cellio: (mars)
[personal profile] cellio
I was recently asked about this, and I don't know what the current thinking is.

The question of when an astronaut observes Shabbat (while in space) is well-understood. [1] But what happens when we colonize other planets and your hometown is on Mars? Do you count six Mars-days and observe the seventh as Shabbat? How long is a month (and how do you decide which moon)? Is it still desirable to stay in sync with Earthly seasons, or will that go out the window? If you follow the sun as locally experienced, what happens when that causes hardship? (Does the lunar colony observe one ~29-day Shabbat every seven months?) There must be commentary on this by now from sources other than Wandering Stars, but I don't know what the popular opinion is.

[1] I know of three opinions for the astronaut in space: follow your hometown, follow the city from which you launched (your port of departure, like for ships), or follow Jerusalem. All of these involve a ~25-hour Shabbat every seven days, like on Earth, even though your orbit might cause you to see a 90-minute day. But the astronaut is, by definition, just visiting.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-05-03 03:13 am (UTC)
geekosaur: spiral galaxy (galaxy)
From: [personal profile] geekosaur
Er, weeks don't correspond to any natural time division; they're purely a man-made (or HaShem-made, depending on viewpoint) invention. Not even to lunar months (which are 29+ days, not 28). And the ancient Jews were more or less the only culture that kept anything like a week, much less Shabbat. (Babylonian kings occasionally declared "shappatu", but not on a regular schedule.)

IIRC the Rabbis of the Talmud understood this and specifically treated the week as an artificial time division instituted by HaShem specifically for Jews.

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