See this linked page.
Jewish holidays do not fall on fixed dates on the secular calendar, so a holiday that falls on Oct. 3 this year will fall some other day next year. (All Jewish holidays move around the way Easter does on the Christian calendar.) In 2020, however, Succot starts on Oct. 3.
Jewish holidays do not fall on fixed dates on the secular calendar, so a holiday that falls on Oct. 3 this year will fall some other day next year. (All Jewish holidays move around the way Easter does on the Christian calendar.) In 2020, however, Succot starts on Oct. 3.
A calendar for 1927 containing all of the United States holidays can be found in the external link.
No, in fact Jewish people have no holidays tied to the western calendar at all.
According to the Jewish calendar, days start at sunset. Therefore, all holidays start at sunset.
D-Day is all I could find on the calendar, but I don't know if that's actually a holiday.
There is a book by Morris Epstein (available through Abebooks) called All About Jewish Holidays and Customs.
A calendar including all the major holidays can be found at any office supply store that carries personal planners, calendars, or organizers. Almost all retail calendars will include the major holidays, pre-written, into the dates.
chabad.org is a great site to find all information about Jewish traditions as well as holidays. It has extensive data which is updated for the current year i.e. 2012
The Google Calendar is very accurate, and doesn't contain any immediately visible errors. One can assume that the Google calendar is able to keep track of any important holidays all over the world, as well as American national holidays and religious holidays.
Holidays foreign and domestic, moon cycles, sunrise sunset; all depending on the calendar and location.
You can use this link (http://www.calendarlabs.com/online-calendar.php?y=2013) to customize your own calendar. Be sure to check the "include holidays" box.