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Rosh Hashanah

Honey drizzling into a dish near two red apples on a red surface.

Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish new year, is the first of the High Holy Days or Yamim Noraim (Days of Awe). It weds seriousness with celebration and begins the 10 days of repentance that culminate in Yom Kippur. The new year focuses our attention on themes of judgment, repentance, memory, and the divine presence in the world. At the same time, Rosh Hashanah invites us to celebrate birth and creation on many levels. The liturgy suggests that Rosh Hashanah commemorates the creation of the world. Family-oriented services often include a birthday cake for the world—a big hit for kids of all ages! We dip apples in honey to emphasize the sweetness of starting the cycle of seasons once again, and eat round challot to remind us of the cycles of life. The Torah and Haftarah readings for the holiday also address birth and the preciousness of all human life. These stories remind us that the arrival of every child—each and every one of us—is a promise for a renewed world. We renew ourselves at Rosh Hashanah in order to reconnect with this promise and to help ourselves fulfill it in the year ahead.

Latest Rituals

Rosh Hashanah meal with symbolic foods based on Sephardic customs

Apple whole and sliced on a red tray with a honey dipper.
A meditation for Tashlikh focused on embodying the ritual of casting off.
person is standing on a rock overlooking a large body of water during a sunset
Because aren’t we all / swirling dust, flashing shards / from a broken vessel of hope / too vast be contained?
two hands holding burning sparklers next to each other
God, without boundary, / please widen our gaze.
clouds blowing across a blue sky
Eheyeh asher eheyeh / shimmers / with the possible.
close up of two pages of a Hebrew book
You want to leave in peace. / I want to write your name with love.
woman with backpack facing a wintry lake and mountains
A person walks through a sunlit autumn forest with leaves on the ground and rays filtering through the trees.
A person wearing white holds and reads a Hebrew book.

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