Ahavas Sholom – an Historic Landmark and Sacred Space

Newark's Last Remaining Synagogue born of the Great European Migration at the turn of the 20th Century

145 Broadway, Newark, NJ 07104
Phone: 973-485-2609 | Email: cahavassholom@optimum.net

Events

Saturday, March  27th and Sunday, March 28th at 8:00 pm

Free Zoom 1st and 2nd Night Community Passover Seders

Break matzah, drink wine, and eat Karpas, Maror, and Charoset together with your friends at Ahavas Sholom for our second annual Free Zoom 1st and 2nd Night Community Passover Seders.

We don’t have to be spiritually distant as we socially distance ourselves from Covid-19.


Join us online on Saturday, March  27th at 8 pm, for the 1st Night Community Passover Seder, as we contemplate and celebrate our liberation from slavery and the Exodus from Egypt.

Zoom Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84611779874
Meeting ID: 846 1177 9874

You can also sign onto Zoom by phone for the 1st Night Community Passover Seder.  
Phone Number: 1-646-876-9923  

Meeting ID: 846 1177 9874


Join us online on Sunday, March  28th at 8 pm, for the 2nd Night Seder

Zoom Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86108226247?pwd=Z3QzQ1d4SVlYVlpQdzE4c25MUWJIQT09                       
Meeting ID: 861082262479
Passcode: 479451

You can also sign onto Zoom by phone for the 2nd Nigh Community Seder 
Phone Number: 1-646-876-9923  
Meeting ID: 861082262479
Passcode: 479451


Both Seders are free event.

To prepare for the Seder, if you can, gather the following items together.

1. Three pieces of Matzah on a plate, covered with a napkin

2. Wine or grape juice

3. A bowl of salt water

4. A Seder plate — The objects on the Seder plate include:

  1. A roasted egg
  2. Maror (Bitter Herbs): Horseradish and/or Romain lettuce
  3. Charoset (mixture of fruit and nuts): Common recipe — a mixture of chopped apple, chopped walnuts, honey, and wine. Represents the mortar the Israelites used in making bricks
  4. Karpas (Spring Vegetable): parsley, celery, boiled potato, or raw onion
  5. Zeroa (Shank bone) a bone representing the sacrifice we made on Passover when the Temple still stood. Some vegetarians use a beet) 

If you can’t get these items, don’t worry, Eric, who will be leading the Seder, will have them, and will be using them ceremonially in the Seder. 

You can use whatever Haggadah you have at home or you can download Rabbinical Assembly’s Passover Haggadah: Feast of Freedom, by clicking  here

We hope to see you at both Seders. 

If you have any questions for Simon at 908-591-4037 or call Jeff at 973-207-3095.

Events