Sukkot has started on the 15th of Tishrei in the Hebrew calendar
each year for the past 3,000 years more or less.
In 2011, that date will coincide with sunset on the evening of October 12.
No, it is a Jewish festival.
sukkot is the holiday of harvest.
i have no idea lol
Yes!! Along with Shavuot and Sukkot
In the Sinai Peninsula, when God gave the Torah, in which Sukkot is one of the festivals (Leviticus ch.23).
Sukkot
Not as serious as Rosh Hashanah, and not as laughter-filled as Purim.
Sukkot in 2012 starts on Monday, the 1st of October and continues for 7 days until Sunday, the 7th of October.
All three of the major Jewish festivals are related to harvest (especially Sukkot). Passover is a thanksgiving to God for the Exodus and the annual barley-harvest, Shavuot is a thanksgiving to God for the Giving of the Torah and the annual wheat-harvest, and Sukkot is a thanksgiving to God for the yearly ingathering of grain.See also the Related Link.The Jewish festivals
The Summer Harvest festival is called Shavu'ot (שבועות) and the Autumn Harvest festival is called Sukkot (סוכות)Answer:Sukkot is not a festival of harvest. It is the festival of ingathering; and those are two different things.
The autumn harvest festival of Sukkot (סוכות) occurs in Tishrei. The summer Harvest festival of Shavu'ot (שבועות) occurs in Sivan.
Sukkot means booths or huts. The festival of Sukkot is commanded in the Torah (Leviticus ch.23). It commemorates the protection which God gave us in the wilderness, and it gives thanks for the annual ingathering of grain. It also marks the beginning of mentioning the rainy season in our prayers.