Yes.
The last time was November 28, 2013. It will never happen again in our lifetime.One physicist has calculated that, if the Jewish calendar is not revised, Thursday, November 28 will not fall during Hanukkah again until the year 79811, once it has drifted all the way around the cycle of the Gregorian calendar and back to NovemberHowever, since the Jewish day does not begin at midnight, but on the sunset before it, there will be two more years in which Hanukkah and Thanksgiving partially overlap, with the first night of Hanukkah beginning in the evening of Thanksgiving. These will be the evenings of Thursday, November 27, 2070 and Thursday, November 28, 2165.
They never happen at the same time. The latest Diwal can start is mid November. The absolute earliest date Hanukkah can start is the last few days of november, but 90% of the time, it starts in December. A calendar of Diwali dates shows that it won't even be close to Hanukkah (with two weeks of each other) for at least the next 50 years.
Hanukkah goes according to the Hebrew calendar and can occur at any time in late November or the month of December. Thanksgiving is in late November.
Thanksgiving is celebrated in the fall. (November)
fall,fall begins in November(which is thanksgiving) and winter starts in December(christmas)
It happened in 2002 and will happen again in 2013.
Thanksgiving Day is celebrated in the United States on the fourth Thursday of November. Thanksgiving is a day to give thanks. While the United States Thanksgiving began with the pilgrims 1621, it is not necessarily a religious holiday. Canada celebrates their Thanksgiving on the first Monday of October. The two are not related. Hanukkah is a religious holiday observed by people of the Jewish faith throughout the world.
Thanksgiving is in the season of fall.
No. No one is forced to do anything. Hanukkah is celebrated voluntarily because it's a joyful festival and a religious occasion of thanksgiving to God.
Thanksgiving is in the month of November, which is a fall month. It is the one day our nation gives thanks to God for all that we have.
Hanukkah begins on the 25th of the Hebrew month of Kislev ... the third month of the year that began in the Fall with Rosh Hashana. That places the beginning of Hanukkah typically somewhere between late November and mid-December. In 2010, the first day of Hanukkah coincides with December 2.