As the month of Nissan begins my thoughts turn to
Seders past. So many years I have carefully set the Seder table with a stiff,
white tablecloth, sparkling wines glasses just waiting for their wine, stacks
of three matzos covered with the hand-made, embroidered cloths, and time-worn haggadot
next to each place. The Seder always begins with a surge of excitement and
anticipation. Once it ends, though, there is little to resemble to the
beginning either physically or spiritually. The tablecloth is no longer white,
rather stained red, green, and brown from wine lettuce, and chorosis.
Matza crumbs adorn the table, the chairs, and the once shining floor. The
children who have stayed awake are tired and irritable and the adults are not
much better. When I stumble off to bed I can only hope that despite the mess
and exhaustion we have managed to add precious memories, ideals, and attitudes
to remember throughout the coming year.
Every year the Seder is the same and yet different.
There are the components that are precious because they are so much a part of
our childhood. Who doesn’t remember asking The Four Questions for the first
time? It was when I was six or seven that my father patiently taught me how to
recite them. Now, as my grandchildren take their turns, I get teary-eyed
knowing that they will in-turn, please G-d, listen to their own grandchildren.
How many of us, as children, listened to the
recitation of the Four Sons and tried to decide who at the table was wise,
wicked, simple, or unable to ask? Was I
the only one who looked forward to the recital of The Ten Plagues knowing that
I would be able to lick my finger at the end and satisfy some of my hunger
pains? Weren’t many of us roused from our stupors to join in a loud rendition
of Dayenu? And, of course, we all looked forward to Shulchan Orach,
the holiday meal.
As I grew older I began to pay attention to more and
more parts of the Seder. Avodim Hiyenu always makes me think of our
friend’s father who one year cried at this point in the Seder. He might have
been speaking about being slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt but he was remembering
being a slave to Hitler in Europe.
When I was younger and read V”hi, the
declaration that in every generation they rise up to destroy us but the Holy
One, Blessed be He, rescues us from their hand, I never thought it applied to
me. Anti-Semitism ended, I was sure, with the defeat of Nazi Germany. How
tragic that I was wrong. How heartrending that my children and grandchildren
know first-hand that our enemies want to destroy us.
Three years ago I gained a new understanding to another
part of the Seder. Right in the middle of Maggid is a verse from
Yechekel, 16:6. And I passed over you and I saw you wallowing in your blood
and I said to you, “In your blood you will live”; and I said to you, “In your
blood you will live”. I had never paid any attention to this verse but that
night the discussion of it became animated. I learned that this verse it also
recited at a brit milah. The double In your blood you will live is
not a typo; it is recited twice. One time it refers to the blood of brit
milah. The other time refers to the blood of the Pesach sacrifice.
Our newest grandson was with us that Seder night. We
had celebrated his brit in the Itamar synagogue just five weeks earlier,
four days after the horrific murders of Udi, Rut, Yoav, Elad, and baby Hadas
Fogel, who lived down the block from my son and his family. When the Rabbi
named our grandson tears rolled down his face and the faces of others as he recited
the verse In your blood you will live; In your blood you will live. The
memory of the Fogel’s blood was fresh and searing and we wondered how we would
go on without them. Now every time I go to a brit I think of them as I
hear those words.
Sometimes the pain of remembering that tragedy is
overwhelming and I search for comfort. I think of those words In your blood
you will live; In your blood you will live. HaShem kept three of the Fogel
children alive. He has given us a promise that the Jewish people will continue
to live and I believe Him.
I have learned that brit milah is a
personal commandment and the Pesach sacrifice is a communal one. Perhaps
this will be the year that every single one of us can perfect our private
service to HaShem. Then we can work together as a community, putting aside our
difference, and do our public commandments together as a united people. This
accomplished, towards the end of the Seder, when we open the door for Eliayhu
HaNavi he will really enter, herald the coming of the Moshiach, and
Jerusalem will be rebuilt. Next year instead of setting the table for Seder I
will be able to pack my bags for our journey to the Holy Temple. Once there, we
will offer our Pesach sacrifice accompanied by all our fellow Jews. How I pray for this to happen!
Haggadot: text
of the Seder
Chorosis: fruit
and wine mixture to resemble bricks
Dayenu: It
would have been enough for us
Avodim Hiyenu: We
were slaves
Brit milah: circumcision
Eliayhu HaNavi: Elijah
the Prophet
Moshiach: Messiah
2 comments:
I remember well the Seder's we had together growing up. Those were very special times, the whole family together, the joy of Pesach. I remember those times with love and joy. What a wonderful memory you are passing on to your grandchildren. They may not realize it for many years, but it is there and always will bring them joyous blessings.
Thank you for giving me another wonderful reminder of the past.
Love, Esther
Thank you, Esther
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