Matza isn't eaten during Purim.
There is no tradition that addresses eating matza on Purim. It is treated as any other food.
The one-eyed purple Lulav eater.
Joshua Matza was born on 1931-08-08.
Matza meal is matza that has been ground to the consistency of coarse bread crumbs. Matza meal is used in some cooking. On Passover especially, many people bake and cook with matza meal because it is not feasible to bake a cake in 18 minutes. Matza balls have a lot of matza meal in them, as you can imagine. Not all Jews will use matza meal on passover, however. Some Jews do not eat Gebrukts, matza with liquids on it. They are afraid that maybe there is still some flour that didn't get mixed with water and therefor has not been cooked and can still rise, which is forbidden on Passover. For that reason, some Orthodox Jews will not eat matza with spreads on it, and for the same reason will not eat anything baked with matza meal or any other matza by-product.
There is the Seder plate, or Keharoh, but no one eats off it. It is where all the symbolic food (according to some, not the matza) in placed.
Rosita Matza has written: 'Autre temps, autres moeurs'
"Purim" (פורים) is the Hebrew name for Purim.
Matza restaurant suicide bombing happened on 2002-03-31.
There is no record of when Matza balls were first used. The patriarch Abraham already used Matza in 2000 BCE - so maybe his wife Sara made him Matza balls.
Judaism.See also:The origins of Purim
Purim was on Sunday, March 9, 1879 (Shushan Purim was on Monday March 10)
Oh, dude, Shushan Purim is like the afterparty for Purim, but in the ancient city of Shushan. It's when the peeps in walled cities celebrate Purim a day later because they were too busy defending their walls on the regular Purim day. So, it's like Purim, but fashionably late.
Purim was on March 21 in 2008.