As Jewish people around the world prepare for yet another Passover with many of us still isolating due to the pandemic, we are faced with unique challenges and questions. While strictly following the guidelines of the CDC, how are we to prepare with limited access to communal resources? How to celebrate the Seder alone? How can those of us quarantining celebrate the Festival of Freedom with our movement restricted? Find answers to all this and more ...
Join us for the Pesach Seder
Celebrate Passover with 2 options: an in-person Seder with hand-baked Shmurah Matzah, wine, and a wonderful dinner spiced with unique traditional customs or a Seder-at-home kit with Matzah, wine, and all the other key elements.
What is Pesach?
The eight-day festival of Passover is celebrated in the early spring, from the 15th through the 22nd of the Hebrew month of Nissan. Passover (Pesach) commemorates the emancipation of the Israelites from slavery in ancient Egypt. Pesach is observed by avoiding leaven, and highlighted by the Seder meals that include four cups of wine, eating matzah and bitter herbs, and retelling the story of the Exodus
The absolute deadline for eating chametz is the morning before Passover, it is forbidden to eat chametz until the close of the festival in eight days.
Sell and Burn Chametz before
March
26 2021, 12:29 PM
Since we cannot burn or sell chametz on Erev Pesach this year due to \r\n the sanctity of Shabbat, the burning of the chametz will take place on Friday and the selling of the chametz will take place (the latest) on Friday.