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Passover, also known as Pesach, dates back to at least the 5 th century B.C., and today ... Maror refers to bitter herbs eaten during the course of the Passover meal, once on its own and ...
Passover, also known as Pesach, dates back to at least the 5 th century B.C., and today ... Maror refers to bitter herbs eaten during the course of the Passover meal, once on its own and ...
Traditionally, Jews take part in a seder, or Passover meal, to open the weeklong observance. Passover celebrates the emancipation of the Israelites from Egyptian slavery, as described in the Bible's ...
We eat the maror, the bitter herbs, as a way of remembering the bitterness of our enslavement, and we lean to our left while drinking wine on Passover, to remind ourselves that today we are free ...
since Christ is the Passover Lamb; bitter herbs (a lettuce mix with arugula, which children often find bitter, tossed with olive oil and lemon works well), remembering the bitterness of the ...
On Thursday, April 3, American Jewish Committee (AJC) Detroit held its annual Global Diplomatic Interfaith Seder at Adat ...
MIAMI — For many South Florida Jews, Passover is a holiday marked by ... or unleavened bread, bitter herbs (to represent the bitter slavery endured) and drink four cups of wine or grape juice.