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Rosh Hashanah

Home Living Humanistic Judaism Celebrate Holidays Rosh Hashanah

Rosh Hashanah is the beginning of the 10-day Jewish new year festival, which culminates with Yom Kippur.
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Humanistic Jews see Rosh Hashanah as a time for renewal, reflection, and new beginnings. Our focus is on the affirmation of human power and human dignity. Rosh Hashanah is a time to consider the possibilities for change, improvement, and happiness that we can create for ourselves as human beings.

Each Humanistic Jewish community celebrates Rosh Hashanah in its own unique way. Most communities create a service booklet that contains inspiring meditations, stories and poems that are relevant to our lives today and to the Rosh Hashanah themes of new beginnings, forgiveness, and change. Most communities also have beautiful music and interesting talks, and include the traditional blowing the shofar (ram’s horn) as part of the celebration. For a schedule of Rosh Hashanah celebrations in SHJ communities, follow this link.

The ceremony of Tashlikh, which traditionally  involves visiting a moving body of water and symbolically casting off one’s sins by throwing bread crumbs into the water, often is included in a Humanistic Rosh Hashanah observance. Humanistic Jews creatively incorporate Tashlikh into their holiday calendar. Tashlikh allows Humanistic Jews to reflect on their behavior, to cast off behaviors they regret  and to vow to be better people in the year to come.

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Proud to be Jewish/part of a Jewish family — yet not comfortable with religion? Welcome to the majority! Most Jews do not believe in God as described by the Bible. Secular Humanistic Judaism is honest about it.We keep the best parts of Judaism — meaningful lifecycle events, rituals to foster connectedness to the natural universe and to humankind, learning, laughter, ethics, holiday celebrations, and so much more — while only ever saying what we believe and never saying what we don’t believe.

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