Welcome to the David Victor Vector Blog

Welcome to the David Victor Vector blog. This is blog that covers religious observances around the world international affairs and global business. This blog describes religious holidays for most major religions as well as raising issues dealing with globalization, international business ethics, cross-cultural business communication and political events affecting business in an integrated world economy. I look forward your discussion and commentary on these articles and subjects. Enjoy!
Showing posts with label 2014 holidays. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2014 holidays. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

FALL 2014 RELIGIOUS HOLIDAYS

For several years now, I have posted as a reference overviews for many of the religious observances for Bahai'ism, Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, neo-Paganism, Sikhism and Wicca. This is intended to allow those teaching or otherwise following a semester academic calendar to  accommodate students, faculty and staff who wish to observe them.

As September approaches again, we are now coming upon the start of the cycle of holidays once more. For many of these holidays (those from religions that follow calendars that differ from the Gregorian calendar), the dates in the secular year will differ but the main content of the posts should not. 

To that end, I would like to give the dates for the holidays in the next few months paralleling the Fall semester in most US universities (I am, after all, a professor in the United States).

I have noted only holidays to which I have already written a post. These are those holidays that I would argue are the most important holidays within their religion. Admittedly, there are others which may be of strong importance to those who observe them. Thus, I have not included, for example,  the Christian holiday of Advent Sunday on December 1. This does not, however, mean that such holidays are unimportant to those who wish to observe them, which should be kept in mind for religious accommodation purposes.

Similarly, I have left out some holidays that are regionally of importance within a religion but not of such significance beyond the regional context..  For example, I have left out the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe (December 12) which is primarily observed among Mexican Catholics. Likewise excluded is Onam (this year on September 7) which is primarily observed among Hindus from Kerala state in India.

Note also that observance varies according to practice. For example, Reform and Reconstructionist Jews may observe a holiday for one day that Orthodox and Conservative Jews observe for two days. Some streams of Hinduism may observe Diwali for five full days, while others may do so for one, two or three days. While all Muslims recognize Ashurah as a holiday, it holds much greater significance in Shi'a tradition than in most other branches of Islam. Because of this, two people of the same faith may observe the same holiday for different lengths. These are explained for each holiday in the connected blog post. The main point here, though, is that we should recognize such differences in practice as legitimate.

FALL 2014 RELIGIOUS HOLIDAYS

The list below gives the date for 2014, the name of the holiday, the main religion observing the holiday and the previous David Victor Vector post on that holiday.While the dates on the links may be from an earlier year, most of these are regularly updated, and all are corrected for the date when it changes.


September 24 sunset through September 26 sunset
Rosh HaShanah
Judaism


September 23
Autumnal Equinox/Mabon
Wicca, Neo-Paganism, Neo-Druidism

September 30-October 4
Durga Puja
Hinduism
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2011/10/durga-puja.html



October 3 sunset through October 4 sunset
Yom Kippur/Day of Atonement


October 4 sunset through October 5 sunset (depending on the sighting of the moon)
Eid al-Adha/Festival of the Sacrifice
Islam

October 8 sunset through October 15 sunset
Sukkot/Festival of Booths/Festival of Tabernacles 
Judaism
            http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2011/10/sukkot-hoshanah-rabah-shemini-atzeret.html


October 16 sunset through October 17 sunset
        Shemini Atzeret
        Judaism

October 17 sunset through October 18 sunset
Simchat Torah
Judaism

October 20
Birth of the Bab
Bahai’ism

October 23-27
          Devali
          Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism

October 31 sunset through November 1 Samhain
Wicca, Neo-Paganism, Neo-Druidism
November 1
  All Saints Day

November 1
Reformation Day
Lutheranism, some Protestant sects
November 2
All Souls Day/Día de los Muertos
Roman Catholicism
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2011/10/samhain-all-saints-day-dia-de-los.html


November 3 sunset through November 4 sunset (depending on the sighting of the moon)
Ashura
Islam, especially Shi’a
              http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/11/ashura-2012.html


November 12
Birthday of Bahá'u'lláh
Bahai'ism
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2011/11/birthday-of-bahaullah.html


December 8  
Bodhi Day
Buddhism


December 16 sunset through December 24 sunset
Chanukah

December 21
Yule/Winter Solstice
Wicca, Neo-Paganism, Neo-Druidism
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/12/yule.html


December 25
Christmas
Western Christian faiths (Roman Catholicism, Protestantism)
 http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2011/12/christmas-day.html


A FEW CLOSING REMARKS

Before I go on, I should note that all holidays in Islam begin with the actual sighting of the moon. Therefore, the dates given for Eid al-Adha and Ashura are the likely dates for the holiday depending on the sighting conditions. Some debate exists regarding where the moon sighting should occur (e.g., locally or in Mecca). This may also cause observance to fall on a day before or after that indicated in this list. The date given here does not intend to suggest that one or the other interpretation is correct; this date is merely intended to be information for the date most widely observed in North America.

In all likelihood, I have overlooked a holiday or observance. Please feel free to share this with me.

While the links to many of the holidays above were posted in earlier years, they are regularly updated as the holiday approaches for this year. The dates in this post are (to the best of my knowledge) correct for 2014.

Finally, I would like to ask you to spread the word about this blog. If you are not formally a follower, please do add your name to the list through your Google, Twitter, AIM, Netlog or Yahoo account.


Thanks so much!

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Winter and Spring 2014 holidays

What follows is a list of the upcoming religious holidays for the Winter and Spring 2014 semesters.

Beginning in Fall 2011, I have posted overviews of many of the religious observances for most of the major religions. In the following semesters,  I posted a list of the religious holidays as well. Positive response has led me to do so again for the Winter and Spring 2014 semesters.

As the Winter 2014 semester begins, I would like to refer back to the posts for these holidays made last year.  For many of these holidays (those from religions that follow calendars that differ from the Gregorian calendar), the dates in the secular year will differ but the main content of the posts should not. 

To that end, I would like to give the dates for the holidays in the next few months paralleling the Winter, Spring and Summer semesters in US universities (I am, after all, a professor in the United States).

WINTER AND SPRING 2014 RELIGIOUS HOLIDAYS

The list below gives the date for 2014, the name of the holiday, the main religion observing the holiday and the previous David Victor Vector post on that holiday. Some of the links here are older posts that have been updated posts for the current year. Other of these holiday posts will be entirely new posts (for example, the upcoming Asian New Year of the Horse).  I have indicated that this will be posted at a later date in those instances.


January 7
Eastern Orthodox Christmas
Eastern Orthodox Christianity
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2011/12/christmas-day.html

January 19
Timkat (Ethiopian Orthodox Christian)
Ethiopian Orthodox Christian
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2011/12/christmas-day.html


January 31-February 3
Asian Lunar New Year: Year of the Horse
Buddhism, Taoism
Many non-Buddhist observers celebrate the holiday as well
                  http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2014/01/year-of-horse-business-impact.html


  February 2
  Candlemas (Roman Catholic, Epsicopalian, Anglican)
  Presentation of the Lord (Evangelical Lutheran)
     Imbolc (Wicca, Neo-Paganism, Neo-Druidism)
     http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/05/pentecost.html


February 8 (or February 15, depending on tradition)
Festival of Lord Buddha's Renunciation (celebrated by some in place of Paranirvana)
Buddhism
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/02/parinirvana-or-nirvana-day.html

   March 3
   Clean Monday
   Eastern Orthodox Christianity
    http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/04/easter-and-pascha.html

March 5
Ash Wednesday
Roman Catholic, Episcopalian, Anglican, Lutheran, Presbyterian, Methodist Christianity
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/02/lenten-season.html


Sunset March 15 through sunset March 16
Purim
Judaism
            http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2013/02/as-part-of-my-ongoing-on-upcoming.html

March 17
St. Patrick's Day
Roman Catholic Christianity
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/03/saint-patricks-day.html

March 17-18
Holi
Hindusim
              http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/03/holi.html


Sunset March 19 through end of March 20
Ostara
Wicca, Neo-Paganism, Neo-Druidism
               http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/03/ostara.html


Sunset March 20 through sunset March 21
Naw Ruz
Bahai'i, Zoroastrianism, Alawite Islam, Alevi Islam, Bektashi Islam



Sunset April 14 through sunset sunset April 22
(first two nights may affect attendance at school and work)
Passover
           Judaism
           http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/04/passover.html

April 18
Good Friday
Roman Catholic and Protestant Christianity
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/04/easter-and-pascha.html

April 20
Easter
Roman Catholic and Protestant Christianity
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/04/easter-and-pascha.html

April 20
Pascha (Orthodox Easter)
Eastern Orthodox and Coptic Christianity
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/04/easter-and-pascha.html

Sunset April 20 through sunset May 2 (first and last days may affect attendance at school and work)
First Day of Ridvan
Bahai'i
                 http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/04/ridvan.html

May 1
Beltane
Wicca, Neo-Pagan, Neo-Druidism
               http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2013/04/beltane.html

May 15
Theravada Buddhist New Year
Theravada Buddhism
 http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/02/parinirvana-or-nirvana-day.html

Sunset June 3 through sunset June 5
Shavuot
Judaism
            http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/05/shavuot.html

June 8
Pentecost (Note: Western and Orthodox are on the same day in 2014)
Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Coptic, and most Protestant Christianity
http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/05/pentecost.html

June 21
Litha
Wicca, Neo-Pagan, Neo-Druidism
 http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2014/06/midsummers-day-litha-and-saint-johns-   eve.html            

Sunset June 27 through sunset July 27
Ramadan
Islam
             http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/07/ramadan.html

Sunset July 27 through sunset July 29
Eid al-Fitr
Islam        
             http://davidvictorvector.blogspot.com/2012/07/ramadan.html

A FEW CLOSING REMARKS


In all likelihood, I have overlooked a holiday or observance. Please feel free to share this with me.

Relatedly, I am as yet uncertain whether I should repost each holiday with the 2014 occurrence or just leave it be. Please let me know what you think.

Some controversy exists over the specific dates of some holidays in various traditions. For example, I have given both the dates for Paranirvana which differ in the Mahyana and Theravada Buddhist traditions. I am not endorsing one or the other of these by posting this only once with a parenthetical indication of the other.

Likewise, considerable difference of opinion exists as to what is the proper date for the beginning of holidays in Islam, with some holding that the date is that of when the moon is sighted in Mecca while others with the date that the moon is sighted in the specific location where one lives (e.g., a different day for those in the Western hemisphere than those in the Eastern hemisphere.). I am not endorsing one or the other of these by posting the date that is here, and I have explained to the best of my ability the difference of opinion in the blogpost itself. Please take this as a good-faith effort toward information rather than an opinion on the matter (of which I am attempting here to be neutral).  Relatedly, all holidays in Islam depend on the actual sighting of the moon. If the moon is not sighted, the holiday date is adjusted. The dates here presume that the moon will be sighted on the date indicated.

Finally, I would like to ask you to spread the word about this blog. If you are not formally a follower, please do add your name to the list through your Google, Twitter, AIM, Netlog or Yahoo account at

http://www.google.com/friendconnect/signin/home?st=e%3DAOG8GaAeRmgH2L%252BUeY%252BLu6lVd1YrbF8X3UJMKCg4Wep9KQ9iGZ1uXGPQPK7inBrDpqbrEQXYp%252FmEoAUOKtl348Yyg8AX80Fm7mBM1eFVGrE2C5Sv2d04gDEN6iuMFYf7UIKzHs2B5VHGbWsAUJrtMJLFySobOschNfd6QBizOhB8YLFC7GIfG4Pz%252BKRvJ5h%252FuHnIgLeYGJpaeOqU%252FzQ%252B5g2ut%252FRAs4WsnyvkK%252BVFHXz7U593oGNYTwc%253D%26c%3Dpeoplesense&psinvite=&subscribeOnSignin=1

Thanks so much!