Jump to Navigation
Home
Make your own Passover Haggadah
  • Login
  • •
  • Sign Up
  • Clip Library
  • How It Works
  • Add Clip
  • Contributors
  • Blog
  • Feedback
  • Donate

Clips Library

Search form

My Haggadah

    • View all clips

Popular Categories

  • Traditional
    311
  • Creative
    259
  • Social Justice
    216
  • Children
    200
  • Progressive
    171
  • filter by
  • Section
    • -- Exodus Story (2)
    • Cover (1)
    • Introduction (1)
    • Karpas (1)
    • Shulchan Oreich (1)
  • Clip Categories
    • (-) Remove Family / Customs filter Family / Customs
    • (-) Remove Food filter Food
    • (-) Remove History filter History
    • (-) Remove Interfaith filter Interfaith
    • (-) Remove Traditional filter Traditional
    • Jews by Choice (6)
    • Creative (5)
    • Progressive (5)
    • Secular / Humanist (5)
    • Children (4)
    • Contemporary (4)
    • GLBT (4)
    • Green / Environmental (4)
    • Israel (4)
    • Reconstructionist (4)
    • Reform (4)
    • Slavery / Liberation (4)
    • Teens (4)
    • Feminist (3)
    • Health (3)
    • Humor (3)
    • Recovery / Addiction (3)
    • Sephardi (3)
    • Social Justice (3)
    • Song (3)
    • Translation (2)
    • Transliteration (2)
    • Holocaust (1)
    • Loss / Mourning (1)
  • Use
    • Commentary (4)
    • Ritual (3)
    • Images (2)
  • Media Type
    • Image (4)
    • Text (2)
  • Clear All
  • (-) Remove Family / Customs filter Family / Customs
  • (-) Remove Food filter Food
  • (-) Remove History filter History
  • (-) Remove Interfaith filter Interfaith
  • (-) Remove Traditional filter Traditional
  • image

    Eggs

    Eggs are prominent and pervasive on Pesah. In fact, so prevalent are they during the holiday week that one might suspect that the ancient Greek name for Pesah actually may have been Cholesterol!Let's start with the Seder Plat ...
    Introduction
    contributed by Gerald Weiss
    Bookmark
    Add to Haggadah
  • Shulchan Oreich

    It’s traditional to begin the actual Seder meal with each person eating a hard ...
    Shulchan Oreich
    contributed by Alex Kristal
    Bookmark
    Add to Haggadah
  • Maror

     Maror comes from the hebrew word for bitter. The maror symbolizes the bitt ...
    Cover
    contributed by Sara Balsam
    Bookmark
    Add to Haggadah
  • Natalia Kadish

    -- Exodus Story
    contributed by natalia kadish
    Bookmark
    Add to Haggadah
  • Natalia Kadish

    Moshe in basket
    -- Exodus Story
    contributed by natalia kadish
    Bookmark
    Add to Haggadah
  • image

    Parsley, Sages, Saltwater and

    We dip a green vegetable, often parsley, into saltwater and recite the blessing for green foods that grow in the ground.Why? The traditional reason, according to the Sages of the a ...
    Karpas
    contributed by Gerald Weiss
    Bookmark
    Add to Haggadah
Connect with Haggadot.com
TwitterFacebook Follow Me on Pinterest
subscribe to our updates
2011 HAGGADOT.COM / All rights reserved
  • About
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • Sharing Policy
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • Feedback
Did you know that Kavanot.com is a not for profit organization
Before you print and head off to your seder, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to help the site grow and stay completely free for users.
PDF Processing...