Passover Under Coronavirus Lockdown: Israeli Jews Revise the Rituals

JERUSALEM — Singing outdoors. Participating remotely in a relative’s Zoom Seder. Leaving apartment doors open so solitary neighbors can hear the recitations.

Israeli Jews are seeking novel ways of celebrating this week’s Passover holiday, traditionally a festival of freedom and community, after the government announced strict curfews to limit social gatherings.

On the first night of Passover, which falls on Wednesday, multigenerational families, relatives and friends usually gather for the ritual Seder feast to commemorate the Israelites’ liberation from bondage in ancient Egypt.

But in an extraordinary effort to prevent the spread of the coronavirus, the government has tightened the general lockdown with additional restrictions targeted specifically at the holiday.

Others, including Israel’s state rabbinical authority, vehemently opposed that ruling, upholding the ban on the use of electronic devices even if they are switched on by a timer.

source: nytimes.com