5769 - until the sun goes down on the 18th of September, when it will be 5770.
There is no such month on the Jewish calendar as September-October. The Jewish calendar is an ancient lunar based calendar which does not coincide with our modern calendar. Hence, Jewish holidays fall at different times each year when compared to the modern calendar. The months of Elul and Tishrei usually fall around September and October. This year, for example, the Jewish month of Elul began on August 21, 2009 and ended on September 29, 2009. The Jewish month of Tishrei bega on September 30, 2009 and will end on October 18, 2009. The Jewish month of Chesvan then begins on the 19th of October.Answer:Tishrei contains 30 days and corresponds to late September-mid October.
It was 5769 up until Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish New Year which this year began on the 18th of September in the secular calendar; so, according to the Jewish calendar, it is now 5770.
In September (24th) of 2014, the Jewish year will be 5775. Year 1 on the Jewish calendar began the sixth day of creation according to the book of Genesis.
The Jewish Temple was destroyed in the year 70 AD.
House of Life The Old Jewish Cemetery in Prague - 2009 was released on: USA: 6 April 2009
Rosh Hashana is the Jewish New Year.
It is 5774 (for autumn 2013 until autumn 2014). (the Jewish new year, Rosh Hashanah, falls in September or October, and that's when the year changes).
Stephen W. Massil has written: 'The Jewish Year Book 2005' 'Jewish Year Book 1998 (Jewish Year Books)' 'Jewish Travel Guide, 1992' 'The Jewish Travel Guide 1997 (Annual)' 'Jewish Year Book 2006' 'The Jewish Year Book 1996' 'Jewish Year Book 2004' 'The Jewish Year Book 1999'
As I write this, it is September 2011. The Jewish year of 5772 will begin in a few days.
The Jewish new year is the holiday Rosh Hashana which literally translates to "head of the year".
It's the Jewish New Year
Jewish New Year