Take a trip to the heart of Israel you'll see the restoration of an ancient tradition of the Jewish People where thousands of people from all nations of the world voyage to Jerusalem to celebrate the Sukkot Festival (Feast of Tabernacles).
Mistakenly confused with Sukkot and sometimes referred to as the last days of Sukkot, the holiday of Simchat Torah is actually an independent holiday that begins the moment the holiday of Sukkot ends.
The day after the Jewish High Holiday of Yom Kippur, Jewish communities in Israel and around the globe start building in preparation for the Festival of Succot.
A major Torah scholar from the 19th century confronted a deadly cholera outbreak with an innovative public welfare strategy that remains applicable during the corona pandemic.
Concern for our material possessions does not represent indulgence, but the opposite. We learn this lesson from our forefather Jacob and the Festival of Sukkot.
US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman was among the 100,000 who attended the annual 'Birkat Kohanim' - Priestly Blessing - at the Western Wall in Jerusalem during Sukkot 2019.
Despite the fickle weather across Israel over the last few days, 130,000 Israelis took to the road on Wednesday, visiting national parks and nature reserves throughout the country.
Prime Minister Netanyahu hosted lone soldiers on Sunday in his sukkah at the Prime Minister's Residence in Jerusalem and spoke with their parents by video.
Sukkot is the holiday of joy and Israelis just love to eat! In Jerusalem's famous Mahane Yehuda market, one experiences a real feeling of the upcoming holiday.
Tens of thousands of Jews gathered on the Sukkot holiday at Jerusalem's Western Wall, arriving from all over the world to receive the Birkat Kohanim (Priestly Blessing).
With the 'super blue blood moon' arriving in 2018 for the first time in 150 years, it's a great time to look back to 2015, when the fourth blood moon in a row showed up during a Jewish holiday.