Jewish Holidays
at Utah Hillel
- Rosh HaShana and Yom Kippor, the anniversary
of the Creation of the World, and the day of atonement for our
sins. Our page includes Hillel
and other local services, Tashlich at Red Butte, campus Break-fast,
resources and more.
- Succot (Succus, Succos, Sukkot, Succoth, Festival of
Tabernacles, Feast of Booths). The Sinai or fall harvest pilgrimage
festival. Live or at least eat in a booth (succah), wave your
lulav, smell an etrog, parade a Hoshana, read Kohelet (Ecclesiastes)
and remember the fragility of human institutions, the vanity of
vanities and the need for openness.
- Hoshana Rabba, Simhat Torah. Shake your lulav, dance
all night: A people is founded on law with aspirations to justice.
The Torah is given on Sinai and we begin reading it in shul. Organize
a Hillel delegation to one of the local congregations or organize a celebration
on campus. Guaranteed aliyahs for all who stay to finish the reading
of the Torah and begin it again.
- Chappy Chanukah. Hillel has a Hanukkah Party and Chabad
has a menorah lighting at the Olpin Union. For announcements of
the Party and menorah lighting details, join our email list or check the Hillel
events page.
- Christmas. Huh?! Christmas isn't a Jewish holiday, but
it is a holiday for most everyone else around here,
so for many years the SLC Jewish community has staffed Christmas
Dinner at the Homeless Shelter. Call to volunteer.
- Tu B'Shvat. New Year of the trees. Eat the fruits of
the Land, plant a tree, have a campfire, roast potatoes, sing
songs, buy a tree in Israel,
write a letter to the President or your congressperson on an environmental
issue. Or, for the kabbalists among you, have a full Tu B'Shvat
seder. This new/old holiday is in a state of creative ferment.
Read a Jerusalem Report article
on the rise of modern Tu B'Shvat celebrations. Download Tu
B'Shvat seder texts prepared by the Berkeley
Reform chavura or COEJL: the
Coalition on the Environment and Jewish Life.
Download jbop,
a terrific game (designed for elementary schoolers by JeMM)
to learn about Tu B'Shevat and have fun at the same time.
- Purim. The Festival of Lots. Read the Book of Esther
and celebrate victory over injustice and oppression, survival
against the odds, a God who doesn't guarantee the victory of good
over evil. It's carnival time: celebrate overturnings by dressing
up and partying; get so drunk you can't tell Hamen from Mordechai;
give gifts of food to your friends and money to the poor. And
today, you should let someone give you the whole megillah.
- Local Celebrations:
- Help organize and stage the Hillel Whole Megillah Purim
Spiel - the traditional spoof play, often but not necessarily
the Book of Esther in drag or local satire.
- Kol Ami, Chabad, the JCC and all the Hebrew Schools
organize Purim parties.
- All the local congregations have megillah (Esther) readings,
mostly designed to be kid friendly (kids and grownups
invited to come in costume).
- A handful of local stores sell hamentashen (Hamen's hat cookies; Hamen's ears to
the Sephardim) or make your own.
- Purim Bibliography:
- Passover (Pesah, Pesach), our time of Freedom. You were
strangers in Egypt and must, therefore, free the oppressed. Our
Passover page includes Hillel Student
Seder, Seder match-up services, community Seders, Campus Interfaith
Seder, Passover shopping, Pesah recipes, Passover bibliography,
web links, etc.
- Holocaust Week, Mideast Week, Yom HaAtzmaut (Israel Independence
Day). Activities at the University and elsewhere. Click for some
details, or organize a new activity.
- Lag B'Omer. Hide in caves, shoot bows and arrows, flee
Romans, secretly study Torah, get a haircut, pray at a mystic's
grave. Calling for freedom to learn!
- Shavuot (Shavuos, Shavuoth, The Feast of Weeks). Read
the Book of Ruth, defend the poor, foreigners and the oppressed.
Make blintzes or Hungarian Cheese Latkes
and study the law of the corners of the field -- the obligation
to support the poor. Hillel's Minyan Netivot meets for a late night study & blintz
session (tikkun) on Erev Shavuot. Call us for time and
place. Kol Ami runs a late night tikkun/study session,
a small traditional morning service and a larger evening Confirmation
service. More services at the other
local congregations.
- Tisha B'Av. Read Eicha (Lamentations). Fast for the destruction
of the First and Second Temple, the expulsion from Spain and other
disasters. Hear Eicha (Lamentations) at any of the local congregations, or organize a Hillel
reading and discussion.
- Roshei Hodesh: The new moon. Join Salt Lake's
Chavurat Rosh Chodesh Women's Group. Or organize a group to
say Birkat HaLevana.
Holiday Bibliography
- Hillel International Center Web Site Holiday
Resources (go to "Jewish
Resources", then "Holidays".)
- JTS (one of the Conservative
movement's Rabbinical Seminaries) distance
learning site on the holidays,
including history, study, practice guides, spiritual resources,
gifts, greeting cards, games, etc.
- Rabbis For Human Rights-North America has put
together a High Holiday
Resource Packet, including liturgical texts (new prayers and
commentary on traditional ones), contemporary voices on the current
conflicts, and study texts on the creation of humans in the image
of God, the place of suffering and tears, and the commandment
of tochekha (moral criticism).
- Booklets explaining the structure of the service and
other synagogue customs, a transliterated service, and vocabulary.
- Passover.
- Richard Siegel, Michael Strassfeld and Sharon Strassfeld, The
Jewish Catalog: A Do-It-Yourself Kit. (Jewish Publication
Society). Still the best introduction to doing it yourself.
- Michael Strassfeld, The Jewish Holidays A Guide and Commentary.
(1985: Harper and Row). Readable and sophisticated discussions
of the traditions and customs of all the holidays.
- Kerry M. Olitzky and Ronald H. Isaacs, The How To Handbook
For Jewish Living (1993 KTAV Publishing). Simple directions
for the choreography of Jewish life: the basic blessings, how
to wave a lulav, how to make havdalah, when to bow in the Amidah,
making matzoh, and so on.
- Anita Diamant, Living a Jewish Life. The author of the
best book on Jewish weddings
is expanding her repertoire.
- The Yo-Yo
Guide to the Jewish Holidays, from David
Bader's "How To Be An Extremely Reform Jew".
- Jewish
Holiday Jokes, from Lori's Mishmash Jewish Jokes
page.
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