Overview: Types
of Jewish Holidays
There are essentially three major categories of Jewish
holidays, celebrations, and commemorations found in the Jewish calendar. These
are biblical holidays, rabbinic holidays, and post-rabbinic celebrations. These
categories indicate the historical period during which these holidays came to
be established events in the Jewish calendar.
The first major category is biblical holidays. These are
festivals that are mentioned in either the Torah (Such as Passover) or other
books of the Hebrew Bible. There are two central chapters in the Torah that
list the biblical holidays: Leviticus 23 and Deuteronomy 16. These chapters
list two kinds of Israelite holidays, the three pilgrimage festivals and the
High Holy Days.
The three pilgrimage festivals of Pesach (Passover), Shavuot
(Feast of Weeks), and Sukkot (Festival of Booths) mark not only historical
events in the development of the Jewish people, but also agricultural
celebrations and the seasonal harvests in the land of Israel. These holidays
are called pilgrimage festivals because in ancient times all Israelite men were
commanded to travel to the Temple in Jerusalem, to take part in the festival
celebrations. Even today, Pesach, Shavuot, and Sukkot continue to mark
significant national-spiritual events in the life of the Jewish people, namely the
Exodus from Egypt, the receiving of the Torah on Mt. Sinai, and God’s
sheltering of the Israelites in the desert for 40 years, respectively.
The other holidays mentioned in the Torah are the High Holy
Days. Although not given these names until much later, Rosh Hashanah (New Year)
and Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement) are first described in the Torah, though not
in the complete form that is observed today. Rosh Hashanah celebrates the
beginning of the new Jewish calendar year (a later designation) and is celebrated
with the sounding of the shofar, the ram's horn(a biblical description). Yom
Kippur is described as a day on which the Israelites are to practice
self-denial (later understood to mean fasting and the refraining from several
other activities) and to seek expiation for their individual and communal
transgressions.
The second major category of Jewish holidays is the rabbinic
holidays. These are festivals or events which are not expressly mentioned in
the Hebrew Bible, but were developed later during the rabbinic period of Jewish
history.
One holiday that the rabbis developed--though did not
originate--is the holiday of Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah. Shemini Atzeret
is mentioned in the Torah, and so is an anomaly in the rabbinic holiday
category, but it was the rabbis who imbued it with meaning. Originally
described in the Torah as an eighth day of the pilgrimage festival of Sukkot,
the rabbis declared that Shemini Atzeret was to be celebrated as a holiday in
its own right. The second day was later called Simchat Torah, the day of
rejoicing in the Torah, on which the ritual reading of the Torah is completed
and begun all over again. (In Israel and in many contemporary liberal
communities, Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah are celebrated simultaneously on
one day, not two.)
The rabbis also added two public fast days to the Jewish
calendar, which are briefly mentioned in the Hebrew Bible: the fast of Esther
(Ta’anit Ester), in commemoration of the Jews’ fasting before Esther went in to
see the king (Esther 4:16), and the fast of Gedaliah, whose assassination ended
Judean sovereignty after the destruction of the First Temple (2 Kings 25:22-26;
Jeremiah 40-41).
The other holidays that the rabbis added are primarily
commemorations of events in Jewish history that occurred after the period of
the Hebrew Bible. For example, Hanukkah, the festival of Lights, celebrates the
victory of the Maccabees over the Hellenistic Syrians, and the fast of Tisha
B’Av commemorates the traditional date on which both the First and Second
Temples were destroyed.
The third major category of Jewish holidays consists of
post-rabbinic holidays. These mark significant events that occurred in the past
2000 years of Jewish history. One holiday that has had a noticeable evolution
is Tu BiShevat. Although based on a biblical tradition, and observed after the
destruction of the Temple, the character of Tu Bishevat took shape under the
guidance of the medieval kabbalists (mystics).
Over time it has developed into a popular Jewish “arbor day” with
spiritual overtones. Originally associated with planting crops and trees in
ancient times, this day has become associated with planting trees and holding
symbolic ritual meals characterized by eating fruits and nuts from the land of
Israel.
In more recent times, Yom
Hashoah, or Holocaust Remembrance Day, was created by the Israeli Knesset
(Parliament) to remember the approximately six million Jewish victims of the
Nazi Holocaust in Europe. In addition, Yom Ha’atzmaut, or Israel Independence
Day, marks the declaration of the existence of the modern Jewish State of
Israel in 1948. It is preceded in Israel by Yom Hazikaron, the Israeli version
of Memorial Day, set aside to remember the fallen soldiers who have given their
lives defending Israel since its establishment.