Pesach – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com israelhayom english website Wed, 24 Apr 2024 12:15:08 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.israelhayom.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/cropped-G_rTskDu_400x400-32x32.jpg Pesach – www.israelhayom.com https://www.israelhayom.com 32 32 Passover is about embracing 2 contradicting narratives https://www.israelhayom.com/2024/04/24/passover-is-about-embracing-2-contradicting-narratives/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2024/04/24/passover-is-about-embracing-2-contradicting-narratives/#respond Wed, 24 Apr 2024 06:59:40 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=948377   Galileo Galilei was persecuted because he thought forbidden thoughts; Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake because he held dangerous beliefs. In 17th-century Europe, free thinkers faced persecution. Scientists, philosophers, and religious dissenters risked their reputations, freedom, and even lives to challenge accepted norms. Many saw no future in the world they knew and […]

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Galileo Galilei was persecuted because he thought forbidden thoughts; Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake because he held dangerous beliefs. In 17th-century Europe, free thinkers faced persecution. Scientists, philosophers, and religious dissenters risked their reputations, freedom, and even lives to challenge accepted norms. Many saw no future in the world they knew and sought escape to a new world across the Atlantic – America.

It's tempting to depict the journey from the Old World to the New World as a passage from darkness to light. But many migrants felt not that they were abandoning the past, but rather reenacting it. To them, Europe was Egypt, America the Land of Canaan, and crossing the Atlantic, their personal Exodus. This consciousness animated not just the early American settlers but the nation's founders over a century later. Many saw King George III as the embodiment of King Pharaoh, and Benjamin Franklin even proposed the crossing of the Red Sea for the Great Seal of the United States.

The Americans were not alone. When battling for national liberation, the Dutch saw themselves as the new Israelites, the modern-day Exodus story. The English shared similar sentiments, and as the philosopher Michael Walzer showed, many Western peoples struggling for freedom cast themselves as Hebrews defying their Egyptian oppressors.

Notably, when Martin Luther King Jr. demanded full civil rights for all Americans regardless of race, he appealed to the American establishment with Moses' cry: "Let my people go." The metaphor had flipped; the American system, founded by those who saw themselves as breaking free from Egypt, was now perceived as the Egypt from which liberation was needed.

What happened? Here's what didn't – this was not about freedom-seeking leaders and activists reading, studying, analyzing, and interpreting the Exodus story. Rather, they were reliving it.

Every few years, the question resurfaces – "Is Exodus a story true?" That is, does the narrative we tell reflect actual historical events? Among archaeologists and historians, there is no consensus. Perhaps we should rephrase the query. We do not know if the Exodus story is real, but we know that historical events in the West have tried to mirror the Exodus story. Great stories are not measured by how accurately they depict the past, but by how they shape the future.

Two perspectives

The Exodus story, a spectacle of "blood, fire, and pillars of smoke," is a tale of wielding extraordinary power. But perhaps the greater drama is not of the story of power, but of the power of the story – its ability to magnetize human history and seduce those who encounter it into becoming consumed by it, ceasing to merely observe the story and beginning to be the story.

The proven power of the Exodus story is a significant component of the cultural patriotism Zionism sought to cultivate. The Bible is a national book, created by the Jewish people and tells their story, yet this very book shaped the consciousness of vast swaths of humanity. The opening passage of Israel's Declaration of Independence sees the Bible's universal influence as the Jewish people's greatest historical achievement: "In the land of Israel, the Jewish people came into being. Here their spiritual, religious, and political identity was shaped. Here they achieved sovereignty and created cultural assets for all humankind and gave the world the eternal Book of Books." 

In other words, we have a story, and all peoples are invited not only to study it, but to live it. 

Here are two perspectives on the Exodus story: one from within the story, and one on the story itself. From within, it depicts the ancient Hebrews enslaved in Egypt, rebelling, liberating themselves, and marching to freedom – a story of a solitary people navigating a world that seeks to subjugate and, at times, annihilate it. The second perspective is the inverse: The world draws inspiration from the Jewish people, and in moments when nations seek emancipation from their oppressors, they reenact the ancient Hebrew narrative.

It is almost impossible to reconcile these two perspectives: human reality is replete with base, violent impulses directed at Jews that we must defend against and insulate ourselves from. Yet simultaneously, human reality brims with the influence of Jewish ideas, and we have an ancient, biblical mandate to engage with the world and contribute to its repair. Can we hold both views concurrently?

An optical illusion

Not all can hold these two perspectives at the same time. On the far-Right, there are hyper-nationalistic Israelis who seek to withdraw from the world; on the far-Left, there are highly universalistic Israelis who seek to dissolve into it. These two groups are homogeneous; their value systems are built on a single foundational tenet – unbridled nationalism devoid of universal humanism on the extreme Right; universal humanism untempered by nationalism on the post-Zionist Left. Most Israelis are not homogeneous, but rather, hybrids – humanistic and nationalistic concurrently.

One of the profound processes unfolding in Israeli society in recent months is the shared realization of the great optical illusion to which we had fallen victim. We thought Israel was divided in two – nationalists versus universalists; the Right is nationalist, the Left is universalist, and the tension between them is tearing Israel apart. But this is an optical illusion. Throughout months of war, we keep rediscovering that Israel is not divided into two, but three: the mainstream of Israeli society is hybrid.

When we believe the optical illusion that Israel is divided into two, the hybrid Israelis perceive themselves as the moderate, compromising fringe of one of the two groups. But when divided into three, the hybrid Israelis understand that they are not the fringe of either group, but rather, a group unto themselves – not just Israel's largest, but one capable of uniting and leading it.

The paradox of Passover

The emerging Israeli hybridity amidst the harsh war we are embroiled in is also one of the great hopes arising from it. Israeli hybridity is, in essence, Jewish hybridity, which we encounter in the paradox of Passover. On the Seder night, we recount the story of solitary people in a hostile world, one of whose messages is that in every generation, there are those who rise to destroy us – a story that cultivates suspicion of the world and the inclination to withdraw from it. Yet it is this very story that has been embraced by the world and become a universal tale. The paradox of Passover is the paradox of Israel.

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New Chabad Haggadah becomes No.1 bestselling Jewish book on Amazon https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/03/29/new-chabad-haggadah-becomes-no-1-bestselling-jewish-book-on-amazon/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/03/29/new-chabad-haggadah-becomes-no-1-bestselling-jewish-book-on-amazon/#respond Mon, 29 Mar 2021 09:00:23 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=604815   The Passover Haggadah has seen more editions than any other Jewish book in history. Still, the recently released Chabad.org Haggadah, which is faithful to tradition, has already set a new standard for the times. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter Written and designed by the staff, it was created in the wake of […]

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The Passover Haggadah has seen more editions than any other Jewish book in history. Still, the recently released Chabad.org Haggadah, which is faithful to tradition, has already set a new standard for the times.

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Written and designed by the staff, it was created in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic as so many were suddenly tasked with making seders for the first time, and with many Jews still homebound and planning to hold Passover alone or just with immediate family.

The illustrated Haggadah provides extensive notes about the seder and an easy-to-understand English translation with commentary.

Since its launch mid-month, the softcover holiday text has been downloaded nearly 100,000 times and has become the No.1 bestselling Haggadah and No.1 bestselling Jewish book on Amazon.

"The response has been tremendous – well beyond what we anticipated," Rabbi Motti Seligson, associate director of Chabad.org, who led the design concept of the Haggadah, said.

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"It seems that this Haggadah is exactly what so many were waiting for to help guide their Passover seder and make it that much more meaningful."

Plans are in the works for an upgraded, hardcover version to be released in 2022.

Reprinted with permission from JNS.org

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Adapting to COVID era, Passover priestly blessing at Western Wall to stretch across 2 days https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/03/29/adapting-to-covid-era-passover-priestly-blessing-at-western-wall-to-stretch-across-2-days/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/03/29/adapting-to-covid-era-passover-priestly-blessing-at-western-wall-to-stretch-across-2-days/#respond Mon, 29 Mar 2021 08:40:53 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=604995   Every year on the third day of Passover, thousands of worshippers gather at Jerusalem's Western Wall plaza to attend a special "priestly blessing" prayer. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter This year, due to the coronavirus pandemic and the limited attendance allowed at the site, the prayer will take place over two days, […]

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Every year on the third day of Passover, thousands of worshippers gather at Jerusalem's Western Wall plaza to attend a special "priestly blessing" prayer.

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This year, due to the coronavirus pandemic and the limited attendance allowed at the site, the prayer will take place over two days, on the second and third day of Pesach, which is Monday and Tuesday.

Last year's ceremony included only 10 priests, known as "kohanim" in Hebrew, residents of the Jewish Quarter of the Old City. This year's ceremony marks the first time since the outbreak of the virus that kohanim across Israel will be allowed to participate in the traditional event.

As is the case every year, the ceremony will be attended by top religious and political leaders, among them Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef, Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau, Western Wall Rabbi Shmuel Rabinovitch, Religious Affairs Minister Ya'akov Avitan, and Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion.

The Western Wall Heritage Foundation asked worshippers that attended the ceremony on Monday to refrain from doing so on Tuesday as well, to allow anyone interested in attending the event to be able to do so.

The priestly blessing at the Western Wall dates back to 1931. It is traditionally held twice a year, on Passover and Sukkot.

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Another Passover in quarantine? Try making your own Haggadah https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/12/another-passover-in-quarantine-try-making-your-own-haggadah/ https://www.israelhayom.com/2021/02/12/another-passover-in-quarantine-try-making-your-own-haggadah/#respond Fri, 12 Feb 2021 11:03:00 +0000 https://www.israelhayom.com/?p=587517   The outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic has turned daily life into a challenge. The things we used to take for granted are no longer available to us, such as spending holidays together with the whole family. Follow Israel Hayom on Facebook and Twitter Passover used to be a festival in which the entire family, […]

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The outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic has turned daily life into a challenge. The things we used to take for granted are no longer available to us, such as spending holidays together with the whole family.

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Passover used to be a festival in which the entire family, along with relatives and friends, gathered around the same table to read the Haggadah.

Last year, the virus caught us unprepared and many Jews all over the world celebrated Passover under lockdown. This year, however, Haggadot.com has created innovative at-home Jewish rituals to help anyone looking to celebrate Passover, which begins the evening of March 28, at home.

"We spent the last year inviting our users to explore new at-home rituals, including home altar making for Rosh Hashanah and designing outdoor light sculptures for Chanukah," Haggadot.com Founder and CEO Eileen Levinson said.

"Our work gives people permission to make the holiday their own. We may feel fatigued, but our site keeps people spiritually nourished," she explained.

The website offers resources for a Haggadah that feels meaningful for a contemporary seder, with content tailored for traditional, Ashkenazi, Sephardi, liberal, feminist, and LGBTQ+ seder meals, as well as classical texts and contemporary explanations about Passover.

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