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Amid coronavirus isolation, Chabad at the Shore offers Passover DIY tools

  • Ventnor

Wikimedia/Seder plate.

VENTNOR - As Passover approaches (April 8-16) with restrictions put in place to curtail the spread of COVID-19, Atlantic County's Jewish community is preparing to celebrate Passover at home under mandated shelter-in-place orders. Chabad at the Shore is responding with Passover Seder-to-Go kits and DIY tools.

Unable to gather for the seder with family, friends and community, for many, this will be their first foray into leading it themselves. And while there isn't a noticeable supply shortage, many may find difficulty in preparing for and leading the seder for the first time. In response, Chabad will offer Seder-to-Go kits containing instructions on how to conduct a Passover seder yourself, as well as all of the traditional foods, ensuring that every Jew in Atlantic County wishing to have a Passover seder can easily do so, whether they are in quarantine or just isolating at home.

In the past, Chabad has led large community Passover seders open to the public and has ensured that all of areas community members had the tools to celebrate Passover, including providing for the homebound and institutionalized. This year, with social distancing measures in place, they have ramped up those efforts to ensure that everyone will have what they need to celebrate the holiday in their homes.

While traditionally, Passover is a time when families and communities come together, this year, we'll each be celebrating at home, and for many, it will be their first time conducting a Seder, said Rabbi Avrohom Rapoport. That's why we're making sure that everyone has what they need to celebrate Passover as well as the know-how of how to celebrate Passover.

The preparations for the seder are not just in the kitchen. The seder is generally led by the head of the family and all kinds of people are stepping into that role on short notice and being the Moses of their family. Rabbi Rapoport is offering an online crash course and model seder to teach them, as well as sharing online Passover resources at www.Chabad.org/CoronaPassover made to help people through this unique Passover on the world's largest Judaism website.

While many groceries have the machine-made square matzahs, also being made available are traditional, handmade shmurah matzah, the unleavened bread made from flour guarded and watched from the wheat field to the mill, before being handmade in a bakery and then eaten on Passover, to allow for the observance of this significant custom while adding a unique flavor and experience to the seder.

The local effort is part of a global Passover campaign that began in 1954, when the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, launched the shmurah matzah initiative as part of an effort to create awareness and promote observance of the holiday. An estimated four million hand-baked shmurah matzahs will be distributed by the worldwide Chabad-Lubavitch movement leading up to Passover.

As chametz (leavened products) cannot be owned by a Jew on Passover, Chabad at the Shore is providing a chametz-sale service online. The chametz is set aside in one's home, sold to a non-Jew for the duration of Passover and bought back after the holiday. The chametz sale service is also available at www.Chabad.org/SellChametz which coordinates approximately 90,000 chametz transactions, but this year with synagogues shuttered, they anticipate the number to jump to 350,000.

We are praying for the full and speedy recovery of everyone who has been affected by this terrible virus, said Rabbi Rapoport. While each in our own homes, remember you are not alone, and we are all in this together. Faith, tradition and community has never been more important than now. With the help of God and community we will come out of this stronger than ever before.