(Very Fine Judaica) A most beautiful original handpainted Passover Plate hebrew


(Very Fine Judaica) A most beautiful original handpainted Passover Plate hebrew

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(Very Fine Judaica) A most beautiful original handpainted Passover Plate hebrew:
$427.00


(Very Fine Judaica) A most beautiful original handpainted Passover Seder Plate hebrew!
Stunning antique handpainted Porcelain from Czech !!!!!
Here now something very special and exceedingly rare! Original Czech Porcelain!A most wonderful original handpainted Passover Seder porcelain plate, with hebrew inscription:The young boy reads the \"Mah Nishtanoh\"...(unbelievable beautiful)!
Diameter: ca. 28,1 cm
Condition: Very good++For your private Judaika collection!
EXTREMELY RARE TO THE MARKET AND HIGHLY SOUGHT AFTER!
Please feel free to have a look also to my another wonderful manuscript sales in at the XXL Bilder bei XXL Bilder bei
I have listed more older items at the moment in !
Keywords: jewish,sehr altes , ancien ,very old porzelan, selten und item is located in Germany! 10 day sale.
s/h to the USA (ca. 9 days) is: $4,-
Canada and South- America: $ 4,-
National shipping within Germany is: $4,-
Europe: $4,-
I\'m not responsible for customs or Tax! Insurance on request! Payment via Pay-Pal!
I send the mail with a trackable Number only! sale starts on 0.99 USD ending on sunday. NO information about Passover Plates:
The Passover Seder Plate Hebrew: ke\'ara (קערה) is a special plate containing symbolic foods eaten or displayed at the Passover Seder.
SignificanceEach of the six items arranged so on the plate has special significance to the retelling of the story of the exodus from Egypt,
which is the focus of this ritual meal. The seventh symbolic item used during the meal — a stack of three matzos — is placed on its own plate
on the Seder table. Others place the Seder plate on top of the stack of matzos.
Symbolic foodsThe six traditional items on the Seder Plate are as follows: Maror and chazeret — Bitter herbs, symbolizing the bitterness and harshness of the slavery the Hebrews endured in Egypt. In Ashkenazi
tradition, either horseradish or romaine lettuce may be eaten in the fulfillment of the mitzvah of eating bitter herbs during the Seder.
Sephardic Jews often use curly parsley, green onion, or celery leaves. Charoset — A sweet, brown mixture representing the mortar used by the Hebrew slaves to build the storehouses or pyramids of Egypt. In
Ashkenazi Jewish homes, Charoset is traditionally made from chopped nuts, grated apples, cinnamon, and sweet red wine. Sephardi recipes
typically call for dates and honey in addition to chopped nuts, cinnamon, and wine. Karpas — A vegetable other than bitter herbs, which is dipped into salt water at the beginning of the Seder. Parsley, celery or boiled
potato is usually used. The dipping of a simple vegetable bounces into salt water (which represents tears) mirrors the pain felt by the Hebrew
slaves in Egypt. Usually in a Shabbat or holiday meal, the first thing to be eaten after the kiddush over wine is bread. At the Seder table,
however, the first thing to be eaten after the kiddush is a vegetable. This leads immediately to the recital of the famous question,
Ma Nishtana — \"Why is this night different from all other nights?\" It also symbolizes the spring time, because Jews celebrate Passover in the
spring. Z\'roa — Also called Zeroah, it is special as it is the only element of meat on the Seder Plate. A roasted lamb or goat shankbone, chicken
wing, or chicken neck; symbolizing the korban Pesach (Pesach sacrifice), which was a lamb that was offered in the Temple in Jerusalem, then
roasted and eaten as part of the meal on Seder night. Since the destruction of the Temple, the z\'roa serves as a visual reminder of the
Pesach sacrifice; it is not eaten or handled during the Seder. Vegetarians often substitute a beet, quoting Pesachim 114b as justification;
other vegetarians substitute a sweet potato, allowing a \"Paschal yam\" to represent the Paschal lamb. Beitzah — A roasted hard-boiled egg, symbolizing the korban chagigah (festival sacrifice) that was offered in the Temple in Jerusalem and
roasted and eaten as part of the meal on Seder night. Although both the Pesach sacrifice and the chagigah were meat offerings, the chagigah is
commemorated by an egg, a symbol of mourning (as eggs are the first thing served to mourners after a funeral), evoking the idea of mourning
over the destruction of the Temple and our inability to offer any kind of sacrifices in honor of the Pesach holiday. Since the destruction of
the Temple, the beitzah serves as a visual reminder of the chagigah; it is not used during the formal part of the seder, but some people eat
a regular hard-boiled egg dipped in saltwater as the first course of the meal.Sterling silver seder plateMany decorative and artistic Seder Plates sold in Judaica stores have pre-formed spaces for inserting the various symbolic foods.
Table set for the seder with a seder plate, salt water, matza, kosher wine and a copy of the Haggadah for each guestThe sixth symbolic item on the Seder table is a plate of three whole matzot, which are stacked and separated from each other by cloths or
napkins. The middle matzah will be broken and half of it put aside for the afikoman. The top and other half of the middle matzot will be used
for the hamotzi (blessing over bread), and the bottom matzah will be used for the korech (Hillel sandwich).A bowl of salt water, which is used for the first \"dipping\" of the Seder, is not traditionally part of the Seder Plate, but is placed on the
table beside it. However, it sometimes is used as one of the six items, omitting chazeret.
Variants Orange. — In the early 1980s, Susannah Heschel began the tradition as a protest against the exclusion of homosexuals from Judaism. She
found the orange to be a more appropriate symbol than a crust of bread than some Oberlin College students had suggested. There is a popular
myth that the tradition was introduced in response to a rabbi who told a young girl that a woman belongs on a bimah as an orange on a seder
plate.The orange is now said to be a symbol of the fruitfulness of all Jews, including women and gay people.
Passover
Seder
Seder The Exodus
\"Outstretched Arm\"
Ten Plagues
Afikoman
Ma NishtanaSeder Plate Beitzah
Charoset
Karpas
Maror
ZeroaHaggadah
Songs Adir Hu
Chad Gadya
Dayenu
Echad Mi YodeaIllustrations Sarajevo Haggadah
Szyk HagaddahPassover foods
Matzah products Matzo
Matzah ball
Matzah brei
Matzo farfel granolaMatzah companies Streit\'s
Manischewitz
René Neymann
Yehuda Matzos
Rakusen\'sReligious
Observances Bedikas Chametz
Fast of the Firstborn
Eve of Passover on Shabbat
Passover sacrifice
Chol HaMoed
Mimouna
Isru Chag
Pesach SheniLaws/Customs Chametz
Challah from Shmurah Matzah
Kitniyot
GebrochtsPrayers Song of Songs
Torah readings
Prayer for dew
Source: Wikipedia

(Very Fine Judaica) A most beautiful original handpainted Passover Plate hebrew:
$427.00

Buy Now