No Where...or...Now Here...you decide.
Rosh Hashana is the Jewish New Year.
No, Yom Kippur is the holiest day of the Jewish year.
-- Day of Remembering -- Day of Bugling -- Jewish New Year
Rosh Hashanah.
The weekly day of rest is the Shabbat, from Friday sundown until Saturday after twilight.Prayer:Jews pray three times every day of the year. On Shabbat the prayers are longer, but it is not the only day of prayers each week.
There is no Jewish Temple as it was destroyed in the year 70BCE. If you are referring to modern day Jewish houses of worship, which are called Temples by some groups, they are places of prayer, study, and community celebrations.
The Jewish day of rest is Shabbat, from Friday sundown until Saturday after twilight.The Jewish day of worship is every day of the year. Three public prayer services are held every single day. Longer services are on Shabbat and festival mornings.
Different religions and cultures celebrate different new years. For example, Chinese New Year is different from Jewish New Year, and both are different from the new year of the Western calendar in which New Year's Day is January 1.
Yom Kippur (the Day of Atonement) is called the holiest day in the Jewish year, during which we fast and pray at great length. However, in terms of relative stringency, the weekly Shabbat has greater holiness.
In September (24th) of 2014, the Jewish year will be 5775. Year 1 on the Jewish calendar began the sixth day of creation according to the book of Genesis.
Jewish isn't a language.