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Fundraising Tuesday: All the New Years

August 13, 2024 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Where are we in our year?

It’s August. You may be taking a well-deserved vacation. If not, if you’re at work, probably the end of the calendar year is looming. Your nonprofit may be planning end-of-year appeals: a Fall appeal, one just after Thanksgiving, and one in the very last week of December. Sound familiar?

It’s August 2024. It’s an election year. For your cause, or for you personally, Tuesday, November 5 may mark the most important day to remember (not Tuesday, December 31). A new administration could mean your organization loses its federal grants, you lose your own bodily autonomy, and/or our nation loses its proud history of rule by the people. The election year may the most significant to you.

But what about the year that’s beginning in only a few weeks: the school year? If you run a school or an afterschool program, of if you’re a parent of school-age children, you may be aware of the other two dates, but the first day of school is the one that’s impending.

We live in many calendars at once. That’s no surprise. It’s nothing new, and we are used to keeping those different new years in mind. So how difficult would it be to pay attention to other people’s new years?

Different calendars, different years

Christian

Whether we realize it or not, the Gregorian calendar that most of us use most of the time is based on a Christian cycle. It is named after Pope Gregory XIII, who put it into place back in 1582.

New Year’s Day, January 1, is eight days after the purported birthday of Jesus into a Jewish family. Jews circumcise boy babies on the eighth day, and that is why January 1 is the Feast of the Circumcision on many Christian holiday calendars. Christian countries’  military and economic predominance led to the Gregorian calendar being the shared calendar we use in secular spaces.

Muslim

But January 1 is not the start of a new year for Muslims. The Muslim New Year is on the first day of the month of Muharram, What’s that, you say? It’s the first month of the Muslim year, the same way that January–named after a pagan god who looked backward and forward at the same time–is the first month of the Gregorian calendar.

When is the first of Muharram? If you’re trying to find it on the Gregorian calendar, you’ll have to look for it on different dates. That’s because the Muslim calendar is a lunar calendar, with twelve months of about 29 days each, adding up to a 354-day year. The calendar most of us are used to is a solar calendar, with 365 days (366 in leap years).

So, the Islamic New Year has already occurred, on July 7, 2024 (the first day of Muharram in the year 1446). The next Islamic New Year will be on or about June 26, 2025–eleven days earlier on the Gregorian calendar than it was in 2024. And so on every year.

Jewish

You may think that Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish year, is always sometime in September, and wonder why “it keeps moving around” compared to the Gregorian calendar. But in 2024, Rosh Hashanah begins on the evening of Wednesday, October 2! Why?

The Jewish religious year doesn’t follow the sun only, like the Christian one, or the moon only, like the Muslim calendar. Instead, it’s luni-solar. A regular year has twelve months of 29 to 30 days each, just like the Muslim years. But because certain holidays HAVE to occur during certain seasons–Passover in the spring and Sukkot in the fall for instance–Jews add an entire leap month every so often.

This one of those thirteen-month years. In 2023, Rosh Hashanah began the evening of September 15. In 2024, Rosh Hashanah begins on the evening of Wednesday, October 2. In 2025, it will start the evening of September 22. All of those dates are the first of the Jewish month of Tishrei, no matter what the date is on the calendar most commonly used.

Many cultures, many years

You have probably heard of the Chinese New Year. Next year (the Year of the Snake) starts Wednesday, January 29, 2025. But that is not the only Asian new year celebration!

The Tibetan New Year (Losar) starts Friday, February 28.

The Cambodian New Year (Chaul Chnam Thmey) begins Monday, April 14.

A little further west, in Asia Minor, the Persian New Year (Nowruz) occurs on the spring equinox, which in 2025 will be Thursday, March 20.

Click here for a list of 26 Completely Different New Year’s Days Around the World!

Happy New Years! What do nonprofits do with them?

Taking note of when different years start for people you know is a sign of respect. Just knowing about Rosh Hashanah, Nowruz, or lunar new years will be a step in the right direction. But once you know there are so many different years, what do you do with that awareness?

At minimum, I’d suggest, you can wish employees, clients, supporters, etc., a happy new year in a culturally appropriate manner. For instance, a traditional greeting for the Jewish new year is “Shanah tovah,” which means “A good year.” (But please don’t wish me a happy Yom Kippur!)

Two New Years book coverA step beyond that: start learning about the meaning of the new years and other holidays that your particular community observes, and what they do for those days. Children’s books are a good place to start. I recommend Two New Years, by Richard Ho, for a good introduction to Rosh Hashanah and lunar new years (and a valuable reminder that families can participate in more than one culture!).

Please consider, too, whether your policies enable people to celebrate their new years and other holidays when those important dates aren’t part of the Gregorian calendar. If you provide two weeks of paid vacation to all employees but some of your employees have to use nearly all those days for religious or cultural observance, consider what you can do to make your nonprofit more welcoming, diverse, and inclusive.

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When You’re Planning Meetings, Include Other Religions

August 12, 2019 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

Eid Mubarak

Did you know yesterday was a Muslim holy day?

Eid mubarak! That was the appropriate greeting for Muslims yesterday, Sunday, August 11, 2019, as they celebrated Eid al-Adha, one of the most important holidays of the year.

Because it was Sunday, most people in the U.S. would have no trouble avoiding schedule conflicts with Eid al-Adha this year. The secular calendar that most people use in the U.S. is based on the Gregorian calendar, created under the direction of Pope Gregory. Because of its Christian origins, it assumes that Sunday is not a work day.

But Muslims follow a lunar calendar, which means their holidays are NOT on the same date every secular year. Jews follow a lunisolar calendar: ditto. Other religions and cultures also follow their own calendars, so you won’t know the date of their holy days and holidays the way that, for example, everyone in the U.S. knows December 25 is Christmas.

Even if you have a printed or online calendar that mentions all the dates, how do you know whether that day is something that is merely marked (like Ash Wednesday for certain Christians), or taken off from work completely (like Easter)?

The Best Thing to Do is Ask

When you’re scheduling a meeting with a group of people, the best thing you can possibly do is ask ahead of time.

Of course, if you ask and someone says, “I can’t make it that day because of a religious holy day,” you have to be prepared to say, “Okay, let’s look for another date.” If you ask and then you say you’re holding the meeting anyway. think of the message you’ll be sending!

You can look up a calendar of holidays ahead of time and familiarize yourself with other people’s religious observances and cultures–but that is no substitute for asking the people you’re actually working with!

A Jewish Holy Day Calendar for 2019-2020

 

 

Here’s a guide to scheduling around the Jewish holy days that I thought you might find useful.   I didn’t write it, only edited it slightly and updated it each year, but I vouch for its accuracy.

Category I.     MOST JEWS PARTICIPATE.

Please do not schedule meetings around these dates.

ROSH HASHANAH (Jewish New Year) begins at sunset Sunday, September 29, 2019 and continues through Tuesday, October 1.

YOM KIPPUR (Day of Repentance) begins at sunset on Tuesday, October 8, 2019 and continues through Wednesday, October 9.  While Yom Kippur is a fasting day, meals are prepared in advance for the breaking of the fast at the end of 27 hours.

Typically, even some of the least religiously observant members of the
Jewish community do not work on Yom Kippur or Rosh Hashanah.   Please keep in mind that even though the holy day may begin at sunset, these are
home ritual centered holy days, so a great deal of advance preparation is
required.  In other words, please don’t schedule a meeting for the afternoon
preceding the holiday because I will be cooking!

PASSOVER (Celebration of Freedom from Slavery in Egypt) begins at sunset
on Wednesday, April 8, 2020; continues through nightfall on Thursday, April 16.   THE FIRST TWO DAYS (through Sunday evening, April 10, 2020) require refraining from work.    LOTS of cooking and preparation before this holy day.

—————

Category II.   Many observant Jews refrain from work.

I count myself as observant.

SUKKOT (Festival of Booths, or Tabernacles) begins at sunset Sunday, October 13, 2019 and lasts through Sunday, October 20.  THE FIRST TWO DAYS (through Tuesday, October 15, 2019) traditionally require abstaining from work.

SHMINI ATZERET (Eighth Day Assembly, ending Sukkot) begins at sunset on Sunday, October 20, 2019 and lasts through Monday, October 21.

SIMCHAT TORAH (Rejoicing with the Torah) begins at sunset on Monday, October 21, 2019 and lasts through Tuesday, October 22.

The LAST TWO DAYS of PASSOVER begin at sunset Tuesday, April 14, 2020 and last through Thursday, April 16.

SHAVUOT (Festival of Weeks, or Pentecost to our Christian friends) begins at sunset on Thursday, May 28, 2020; continues through Saturday, May 30.

TISHA B’AV (fast day marking the destruction of the ancient Temple in Jerusalem) begins at sunset on Wednesday night, July 29, 2020 and continues through Sunday, July 30.

—————–
Category III. Observance doesn’t require refraining from work.


HANUKKAH
(Festival of Lights) begins at sunset on Sunday, December 22, 2019 and continues through nightfall Monday, December 30.  Every night, candles on the Hanukkiah (eight-armed candelabra, sometimes called “menorah”) are lit.

PURIM – Begins at sunset on Monday, March 9, 2020; continues through Tuesday, March 10.

And a few other seasonal and historical holy days that I won’t mention, because enough already!  If you want to know more about the meaning of these holidays, you might consult www.jewfaq.org or the book Seasons of Our Joy, by Arthur Waskow.

[Dennis] A final note which I thought worth adding from my own experience: Even if someone (who might be Jewish) tells you “It’s no big deal” to schedule meetings and conferences on these days, doesn’t mean that that’s true for all Jews.  People maintain different levels of observance, and a more secular Jew may work on a day when I would not.

When in doubt, please ask!  I can’t speak for other Jewish consultants, staff, board members, and interns, but I know I always prefer to be asked.

Thank you!

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