Rosh Hashana
Yom Kippur
In the Synagogue
Food
Misc.
100

Sephardic and Mizrahim Jews have a full Rosh Hashana Seder. 

True


Challenge: Although not all Jews celebrate a Rosh Hashana seder, it's customary for most Jews to have a Passover seder. Sing us a song your family sings during the Passover seder

100

At the end of your last meal before you begin fasting on Yom Kippur, you’re supposed to eat something sweet to help signify a sweet new year to come.

False

Challenge: Go find something sweet in your house and eat it.

100

All Jews follow the same Torah trope, meaning they all sing the same notes when reading Torah out loud and it will sound the same in any synagogue. 

False

There are many variations of tropes in different Jewish communities

Challenge: Sing your favorite song in a new tune

100

Many Sephardic Jews will eat rice and legumes over Passover

True

Challenge: Do the nutter butter challenge- Eat a spoonful of any type of butter (preferably nut, but you do you) and then with the food still in your mouth, say the following phrases and see if people can understand you. 

"Chag Sameach" 

"Shana Tova"

"G'mar Chatima Tova"

100

People of Ashkenazi descent typically have ancestors from the Americas

False

“Ashkenazim” refers to Jews of Germany, but the term has come to refer more broadly to Jews from Central and Eastern Europe.

Challenge: Want to visit some of these places? Check out the USY Eastern Europe Israel Pilgrimage summer trip!

200

Before eating onions at the Rosh Hashana seder, many Jews say the blessing "Thank you Gd for allowing me to cry tears from my eyes"

False

Although there are many symbolic foods at the Rosh Hashana seder, an onion is not one of them

Challenge: If you had to choose a food to symbolize a prayer, what would your food be and what would your prayer be?

200

All Jews have a similar tradition of breaking the fast with bagels but what goes on the bagel varies if different communities

False

Moroccan Jews customarily break the fast with chicken couscous and harira, a thick soup brimming with stewing meat, fava beans and lentils. A Classic Cuisine of the Italian Jews is a sweet-and-sour fish.

200

During Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur when Aleinu is recited, instead of bowing, it is common to kneel to the ground.


True

Challenge: Do 10 lunges

200

Round challah is made by Jewish households all over the world to observe the high holidays.

False

Round-shaped breads are served in Jewish households all over the world on Rosh Hashanah but their names and recipes vary, be it the Ethiopian dabo, the Ashkenazi challah, the Sephardi bolo, or the Yemenite sabaya.

Challenge: Pick 3 friends and sing Row Row Row Your Boat in rounds

200

In a Sephardic home, the Mezzuzah is typically hung straight up and down

True


Challenge: Stay in a planking position for 30 seconds

300

On the second night of Rosh Hashanah, it is common to eat a new fruit– a fruit that participants have not tasted for a long time. 

True

Challenge: For every letter of your name, name a fruit that starts with that letter. No repeating fruit.

300

In order to make less noise and not disrupt the service, rabbis typically wear quieter shoes on Yom Kippur

False

Challenge: Tie the shoelaces together of someone else who lives in your home. Be sneaky.

300

Sim Shalom is always the last blessing of the Amidah in Sephardic Synagogues

True

Challenge: Your team must sing Debbie Friedman's Shalom Rav

300

Moroccan Jews celebrate a holiday that signifies the end of Passover

True

The holiday is called Mimouna and during this holiday they eat Moufleta which is a stacked cake

Challenge: Walk a straight line with as many hats stacked on your head as you possibly can

300

Jews have their own variation of Valentine's Day

True

It is called Tu B'av. It is associated with happy events in Jewish history. Daughters in Israel would dress in white and dance in the vineyards while unmarried men would follow them until they found a bride.

Challenge: Finish this poem- "Roses are red, violets are blue..."

400

At the Rosh Hashanah seder all the foods also become vessels for meaning. Each food symbolizes a good wish for the coming year, and before each food is consumed there is a special blessing to recite, many of which result from puns on the food’s Hebrew or Aramaic name. 

True

Foods include: fat, juicy, red-skinned pomegranates; glossy, sticky-sweet dates; savory pumpkin; pungent leeks; scallions or chives; foot-long green beans; deep-green spinach; and crisp apples. Some families use beet leaves instead of spinach, quince instead of apples, and other varieties of beans and gourds.

Challenge: Make your own food related pun

400

It is traditional for Mizrahim Jews to fast for 18 hours because of the significance of the number 18, which signifies life or "chai"

False

All Jews are expected to fast for 25 hours on Yom Kippur if they are able. 

Challenge: Tell us, what do you plan to break your fast on?

400

All synagogue's keep their Torah behind a velvet mantle in an ark.

False

Ashkenazi Jews typically keep the synagogue's Torah in an Ark behind a velvet curtain. In many communities (mostly Mizrahi) the Torah scroll is kept in a tiq (wooden or metal case) instead of a velvet mantle.

Challenge: Perform your best "Tiq"Tok dance

400

It is traditional for Hungarian Jews eat cabbage strudel on Shmini Atseret

True


Challenge: Describe your ideal cabbage. We will not take "none" for an answer.

400

Ethiopian Jews celebrate a holiday that no other Jews typically celebrate

True

Ethiopian Jews celebrate a holiday called Sigd. It is 50 days after Passover and the community marks the renewal of the covenant between the Jewish people. On Sigd, Ethiopian Jews pray to God and plead to return to Zion. The community also holds communal introspection because, according to tradition, in order to be worthy to return to Jerusalem from exile, the public must engage in communal introspection and repentance.

Challenge: Take a moment to yourself for some introspection. Close your eyes and be mindful for a minute

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