on actions of repentance and good deeds. The book is then “sealed” on Yom Kippur. It’s common to hear someone offer you the greeting, “May you be inscribed and sealed for a good year.”
Sukkot
When’s Sukkot this year? Sundown on Wednesday, October 16 – sundown on Wednesday, October 23
How can we celebrate? Sukkot is traditionally celebrated at home by building a sukkah, a temporary outdoor structure with three walls and a roof that allows us to see the stars – basically an awesome fort we get to build in our backyards! Then, we decorate the sukkah with fruits, vegetables, and other ornaments to celebrate the fall harvest. People spend as much time as possible in their sukkah, enjoying meals and even sleeping in them – Sukkot camp-out, anyone? The custom of inviting ushpizin (guests) into your sukkah emphasizes the importance of hospitality. A perfect opportunity to reconnect with your HMI friends and invite them to gather under the stars with you. Click here for a guide to hosting your own Sukkot gathering!
Looking for a simpler Sukkot strategy? Check out another one of our Sukkot resources that includes easy sukkah building ideas (even if you live in an apartment!) and an etrog cocktail recipe.
Words to Know: Etrog and Lulav – An etrog is a yellow citrus fruit that resembles a large lemon. The etrog is gathered along with the lulav and waved during Sukkot as an expression of the harvest and its blessings. A lulav is a bundle of branches consisting of a palm, myrtle, and willow branches. They are bound together as the lulav and, along with the etrog, make up the Four Species of the harvest season.
Simchat Torah
When’s Simchat Torah this year? Sundown on Thursday, October 24 – sundown on Friday, October 25
How can we celebrate? Simchat Torah is a really happy holiday with lots of singing, eating, and dancing! If you listen to the final reading in a synagogue, you’ll see the rabbi (or whoever is reading the Torah) wind the whole scroll back to the other side to start again at the beginning. The Torah is then paraded around the synagogue, and everyone joins in to celebrate.
Want to try something new this year? Check out a local synagogue for their Simchat Torah service. It’s a joyful service, and particularly fun for young kids. Or host a dance party with your HMI cohort and put together a special playlist!
Word to Know: Torah – The Torah is the first five books of the Hebrew Bible: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy. It is the core text of Jewish tradition and is full of famous stories like creation, and the exodus from Egypt. It’s also full of laws, morals, and ethical teachings. These stories guide Jewish tradition and are a repository of Jewish memory.
Local High Holiday Services
There are so many places across each city to celebrate the High Holidays, each with their own style and approach! Here’s a selection of congregations and organizations holding High Holiday programming. Remember to apply for an Alumni Micro Grant to offset ticket costs!
Boston
- Base BSTN – Cambridge
- High Holidays at The Vilna – Downtown Boston
- Riverway Project– Longwood
- Temple Isaiah – Lexington
- Temple Beth Zion – Brookline
- Temple Shir Tikva -Wayland
- Temple Shalom of Newton – Newton
To see what else is happening in your area, check out JewishBoston.com for their full community program listings.
Chicago
- Emanuel Congregation – Edgewater
- KAM Isaiah Israel Congregation – Hyde Park
- Temple Sholom of Chicago – Lakeview
- Beth Emet The Free Synagogue – Evanston
- Temple Jeremiah – Northfield
- Mishkan – Jefferson Park
- Anshe Emet Synagogue – Lakeview
Colorado
- Judaism Your Way – Services held at the Denver Botanic Gardens
- Temple Sinai – South Denver
- Hebrew Educational Alliance – South Denver
- Temple Emanuel – Denver
- Adventure Judaism – Boulder
- Congregation Har Hashem – Boulder
Los Angeles
IKAR – Mid-City
Temple Beth Am – Mid-City
Kehillat Israel – Pacific Palisades
Wilshire Boulevard Temple – Koreatown, West LA
Stephen S. Wise Temple – Bel Air
Adat Ari El – Valley Village
Nefesh – Echo Park
Temple Emanu El – Beverly Hills
New York City
- Rodeph Sholom – Manhattan
- B’nai Jeshurun (Aviv) – Manhattan
- Central Synagogue Downtown – Manhattan
- Temple Emanu-El – Manhattan
- JCP Downtown – Manhattan
- BASE UWS – Manhattan
- CBE Brooklyn Jews – Brooklyn
SF Bay Area
- Am Tikvah – Lakeshore, SF
- Beth Sholom – Richmond, SF
- The Kitchen – Soma, SF
- Congregation Beth Am – Los Altos
- Peninsula Temple Beth El – San Mateo
- Rodef Shalom – San Rafael
- Temple Beth Abraham – Oakland
- Temple Sinai – Oakland
- Temple Isaiah Contra Costa – Lafayette