Religious Holidays

On this page:

What is a religious holiday?

What, exactly, is a religious holiday? How are they defined? When you look at your own religious tradition, you may think the answer is straightforward, but when you start to dig into the question more deeply—and begin to look at traditions other than your own—things become much more complex very quickly.

The fact is, even within the same religion, religious holidays are both defined and experienced quite differently by individuals, especially when those individuals come from distinct family backgrounds—to say nothing of distinct cultural contexts. How much more so, then, when we look at different religions, do we find even greater variance: Western societies heavily influenced by monotheistic Judeo-Christian-Islamic traditions think about religious holidays much differently than Eastern societies heavily influenced by Hinduism, Buddhism, and Confucianism, for example.

Why we recognize a variety of religious holidays

Yet this multivalent understanding and experience of religion is not reason to avoid the category of “religious holiday” altogether. For most religions, specific “holy” days are a key aspect of religious practice, belief, and belonging, and an important means by which individuals and their communities reinforce their identities and their relationships—with each other, with family and friends across time and space (including the deceased), and with the Divine.

Therefore, for many adherents of a religious tradition, the freedom and support to observe these holidays are of central importance to one’s self-understanding; and particularly for college students, this becomes a means of reinforcing one’s relational identity even when far from home, family, and culture.

Learn more about religious holidays

To this end, we have established this calendar of important religious holidays from a wide variety of traditions. It is not meant to be comprehensive—for that, please see Interfaith Calendar, which includes both current dates and definitions of a vast number of different religious celebrations. Instead, here, we have sought to reflect our own particular student population, and the specific needs of our community.

We encourage you to peruse this list and learn more! The Pluralism Project is another excellent website in this regard. Here, you will find not only information about various religious traditions, but also locations of places of worship all across the United States.

We hope you appreciate and enjoy these resources; if you have any questions, or would like to talk further, please contact our office.

Calendar of religious holidays

Current year: These dates are for the 2026–27 Academic Year.

Holidays in 2026

HolidayDatesFaith
First of Muharram Monday, June 15 (begins at sundown) -Tuesday, Jun. 16 Islam
Ashura Thursday, June 25 (begins at sundown) -Friday, Jun. 26 Islam
Krishna Janmastami Friday, Sept. 4 Hinduism
Rosh Hashanah (New Year) Friday, Sept. 11 (begins at sundown) - Sunday, Sept. 13 Judaism
Ganesh Chaturthi Monday, September 14 Hinduism
Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement) Sunday, Sept. 20-Monday, Sept. 21 Judaism
Sukkot Friday, Sept. 25 (begins at sundown) - Fri., Oct. 2 Judaism
Shemini Atzeret/Simchat Torah Friday, Oct. 2 (begins at sundown) – Sunday, Oct. 4 Judaism
Navratri Sunday, Oct. 11- Monday, Oct. 19 Hinduism
All Saints day Sunday, Nov. 1 Christianity
Dios de los Muertos (Day/s of the dead) Sunday, Nov. 1-Monday, Nov. 2 Mexico/Catholicism
Diwali Sunday, Nov. 8 Hinduism
Advent Sunday, Nov. 29- Thurs., Dec. 24 Christianity
Hanukkah Friday, Dec. 4 (begins at sundown) - Saturday, Dec.12 Judaism
Feast of Immaculate Conception Tuesday, Dec. 8 Christianity
Bodhi Day/Rohatsu (Japan) Tuesday, Dec. 8 Buddhism
Our Lady of Guadalupe Saturday, Dec. 12 Christianity
Christmas Friday, Dec. 25 Christianity
Kwanzaa Saturday, Dec. 26 – Friday, Jan. 1, 2027 African-American
Feast of the Holy Family Sunday, Dec. 27 Christianity

Holidays in 2027

HolidayDatesFaith
Solemnity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Friday, Jan. 1 Christianity
Christmas (Orthodox) Thursday, Jan. 7 Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Lunar New Year Saturday, Feb. 6 Confucianism / Taoism / Buddhism
Ramadan Sunday, Feb. 7 (begins at sundown) – Monday, Mar. 8 Islam
Ash Wednesday / Beginning of Lent Wednesday, Feb.10 Christianity
Laylat al Qadr Friday, Mar.5 (begins at sundown) - Saturday, Mar. 6 Islam
Maha Shivaratri Saturday, Mar. 6 Hinduism
Eid al Fitr Tuesday, Mar. 9 (begins at sundown) - Wednesday, Mar. 10 Islam
Orthodox Great Lent Monday, Mar. 15 – Saturday, May 1 (Orthodox) Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Holi Monday, Mar. 22 Hinduism
Purim Monday, Mar. 22 (begins at sundown) - Tuesday, Mar. 23 Judaism
Paschal Triduum Thursday, Mar. 25-Sunday, Mar. 28 Christianity (Catholic/Protestant)
Good Friday Friday, Mar. 26 Christianity
Easter (Western) Sunday, Mar. 28 Christianity
Passover / Pesach Thursday, Apr. 22 (begins at sundown) – Thursday, Apr. 29 Judaism
Orthodox Good Friday Friday, Apr. 30 Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Pascha (Orthodox Easter) Sunday, May 2 Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Yom HaShoah Monday, May 3 (begins at sundown) - Tuesday, May 4 Judaism
Pentecost Sunday, May 16 (Western) Christianity
Eid al-Adha Sunday, May 16 (begins at sundown) - Monday, May 17 Islam
Shavuot Thursday, June 10 (begins at sundown) -Saturday, June 12 Judaism
Pentecost (Orthodox) Sunday, June 20 Christianity