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Scrawled Shortcuts through the Research Maze

Fall is not only the academic new year; it is also the new year for Jews, who observe the holiest days of Jewish liturgical time at this season: Rosh HaShana (the New Year) and Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement).

Dictionary of Jewish Usage

But is it the high holidays, or High Holy Days, and are these capitalized or lower-cased?  See this handy dictionary for some guidance.
Ref 296.03 S823d 

Dictionary of the Jewish Religion 

Rosh HaShana marks the new year.  But by whose count?  Under “Calendar,” find a formula for converting Gregorian to Jewish calendar years.  After Rosh HaShana (Sept 13), we’re in the year 5768 since the Creation of the World.
Cornell Room 296.03 O98o

Reader’s Guide to Judaism

That said, how do Jews square the 5768 years of Jewish time with the billions of years of scientific time since the Big Bang?  See this useful collection of bibliographic essays, under “Science and Religion”.
Cornell Room 296.03 R286r 

The Jewish Religion: A Companion

Why do some Jews celebrate Rosh HaShana for two days, and others for one?  It has to do with sightings of the New Moon, which determine the Jewish months.  See this reference, under “Rosh HaShana”
Cornell 296.03 J17b

JPS Guide to Jewish Traditions

No two Jewish holidays could be more different than Yom Kippur and Purim (Jewish Mardi Gras).  But by scrambling the letters, Jewish mystics uncovered Purim inside Yom Kippur.  What could they have been thinking?  This source gives a clue. (And after all, Mardi Gras culminates in Lent).
Cornell Room 296.4 E36j 

Encyclopedia Judaica 

A favorite pastime among Jewish philosophers is pondering reasons for  Jewish rituals.  For 10 good reasons to blow the Shofar, or ram’s horn, whose unique sound is ritually heard at the High Holy Days, look here under “Shofar.”
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