There are around 25 weeks (177 days) between the first day of Passover and the first day of Sukkot.
These three holidays are Passover, Shavuot, and Sukkot. Passover falls in the early spring. Falling exactly seven weeks after Passover is Shavuot.It occurs at the time of the late spring harvest. Sukkot mostly falls in the mid-autumn.
Rosh Hashana is generally around September, as a celebration of the Jewish new year. Sukkot is a few weeks after that, to remember what happened to us in the desert on the way to Israel Passover is in the spring, and it is to remember leaving Egypt.
Shavuoth is the fiftieth day after the second day of Passover.
Shavuot ("Weeks"), seven weeks after Passover.
Traditional Jews do not work on the Sabbath or any Holy day: 1 Rosh Hashanah - The Jewish New Year 2 Yom Kippur - Day of Atonement 3 Sukkot - Feast of Booths (or Tabernacles) 4 Pesach - Passover 5 Shavuot - Feast of Weeks - Yom HaBikurim
Pentecost is also the Greek name for Jewish Feast of Weeks (Shavuot), falling on the 50th day of Passover
There is no holiday 15 days after Passover.Answer:15 days after the first day of Passover, is the first of Iyar (the first day of the Jewish month of Iyar). The first day of every Jewish month is a minor holiday.
Shavuot is a Jewish holiday that commemorates the giving of the Torah to the Jewish people at Mount Sinai. It is observed seven weeks after Passover and marks the end of the counting of the Omer. It is a time for study, prayer, and eating dairy foods.
The three holidays where the Bible (the Torah) commands going to Jerusalem are Passover, Shavuot ( Festival of Weeks) and Sukkot (Feast of Tabernacles). See Exodus 23:17, Exodus 34:23, Deuteronomy 16:16).
One of the great Jewish theologians of the early 20th century, Franz Rosenzweig, arranged the 3 great Jewish festivals in a triangle. He identified Passover with the creation of the Jewish people, Shavuot (the Feast of Weeks or Pentecost) with God's revelation to the Jewish people, and Succot (the fall Feast of Booths) with God's redemption of the Jewish people.Of course, each of the festivals has elements of creation, revelation and redemption built into it. Passover celebrates the exodus of the Jews from Egypt. Prior to the exodus, God was revealed only to a few individuals. With the miracles of the exodus, God was revealed to the whole people. And those miracles redeemed the people from slavery. Passover remembers all of this. The liturgy of the Passover seder re-enacts the exodus so that each Jew can feel that he (or she) was there and was personally redeemed.
The question refers to the holiday of "shah-VOO-oat", a Hebrew word meaning "weeks". The holiday begins seven weeks after Passover, which places it in April or May of the common business calendar.
Shavuot - 7 weeks after Passover