Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks. And I'm assuming time off also depends on where it falls during the week?
Anonymous wrote:There's a range of practices but if you want to find the widest sweep, don't schedule anything after noon on the 20th, or at all on the 21st and 22nd. All Jewish holidays start at sundown the night before the official date listed on the regular calendar. Therefore Rosh Hashana starts around 6 or 7 pm on the 20th. More observant people -- even those who only attend services on the High Holidays -- may leave work around 2 or 3 to get home early for a festive meal before going to synagogue. And then be in synagogue each of the next two days. Same story for Yom Kippur except it is the evening before plus one day.
Anonymous wrote:If Rosh Hashana begins at sundown on Sept. 20th, then I'd take day off on Sept 21.
Anonymous wrote:Every year I end up having to reschedule work meetings that I've mistakenly scheduled on Jewish holidays. I'm trying to pre-emptively avoid this for next year by dropping the 2017 holidays on the calendar now, but am confused by exactly how they work.
If Rosh Hashana begins at sundown on Sept. 20th, and the actual dates are Sept. 21-22, when do people typically take off to observe? If it matters, said people are the Jewish equivalent of Christmas and Easter Catholics.![]()
Thanks for your help.