Browse every parsha and holiday reading in one place, with full Hebrew text, trope marks, and audio.
Your Hebrew calendar for Torah readings and Jewish holidays
Whether you are preparing for a Bar or Bat Mitzvah, leining on Shabbat morning, or simply curious about the Jewish calendar, this page puts every parsha, holiday, and special reading at your fingertips. Browse by month, find the date you need, and open the full reading to start practicing with trope cantillation marks and audio.
Weekly Torah portions at a glance
Every Shabbat parsha is listed on the calendar so you can see what is coming up, plan ahead, and jump directly into the reading page to start practicing.
Jewish holidays and special readings
Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Sukkot, Pesach, Rosh Chodesh, fast days, and every other occasion that carries a Torah or Haftarah reading appears right on the calendar.
Israel and diaspora reading cycles
Switch between Israel and diaspora locale settings and choose your preferred triennial cycle so the calendar always matches the reading schedule your community follows.
One click from date to reading
Every parsha and holiday on the calendar links to the full TropeTrainer reading page, complete with text, trope markings, and audio, so you can go from browsing to practicing in seconds.
Frequently asked questions
What does the TropeTrainer Hebrew calendar show?
The calendar displays Gregorian and Hebrew dates side by side, with weekly Torah portions, Jewish holidays, Rosh Chodesh, fast days, and other special occasions overlaid on each day. Every reading event links to its full practice page.
How do I find this week's Torah portion?
The calendar opens to the current month by default. Look for the nearest Shabbat date to see the parsha listed there, then click it to open the full reading with text, trope cantillation marks, and audio.
Does the calendar support Israel and diaspora reading differences?
Yes. You can switch between Israel and diaspora locale settings using the options menu. The calendar will update to reflect the correct parsha schedule, since Israel and diaspora communities occasionally read different portions on the same Shabbat.
Can I open a Torah or holiday reading directly from the calendar?
Yes. Parsha names and holiday titles on the calendar are clickable links. Each one opens the corresponding TropeTrainer reading page where you can follow along with the Hebrew text, listen to the chanting, and practice at your own pace.
Continue exploring
Open a sample Torah reading with full Hebrew text, trope marks, and audio to see how TropeTrainer works.
Work through guided lessons on Torah trope cantillation, from basic symbols and melodies to advanced phrase patterns and exercises.