High Holidays - BmoreJewish.com
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With Chabad of Downtown
Holiday Date
October 2 - 12, 2024
ב"ה

Shanah Tovah!

Celebrate the High Holidays among friends and connect with your inner self. Services will be interspersed with explanations and page guidance. In short, you will feel at home. Wishing you and yours a very happy and sweet new year!

About
Services Schedule
Rosh Hashanah Dinner
High Holiday Appeal
Donate
Increase your generosity of tzedakah (charity) during the High Holiday season. “Repentance, prayer, and charity take away the severity of the decree”.
Upcoming events
Oct. 04, 2023
Downtown’s newest attraction will disappear in just a few days!
Whether you’re downtown for leisure or work a Sukkah is there for you; just minutes from downtown businesses, hospitals and ...
Oct. 04, 2023
Inner Harbor Sukkah @ Pier 4 Young Jewish Adults 20s & 30s Join for an evening of brain-teasing fun under the stars!
Oct. 05, 2023
Downtown’s newest attraction will disappear in just a few days!
Whether you’re downtown for leisure or work a Sukkah is there for you; just minutes from downtown businesses, hospitals and ...
Oct. 06, 2023
Downtown’s newest attraction will disappear in just a few days!
Whether you’re downtown for leisure or work a Sukkah is there for you; just minutes from downtown businesses, hospitals and ...
Oct. 07, 2023
Shmini Atzeret Morning & Yizkor Memorial Services
Join us for a lively holiday morning Davening, some inspirational learning.
Shachrit - Morning Services: 10:00 AM
Yizkor - Memorial ...
Oct. 07, 2023
Simchat Torah Eve
Arvit - Evening Service: 7:30 PM
Hakafot - Torah Celebration: 8:00 PM
Oct. 08, 2023
Simchat Torah Day Services, Hakafot &Torah Reading
Shachrit - Morning Services: 10:00 AM
Kiddush Following Shachrit: 11:00 AM
Hakafot & Torah Completion & Commencement: 11:30 AM
What Are the High Holidays?
The two-day holiday of Rosh Hashanah is the head of the Jewish year, the time when G‑d reinvests Himself in creation as we crown Him king of the universe through prayer, shofar blasts, and celebration. A week later, the High Holidays reach their crescendo with Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement). Like angels, we neither eat nor drink for 25 hours. Dressed in white, we pray in the synagogue—united as one people, children of One Father.

Thank you to the Solomon, Coopersmith, Juter & Lewin families
for making High Holidays with Chabad of Downtown possible.