Sept 2010 to Sept 2011 is the year 5771.
Sept 2011 to Sept 2012 is the year 5772.
As I write this, it is September 2011. The Jewish year of 5772 will begin in a few days.
No, the Jewish year has 365.25 days, just like the Gregorian, but the calendar is calculated differently. The Gregorian calendar is Solar, meaning it's based on the Sun; the Jewish calendar is Lunisolar, meaning its based on the Moon, but periodically corrected to match the Sun. By contrast, the Islamic calendar is Lunar and has only 354 days in a year.
While there is still a traditional counting and observance of the Sabbatical Year, the counting of the Jubilee year has been lost.
Roughly 1942. They started being liquidated from the Lodz ghetto
That would be the Jewish Calendar. Subtract the current civilian year of 2011 from the current Jewish year of 5770 and you get the biblical date from the "creation" of Adam which was 3760 years before the birth of Christ, the second "Adam".
The Jewish Temple was destroyed in the year 70 AD.
Rosh Hashana is the Jewish New Year.
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
The Jewish calendar puts the current year at 5770, counted since creation.
The Jewish year counts the years from the traditional date of the creation of the world.
The Jewish new year, Rosh Hashanah, will begin Sep. 8th this year at sunset and end Sep. 10th at nightfall. For more info, go to jewfaq.org
The Jewish new year
Rosh Hashanah is the Jewish New Year.