"booths" The Feast of Booths or Tabernacles
(Hebrew, "booths") — The Feast of Tabernacles celebrating the fall harvest and commemorating the desert wandering of the Hebrews during the Exodus. See sukkah.
Seven-day Jewish fall festival beginning on Tishri 15 commemorating the sukkot where Israel lived in the wilderness after the Exodus; also known as hhag haasiph/, the Festival of Ingathering (of the harvest). See also calendar.
Heb. (Feast of Tabernacles) This holiday is a time for thanking God for bringing the Israelites through the wilderness to the Land of Milk and Honey.
The Feast Of Booths (or Tablernacles)
(Hebrew, "Booths"). Eight-day autumn festival commemorating the Exodus and celebrating the harvest. See Jewish Holidays: Sukkot.
autumn festival marking the harvest season and commemorating the wandering of the Israelites in the wilderness for 40 years following the Exodus from Egypt
On this holiday, one gives thanks for all things that grow and remembers the difficult escape from Egypt by Jews in Biblical times. Children especially enjoy helping build a "sukkah." Built from branches and other natural materials, the sukkah is a booth or hut open at the top so that one can see the stars from inside. Children enjoy sitting inside and even having a meal there. Fruit and cake are traditional.
Jewish Feast of Tabernacles which celebrates the harvest and the protection of the people of Israel as they wandered in the wilderness dwelling in tents.
(Feast of Booths): An eight-day Jewish festival of booths (or tabernacles) and the fall harvest. The name refers to the booths (sukkot) used by Israelites during desert wanderings and constructed in the fields during the harvest season. It is a time of thanksgiving for God's presence in creation and among the Jewish people. The Eighth Day (Shmini 'Atzeret) is considered both the end of Sukkot and a distinct festival. (Judaism)
Literally booths. A festival commemorating the wandering in the desert and the final harvest.
A seven-day festival commemorating the years that the Jews spent in the desert on their way to the Promised Land. Also called the Feast of Tabernacles or Feast of Booths.
Harvest festival which commemorates the 40 years in the wilderness on the way from Egypt to Israel.
(Soo - KOAT) The Feast of Tabernacles Booth, temporary dwelling One of 3 pilgrim feasts
(Jewish) Feast of Tabernacles celebrating the harvest and the wandering of Israel in the wilderness dwelling in tents
Feast of Booths, one of the three pilgrimage festivals.
Lit. "booths." One of the three Pilgrim Festivals marked by building makeshift shelters called "sukkot" commemorating the wandering of the Israelites in the wilderness on the way to the Promised Land.
Means 'booths' -- this is the festival of tabernacles which commemorates G-d's protection on Israel when she lived in tents under His protection.
A temporary hut or booth, built for the holiday Sukkot. Click here for details
Hebrew - "booths". One of the three main Jewish pligrimage holidays that lasts eight days starting with the 15th of Tishrei (Just after Yom Kippur). Celebrated but eating (and living) out side in a booth or Sukkah. Also the traditional time for the repurification/rededication of the Temple.
(Booths, Tabernacles)--Festival of Booths (Hebrew Chag HaSukkot) to be observed the fifteenth day of the seventh month. Lev 23:34, Yo 7:2.
(Hebrew for "booths, tabernacles") A seven-day Jewish fall festival beginning on Tishri 15 commemorating the sukkot where Israel lived in the wilderness after the exodus; also known as hag ha'asiph, the Festival of Ingathering (of the harvest).
An eight day festival (the festival of Booths) coming five days after Yom Kippur and culminating in Shemini Atzeret and then Simchas Torah. It is marked by the building of a temporary structure called a SUKKAH which is roofed over by branches and in which meals are to be taken and one may sleep therein. This is to recall the dwellings in the Exodus. ALIT/TALLIS: The prayer shawl with its prescribed fringes used in daily prayer. The fringes are a reminder of the Mitzvot.
Sukkot (סוכות or סֻכּוֹת sukkÅt, also transliterated as Succoth or Sukkos, (Hebrew: "booths")) and also known as the Feast of Booths, the Feast of Tabernacles, Tabernacles, or the Feast of Ingathering, is a Biblical pilgrimage festival that occurs in autumn on the 15th day of the month of Tishri (early- to late-October). In Judaism it is one of the three major holidays known collectively as the Shloshet ha-Regalim (three pilgrim festivals), when historically the Jewish populace traveled to the Temple in Jerusalem.