This phrase describes cleaning your home thoroughly in the spring.
Spring Cleaning
This traditional Jewish bread, typically made with eggs but no butter or milk, is eaten on Shabbat and other holidays, and is known for its braided texture.
Challah
Best known for his role in "Top Gun," this famous actor performed the speaking parts of Moses in Dreamwork's 1998 animated movie, "The Prince of Egypt."
Val Kilmer
On Aug. 28, 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. delivered his "I Have a Dream" speech from the steps of this Washington, D.C., location.
The Lincoln Memorial
Prior to 2013, these items, whose consumption is very common outside of the United States, were not kosher for Passover.
Cigarettes
This month contains the spring equinox in the Northern hemisphere.
March
This ingredient is commonly used as a leavening agent in bread-making and is therefore NOT used during Passover.
Yeast
This Jewish actor is a direct descendent of one of the Rabbis in the Haggadah.
Hank Azaria
W.E.B DuBois was a prominent African American civil rights activist, scholar, and co-founder of this civil rights organization.
NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People)
In 2010, the world’s largest matzo ball was made in this city.
Tuscon, Arizona
Also associated with pomegranates, she is the Greek goddess of spring and nature.
Persephone
The word bagel is thought to have its etymological roots in the Yiddish word "beygl" which means __.
Ring
While no Jews have held the office of President of the United States, this U.S. President was the first to host a Passover Seder at the White House.
Barack Obama
The Americans with Disabilities Act, which protects persons with disabilities from discrimination in many aspects of life — including employment, education, and access to buildings and businesses — was signed into law in this year.
1990
Pulitzer Prize-winning author Geraldine Brooks’s best-selling novel, People of the Book, tells the tale of this famous illustrated Haggadah.
The Sarajevo Haggadah
This gem is the April birthstone.
Diamond
This Italian bread literally translates from the Italian language as the word "slipper".
Ciabatta
This American president was assassinated on the fourth night of Passover.
Abraham Lincoln
In 1890, this was the first state in the United States to grant women the right to vote.
Wyoming
Now replaced by the ubiquitous Horseradish, this was the original food used for Maror.
Lettuce
Osterfeuer, or Easter bonfires, are a tradition to welcome spring and Easter in this European country.
Germany
This ancient nation was the first to use beer to make bread rise.
Egypt
In 1973, this Apollo 17 astronaut was (incorrectly) reported to have shouted, “Manischewitz!” while walking on the Moon
Gene Cernan
Long before Rosa Parks was arrested in Montgomery, Alabama for a similar act, this man was arrested for sitting in the "white" car of the East Louisiana Railroad in 1892.
Homer Plessey
This city hosts what is often called "the world's largest Passover Seder" every year.
Kathmandu, Nepal