Seasonal & Holidays

Ways To Celebrate Passover 2021 In Midtown

See where Seder meal celebrations are planned in and near Midtown.

Jewish faith members in Midtown can celebrate Passover with Seder meals held mostly over Zoom in 2021.
Jewish faith members in Midtown can celebrate Passover with Seder meals held mostly over Zoom in 2021. (Shutterstock)

ATLANTA — Passover, the major Jewish holiday that marks the Hebrews’ deliverance from slavery and return to Israel, begins Saturday, with opportunities to celebrate virtually and in and near Buckhead.

The Seder is the traditional meal each night of Passover, which begins/began at sundown Saturday and will end at nightfall on Sunday, April 4. For the second year in a row, many families are turning to technology to help celebrate the dinner together due to the coronavirus pandemic.

In Midtown, celebrations include...

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  • The Temple in Midtown
    • First Night Virtual Passover Seder: March 27, 6-7 p.m.
    • No cost, but to register visit the website.
  • Ahavath Achim Synagogue
    • Second Seder Hallel - “I Called Out From the Narrow Place”
    • March 28, 9-10 p.m.
    • Go to the website to join via Zoom.
  • 11th Annual Atlanta Community Hunger Seder
    • Temple Kol Emeth and the Atlanta Jewish Community Relations Center: March 31, 7-8 p.m.
    • Go to the website to register.

Seder meal celebrations in many communities, such as Laguna Beach, California, remain small one year into the pandemic as restaurants are promoting their to-go meals. There, Gelson’s restaurants are offering the traditional Seder fare including beef brisket, sides of matzo balls and a gefilte fish with horseradish.

Passover is celebrated over several days to mark the time God “passed over” the Israelites during the final days of the 10 plagues. Many of the country’s largest synagogues are holding Zoom Seders of their own.

Find out what's happening in Midtownwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Central Synagogue in New York City has a family Seder led by Rabbi Rebecca Rosenthal and Jeremy Sipe set for Saturday night on Zoom. The Seder will last for about an hour and include readings from the Haggadah, the Jewish text traditionally ready at a Seder, before families log off and continue the celebration at home.

The Temple Sinai reform congregation in Reno, Nevada, is among the others that will air a livestream of their Saturday night Seder.


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