Celebrate Passover at Temple Beth Am!

Passover begins before sundown on Wednesday, April 1st, 2026, and ends after nightfall on Wednesday, April 8th. We will have various Passover seders, services and celebrations throughout the holidays! Please join us for one or all of them.

Passover-seders,services,-celebs-
March-24 web

6:00 PM | A Brotherhood Seder for the Guys

Complete catered Seder Meal with the guys led by Rabbi Barras for $54.

March-29 web

3:00 PM – 5:00 PM | South Dade Community Women’s Seder

Temple Judea

Join Temple Judea’s 3rd Annual Seder, full of meaning, joy and women celebrating together!

April-2 web

First Day Passover Service

Join us for First Day Passover Service in the Chapel.

Traditional Seder

Celebrate the second night of Passover with Rabbi Barras,Cantor Smolash, and our Temple Beth Am community with an elegant and meaningful seder.

$90 per adult, $54 per child under 12.

Family Friendly Seder

Join Temple Beth Am on the second night of Passover for a festive meal led by Rabbi Greengrass, Rabbi Aklepi and Rabbi Fisher. Enjoy Passover seder activities for the whole family, and a chance to connect with your Jewish community.

$60 per adult, $36 per child (under 12), and 3 and younger are free. 

April-5 web

Miami Jews Seder in the Garden

5:30 PM | Fairchild Tropical Botanical Gardens

Miami Jews invites you to an engaging Passover experience at Fairchild Tropical Botanical Gardens for young professionals in their 20s and 30s.

Learn more at @miamijews on Instagram.

April-8 web

Passover Yizkor Service

10:30 AM | Sanctuary

Join us for a Yizkor service in the Sanctuary for the last day of Pesach.

Every year, Jews around the world conduct a seder (meaning “order”) on the first evening of the holiday, as we remember and tell our children and grandchildren of the exodus out of Egypt. Future generations of the Jewish people must always be aware of how God freed the slaves who became the ancestors of the Jewish people today.

The seder is a blending of religious rituals, food, song, and the telling of the Passover story, and it is all done in a particular order. That order is set forth in the Haggadah. In addition to the order of the seder, the Haggadah contains prayers, songs, explanations of the various Passover symbols, and, most importantly, the telling of the Passover story of how God freed the Jews from Egyptian slavery. The Hebrew word Haggadah actually means “telling.” A great deal of the text is quite ancient, the earliest of which precedes the Middle Ages (which began around 476 CE) by several centuries.