Fall Holidays

For a full list of High Holiday services and meal times click HERE

The High Holidays: The Cornell Hillel Experience

  • The Cornell Hillel High Holiday experience combines traditions from home with unique components of campus life.
  • As early as the spring before, students prepare for the following fall, forming leadership committees for each of the respective religious groups on-campus, Kesher (Reform), Koach (Conservative), and Kedma (Orthodox).
  • In partnership with Cornell Hillel’s full time and part-time Rabbinic staff, students plan festive meals, coordinate walks to services, and recruit greeters to welcome attendees.
  • Services are student-led; students organize services, lead prayers, chant from the Torah and Haftorah portions, conduct special learning sessions, and write d’var Torahs (speeches reflecting on the holiday and Torah portion). The results are a meaningful holiday experience unlike any you've ever experienced.
  • Details about this year's services and holiday meals can be found here.

Rosh Hashanah
  • Rosh Hashanah is the Jewish New Year, the beginning of a time of reflection and repentance for the Jewish people. Rosh Hashanah is a time when Jews reflect on their actions and try to make amends with each other and G-d. In synagogue, the shofar is sounded. We eat apples and honey to symbolize a new year pure, happy, and free from past transgressions.
  • At Cornell, Hillel offers students the opportunity to celebrate as a community with meals and services. Leading up to the holiday, students and staff hand out apples and honey on Ho Plaza (if the timing is right, students have hand-picked the apples at the local orchard). The holiday kicks off with a festive campus-wide dinner. This past fall, the theme was New Year’s Eve- complete with confetti and top hats for more than 500 students. Services are offered across campus for different denominations.
Yom Kippur
  • Yom Kippur is the Day of Atonement. It is often considered the holiest day of the Jewish year. This day of fasting, prayer, and introspection begins the evening before with Kol Nidre, a prayer that asks for absolution from vows, and ends with the Neilah prayer.
  • At Cornell, Yom Kippur begins with the opportunity for students to gather together for a pre-fast meals. Each of the three services take place across campus, and at the end of Yom Kippur, students gather for communal break-fasts.
Sukkot
  • Sukkot is a week-long fall festival. The sukkah, the non-permanent outdoor hut, is meant to recall the time the Israelites spent wandering in the desert. Sukkot was also once a holiday of agricultural thanksgiving, and this is celebrated with the holiday's other great ritual items: the lulav and etrog.
  • There are sukkot on West campus at the CJL, and on North campus at Appel Commons. There is also a sukkah on Ho Plaza, run by Chabad, where passers-by can recite the blessings over the lulav and etrog.
  • Shemini Atzeret and Simchat Torah
  • Shemini Atzeret is the final day of festivities at the end of Sukkot. It is followed by Simchat Torah, the holiday that marks the conclusion of the annual reading of the Torah and its beginning again--amid dancing, song, and celebration. Students take great care in planning special learning sessions and celebrations.
Hanukkah
  • Hanukkah commemorates the victory of the Jews over the Syrian Greeks in 164 BCE, and is celebrated by lighting a hanukkiah, or menorah, for eight days, eating latkes, and playing dreidel.
  • At Cornell, you can light a menorah on Ho Plaza with President Skorton, or in your residence hall (carefully and with proper fire hazard precautions!). Enjoy sufganiyot (jelly donuts) and latkes with your friends as the fall semester winds to a close. Happy Hanukkah!







* View: Full | Mobile