Passover is not associated with making a specific choice. It is a holiday of freedom and redemption.
Answer:
According to tradition, shortly before the Exodus the Israelites were told by a prophet that they had to abandon any assimilating tendencies, and especially any dabbling with the Egyptian idolatry. They had to make the choice of obeying this, or ignoring it.
There is no traditional concept of decorating on Passover.
it celebrates the hebrews escape from slavery
By celebrating it and keeping its laws.
The Passover celebration commemorates the flight from Egypt. There was no Passover meal before the flight.
The passover.
Passover celebrates the time when the Hebrews fled from Egypt and Moses led them, chasing after them was Pharaoh's army. Moses then parted the sea to let the Hebrews cross and closed the sea on Pharaoh's army. I xxx
Passover is a Jewish and Samaritan celebration of the Hebrews' escape from bondage in Egypt. In the book of Exodus, in the bible, God sent ten plagues among Pharoah and the Egyptians to get Pharaoah to free the Hebrews. On the tenth plague, God warned the killing of the first born child of every home, with the exception of the Hebrews' home with the blood of a lamb spread on their doorpost. That night, God sent his holy spirit, and the homes with the blood of the lamb on the doorposts were passed over, creating the term passover. As a result, Pharoah freed the Hebrews.
The Passover is still the Passover, or Pesach, to the Jews. In the Christian calendar, Good Friday which is observed two days before Easter Sunday, falls at the same time as the Jewish Passover.
Passover (in Hebrew pronounced "Pesach" - פסח ). The Israelites were freed on the 15th of Nissan (which occurs in April).
The escape of the Hebrews from slavery in Egypt is called the Exodus. This event, central to Jewish tradition, is described in the Book of Exodus in the Bible and is commemorated during the festival of Passover. The Exodus symbolizes liberation and the journey to freedom, culminating in the Hebrews' arrival at Mount Sinai, where they received the Ten Commandments.
The symbol used on Passover is called maror (מרור) in Hebrew, which is usually represented by horseradish or lettuce.
The fifty days after the first day of Passover include the forty-nine days of counting the Omer; and the fiftieth day itself is the holiday of Shavuot (see Leviticus ch.23 and Deuteronomy ch.16).