High Holidays 5774 - 2013
Start the New Year off with a most inspiring, delightful and relaxing High Holiday Services!
Service Schedule | ||
![]() | Wednesday, September 4 | |
Mincha and Maariv.......................6:30 PM | ||
Thursday, September 5: | ||
Morning Service.......................9:30AM | ||
Friday, September 6: | ||
| Morning Service.......................9:00AM RECOMMENDED SEGMENT: 10:15 - 12:30 (services over at about 1:45 PM followed by Kiddush) Mincha and Maariv........6:30 PM | ||
![]() | Friday, September 13: | |
Kol Nidre Service.................6:15 PM | ||
Shabbat/Saturday, September 14: | ||
| Morning Service...........8:00AM RECOMMENDED SEGMENT: 10:30 AM - 12:30 PM (Includes Yizkor) Break..............2:50 pm- 4:45 pm (approximate time) Mincha.....................4:45PM Neilah........................5:45 PM RECOMMENDED SEGMENT: Neilah - the High Point of Yom Kippur 5:45 – 7:30 PM Yom Kippur ends.................7:23 PM | ||
Please note: We urge you to please make every effort to attend by the beginning of the recommended segments (and then stay for as long or as short as you would like) which are: 10:15 AM to 12:30 on Both Mornings of Rosh Hashanah Sept. 5 & 6 (actual service times are from 9 AM to about 1:45 PM followed by kiddush) On Sept 13th Kol Nidrei 6:15 PM to 8:30 PM and Yom Kippur Morning (Includes Yizkor) Sept 14th 10:30 AM to 12:30 PM and then Neilah - the High Point of Yom Kippur 4:45 – 7:23 PM Followed by the Break Fast |
Coming from abroad? we need some Kosher food! Please let us know if you can help
| Passover (Pesach) celebrates the deliverance of the Jewish people from slavery in Egypt. Our Passover megasite has tools, guides, insights, stories, inspiration—and just about everything you need to celebrate Passover (but bring your own wine). No work permitted on March 26 - 3/27/2013 and April 1 - 4/2/2013. Work is permitted only on March 28 - 3/29/2013 and March 31 with certain restrictions. Thirty days ago we cleaned our homes and souls of leaven, and matzahed our way through the week-long festival of Passover. And now, Pesach Sheni—a Second Passover! Work permitted The birthday of Jewish mysticism . . . The spiritual significance of the bow and arrow . . . Can love be true, and can truth be loving? . . . What is Kabbalah? Work permitted Shavuot marks the giving of the Torah on Mt. Sinai. The Ten Commandments are read in synagogues, just as they were in the desert on Mt. Sinai over 3,300 years ago. No work is permitted The “Three Weeks” and Tisha B’Av are designated as a time of mourning over the destruction of the Holy Temple and the galut (exile). Work permitted The “Three Weeks” and Tisha B’Av are designated as a time of mourning over the destruction of the Holy Temple and the galut (exile). Work should be avoided. Consult a Rabbi if this is not possible. Our sages proclaimed the 15th of Av as one of the two greatest festivals of the year, yet they ordained no special observances or celebrations for it . . . Work permitted Virtually everything you need to know about Rosh Hashanah: How-To Guides, Essays and Insights, Holiday Stories, Traditional Recipes, Multimedia, and much more! No work is permitted. Virtually everything you need to know about Yom Kippur, the holiest day on the Jewish calendar: How-To Guides, Essays and Insights, Prayer Service Overviews, Stories, Multimedia, and much more! Falls on Shabbat. Virtually everything you need to know about the holiday of Sukkot: How-To Guides, Sukkah and “Four Kinds” Wizards, Essays and Insights, Recipes, Stories, Multimedia, and much more! No work permitted on September 19 - 9/20/2013. Work is permitted on September 22 - 9/25/2013 with certain restrictions.. Virtually everything you need to know about the holidays of Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah: How-To Guides, Essays and Insights, Recipes, Stories, Multimedia, and much more! No work permitted Chanukah commemorates the rededication of the Temple in Jerusalem after a group of Jewish warriors defeated the occupying mighty Greek armies. Work permitted, except Shabbat What happened on 10 Tevet? . . . Why do we need the Holy Temple? . . . The positive aspects of a “siege mentality” . . . The Rebbe on the Holocaust . . . Work permitted |













