Passover, Easter, Ramadan, and the Memory of Deliverance
Passover, Easter, and Ramadan are not interchangeable festivals, but each forms sacred memory through time, body, worship, discipline, and deliverance. In Judaism, Passover remembers Israel’s liberation from Egypt, the blood of the lamb, unleavened bread, household ritual, covenantal identity, and the command to tell the story across generations. In Christianity, Easter is interpreted through Jesus’ death and resurrection as Paschal mystery, new creation, victory over death, and deliverance from sin, while remaining historically rooted in Jewish Passover memory. In Islam, Ramadan is the month of Qur’anic revelation, fasting, mercy, repentance, charity, Night of Power, and liberation from heedlessness and appetite through taqwa. This article compares sacred deliverance across the three traditions while preserving their real differences.









