Description
Shabbat shalom! Wish friends and family Shabbat shalom with this charming matzoh popup card. On the cover is the Star of David, and inside a 3-D stack of Matzoh flatbread crackers, surrounded by Jewish symbols of celebration. For your Bubbe and Zayde. Perfect for Passover.
A little schmear of this, a little spread of that. Try some chopped liver, or finish your charoset. And the rest is a yummy balancing act as we try to eat an open faced matzo sandwich or squish a food of choice between two pieces of the crumbly matzo.
You say matzo, I say matzah, but you can also write matzoh, matza or any other combination of similarly sounding letters. And whether it is plain matzo, whole wheat, spelt, machine-made square or handmade shmura round, it all pretty much crumbles the same way.
Messages you could write in this card, or I can write for you and mail to your recipient:
• Shabbat shalom!
• Gut Shabbes! (Yiddish for good Sabbath)
• Happy Passover! Gut yontif!
• Chag Sameach! (Happy Holiday!)
• Shavua tov! (Have a good week)
• Chag Pesach Sameach! (Happy Passover!)
• Chag Pesach kasher vesame’ach. (Have a kosher and joyous Passover.)
• Happy Hanukkah
• Thinking of you
Wish friends and family Shabbat Shalom, Happy Hanukkah, a Happy Passover and Happy Pesach with this loving popup card. This card is hand-assembled, approximately 6.75″ x 4.5″, and comes with an envelope.
Messages you could write in this card, or I can write for you and mail to your recipient:
• Shabbat shalom!
• Happy Pesach (Hebrew for happy Passover)
• Gut Shabbes! (Yiddish for good Sabbath)
• Happy Passover! Gut yontif! (Yiddish)
• Chag Sameach! (Happy Holiday!)
• Shavua tov! (Have a good week)
• Chag Pesach Sameach! (Happy Passover!)
• Chag Pesach kasher vesame’ach. (Have a kosher and joyous Passover.)
• Happy Hanukkah
• Thinking of you
What is Passover?
Passover is a Jewish holiday that celebrates the Israelites being freed from slavery in Egypt. It is observed for seven or eight days, and during the first two nights, Passover is celebrated with a home ritual known as the Passover Seder.
The Seder is celebrated around a dinner table. It includes the retelling of the Passover story — the story of Exodus from the Old Testament (or the Torah in Judaism) — blessings over food and wine, explanations of Passover symbols, discussions of freedom and social justice, and plenty of singing and eating. All of these rituals are performed in an order prescribed by a Passover-specific book known as a Haggadah. Happy Passover!
Passover 2025 begins before sundown on Saturday, April 12, 2025, and ends after nightfall on Sunday, April 20, 2025.
See also: Gold Menorah, Festival of Lights.