Shavuot About the
Holiday Guide
Holiday
Shavuot is a major Jewish festival commemorating the giving of the Torah at Mt. Sinai, and is one of the three pilgrimage festivals mentioned in the Torah. The other two are Pesach and Sukkot. The Hebrew date of Shavuot is the sixth and seventh of Sivan, this year beginning on Saturday, June 4 at sundown and ending on Monday, June 6 at sundown. In Israel, and in liberal Jewish observance, Shavuot is celebrated for one day. The word Shavuot means weeks and the holiday falls on the fiftieth day following the seven-week Sefirah count begun on the second night of Pesach – Sefirat Ha-Omer. Shavuot is known by several names, each of which reveals a facet of the holiday’s character. Chag Ha-Katzir, Festival of the (wheat) Harvest, and Chag HaBikkurim, Festival of the First Fruits, highlight the ancient agricultural side of the holiday, which has been revitalized in the modern state of Israel. Z’man Matan Torateinu, the season of the giving of our Torah, emphasizes the spiritual and communal aspect of the holiday. At the moment God gave, and the Jews accepted, the Torah at Sinai, a covenantal community was created. God had previously entered into covenantal relationships with individuals. When B’nai Yisrael pledged, “Na’aseh V’Nishma,” We Will Do, And We Will Hear,” the entire community became part of a committed relationship with God. Our Rabbis teach that all of the Jewish people were standing at Sinai, those alive at that time, those yet unborn, and those who during the course of their lives would choose to become Jews. Shavuot is linked to Pesach by the counting of the Omer, and without Shavuot and the receiving of the Torah, Pesach loses its essential conclusion. Without Shavuot, the dramatic liberation of Pesach would merely have let us out into the desert.