by Rabbi Shimon Apisdorf
Putting the Seder into perspective.
The holiday of Passover marks the anniversary of the birth of the
Jewish nation. The story of the Jewish nation is one of individuals who
became a family who became a people. The great individuals who laid the
spiritual foundation of Jewish peoplehood were Abraham and Sarah, their
son and daughter-in-law Isaac and Rebecca, and their son and
daughters-in-law Jacob, Rachel, and Leah.
From Jacob, Rachel, and Leah came a family of 70 people who, due to a
famine in Israel, were forced to migrate to Egypt. In Egypt this family
grew and prospered to such an extent that they eventually came to be
seen as a threat by their Egyptian hosts. Respect and admiration turned
to contempt, and finally to an organized program of enslavement and
oppression. After 210 years, and a series of unheeded warnings by Moses
to Pharaoh which resulted in the Ten Plagues, God liberated a nation
which had grown from the original family of 70 people. Seven weeks
later this newly conceived nation received the Torah at Mount Sinai.
The Haggadah is the story of the birth of the Jews as a people. It
deals primarily with the events in Egypt which led from slavery to
liberation, though it also spans the entire period from Abraham to the
giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai. One could say that the Haggadah is
our national birth certificate as well as our Declaration of
Independence. More than just a historical document, it also speaks of
the ideals and values which constitute the essence of our national
consciousness and identity.
The word haggadah means to tell, or to relate. The Haggadah is a vivid
narrative which is set in the context of a parent-child dialogue.
Passover, with the Haggadah as its focus, tells every Jew three things:
who you are, where you came from, and what you stand for.
The message inherent in the Haggadah is that Jewish identity and
continuity hinge on encouraging children to ask questions -- and being
prepared as parents to provide sensitive and substantive answers. In
Judaism, being learned, knowledgeable, and wise is not only a goal,
it's a prerequisite.
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Haggadah: An Introduction
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