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What are the three major festivals of Jews?
Passover, July 7 and tents.

Festivals refer to important memorable days in life. It is a kind of folk culture created by people all over the world to meet the needs of production and life, and it is an important part of the world folk culture. All ethnic groups and regions have their own festivals.

Three major festivals of Jews

The three main festivals of Jews are Passover, July 7th and Tent of Meeting.

1. Passover is to commemorate the night before leaving Egypt. The angel killed all the firstborn sons in Egypt, but went through the houses of the Israelis and saved all the Israelis.

2. The festival of tabernacles, also known as the Collection Festival, starts in Jewish cities on June 15 every year and lasts for 7 or 9 days.

July 7th, also known as Pentecost, celebrated the harvest of wheat and dedicated the first ripe wheat to God.

berlin jewish museum

Located at the junction of Fifth Avenue and 92nd Street in Berlin, Germany, the Jewish Museum in Berlin has become a representative building in Berlin. The design background of this museum is that Germany has never stopped reflecting on history after World War II. Germany's attitude towards history has made Germans, French and even Europeans feel relaxed and safe. In order to show its determination to "never forget history", Germany also built a Holocaust Memorial Hall for Jews. In June 5438+February 65438+May 2005, the Jewish Memorial Hall in Berlin was finally completed.

The Jewish Museum in Berlin is a museum of Jewish history in Europe. Its purpose is to record and show the history of Jews in Germany for about 2000 years, including the history of persecution and slaughter of Jews by German Nazis. The latter is a very important part of the exhibition, such as the commemoration of the Holocaust. Its exhibits are mainly historical relics and life records, with as many as 3,900 pieces, of which 1600 pieces are original.

The museum's multi-faceted and tortuous shape, like a dagger in architectural form, opens the door for people to visit justly, and comprehensively shows the life course of German Jews for 2,000 years, their outstanding contributions to German art, politics, science and commerce, and their tragic history in the 20th century.

Daniel libeskind's Berlin Museum (Jewish Museum) is a rare work that condenses the pains and troubles of life. Rectangular buildings with repeated sharp corners and forced compression in width are full of life-like painful expressions and contain the crisis of dissatisfaction and resistance.