Major Religious Holidays/Holy Days

2009-2010 School Year

August 2009
22 (Sat.) Ramadan (first day)- Islamic

September 2009
18 (Fri.) Rosh Hashanah (begins at sunset)- Jewish
19 (Sat.) Rosh Hashanah (first day)
20 (Sun.) Rosh Hashanah (second day)
20 (Sun.) Eid al-Fitr (end of Ramadan)- Islamic
27 (Sun.) Yom Kippur (begins at sunset)- Jewish
28 (Mon.) Yom Kippur

October 2009
02 (Fri.) Sukkot (begins at sunset)- Jewish
03 (Sat.) Sukkot (first day of seven days)
17 (Sat.) Diwali (Festival of Lights)- Hindu

November 2009
12 (Thurs.) Baha'u'llah's Birthday (Commemorates Founder's Birthday)- Bahá'í
27 (Fri.) Eid al-Adha (Festival of Sacrifice at the end of Hajj)- Islamic

December 2009
08 (Tues.) Bodhi Day (Buddha's Enlightenment, Rohatsu)- Buddhist
11 (Fri.) Hanukkah (begins at sunset; first candle lighting)- Jewish
12 (Sat.) Hanukkah (first day of eight days)
18 (Fri.) Al-Hijra/Muharram (New Year)- Islamic
25 (Fri.) Christmas- Christian

February 2010
15 (Mon.) Nirvana Day (Commemorates the death of Buddha)- Buddhist
17 (Wed.) Ash Wednesday- Christian
26 (Fri.) Mawlid al-Nabi (Muhammad’s birthday)- Islamic
27 (Sat.) Purim (begins at sunset)- Jewish
28 (Sun.) Purim
28(Sun.) Holi (Spring festival)- Hindu

March 2010
1 (Mon.) Holi (Spring festival)- Hindu
21 (Sun.) Naw-Ruz (Baha’i New Year)- Bahá'í
28 (Sun.) Palm Sunday- Christian and Orthodox Christian
29 (Mon.) Passover (Pesach; begins at sunset; first Seder)- Jewish
30 (Tues.) Passover (first day of eight days; second Seder)
31 (Wed.) Passover (second day)

April 2010
02 (Fri.) Good Friday- Christian & Orthodox Christian
04 (Sun.) Easter- Christian & Orthodox Christian
21 (Wed.) Ridvan (Declaration of Baha'u'llah; 12 days; begins at sunset 4/20)- Bahá'i

May 2010
21 (Fri.) Vesak (Buddha Day, celebrates the birth of Buddha, Visakah Puja)- Buddhist
23 (Sun.) Pentecost- Christian



Explanatory Notes
(Please note: Islamic holidays, like Jewish holidays, traditionally begin at sunset of the previous evening)

• Ash Wednesday: Begins Christian observance of Lent; name derives from use of ashes to signify penitence.
• Baha'u'llah's Birthday: Commemorates the birth of the founder of the Bahá'í faith in 1817.
• Bodhi Day: Buddhist celebration of the Enlightenment of Buddha, ca. 596 B.C.E.
• Christmas: Christian celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ.
• Diwali: Festival of Lights; one of four seasonal celebrations in India.
• Easter: The day Christians celebrate Jesus' resurrection from the dead.
• Eid al-Adha: Islamic festival of sacrifice; commemorates Abraham’s faith, and is also a memorial to the dead.
• Eid al-Fitre: Islamic festival of the breaking of the fast of Ramadan.
• Good Friday (Holy Friday): The day Christians commemorate Jesus' crucifixion.
• Hanukkah: Jewish festival of lights; eight day commemoration of the rededication of the Second Temple in 165 B.C.E. A candle is lighted on each evening.
• Holi: Spring festival; a Hindu carnival occasion featuring bright colors, pilgrimages, and bonfires.
• Nirvana Day: Commemorates the death of Buddha.
• Palm Sunday: Begins Christian Holy Week; palms recall the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. Orthodox Christian observances are the same as those observed in the West, but are based on the Julian (Eastern) calendar rather that the Gregorian (Western) calendar.
• Passover (Pesach): Eight day celebration marking the deliverance of the Jews from slavery in Egypt; Seder ceremonies retell the story of the "Exodus."
• Pentecost 50 days after Easter, when Christians celebrate the coming of the Holy Spirit on the disciples of Jesus. Sometimes referred to as the “birthday of the Church.”
• Purim: Feast of Lots. Celebrates deliverance of Jews in ancient Persia from a plot to destroy them. The scroll of Esther is read.
• Ramadan: The ninth month in the Islamic calendar; 30 days of strict fasting from sunup to sundown in honor of the first revelations to the Prophet Muhammad.
• Ridvan: Commemorates the declaration of Baha'u'llah to his followers in 1863. Work is suspended for the Bahá'í faithful on the 1st, 9th, and 12th days.
• Rosh Hashanah: Jewish New Year beginning 10 days of penitence concluded on Yom Kippur.
• Sukkot: Jewish festival of booths (or tabernacles) and the fall harvest; takes its name from the booths used by Israelites during desert wanderings. First two days and last two days have special observances.
• Yom Kippur: Jewish day of atonement; most solemn Jewish holy day, devoted to prayer, fasting and repentance.


For more information please contact Rev. Mark Duntley at duntley@lclark.edu or 503-768-7082

Return to Chapel Home Page