The Seder Plate
The placement and symbolism of the items on the seder plate.
Rules for Passover
From avoiding leavened products to the Fast of the First Born, here’s your cheat sheet of Passover practices.
What is Not OK to Eat on Passover
Your guide to which foods are customarily avoided on the holiday.

Passover 2025
In 2025, the first seder will be held on the evening of Saturday, April 12.
Next Torah Portion
Summary
In this Torah portion, God describes the laws of animal sacrifice. God explains the different sacrifices that atone for guilt or sins, and distinguishes between sins committed inadvertently and sins committed on purpose.
Featured Commentary
Parashat Vayikra: I Give, Therefore I Love
This Torah portion teaches that it’s better to give than receive.
Daf Yomi
Sanhedrin 107
On today’s daf, the Gemara finally concludes its lengthy discussion of those individuals who have no share in the World …
Sanhedrin 106
Which would you rather be, a mighty cedar or an unremarkable reed? The Talmud’s answer might surprise you. On yesterday’s …
Sanhedrin 105
Balaam’s ultimate fate.
STUDY RESOURCES
Recharge Now
Our weekly Shabbat newsletter, Recharge, features a thoughtful, timely essay to enrich your Shabbat. Here are a few of our recent pieces:
Revaluing Labor
On restoring the prestige of physical work.
Loving the Stranger
It’s the most frequently repeated commandment in the Torah, but what does it actually require?
Vashti’s Bad Rap
Why the deposed queen is the under-appreciated heroine of Purim.
MORE from MY JEWISH LEARNING
Ask the Expert: Do All Religions Worship the Same God?
Jews don’t have a monopoly on God, but we do privilege and prefer our own access.
The Jews of Russia
The territories of the former Russian Empire were the cradle of Jewish modernity, the birthplace of Zionism and Jewish socialism, and a major center of the Hasidic movement.
How to Talk to God
The Hasidic prayer practice of hitbodedut — talking to God freely in one’s native tongue — helps to build intimacy over time.
Tikkun Olam: Repairing the World
This phrase with kabbalistic roots has come to connote social justice.