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Committee on Multicultural Initiatives and
Diversity - COMID The
mission of the Committee on Multicultural Initiatives and
Diversity (COMID) is to foster our community and
environment where the richness of our diversity is
recognized, respected and embraced. Our view on diversity
includes, but is not limited to, ethnic, racial and
linguistic heritage; religious traditions; gender; sexual
orientation; age; and socioeconomic status.
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The Cary Academy Committee
on Multicultural Initiatives and Diversity (COMID) would
like to inform the community about the week from Palm Sunday
through Easter, April 9 – April16, 2006.
Passover

Passover, in Judaism, one of
the most important and elaborate of religious festivals. Its
celebration begins on the evening of the 14th of Nisan
(first month of the religious calendar, corresponding to
March–April) and lasts seven days in Israel, eight days in
the Diaspora (although Reform Jews observe a seven-day
period). As the Jewish day begins at sundown the night
before, for the year 2007, the first night of Passover will
be April 10th.
Numerous theories have been advanced in explanation of
its original significance, which has become obscured by the
association it later acquired with the Exodus. In pre-Mosaic
times it may have been a spring festival only, but in its
present observance as a celebration of deliverance from the
yoke of Egypt, that significance has been practically
forgotten.
Passover now commemorates the
freedom and exodus of the Israelites (Jewish slaves) from
Egypt during the reign of the Pharaoh Ramses II.
This is as much a
celebration of the Israelites' spiritual freedom as the
physical liberation from slavery. The
name "Passover" refers to the fact that God "passed over"
the houses of the Jews when he was slaying the firstborn of
Egypt.
In the ceremonial evening meal (called the Seder), which
is conducted on the first evening in Israel and by Reform
Jews, and on the first and second evenings by all other
observant Jews in the Diaspora, various special dishes
symbolizing the hardships of the Israelites during their
bondage in Egypt are served; the narrative of the Exodus,
the Haggadah, is recited; and praise is given for the
deliverance. Only unleavened bread (matzoth) may be eaten
throughout the period of the festival, in memory of the fact
that the Jews, hastening from Egypt, had no time to leaven
their bread. Jewish law also requires that special sets of
cooking utensils and dishes, uncontaminated by use during
the rest of the year, be used throughout the festival. With
its special foods, songs, and customs, the Seder is the
focal point of the Passover celebration.
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