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Today is:
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rosh hashana, yom kippur, sukkot, simchat torah, shmini atzeret,chanukah,hanukkah,purim,pesach,passover,shavuot, lag ba'omer,tisha b'av |
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Yom Ha-Atzmaut,
Israel's Independence Day
Every year since 1948, Israel celebrates its
independence on the fifth day of Iyar, which is the formal Hebrew
Calendar date of the establishment of the State, when the young
country's "provisional government" read and signed a Declaration of
Independence in Tel Aviv. The secular date of that monumental day was
May 14, 1948.
In Israel Yom Ha'atzmaut is a national holiday. Government
offices, banks, educational institutions, and most commercial
establishments are closed for the day. In the synagogues Yom
Ha'atzmaut is marked with the recital of the Hallel prayer (Palms of
Praise), and around the country the Israeli government and local
municipalities conduct official ceremonies. Israelis celebrate Yom
Ha'atzmaut in a variety of ways, with parades, nighttime festivities
and public shows offered for free by the municipalities and the
government. Many spend the night dancing Israeli folk dances or singing
Israeli songs, and during the daytime thousands of Israeli families go
out on hikes and picnics. Yom Ha'atzmaut is concluded with the
ceremony of granting the "Israel Prize" recognizing individual Israelis
for their unique contribution to the country's culture, science, arts,
and the humanities.
For American and other Diaspora Jews, celebrating Yom Ha'atzmaut
has been a way to express solidarity with the State of Israel and to
strengthen their alliance with it. Often, however, celebrations are
postponed to the Sunday following Yom Ha'atzmaut in an effort to
bolster participation.
Mazor Guide to Yom Haatzmaut brings you much more about the holiday, its
meaning and its traditions... See the links below.
MazorGuide Recommended Reading
Letters from Jerusalem 1947-1948 (Paperback)
~ by Zipporah Porath
Battleground: Fact & Fantasy in Palestine (Paperback)
~ by Samuel Katz
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