seder

The Bread of Affliction

by: Rabbi Ari Weiss

Fri Apr 15, 2011 at 11:11:51 AM EDT

Next Monday evening, Jews across the world will be participating the Passover seder, the quintessential Jewish meal. Its food recreates the tastes of slavery and freedom: matzo, the bread of affliction; the maror of embittered lives and hard work; charoset, thick as mortar; the four cups of triumphant redemption; and the savory pesach sacrifice, a celebration of being passed-over and chosen for a life of service. Food at the seder goes beyond just simple nourishment; it is symbol and performance.
 
The seder incorporates these tastes and smells of freedom to tell a story about the Jewish people, specifically, a story of the liberation from slavery and their realization as a people. The Haggadah provides the general narrative of this story but its telling remains incomplete. In every generation, one must regard themselves as though they had gone out from Egypt and in every generation we must continue the work of the Exodus and continue to create freedom and fairness in the world. In this generation, Uri L’Tzedek has chosen to add an ambitious chapter to the seder’s never-ending story of oppression and freedom: food and justice.

The Food and Justice Haggadah Supplement contains commentary by 26 different authors highlighting themes related to food, social justice, and ethical consumption found in the Haggadah.

Download the supplement for free.

 

Discuss :: (5 Comments)

An American Seder

by: Jeremy Burton

Sun Mar 28, 2010 at 14:59:46 PM EDT

By now probably every Jew in America knows that tomorrow night President Obama will host his 2nd annual White House Passover seder (and his third annual participation going back to the now legendary campaign seder during the PA primary).

If President Clinton was the 1st African-American President (to use his own communications hype), then it would seem that President Obama is firmly establishing himself as our 1st Jewish President (it helps that the 1st lady's cousin is a respected rabbi).

So what is it about Obama and Passover that feels just so damn authentic this year? Of course it all makes sense considering that Passover is the most American of Jewish days, America inherently embodies Passover values, and this President, like none in half a century, embodies both.

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Next Year's White House Seder

by: Mik Moore

Sun Apr 12, 2009 at 18:01:19 PM EDT

Well, this is pretty cool.

One small thought: If the President would like to elevate the importance of the Passover seder even more than he has already, he might consider replacing the annual White House Hannukah party(currently the big Jewish White House party) with an annual White House seder. The fact is, Hannukah is a minor holiday that has been taken over by Christmas; Passover has held its own against Easter and is the most popular - and interfaith-friendly - of all Jewish holidays. It also speaks to the relationship between Jews and other traditionally oppressed communities, but particularly between blacks and Jews. Passover is, in short, a holiday with good politics.

A large seder would be less fun for the President, perhaps, but would be a great way to bring together all of the President's closest friends and allies in the Jewish community.

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Escaping the Mitzrayim of Despair

by: Rabbi Jill Jacobs

Mon Apr 06, 2009 at 10:10:53 AM EDT

Click here to download a beautiful PDF of a bookmark with JFSJ's 2009 Pesach message--perfect for holding the page in your haggadah while leaving two hands free to juggle parsley and salt water.

 Text of the message below:

The economic collapse has left many of us feeling powerless and despondent. The world, it seems, has drifted into a new Mitzrayim, a term that refers geographically to the land of Egypt, but literally means a narrow or constricted place.

It is not easy to escape from Mitzrayim. According to the Torah, the ancient Israelites endure slavery for hundreds of years before
summoning the strength even to pray for liberation. Frightened when freedom comes, the people continue to long for a return to the security of slavery.

At one point, God comments, “They will know that I am Adonai their God who brought them out of Mitzrayim to dwell among them.” (Exodus 29:46) Rashi, an eleventh century scholar reads this verse conditionally: “On the condition that I dwell among [the people], I
have brought them out of Egypt.”

That is – as long as the people allow the divine presence to dwell among them, they will remain free from Mitzrayim. But the moment the people stop actively trying to make the divine presence manifest, they will metaphorically return to the constricted space
of Mitzrayim.

By giving tzedakah, by working for policies that will create opportunity for everyone, and by helping to create a more just society, we too can make the divine presence evident among us, even – or especially – in difficult times, and will lift ourselves collectively out of the narrowness of Mitzrayim.

— Jill Jacobs, Rabbi-in-Residence for Jewish Funds for Justice and author of There Shall Be No Needy: Pursuing Social Justice through Jewish Law and Tradition (Jewish Lights 2009), is a leading expert on Jewish perspectives on economic and social justice.

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More Progressive Passover Resources!

by: Joshua Schwartz

Thu Apr 17, 2008 at 17:28:46 PM EDT

(more great resources! - promoted by Mik Moore)

Passover is a truly unique holiday.  Unlike the usually cold and rainy Sukkot, the Jewish spring time holiday is actually occurring in a beautiful spring!  Also, of course, there's the whole no bread thing.

For me, the uniqueness of the hoiday truly plays out in the command to remember the Exodus from Egypt as if we were the ones who had left.

Now, what does it mean to remember?  One type of remembering is passive.  You hear a song and remember the love you once had in your halcyon days of youth.  I believe that the type of memory stressed by the Pesach is of a more active variety.  We hold the seder in our home, and we do not merely allow the story of our liberation wash over us and cause us to "remember" the Exodus.  No!  We are instructed to drash out the tale of our oppression and freedom.  We must raise the matzah and maror and explain their meaning.

The remembering of Passover is a consciousness we are told to take up as our own.  An intimacy with and inherent compassion for the reality of oppression and the deep human thirst for justice and freedom is the gift God has given us through this chag.

In my work here at JFSJ, my main task has been to develop educational materials so that Jewish communities can engage with the issue of immigration.  To my mind, ignoring this issue runs directly counter to the type of remembering we are supposed to be taking up on Passover.  Our experience of slavery is one of the first struggles of the displaced in human history!  It took our crying to God to have God remember the promise made to us in times past.  There are more voices crying out all around us, and ignoring them negates the holy task this holiday has given us.

So: here are a list of progressive Passover resources so that you and your family may actively and consciously call to mind this present situation crying out for liberation from oppression:

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Passover, Earth Day, & Cimate Crisis

by: (Rabbi) Arthur Waskow

Tue Apr 08, 2008 at 09:40:58 AM EDT

Dear Chevra,
 
We have just opened our eyes to the glimmer of the new moon, birthing the moon th when -- in two weeks, at the full moon --  we not only remember and reenact the ancient liberation from the top-down, unaccountable power of Pharaoh, but take responsibility to free ourselves as well. All of us, all earth and all humanity.
 
As the Passover Haggadah says, "In every generation, every human being must go forth to freedom."
 
This year, Passover begins the night of April 19 and includes Earth Day on April 22. And today, the greatest danger of destructive plagues comes from the global climate crisis and the top-down, unaccountable power-structures that are pushing us ever closer to the edge of climate disaster.
 
So this year, it makes sense to focus on the elements of Passover that call us to free and heal the earth and our society from that danger.
 
The notes below can be used in your Passover Seder, in congregational newsletter columns, and as teaching points for sermons.
 
For many other materials on applying religious tradition and thought to the climate crisis, see our Website in the Green Menorah section at http://www.shalomctr.org/taxonomy_menu/1/1
 
Please let us know how you are using these materials by writing GreenMenorah@shalomctr.org
 
Searching for Chameitz - What is Chameitz in Our Lives Today?
 
Before Passover begins, we traditionally rid our houses of chameitz in any form.  Chameitz, literally, is anything made out of wheat, spelt, barley, rye and oats, that has been mixed with water and allowed to ferment for more than eighteen minutes.  It is food that has swelled up.  Chasidic teachers, though, saw chameitz metaphorically, as the swelling up of excess in our own lives.
 
What is metaphorical chameitz in our own day?  What is the excess in our lives that we need to rid ourselves of, or that we can at least tone down, to keep it in proper proportion and perspective?
 
Chameitz, first of all, can be carbon dioxide.  It is the one single element most responsible for the global climate crisis. It is the element that we must immediately reduce our spewing of into the atmosphere.
 

Chameitz can be seen as overconsumption.  Is one lesson of Passover this year that we should simplify our lives?

More specifically, is coal-fired electricity a kind of eco-chameitz?  Is our ddiction to the over-use of oil, coal and gasoline a eco-chameitz?
 
Seen this way, what then do we need to do in order to sweep eco-chameitz from our lives?
 
Some answers:
 
Switching our households and institutions to wind power and other renewable ources of energy; supporting legislation that supports this switch, as ell; getting an energy audit; changing all lightbulbs to CFLs.
 
Driving less; purchasing fuel-efficient and hybrid cars; supporting public ransportation; shopping on-line.
 
Making green renovations and new buildings.  Supporting legislation
mandating such measures.
 
Making these changes is, of course, not easy.  Chameitz looks better and it astes better.  Being more puffed-up in size, it tends to attract people and et more attention.  And it's not even completely bad, as it's permissible to enjoy chameitz 51 other weeks of the year.  What's not alright is to be a slave to it.  More about that later.
 
Shabbat HaGadol - The Great Sabbath
 
The Shabbat just prior to Passover is called Shabbat HaGadol.  This year it calls directly before Passover begins, since the first seder is on Saturday night of April 19, 2008, immediately after Shabbat HaGadol ends.
 
So while we encourage leaders to keep their sermons mercifully short on Shabbat HaGadol, we do endorse using the tradition of "addressing some topical comments" to focus this year on the global climate crisis.
 
Shabbat HaGadol gets its name from the haftarah, the prophetic portion that is traditionally read on this day.  The context of the haftarah is dramatic: its 25 lines represent the final words of the final prophet, Malachi.
 
He writes, speaking on behalf of YHWH:
 
Behold!  I will send you Elijah the Prophet before the coming of that great and awesome day of YHWH, so that he will turn the hearts of the parents to the children and the hearts of the children to the parents, lest I come and strike the Earth with utter destruction.  (Malachi 3:23-24)
 
This call from 2500 years ago that the generations must work together to heal the earth from the danger of utter destruction comes alive with new force in our generation.  When we invoke Elijah the Prophet on Shabbat HaGadol and during our Passover seders, we must make sure that we are giving voice to our own commitment to take actions in our own day to  move this world closer to redemption.
 

This leads to yet another meaning of "HaGadol," as pointed out in the ommentary to this haftarah in the Etz Hayim chumash: "Shabbat ha-Gadol calls attention to an ultimate or "great" accountability that all creatures bear for the resources of the earth...(p. 1296)."
 
 
 
Passover Seder
 
Early in the Seder, we dip green vegetables -- parsley, mint -- into salt water --  the oceans where all life was nourished. We can pause to celebrate the Source of Life that is now endangered, and to pledge our help to heal the green and the blue that enrich our planet, lest the salt water become tears as the green plants wither.
 

Four Questions for Today:
 
We can sing the first line, and then continue as a wordless melody:  Mah nishtanah halailah hazeh mikol haleilot?
[Literally: Why is this night different from all other nights?]
 
Why is this blight different from all other blights?
 
For other blights we can be concerned only for ourselves, why for this blight must we be concerned for others?
 
Because the climate crisis affects everyone on Planet Earth, since the atmosphere does not respect the political boundaries that nations erect between themselves.
 
For other blights, we might not really know what's happening, why for this blight are we so sure?
 
Because there is a scientific consensus that human action is leading to global climate temperatures increasing - can we muster up the will to do something about it?
 
For other blights, the problem might seem too hard or too distant for us to do anything about it; why for this blight is it possible for us to make a difference?
 
Because each one of us contributes daily to the crisis - each one of us uses energy, each one of us causes carbon dioxide to be released into the air. And therefore each one of us can daily make a positive change to address the crisis.
 
For other blights, it can seem impossible to get the attention of politicians.  How can we do so for this blight?
 
Because already, key members of Congress are taking bold leadership to address the global climate crisis.  And we need to actively support their efforts.  Though the federal government is not moving quickly enough, there's an inspiring move by local and state leaders to put necessary changes into place even while the national government plods along.  We must call for and support these initiatives as well.
 
 
Avadim Haiyinu - Once We Were Slaves: Passover as a Call for Environmental Justice:
 
Later in our seder we read, "In every generation, we are obliged to regard ourselves as though we ourselves had actually gone out from Egypt."  We are to remember the experience of being slaves, of being disenfranchised, of being the ones with the least power, with the least resources, with the least people looking out for our welfare and our well-being.  We are to remember the experience of being valued only for what we can do, what we can do for others, rather than for our inherent value as human beings.
 
Environmental degradation in the United States most severely harms those people who are already the ones with the least power.  All one needs to do is think of the aftermath to Hurricane Katrina.  Or look at asthma rates in lower-income neighborhoods, or exposure rates to toxic waste.  Similarly, the global climate crisis most severely harms people in those countries that also have the least.
 
While we in the United States will be forced to make gradual changes to adapt to a changing climate, people in other countries will face refugee crises and fierce wars over shifting agricultural and water distribution patterns.
 
And so, on this Passover, we remember avadim haiyinu, that we were slaves.
 
Avadim haiyinu, haiyinu, atah beney chorin, beney chorin
Avadim haiyinu atah atah beney chorin.
Translation: "Once we were slaves but now we are free"
 
We remember that we were slaves, doing so in order to remember that our obligation is to help set everyone free.  And we don't just sing the words. We commit ourselves to making sure that the moral voice continues to be spoken, ensuring that concern for environmental justice continues to be a part of any public policy.
 
For example, the Lieberman-Warner "America's Climate Security Act" already includes legislation about environmental justice.  As this bill is debated and eventually passed, we commit ourselves to making sure that these sections not only survive deliberations, but also that they are strengthened.
 
Environmental Plagues Then and Now:
 
In the Exodus story, nearly all but the final two plagues were environmental in nature.  We can see this clearly from the teaching of Rabbi Yehuda Halevi, a 12th century Spanish physician and poet, who explained that the first eight plagues could be divided in a way that made their environmental basis clear:  two came from water (blood, frogs from Nile); two came from the earth (lice and wild animals); two were infections carried by the air (plague and boils); and two were things carried by the air that did physical damage (hailstorms and locusts). 

In our own day, we face a daunting array of environmental plagues as well.
 
[Everyone fills up the next glass with wine or grape juice.  Leader lifts up kiddush cup and invites everyone else to do likewise. As each environmental plague is said out loud, a drop of wine/grape juice is poured out, or drops are removed by dipping finger into cup]
 
Leader asks: What are the environmental plagues that are befalling us in our own day?
 
Answers might include:
undrinkable water in rivers
frogs dying
Great Lakes drying
glaciers melting
polar bears drowning
seacoasts rising
droughts increasing
extreme weather conditions increasing
temperatures rising
unhealthy air quality
changing bird migration
melting of permafrost
spread of infectious diseases
famine
animal and plant extinction
 
 
Rabban Gamliel and the Three Elements of Any Passover Seder:
 
Rabban Gamliel used to say:  Whoever does not explain the following three things at the Passover festival has not fulfilled their duty, namely:  the
Passover sacrifice, Matzah and Maror.
 
1.  Passover Sacrifice:
 
Point to the shank bone, beet,  or Paschal yam, pass it around:
 
This shank bone/Paschal yam that we put on our seder plate represents idolatry.  The ancient Egyptians worshiped the lamb. And so to sacrifice a
lamb right under the Egyptians' noses was an act of defiance, one of the first ways that the ancient Israelites began to throw off the shackles of
slavery.  The shank bone/Paschal yam in our own day represents saying and doing what is right, in defiance of what the Pharaoh's in our own day tell
us to say and do.
 
Who are the Pharaohs in our own day?  Who tells us what to do, not because it's right but because they tell us to? (Invite responses from people
gathered there).
 
How about those in our own government who for so long denied that there even was a global climate crisis, even while they provided subsidies to the oil
industry in Texas and Saudi Arabia?  Or the US delegation at the United Nations Climate Talks in Bali, which this past December obstructed progress
toward world action to address the global climate crisis?
 
Or the top officials of the Environmental Protection Agency, which this past December denied California and 18 other states the ability to set greenhouse
gas emission standards stricter than federal levels?
 
How about Senators and Representatives who serve those who pay the most money, at the expense of those who pay the most dearly for short-sighted and
self-serving policies?
 
How about the leaders of the oil and automobile industries, who enrich themselves at the expense of planet Earth?  Who devise ever-more ingenious
ways to entice us to waste more resources, to deplete more energy reserves, and to burn more carbon into the air, while their own pockets deepen and the
global climage worsens?
 
The hearts of pharaohs too often, as in the Exodus story, become hardened. So that an overwhelming scientific consensus about rising climate
temperatures can be ignored.  So that a unanimous recommendation by EPA legal and policy advisers can be ignored, as in the case of the denial of
California's request to enact stricter carbon emission standards.
 
But we can't just look outside of ourselves, blaming others.  Who buys gas guzzling cars?  Who allows politicians to get away with serving the
interests of Big Business in the present at the expense of our shared future?  Who allows Congress to subsidize the coal industry while allowing
alternative sources of renewable energy to be underfunded?
 
Earlier in this Maggid section of our seder, we read another reason, other than slavery, for our need for redemption: "Mit'chila ovdei avodah zara,"
"In the beginning, our ancestors were worshipers of idols." Not only the Egyptians worshiped idols.  We did, too!
 
At Passover, we mark the need for liberation not just from external Pharaohs, but from internal ones as well.  Passover is a time to ask not
just four questions, but hard questions:  In what ways are we addicted to oil? To over-consumption?  To having the newest and the latest and the most
advanced?  To comfort and convenience that takes a toll and levies a cost that doesn't get tallied up until some later year, off in some distant murky
future?  To a lifestyle made possible by the hands of and/or adversely affecting people half a world away, out of sight and too often out of mind?
 
2.  Matzah
 
[Distribute pieces of matzah to everyone present; leader holds up piece]
 
We began the Maggid section of the seder by holding up a piece of matzah and saying, "This is the bread of affliction."  It represents where our spirits
are flat.  It represents what happens when we are beaten down, pressed down, and see ourselves as powerless.
 
But just as matzah literally has two physical sides, so too does it have two sides spiritually. From one perspective it is the bread of affliction, but,
when turned over, when seen from the other side, it is also the bread of liberation, of freedom, of power to change our worlds for the better.
 
How do we make this transformation, from being pressed down to rising up?
 
To answer this, we must ask: what is the significance of matzah?
 
Traditionally, we are forbidden to eat or possess chameitz in any form during Passover. Chameitz literally is food with leavening, fermentation, souring, food that swells up.  Chasidic teachers, though, saw chameitz metaphorically, as the swelling up of excess in our own lives.
 
What is metaphorical chameitz in our own day?  What is the excess in our lives that we can rid ourselves of, or that we can at least tone down, keep in proper proportion and perspective?  [can get responses from gathering]
 
Chameitz, first of all, can be carbon dioxide.  It is the one single element most responsible for the global climate crisis.  It is the element that we must immediately reduce our spewing of into the atmosphere.
 
Chameitz can be seen as overconsumption.  Is one lesson of Passover this year that we should simplify our lives?
 
More specifically, is coal-fired electricity a kind of eco-chameitz?  Is our addiction to the over-use of oil, coal and gasoline a eco-chameitz?
 
Seen this way, what then do we need to do in order to sweep eco-chameitz from our lives? [can get responses from the gathering]
 
Some answers: switching our households and institutions to wind power and other renewable sources of energy; supporting legislation that supports this switch, as well; getting an energy audit; changing all lightbulbs to CFLs.
 
Driving less; purchasing fuel-efficient and hybrid cars; supporting public transportation; shopping on-line.
 
Making green renovations and new buildings.  Supporting legislation mandating such measures.
 
But before we can transform our matzah from the bread of affliction into the bread of liberation, we must face squarely the challenge that we face:
 
3. Maror
 
Maror means bitter herbs.  It represents the pain of our slavery in Egypt. It represents the harm of our actions today.
 
Throughout the past eight years, here is the legacy that has set back the cause of global climate health:
 
As someone says each action aloud, everyone else can sing the refrain, "Let my people go."
 
1. Denied California the Clean Air Act waiver, thus blocking 18 other states from enacting the stricter greenhouse gas emissions standards as well. Sing: "Let my people go."
 
2. Interfered with climate change science, revising NASA and other agency documents to remove language regarding climate change, and engaged in a systematic effort to mislead policy makers and the public about the dangers of global warming.
Sing: "Let my people go."
 
3. Advocated for more nuclear power plants.
Sing: "Let my people go."
 
4. Opened public land in the Rocky Mountains and Alaska to oil and gas drilling.
Sing: "Let my people go."
 
5. Declared carbon dioxide not to be a pollutant.
Sing: "Let my people go."
 
6. Weakened regulations governing air pollution.
Sing: "Let my people go."
 
7. Rejected the Kyoto Protocol, withdrawing the United States from the global warming treaty.
Sing: "Let my people go."
 
Matzah as a Call to Action:
 
Though mentioned and discussed in response to Rabban Gamliel's assertion that matzah is among three things that must be mentioned in order for the Passover seder to be complete, we don't actually get to eat matzah until after the Maggid section.
 
So as we finally approach being able to eat a piece of matzah, let's take a moment to examine a key question:  How does the bread of affliction transform into the bread of freedom?
 
Chameitz can only be made from ingredients that can also be matzah.  The only difference between matzah and chameitz is what we do with those ingredients.  Making chameitz is easy; all you have to do is mix the ingredients together and then do...nothing!  The source of the substance forbidden during Passover is simply waiting and not doing anything. Inaction.
 
Making matzvah, on the other hand, is difficult.  It takes great determination, swift action, and constantly working toward the goal.  When this great effort is made, when we don't let obstacles stand in our way, when we take each step that needs to be taken, with our eyes always on the prize, then the bread of affliction transforms into the bread of liberation.
 
And One for After the Meal - The Prophetic Promise of Elijah:
 
On the Shabbat just before Passover, we read the words of the prophet Malachi, who describes God's promise to send Elijah the Prophet to turn the hearts of parents to children and the hearts of children to parents - "lest the earth be utterly destroyed." This call from  2500 years ago that the generations must work together to heal the earth from the danger of utter destruction comes alive with new force in our generation.
 
When we sing to welcome Elijah, we are giving voice to our own commitment to take actions in our own day to move this world closer to redemption - in our own lives, in our synagogues, offices, and institutions, and by working for changes in public policy.
 
This is what we mean when we sing of Elijah the Prophet coming to us: Elijah is not a person who comes and changes our world, but is rather the name we give to the change that we ourselves bring about through our determined and inspired action.
 
Sing:
 
Eliyahu hanavi, Eliyahu hatishbi
Eliyahu, Eliyahu, Eliyahu hagiladi
Bimherah veyameynu yavo eleynu
Im mashiach ben David, im mashiach ben David
Elijah the Prophet come speedily to us hailing messianic days.
 
Second Seder - Counting Toward Sinai:
 
During the seder on the second night of Passover, we begin counting the 49 days that link freedom from slavery to freedom to enter into a relationship of responsibility and purpose.  Our tradition recognizes that big changes don't happen overnight, but rather take careful planning and preparation.
 
Pulling our world back from the brink of the global climate crisis will require many small and large steps.  No single step alone will solve the problem.  But we can ensure, with each step, that we are at least moving in the right direction.
 
Just as our tradition gives us a 49 day period to spiritually prepare ourselves to stand at Sinai, the second seder is a good time to begin making a plan for what steps each individual, family and community will take toward addressing the crisis we face.
 
Third Day of Passover is Also Earth Day!
 
This year, Passover converges with Earth Day.  And it does so at a time when the global climate crisis can no longer be ignored, calling for us to take bold action.
 
Let's make our voices heard at congressional offices, visiting our Senators and Representatives to say that legislation such as the Lieberman-Warner "America's Climate Security Act" matters greatly to us, and that we insist that it be strengthened and that it eventually actually become the law of the land.
 
And let's do so in a way that is not only a protest, but also a celebration, a re-affirmation, of our power to free ourselves from limitations both external and internal. At Passover, we invoke Elijah the Prophet, as the harbinger of a world redeemed through the actions that we take. 

Seventh Day of Passover - Crossing the Sea:
 
Traditionally, the seventh day of Passover is associated with the Israelites crossing through the Sea of Reeds to escape the pursuing Egyptian army.
 
In a midrash from the     Babylonia Talmud (Sotah 36), Rabbi Yehuda described how "Each tribe said: "I am not going into the water first." During the endless debates, Nachshon from the tribe of Judah jumped into the sea.  He was on the point of drowning when God suddenly divided the waters. 
In other words, the miracle of the splitting of the sea wasn't simply a divine intervention. And it wasn't brought about by one strong central leader.  Rather, one single person, a member of the crowd, took action that was so bold and so inspired and so filled with faith that the miracle then was activated.
 
What a powerful counter-balance to all the words associated with Passover! Time to stop talking; time to do!
 
Prepared by Rabbi Jeff Sultar
Director, Green Menorah Program of The Shalom Center
greenmenorah@shalomctr.org
6711 Lincoln Drive
Philadelphia, PA 19119
(215) 438-2983

Discuss :: (2 Comments)

Labor Seders across the U.S.A.

by: Arieh Lebowitz

Mon Mar 31, 2008 at 12:00:00 PM EDT

The Jewish Labor Committee, often working with local groups, has organized a number of Labor Seders across the country this year: Boston, MA; Brooklyn and Manhattan, NYC; Philadelphia, PA; St. Louis, MO; Washington, DC; Houston, TX, and Los Angeles, CA.

At these festive events, members of the Jewish community and members of the trade union movement sit down together for a a Seder meal and explore the relationships between the traditional story of Pesach and more recent struggles for freedom and dignity.
Most of the Labor Seders listed below still have seats available - but if you're interested in participating, call soon.

People MUST make reservations - you cannot enter without one!

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