Dates of major and minor Jewish holidays for years 187-193, as observed in Israel. Each holiday page includes a brief overview of special observances and customs, and any special Torah readings.
Except for minor fasts, holidays begin at sundown on the first date specified and end at nightfall on the last date specified. For example, if the dates for Rosh Hashana are listed as -, then the holiday begins at sundown on Sep 7 and ends at nightfall on Sep 9.
This page displays the Israel holiday schedule. The Diaspora schedule is used by Jews living outside of modern Israel.
Dates in bold are yom tov, so they have similar obligations and restrictions to Shabbat in the sense that normal “work” is forbidden.
| Holiday |
3948
187‑188 |
3949
188‑189 |
3950
189‑190 |
3951
190‑191 |
3952
191‑192 |
3953
192‑193 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rosh Hashana | ‑ W‑F | ‑ Su‑Tu | ‑ F‑Su | ‑ W‑F | ‑ M‑W | ‑ Su‑Tu |
| Yom Kippur | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ Tu‑W |
| Sukkot | ‑ W‑Th ‑ F‑W |
‑ Su‑M ‑ Tu‑Su |
‑ F‑Sa ‑ Su‑F |
‑ W‑Th ‑ F‑W |
‑ M‑Tu ‑ W‑M |
‑ Su‑M ‑ Tu‑Su |
| Shmini Atzeret | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Su‑M |
| Chanukah | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ Su‑M |
| Purim | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ M‑Tu |
| Pesach | ‑ F‑Sa ‑ Su‑Th ‑ Th‑F |
‑ W‑Th ‑ F‑Tu ‑ Tu‑W |
‑ M‑Tu ‑ W‑Su ‑ Su‑M |
‑ Sa‑Su ‑ M‑F ‑ F‑Sa |
‑ F‑Sa ‑ Su‑Th ‑ Th‑F |
‑ W‑Th ‑ F‑Tu ‑ Tu‑W |
| Shavuot | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F |
| Tish’a B’Av | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ W‑Th |
| Holiday |
3948
187‑188 |
3949
188‑189 |
3950
189‑190 |
3951
190‑191 |
3952
191‑192 |
3953
192‑193 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chag HaBanot | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Tu BiShvat | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ Su‑M |
| Shushan Purim | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W |
| Days of the Omer | ‑ Sa‑Sa | ‑ Th‑Th | ‑ Tu‑Tu | ‑ Su‑Su | ‑ Sa‑Sa | ‑ Th‑Th |
| Pesach Sheni | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F |
| Lag BaOmer | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ M‑Tu |
| Tu B’Av | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W |
| Rosh Hashana LaBehemot | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F |
| Leil Selichot | Aug 30 Sa | Aug 22 Sa | Sep 11 Sa | Aug 27 Sa | Sep 15 Sa | Sep 7 Sa |
| Birkat Hachamah | Mar 25 W | |||||
| Purim Katan | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ M‑Tu | ||||
| Shushan Purim Katan | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ Tu‑W | ||||
| Purim Meshulash | ‑ Sa‑Su |
Minor fasts begin at dawn and end at nightfall.
Tish'a B'Av begins at sundown on the first date specified and ends at nightfall on the second date specified.
| Holiday |
3948
187‑188 |
3949
188‑189 |
3950
189‑190 |
3951
190‑191 |
3952
191‑192 |
3953
192‑193 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tzom Gedaliah | Sep 23 Su | Sep 10 W | Aug 31 M | Sep 19 Su | Sep 8 Th | Sep 26 W |
| Asara B’Tevet | Dec 27 Th | Dec 16 Tu | Dec 4 F | Dec 24 F | Dec 13 Tu | Jan 1 Tu |
| Ta’anit Esther | Feb 27 W | Feb 16 M | Mar 4 Th | Feb 24 Th | Mar 14 W | Mar 4 M |
| Ta’anit Bechorot | Mar 28 F | Mar 18 W | Apr 5 M | Mar 24 Th | Apr 13 F | Apr 3 W |
| Tzom Tammuz | Jun 29 Su | Jun 18 Th | Jul 6 Tu | Jun 26 Su | Jul 15 Su | Jul 4 Th |
Modern Israeli holidays are national holidays officially recognized by the Knesset, Israel's parliament.
| Holiday |
3948
187‑188 |
3949
188‑189 |
3950
189‑190 |
3951
190‑191 |
3952
191‑192 |
3953
192‑193 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shabbat Shuva | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat Shirah | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat Shekalim | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat Zachor | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat Parah | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat HaChodesh | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat HaGadol | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat Chazon | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
| Shabbat Nachamu | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ F‑Sa |
רֹאשׁ חוֹדֶשׁ, transliterated Rosh Chodesh or Rosh Hodesh, is a minor holiday that occurs at the beginning of every month in the Hebrew calendar. It is marked by the birth of a new moon.
Note: the first day of Tishrei is not considered Rosh Chodesh. The holiday that occurs on the 1st day of Tishrei is called Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year. For the month of Tishrei, the major holiday of Rosh Hashana takes precedence over what would be a minor holiday.
| Holiday |
3948
187‑188 |
3949
188‑189 |
3950
189‑190 |
3951
190‑191 |
3952
191‑192 |
3953
192‑193 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan | ‑ Th‑Sa | ‑ M‑W | ‑ Sa‑M | ‑ Th‑Sa | ‑ Tu‑Th | ‑ M‑W |
| Rosh Chodesh Kislev | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ W‑F | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑M | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ W‑F |
| Rosh Chodesh Tevet | ‑ Su‑Tu | ‑ F‑Su | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ M‑W | ‑ F‑Su | ‑ F‑Su |
| Rosh Chodesh Sh’vat | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ Su‑M |
| Rosh Chodesh Adar | ‑ W‑F | ‑ M‑W | ‑ Th‑Sa | ‑ M‑W | ||
| Rosh Chodesh Adar I | ‑ Th‑Sa | ‑ M‑W | ||||
| Rosh Chodesh Adar II | ‑ Sa‑M | ‑ W‑F | ||||
| Rosh Chodesh Nisan | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ W‑Th | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ W‑Th |
| Rosh Chodesh Iyyar | ‑ Sa‑M | ‑ Th‑Sa | ‑ Tu‑Th | ‑ Su‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑M | ‑ Th‑Sa |
| Rosh Chodesh Sivan | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑Su | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ M‑Tu | ‑ Sa‑Su |
| Rosh Chodesh Tamuz | ‑ Tu‑Th | ‑ Su‑Tu | ‑ F‑Su | ‑ W‑F | ‑ Tu‑Th | ‑ Su‑Tu |
| Rosh Chodesh Av | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W | ‑ Su‑M | ‑ F‑Sa | ‑ Th‑F | ‑ Tu‑W |
| Rosh Chodesh Elul | ‑ F‑Su | ‑ W‑F | ‑ M‑W | ‑ Sa‑M | ‑ F‑Su | ‑ W‑F |