The time of year, the haggadah, the readings, contemplations are tough this year with the American Jews. (That I know). There is less faith in the state than I have seen in my lifetime, and while it is younger generations that are more vocal, the effect is seen across the community.
A post...
Every year on Passover I lead my own Seder with a Haggadah compiled from various sources over the years, and with a different focus at the intro to tie it into something that is feeling alive for us collectively at the moment. Last year was freedom, as the concept of what it means to be free coming out of the pandemic had been a focus. But Passover this year was much harder to grapple with than usual. I was honestly at a loss for words on how to reflect on the recent escalation of the ongoing war in Gaza appropriately. But I did so, thanks to the help of a post by Doug Foote. This is how we started our Seder this year…
Like many Americans Jews, we sit around this table saying things like “let all who are hungry come and eat.” We’ll say this while our tax dollars are funding the bombing and starving fellow humans. Gaza has the highest proportion of people living with food deprivation in the world, as an article in The Guardian recently wrote: “There is no precedent for what is happening.” This is not caused by drought or crop failure, but by a military bearing the Star of David from a country I was raised to respect, defend, and honor as a homeland. Passover is a holiday explicitly about the liberation from slavery, from mitzraim – the Hebrew word for Egypt, translating to “a narrow place.” Can we think of a narrow place where people are not free to come and go as they please? October 7th was truly terrible and we deserve to defend ourselves from a terrorist regime who wants to eliminate the Jewish people, but how can Jews say we are ambassadors for peace while so many civilians, including children, are dying at the hands of a Jewish State? How can one humanely calculate “reasonableness of response” when both sides violate international law? How can we make Passover this year something other than darkly ironic or deeply hypocritical? This year let’s focus on our collective hope for Peace…
A post...
Every year on Passover I lead my own Seder with a Haggadah compiled from various sources over the years, and with a different focus at the intro to tie it into something that is feeling alive for us collectively at the moment. Last year was freedom, as the concept of what it means to be free coming out of the pandemic had been a focus. But Passover this year was much harder to grapple with than usual. I was honestly at a loss for words on how to reflect on the recent escalation of the ongoing war in Gaza appropriately. But I did so, thanks to the help of a post by Doug Foote. This is how we started our Seder this year…
Like many Americans Jews, we sit around this table saying things like “let all who are hungry come and eat.” We’ll say this while our tax dollars are funding the bombing and starving fellow humans. Gaza has the highest proportion of people living with food deprivation in the world, as an article in The Guardian recently wrote: “There is no precedent for what is happening.” This is not caused by drought or crop failure, but by a military bearing the Star of David from a country I was raised to respect, defend, and honor as a homeland. Passover is a holiday explicitly about the liberation from slavery, from mitzraim – the Hebrew word for Egypt, translating to “a narrow place.” Can we think of a narrow place where people are not free to come and go as they please? October 7th was truly terrible and we deserve to defend ourselves from a terrorist regime who wants to eliminate the Jewish people, but how can Jews say we are ambassadors for peace while so many civilians, including children, are dying at the hands of a Jewish State? How can one humanely calculate “reasonableness of response” when both sides violate international law? How can we make Passover this year something other than darkly ironic or deeply hypocritical? This year let’s focus on our collective hope for Peace…