Celebrate the High Holidays among friends and connect with your inner self. Services will be interspersed with explanations and page guidance. In short, you will feel at home. Wishing you and yours a very happy and sweet new year!
Special Info and Options
This year will be unlike any other. Our mission is to be here for you, and
provide you with the most meaningful, authentic and uplifting High Holiday
experience possible. To achieve this we will be providing a number of High
Holiday options, which you may view below.
Traditional High Holiday Services: Our cantor will lead us
in socially distanced, but spiritually uplifting entire holiday service. There
will be limited, socially-distanced seats available, and no walk-ins will be
allowed. You must reserve a seat for each service you plan to attend in person.
Masks will be required.
Outdoor Shofar Blowing: At multiples times during the second
day of Rosh Hashana we will be providing a 20 minute outdoor service that will
include a Shofar Blowing, several selected prayers, and short words of
inspiration.
Spiritual Seats: For those who have always reserved a seat
for the Holidays but will be unable to attend in person; we are offering you the
option to still be part of our service. By purchasing your Spiritual Seats, the
Chazzan will include your names in the prayers, and you will be helping support
Chabad, thereby giving you the sense of belonging and the powerful Divine merit
of Holiday attendance.
Holiday Gift & Prayer Book: We will be offering a
taste of the Holidays with a give-away of home made honey cake, apples and
honey, plus a beautifully printed Holiday Guide of Prayers and Insights that you
will be able to use for your own home-bound Holiday Service.
Pre-Holiday Classes & Inspiration: We will be offering
classes and DIY training to inspire your own prayers at home as well as
recording and sending out the High Holiday Sermons before the holiday.
The two-day holiday of Rosh Hashanah is the head of the Jewish year, the time when G‑d reinvests Himself in creation as we crown Him king of the universe through prayer, shofar blasts, and celebration. A week later, the High Holidays reach their crescendo with Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement). Like angels, we neither eat nor drink for 25 hours. Dressed in white, we pray in the synagogue—united as one people, children of One Father.