| Friday | October 2 – 21 Tishrei 7th day of Sukkot Hoshanah Rabbah - The Day Before Shemini Atzeret Note: Click here and here for more information about this special day. What follows is only the information relevant to preparations for the holiday of Shemini Atzeret. In some communities, it is customary that those who will be reciting Yizkor tomorrow (i.e., anyone with a deceased parent) light a 24-hour yahrtzeit candle before the onset of the holiday. Click here for a summary of the laws of Yom Tov, and here for the complete Shemini Atzeret Guide. Women and girls light Shabbat and holiday candles — preferably in the sukkah — in order to usher in the holiday. Click here for the text of the blessings, and here for local candle lighting times. Festive evening prayers followed — in most communities — by the hakafot dancing. After the prayers, we enjoy a holiday meal in the sukkah. (Tonight and the next day, no blessing is made on sitting in the sukkah. Click here for more on this topic.) |
| Shabbat | October 3 – 22 Tishrei Shemini Atzeret Morning service. Full Hallel is recited. Yizkor is recited by those who have a deceased parent. Before the start of the Musaf amidah, the gabbai announces aloud: "Mashiv haruach u'morid hageshem!" ("He causes the wind to blow and the rain to fall"), and from this prayer forward, and lasting until the first day of Passover, those words are inserted into the second blessing of the amidah. The opening paragraphs of the repetition of the amidah contains a special prayer, Geshem ("Rain"), beseeching G‑d to grant bountiful rain, and officially launching the Mediterranean (i.e., Israeli) rain season. The Priests bless the congregation with the Priestly Blessing during the Musaf prayer. Festive lunch meal in the sukkah. Sometime before sundown, it is customary to go into the sukkah, have a bite to eat, and "bid farewell" to its holy shade. After dark (tzeit hakochavim), women and girls say "Baruch Hamavdil ben Kodesh leKodesh" and light candles — in the home — for Simchat Torah, using an existing flame. Click here for the text of the blessings, and here for local candle lighting times. Click here for the complete Simchat Torah Guide, and here for all you need to know about hakafot. Festive evening prayers followed by hakafot — jubilant singing and dancing with the Torah scrolls. After the prayers and hakafot, we enjoy a festive holiday meal (no longer do we eat in the sukkah). When the 1st day of Simchat falls on Shabbat, the kiddush for the eve of the second day includes these five elements, in order: blessing on the wine, blessing on the sanctity ("kiddush") of the day, blessing on fire (as we do each week after Shabbat ends), Havadalah ("separation" blessing marking the close of the Shabbat), and the Shehecheyanu blessing (see above). ("Yaknahaz" is an acronym for the Hebrew words for "Wine, Day, Candle, Separation, Season"). We dip the challah in honey. |
| Sunday | October 4 – 23 Tishrei Simchat Torah Morning service. The Priests bless the congregation with the Priestly Blessing during the Shacharit (morning) prayer. Full Hallel is recited, followed by the hakafot. Festive lunch meal. |
| Shabbat Bereishit | Friday night October 9 – 28 Tishrei Friday evening - Shabbat Bereishit Women and girls light Shabbat candles. Click here for the text of the blessing, and here for local candle lighting times. Kabbalat Shabbat and evening prayers. Kiddush is recited, hamotzi is made and a festive Shabbat meal is enjoyed. |
| Shabbat | October 10 – 29 Tishrei Shabbat Bereishit - Shabbat Mevarchim Morning service: Normal Shabbat prayers. Shabbat lunch meal. The leaders of Chabad-Lubavitch would say: "As one establishes oneself on Shabbat Bereishit, so goes the rest of the year." Tzikdatecha is not said during Mincha Afternoon prayers After nightfall, evening services. Perform the Havdalah ceremony. After the evening services, it is a Chabad custom for the gabbai to announce: "V'Yaakov halach lidarko!" ("And Jacob went on his way!") |
ב"ה
Join the Discussion