Agencies-Gaza post
What is the Israeli Shavuot holiday?
Shavuot: is the descent of the Torah or the feast of weeks for the Jews.
Shavuot, or the Torah’s descent, comes on the “sixth day of the month of Sevan” on the Hebrew calendar, and is known as the “Eve of the Weeks” because it occurs seven weeks after “Jewish Easter” and lasts two days.
The Day of Weeks is one of the three Jewish pilgrimages commemorating the Yakoum of fruit, the Torah’s descent on Jews, and the receiving of the first five Torah scriptures: “Composition, exit, Lao, numbers, and dedication,” also known as “The Travels of Shari’a, which are considered the most important Torah travels,” and they were presenting the first to the temple.
The Solomon Temple was ornamented with green branches, and the initial fruits were introduced to the temple by Jews, and the Jewish National Synagogue presently owns the Solomonic Temple”, because the Torah was given on the first day of the week at Sinai, and the boys must begin studying Hebrew on that day, while Easter and the parachute are the other two pilgrimages.
Shavuot is celebrated for three reasons, according to Jews, the first is that God lowered Moses and the Torah, which is why this holiday is observed as a day of study, and numerous studies are presented.
The second reason is that it is the day of wheat maturity, which began counting from Easter and concludes with Shafoot, and the third reason is that it is the maturity of the crop when the first fruits of the spring season are collected.
Jews send their fruits to the Temple in Jerusalem on this day, they also recite “Safaraut” from their Tawrat in synagogues during Eid prayers. Every year on this day, Jews plan to break into the Holy Al-Aqsa Mosque and perform their “religious rituals and ceremonies” in the “Al-Buraq al” section.
On this day, they also decorate synagogues in various villages and cities, some of whom observe throughout the Eid night, blessing the descent of the Torah, as they believe, and adults read long chapters of the Torah and other readings developed by Jewish scholars and senior thinkers throughout the ages, traditionally among religious and hard-line Jews.
The Jewish Day of Weeks comes on June 5th, so Jews, escorted by occupation police, began storming the Al-Aqsa Mosque early in the morning to conduct their prayers.