rid their households of all leaveaned products
No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.No, passover has to do with the exodus of the Jews from Egypt about a thousand years before the Romans.
The Jews eat the Passover Seder meal on the night of Passover (Pesach). It makes little difference whether Passover begins on Shabbat or on a weekday. Note that there are festive meals on every Shabbat, but they are not called "seder" and the foods are different.
There are always Jews who celebrate Passover regardless of the location or circumstances. Jews celebrated Passover in the ghettos, and then in the concentration camps.
Just like we do today.
The dates of Passover (or Pesach, as we Jews call it) doesn't need to be calculated like the dates of Easter because it always begins on the same day on the Hebrew calendar - 14 Nisan.
jews did like them
Yes, because Passover is a Jewish festival. see also:What_do_Jews_do_when_celebrating_passover
The same way that all other Jews observe Pesach (Passover).
Jews.
There is no such thing as a "reformed" Jew. It is called "reform Jew". Reform Jews celebrate passover as a commoration of the exodus of the ancestors of the Jews from Egypt and into freedom, which is the same meaning passover has to Conservative and Orthodox Jews.
Irish Jews celebrate Passover the same way as Jews all over the world.
Passover must always fall out in the Spring. It is sometimes known as "the spring festival" or "Chag HaAviv"