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April 2009
Reclaiming Our Passover Priorities
*Published in the pre-Passover edition of the Los Angeles Jewish Journal
Throughout the ages, as Jews have journeyed through different places and
experiences, the Passover Seder has evolved and changed. Many of us
might not know that originally the “four questions” were the “three
questions” and that one of the original three is no longer asked at all.
Many might remember, however, that, until recently, most Jews read the
same Hebrew text of the Haggadah at their Seders; today, different
denominations have published Haggadahs with new passages included, older
passages omitted, and the order of the passages rearranged, not to
mention the plethora of personal Haggadahs created and printed annually
by so many of us for our own family-Seders.
But the single greatest change to the Seder in the American Jewish
experience may be our prevailing focus upon a more universal theme and
message related to liberation. Whereas the particular Jewish experience
of subjugation and liberation, either our gratitude or our yearning for
the latter, was once the central expression of the Seder, the
persecution of others and their need for liberation has influenced the
great majority of the changes to both the Haggadah and the Seder
experience for American Jews as we’ve come to feel more secure in our
own freedom and equality as Americans.
In discussing this phenomenon with people planning Seders over the last
several years, they’ve often shared their concern that their non-Jewish
guests or family-members might feel excluded, if not offended, should
their Seders focus too much upon the historical Jewish experiences of
subjugation and redemption or the threats facing Jews today. Some have
even shared that they omit entirely passages in the traditional Haggadah
that reference at all the Jewish experience of persecution and
liberation beyond that of the exodus from Egypt itself.
Ironically, I’ve found over the years that non-Jews attending Seders
come with the expectation, and often the hope, of experiencing a
particularly Jewish occasion. More often than not, we may be responding
to our own Jewish discomfort with a more particularized focus upon our
own history of persecution, or with our need even today to concern
ourselves with the welfare of Jews living with less freedom than we
might enjoy, when we opt to universalize the theme to the exclusion of
the unique historical Jewish experience. And, in doing so, we may even
be avoiding or even denying our own vulnerability, as a miniscule
minority among the world’s population.
Over the last several years, and this year in particular, world events
leave us little room for such self-indulgence. While it is admirable
indeed, and very much in keeping with fundamental Jewish values
championing life and liberty, for us to be sure to include in our Seders
our commitment to the liberation of all human beings, Iran is only
several months away from developing a nuclear arsenal capable of
destroying the State of Israel, home to the world’s largest, youngest,
and only growing Jewish population. Iran’s radical Islamic leadership
has expressed openly its aim to wipe the State of Israel off the map
and, if we do not act immediately and decisively, it will soon have the
means to do so.
We can make a difference, even at this late hour, and we can start at
our Seders. We can encourage our guests or our fellow attendees to
become involved in a nationwide undertaking to thwart Iran’s nuclear
ambitions. We can begin by consulting the website of the American Israel
Public Affairs Committee at www.AIPAC.org. We can download and
distribute at our Seders, and to our friends and relatives nationwide
for distribution at their Seders, important background material on this
issue and links to legislation pending in the House of Representatives
and the Senate that deserve the strongest support of our representatives
in Washington. Via the AIPAC website, we can all lobby our
representatives to support these initiatives. Each of us, and all of our
guests, should be encouraged to contact AIPAC’s offices as soon as
possible after the Seder to learn how we can all be even more helpful in
this sacred and urgent mission to keep the means to annihilate the State
of Israel out of the hands of those who seek such an end.
As for our non-Jewish guests, wouldn’t we be doing them a great
disservice were we to ignore this issue at our Seders as one of central
concern to us as Jews? Shouldn’t they know that both the painful and the
miraculous lessons of our history help us to determine when and how we
must act in the name of Jewish self-preservation? If we reclaim our
Passover priorities, priorities that demand our Jewish self-concern
shamelessly when warranted, more than a few of our non-Jewish guests
might well join with us in our urgent endeavor to keep Iran from harming
our brothers and sisters in Israel. As we invite them to expand the base
of support that will be required to ensure that Iran’s aims are never
achieved, we might well be surprised to learn just how much they may
feel included in our Seders, enlightening us about why they accepted our
invitations to attend our Seders in the first place.
Rabbi Isaac Jeret
Spiritual Leader
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