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What is the most impotentjewish festivel and why?

The most important Jewish festival is typically considered to be Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. It is a solemn day of fasting, reflection, and repentance where Jewish individuals seek forgiveness for their sins from both God and others. Yom Kippur is a time for introspection and spiritual renewal within the Jewish faith.


In 1973 what caused long lines at the gas pumps in the US?

The OPEC oil embargo of 1973 caused long lines at gas pumps in the US. This embargo was a response to Western support for Israel during the Yom Kippur War, leading to a severe shortage of oil and subsequent price increases.


What time does Yom Kippur end in New York City in 2010?

It usually ends roughly an hour after sunset. The time will be around 715 or so. Also depends on how fast or slow the person doing the prayers preaches and blows the shofar. The synagogue I go to goes pretty fast and the shofar is blown by 715. Others I've heard have gone till 730 or so


What is the festival of perfection in Hebrew?

The festival of perfection in Hebrew is called "Sukkot." It is a week-long Jewish holiday that follows Yom Kippur, where people build and dwell in temporary shelters called sukkahs to commemorate the Israelites' journey through the wilderness. Sukkot is a time of joy, celebration, and thanksgiving for the harvest.


When is the next blood moon for 2015?

The next total lunar eclipse will be the evening of September 27, 2015 as seen from the Americas, or around midnight in western Europe. It will be easily visible in western Europe, western Africa, all of South America and the eastern 2/3 of North America.HOWEVER...The term "blood moon" was rarely used before a Texas preacher named John Hagee wrote a book "Four Blood Moons" in 2013. Lunar eclipses will cause the Moon to turn red or orange, as sunlight refracted (bent) in the Earth's atmosphere and into the dark area of the Earth's umbra, or shadow. Lunar eclipses are absolutely predictable, happening like clockwork as the Earth and Moon travel in their respective orbits. There are generally two lunar eclipses per year, but because the alignment isn't perfect, sometimes we get two partial or penumbral eclipses instead of one total eclipse. Infrequently, we'll experience two or even three total lunar eclipses in sequence; a few times a century, we'll see a "tetrad" of four total eclipses in a row.John Hagee observed that these four total lunar eclipses in a row were going to approximately coincide with the dates of the Jewish holidays of Passover and Yom Kippur, and inferred that this was a cosmic "sign from God" that the end times were approaching.Now, it isn't unusual for Passover and Yom Kippur to coincide with lunar eclipses. Lunar eclipses can only occur at the full moon, and the Hebrew calendar is a luni-solar one; Passover and Yom Kippur are defined as being within a day or two of the full moon every year. It isn't even unheard of for the unusual "tetrad" of four total lunar eclipses might coincide with Jewish holidays; it happened in the late 1940's, for example.So, go ahead and enjoy the sight of the probably-copperish Moon at the total lunar eclipse the evening of September 27, two months from now, four days AFTER Yom Kippur.