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FORGIVENESS AND RECONCILIATION – A Poem in Memory of Pope John XXIII and my Aunt and Uncle

08 Monday Dec 2025

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bible, christianity, Faith, god, jesus

Pope John XXIII (1881-1963)

The encounter between the biblical Joseph and his brothers twenty years after they sold him into slavery, an event that inspired me to write the poem below, is among the most emotionally dramatic and heartfelt meetings between brothers in all of scripture. The resolution of their conflict has important implications for us and for the numerous religious, cultural, ethnic, and national groups in America and around the world. In this era of polarization, inter-group and inter-religious distrust and tensions, the story of Joseph and his brothers can be regarded as a corrective healing template. See the book of Genesis, chapters 37 to 50.

Pope John XXIII (1881-1963) thought so much of the encounter between Joseph and his brothers that he quoted the text: “I am Joseph, your brother” (Heb. אני יוסף אחיכם – Ani Yosef Achichem) (Genesis 45:4) to a delegation of 130 American Jewish leaders associated with the United Jewish Appeal in the Vatican on October 17, 1960, five years before the Second Vatican Council published its revolutionary document Nostra Aetate (“In Our Time” or “In Our Age”) in 1965. That document augured the Catholic Church’s modern approach to non-Christian religions, particularly Judaism and Islam, but also to other Christian religious streams. The document emphasized our shared humanity, common values, and the importance of interfaith dialogue, and it affirmed Judaism’s, Christianity’s, and Islam’s shared spiritual roots in the biblical Abraham while rejecting historical condemnations of one religion or other religious streams. 

The moral message in the Joseph stories and in Nostra Aetate is simple – the more commonality we feel with those who are unlike us, the more empathy we will experience and the greater will be the likelihood that we will reach out and act with a sense of shared responsibility in times of need, persecution, poverty, hate, bigotry, and a people’s powerlessness.  

The bronze bust of Pope John XXIII pictured above was given by the Pope to my aunt and uncle – Dr. Max W. and Fay Bay – when they met with the Pontiff in the Vatican in the early 1960s. My uncle was the President of the Jewish Federation Council of Greater Los Angeles and my aunt was a beloved and respected leader in the Women’s Division of the United Jewish Appeal when they represented Los Angeles Jewry in a meeting with the Pope.

Fay and Max left the bust to me in their will, and I treasure it because it represents a new era in the relationship between the worldwide Catholic Church and the Jewish people, and it recalls my loving memories of my mother’s oldest sister (there were ten siblings) and her husband.

Here is my poem:

I can’t stop the dreams in the night / Even while awake I gaze the light / My mother died my father sighed / And wondered about my dreams.

Trusting a man along the way / I found my brothers lying in wait / To banish me from family and home / And send me far away.

They could not utter even my name / They cast me down and spat me away / They broke my father’s heart and claimed / That I had passed away.

My name was written in the stars / But I became a slave and was scarred / And as flesh in a woman’s lustful heart / Who also cast me away.

Her master incensed sent me to Sheol / But still a seer I glimpsed a glow / And blessings bubbled into my dreams / As I wondered about my way.

Alas I was given a royal reprieve / And brought to a place beside the King / I served him long and faithfully / And continued to dream my dreams.

My heart shut down over twenty odd years / My love poured into cold desert tears / I amassed power and instilled much fear / While serving at the pleasure of the King.

My brothers came their faces forlorn / Begging for bread before the throne / Thinking me Viceroy with scepter in hand / Not Joseph of their family clan.

My grandfather re-dug his father’s wells / Seeing my brothers the waters swelled / Into my steeped-up and hardened heart / I opened to love again.

I forgave them all and brought them near / Saved them from their desert fears / Settled them safely amongst their peers / As God intended over all those years.

  • Poem composed by Rabbi John L Rosove

IN THE BLACK NIGHT – A Poem for Parashat Vayishlach

03 Wednesday Dec 2025

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bible, Faith, genesis, god, jacob

Introduction:

I originally posted my poem “In The Black Night” on this blog on Friday, November 15, 2013 during the week in which Jews around the world read Parashat Vayishlach (Genesis 32:4-36:43) as part of the annual cycle of Torah readings. I re-read it this week in which again we read Vayishlach.

My poem addresses not only the biblical relationship between the fraternal twins Jacob and Esau from the perspective of Jacob, but also the relationship between competing political parties, peoples, and nationalities.

I offer it again now because it ought to be obvious how destructive and corrupting to human relationships are the impulses of ego, need, and ambition.

“In the black night / the river runs cold / slowly passing me by / over formerly sharp-edged stones / worn smooth by centuries of churning, / as if through earthy veins – / and I Jacob, alone, / shiver and wait / to meet my brother / and daylight.

Will there be war? / And will the angels carry my soul / up the rungs of the ladder / leaving my blood / to soak the earthy crust?

A presence!? / And I struggle yet again / as if in my mother’s womb / and in my dreams.

We played together as children once, / my brother Esau and me / as innocents, / and I confess tonight / how I wronged him / and wrenched from him his birthright / as this Being has done to me / between my thighs.

I was so young / driven by ego and need, / blinded by ambition, / my mother’s dreams / and my father’s silence.

I so craved to be first born / adored by my father, / to assume his place when he died / that my name be remembered / and define a people.

How Esau suffered and wailed / and I didn’t care. / Whatever his dreams / they were nothing to me – / my heart was hard – / his life be damned!

But, after all these years / I’ve learned that Esau and I / each alone is / a palga gufa – a half soul / without the other – / torn away / as two souls separated at creation / seeking reunification / in a sea of souls – / the yin missing the yang – / the dark and light never to touch – / the mind divorced from body – / the soul in exile – / without a beating bleating heart / to witness – / and no access to the thirty-two paths / to carry us together / up the ladder / and through the spheres. 

It’s come to this! / To struggle again – / To live or die.

Tonight / I’m ready for death / or submission.

Compassionate One: / protect Esau and your servant – / my brother and me / as one – / and return us to each other. 

El na r’fa na lanu! / Grant us peace and rest! / I’m very tired!”

Originally published in the CCAR Journal: Reform Jewish Quarterly, Spring, 2010, pages 113-115.

Life Lessons for Elul – A Hedge Against the Toxicity of Today’s American Politics and War

14 Sunday Sep 2025

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bible, Faith, god, Israel, jesus

Soren Kierkegaard said: “It is perfectly true, as philosophers say, that life must be understood backwards. But they forget the other proposition, that it must be lived forwards.”

Though we’re always living forward, the life lessons we learn can help to shape our future. Since this is the season of self-examination leading to the High Holidays, I offer a list of 32 life lessons I’ve learned – there are others, but the number 32 is significant in Jewish mystical tradition. It equals the 22 letters of the Hebrew א-ב (aleph-bet) plus the 10 “words” of the covenant (aka 10 Commandments), and is the number equivalent for the Hebrew word לב (heart – lev: lamed – bet) which the mystics teach are the number of pathways to God.

I offer the following as a hedge against the toxicity in today’s American political environment, the Hamas-Israel war, and the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza in these days leading to the High Holidays. Some of the following I borrowed 15-20 years ago, gratefully, from a then 90 year-old lady named Regina Brett that were published in the Plain Dealer from Cleveland, Ohio (hers are in italics).

They’re not necessarily a way to God, but a means to a healthier, wiser, and more sacred way of living, at least as I’ve come to believe in them.

  1. God gave us life and our natural abilities only – everything else is either up to us or a result of dumb luck.
  2. Life isn’t always fair, but it’s still good.
  3. Life is short, so cut your losses early.
  4. Begin planning for retirement as a teen by developing your passions and interests, for they will sustain you when you get old.
  5. Make peace with your past so it won’t screw up your present.
  6. You don’t have to win every argument, so at a certain point stop arguing.
  7. Love your spouse/partner, children and grandchildren above all other people and things. If you aren’t married or do not have children, nurture the special friendships in your life.
  8. Don’t compare your life to anyone else’s as you have no idea what their journey has been all about.
  9. If you can’t publish what you want to say or do on the front page of The New York Times because doing so would be slanderous of someone else or less than dignified, don’t say or do or post it anywhere, including on social media.
  10. Try not to speak ill of anyone, but if you must, do so only with trusted family and friends and then only so as to understand better how to cope with people like that.
  11. Don’t procrastinate to see doctors. It may save your life (note: it saved mine).
  12. Carpe diem. Take pleasure in this day and do what inspires you for we don’t know what tomorrow will bring.
  13. When it comes to chocolate, resistance is futile.
  14. Breathe deeply as it calms the body, mind, heart, and soul.
  15. Take your shoes off whenever possible as studies indicate that doing so will prolong your life.
  16. Too much alcohol and drugs (in fact – any amount of alcohol and drugs) dull the mind and loosen the lips compelling us to say things we may mean but don’t want said and to say things we may not mean at all.
  17. Get a dog or a cat for the love for and from such a creature is unlike anything else we will ever know.
  18. Over prepare, and then go with the flow.
  19. It’s not what you say; it’s how you say it.
  20. Speak the truth but only when you know you can be effective and only if it doesn’t cause another person unnecessary harm or hurt. Otherwise, be quiet.
  21. Stand up to bullies wherever they are and whenever you encounter them, personally and in work, organizational and political life.
  22. Time does heal almost everything.
  23. Don’t fear or resist change for it is natural, necessary, and an opportunity for growth.
  24. Don’t envy other people’s talent, job, wealth, circumstances or life – you likely already have everything you need.
  25. Love isn’t just a matter of the heart – it requires concrete acts of altruism (no quid pro quo) in support of others.
  26. Learn Torah, read great literature, view great art, and listen to great music as often as you can – they will enrich, change, and enhance your life and will inspire you (hopefully) to do what you might never choose to do otherwise.
  27. Support the State of Israel as the democracy and Jewish State that it is regardless of its imperfections and corruptions, for Israel remains the best hope for the Jewish people to create a utopia worthy of the ethics of the Biblical prophets, the compassionate teachings in rabbinic and modern writings, and the vision as articulated in Israel’s Declaration of Independence (see https://avalon.law.yale.edu/20th_century/israel.asp).
  28. Be modest.
  29. Be forgiving.
  30. Be kind.
  31. Be generous.
  32. Be grateful.

A New Hebrew Language Book Recommendation

19 Tuesday Aug 2025

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bible, christianity, Faith, god, jesus

My Hebrew teacher, Tamar Kfir, who lives in the German Colony in Jerusalem, has just published a wonderful user-friendly Hebrew language book she calls The Handy Book of Hebrew Verbs.

[A disclaimer – I was one of the book’s editors and do not profit from the sale of the book.]

This book is not just another Hebrew language book. It focuses on 97 of the most commonly used verbs, their infinitives, the preposition that follows each verb, the verb’s gender forms and tenses, and 5 sample Hebrew sentences (transliterated  and translated) that show how the verb is used in every-day Israeli speech. Tamar includes also a list of many commonly used Israeli slang expressions and their meaning.

Each verb has a dedicated page, its 3-letter root set inside a circle, and other words based on that root spraying out like the spokes of a bicycle wheel.

Tamar’s website (www.HebrewWithTamar.com) offers an opportunity to see sample pages and other offerings, how to order a copy or multiple copies, and her direct contact information. The book is available on Amazon.

This book ought to be on the bookshelf of anyone who loves the Hebrew language and aspires to become a proficient Hebrew reader, writer and speaker.

Facts, Insights, and Information You Always Wanted To Know About Passover But Were Afraid To Ask!

11 Thursday Apr 2024

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Faith, judaism, passover, pesach, religion

Written and compiled by Rabbi John L. Rosove

Pesach is a unique opportunity for family and friends to come together and bond with the people of Israel and with humanity as a whole. Since October 7, the people of Israel and the innocent among the Palestinians living in Gaza have suffered deeply. Our Seders this year ought to reflect the circumstances in which we and the Jewish people are living today.

Throughout Jewish history, our people has lived with fear first as slaves to the Egyptian masters and then in many lands and eras in which we’ve been powerless and vulnerable to antisemitic attack. We’ve been schooled in the experience of oppression, subjugation, and violence. We know the heart of the stranger and what happens to vulnerable individuals and groups when evil powers oppress them. We’re taught that no one is secure if anyone lives in fear. No one is free until everyone is free.

One of the unique characteristics of Pesach is that in one event – the Exodus – the particular and the universal, the tribal and the humanitarian are experienced together. Consequently, the Jewish people understands that in history we have been both a people living apart and a people linked to the whole of humanity. Our interests and the interests of others necessarily intersect morally, spiritually, and politically.

Hopefully, our Seders this year will give us an opportunity to reflect about the meaning of October 7, the Israel-Hamas war, the dramatic rise in antisemitism, anti-Zionism, and anti-Israel sentiment in our country and around the world, the right of our people to defend ourselves and live securely in our Homeland, and the right of the Palestinian people to live securely in their Homeland too and free from the yoke of a cruel Hamas, the brutality of radical extremist Islam, and free from Israeli occupation in the West Bank.

What follows are interpretations and insights into this festival of Pesach and into the texts and rituals left to us in the Hagadah. I am grateful especially to my teacher and friend, Rabbi Larry Hoffman (Professor of Liturgy, Worship, and Ritual at the Hebrew Union College – Jewish Institute of Religion in New York) who, more than 45 years ago, taught me much about the Hagadah and the significance of this extraordinarily rich liturgy. He called the Hagadah a mirror of the experience of the people of Israel over time, and he noted that when we are sensitive to the people and experiences that gave rise to the texts, midrashim, rituals, songs, and traditions in the Seder, it is as if we are sitting around the Seder table with all who came before us. He was right about that then, and his words and teachings still ring true.

If you find this blog worthwhile before Pesach, consider sharing it with those who will be with you at your Seder.

May your Seders be filled with meaning, joy, and song, with debate and with visions shared of a wholeness that is yet to come.

1. Key Hebrew Terms: Pesach – פסח – Passover; Seder – סדר – “Order” of the Passover ritual; Hagadah – הגדה – The book used during the Seder.

2. The Seder Plate contains the egg (ביצה – beitzah), bone (זרוע – z’ro-a), parsley (כרפס – karpas), bitter herb (מרור – maror), apples/nuts/honey/wine mixture (חרוסת – charoset), lettuce (?). There is a debate among the sages about whether there should be 5 or 6 items. Rabbi Isaac Luria (1534-1572) argued that there should be 6 items because of the mystical resemblance to the Star of David (a symbol of redemption).

3. The Symbolism of the Foods: Egg = birth and rebirth (personal and national); Bone = God’s strong outstretched arm that redeemed the slaves; Parsley = Spring-time (salt water – tears of slavery); Bitter Herb = hardship of slavery; Charoset – חרוסת = mortar that held bricks together; Lettuce = unknown, but possibly represented sacrifice in Temple

4. The 3 Matzot – מצות on the Traditional Platter – Originally they represented the 3 sacrifices brought to the Temple; the Pascal offering – פסח  (lamb), the Tamid – תמיד offering (daily), and the Maaser Sheini – מעשר שיני  (tithing). The number 3 also represents the three classes of Israelites, all of whom are present at the Seder; the Priests (Kohanim – כוהנים), the Vice-Priests (Levi-im – לווים Levites), and the common folks (Yisraelim – ישראלים Israelites).

5. The Matzah – מצה – Sometimes called the “bread of affliction” or the “poor bread” in the Ha Lachma – הא לחמא (Aramaic) section of the Seder, the Matzah is a salvationary substance that points to God’s redeeming power. The midrashim – מדרשים  (rabbinic legends) speak of bread hanging from the trees in the Garden of Eden. The mannah – מנה of the desert is thought to be the food of the hosts of heaven, much as Greek ambrosia was the food of the gods. In any event, the matzah (or bread) not only sustains life, but is directly linked to God’s redemptive power.

6. Afikoman – אפיקומן – The last item eaten in the Seder, the Afikoman is the middle matzah on the ceremonial matzah plate and is broken off and hidden (tzafun – צפון) before the Seder begins to be found by the children/adults at the end of the meal. Since it is impossible to break evenly the Afikoman, the larger half is hidden symbolizing the larger hope the Jewish people hold out for our future. Afikoman is sometimes translated “dessert,” but in all probability it is an Aramaic word originally derived from the Greek “afikomenos,” meaning Ha-ba – הבא, the “Coming one” or Messiah. Breaking the middle matzah symbolizes the broken state of the Jewish people in slavery and the brokenness of the world badly in need of healing. It also symbolizes the Kabalistic idea of the sh’virat ha-keilim – שבירת  הכלים (the breaking of the vessels) and the introduction of the sitra achra – סִטְרָא אַחְרָא (the “other side” of  God, or the dark aspect of the universe, or evil) into the corporeal world. Finding the Afikoman at the end of the Seder, we restore it to the other half symbolizing the redemption of the individual, the people of Israel, the world, and God’s own name (YHVH) that split apart when the creation of the universe began. In effect, the Jewish people is charged with effecting tikun – תיקון (the restoration of the world – the reclaiming of the Garden of Eden – the reunification of God and the restoration of the people of Israel to the Creator/Redeemer). Then all Seder participants eat the Afikoman together. Prizes are given to those who participate in the hunt.

7. The Number 4  – The number 4 is repeated many times in the Seder (e.g. 4 cups of wine, 4 children, 4 sages, 4 questions, the 4-letter Name of God YHVH – the God of “being” that includes God’s imminence and transcendence). Cross-culturally, the number 4 is symbolic of wholeness, integrity, and completion (Hebrew – sh’leimut – שלימות ), a principle goal of Passover and of Jewish life.

8. Elijah the Prophet – is destined to announce the coming of the Messiah – Mashiach – משיח “anointed one.” The Cup of Elijah – Kos Eliyahu – כוס אליהו – entered the Seder in the 15th or 16th century in times of great stress, anxiety, and fear experienced by Jewish communities following the crusades, disputations, blood libel riots, and the Black Plague.

9.  The Open Door – Jewish folklore suggests that at this moment Elijah comes to every Seder bringing his message of hope. Originally, Jews opened the door to show Christian passers-by that nothing cultic or sinister was occurring at Jewish Seders. This tradition began during medieval times when the infamous blood libel, desecration of the “Host” (the wafer in the Catholic Eucharist – symbolizing the body of Christ), and fear of Jews inspired anti-Jewish riots during the Easter season. The most dangerous day of the year for the Jewish community was when Passover and Good Friday coincided.

10. Birth Imagery – The imagery of birth and the important role of women in the Exodus story is prominent and significant throughout the Seder. The holiday of Passover occurs at the spring equinox when the lambing of the flocks took place. Passover celebrates the birth of the Jewish nation out of slavery. The Israelite boys are saved at birth by two Hebrew mid-wives, Shifrah and Puah (Exodus 1:15-21). Yocheved (Moses’ mother) and Miriam (Moses’ older sister) save the future liberator from certain death. Miriam persuades the Egyptian princess, who adopts Moses, to use his own mother, Yocheved, as his wet-nurse to sustain the connection between Moses and the Israelites. Moses grows to manhood and leads the people through the opening of the Sea of Reeds, a metaphor of the opening of the womb into the light. The name of Egypt in Hebrew is Mitzrayim – מצריים (literally, “narrow or constricted places,” like the birth canal). The salt water might suggest the amniotic fluid heralding the beginning of spring. In the end, not only are the Jews born into freedom, but the holiday celebrates newness, rebirth, and birth.

11. The 4 Children – the wise – chacham – חכם; the evil – rasha – רשע; the simple – tam – תם; the one who does not know enough to ask – einu yodea lishol – אינו יודע לשאול . The wise child wants to understand the rituals and the deeper messianic purpose of the Seder and, consequently, the deeper purpose of one’s life as a Jew. He/she/they ask specifically about the meaning of the Afikoman (see above #6). The evil child separates him/herself/themselves from the community. Not participating, standing aloof, being unaccountable, irresponsible, indifferent, and passive leads to the breakdown of community. The rule of law is an essential part of Judaism. To each child we are instructed to teach according to his/her/their circumstances.

12. The 4 Sages – warned by a disciple that the morning Sh’ma – שמע was about to be recited in the Temple, these four sages, led by the great Rabbi Akiba (1st-2nd century C.E.), were in fact plotting revolution against Rome. The disciple was warning the 4 that informers were coming into the synagogue and that the sages’ absence from Morning Prayer would alarm the Roman authorities. The passage “Arami oved avi” – ארמי אובד אבי (My father is a wandering Aramean – Deuteronomy 26:5) is a disguised attack on Rome. If we switch the letters around and change the vet ב of avi to a mem מ to create ami – my people) and we interchange the hearing-sound of the ayin = ah with the aleph=a, we come up with “Romai oved ami” – רומאי אובד עמי (“Rome is destroying my people”).

13. The Purpose of the Seder – to personally experience and empathize with our people’s historic struggle for liberation; also, for the individual to confront those spiritual and psychological enslavements that prohibit inner growth. The ultimate purpose, spiritually and metaphysically, is for each of us to glimpse wholeness sh’lei-mut – שלימות (i.e. the unity of humankind, the unity of the Jewish people, the unity of God’s holiest Name YHVH – and to become one with God). Passover teaches the Jewish people not to be cruel because we know the heart of the stranger and we understand what happens when a people becomes powerless. Jews are traditionally known as rachmanim b’nai rachmanim – רחמנים בני רחמנים – compassionate children of compassionate parents.

14. The 4 Cups of Wine – recalls the four times (Exodus 6:6) that God tells the people that the Redeemer will liberate them.

15. How is this Night Different? – Mah Nishtanah – מה נשתנה – The 4 questions concern why we eat unleavened bread and the bitter herb, dip the greens twice, and recline at the Seder table. Originally, the Q and A associated with the 4 questions reflected an ancient Greco-Roman tradition of having a feast followed by a philosophical/religious discussion.

16. Leavened Bread – Chometz – חומץ – is forbidden during Passover and the tradition recalls the hasty exit of the Israelites from Egypt. Chometz symbolizes sin, the fomenting of the evil impulse (yeitzer ha-ra – יצר הרע), and the necessity of morally cleansing oneself and physically removing from one’s home chometz during the Passover festival. Technically, matzah that is kosher (permitted) for Passover must be mixed, kneaded, and put in the oven to bake within 18 minutes. Any dough that stands longer than 18 minutes is presumed to be chometz and unfit for Passover consumption.

17. The Search for Chometz – B’dikat Chometz – בדיקת חומץ – A tradition conducted the day before Passover.  All chometz is gathered and either burned publicly (bi-ur chometz – ביעור חומץ), sold, or given away to non-Jews. On the night before, it is a tradition that children take a spoon, feather, and a candle and search the house for chometz crumbs. Five grains are considered chometz during Passover: wheat, spelt, barley, oats, and rye. The following are consequently forbidden to be consumed during Passover: whiskey, beer, and bourbon because of the fomenting process. In some Sephardic homes, rice is permissible during Passover but not so in Ashkenazi homes, because of the principle of mar’it  ayin – מראית עיין (“how a thing appears” – i.e. it may in some form look like leaven).

18. Dayeinu and Hallel – דיינו והלל – are sung just before the meal is eaten. These songs reflect the gratitude of the Jewish people that God redeemed us and will redeem us again. The Hallel is composed of passages from the Book of Psalms and the section is among the most ancient in the Hagadah. 

19. Why Moses in missing from the Hagadah – Moses’ name is never mentioned in the Hagadah. This obvious oversight is a deliberate attempt by the rabbis who developed the Hagadah to remind the people that it was God and God alone Who redeemed the people from slavery. Much of the Hagadah developed in the centuries after Christianity was making inroads into the Jewish community in the first centuries of the Common Era. The rabbis were concerned that Jews not deify any human leader as the Christians had done with Jesus.

20. Wine and Matzah in Christian Tradition – Jesus reportedly said at the Last Supper (thought to be a Seder) while pointing at the matzah and wine: “This is my body and this is my blood.” Christian theologians argued for this doctrine of transubstantiation (concretized in the Eucharist) as a legitimate outgrowth of Judaism in the first century of the Common Era (C.E.). It was, however, a significant theological leap from traditional Judaism. For Jews, the bread was widely understood to represent the lamb of the Pascal offering. For Christians, Jesus replaced the lamb even as the wine symbolized his blood. The anti-Semitic defamation of the “blood libel” is a convoluted distortion of the Eucharist turned against itself and against the Jewish people that had refused to accept the divinity of Jesus as the Christ Messiah.

21.  The 10 Plagues – (blood, frogs, lice, wild beasts, blight, boils, hail, locusts, darkness, death of the first born). Many of these plagues represent an attack on the ancient Egyptian gods in an effort to teach that only YHVH, the God of Israel, is the legitimate deity. Traditionally, we take the index finger and drop a bit of wine on our plates as we recite each plague symbolizing the reduction of our joy (symbolized by wine) even when our enemies suffer. The index finger is used to recall God’s finger. It’s a Syrian and Greek tradition to collect all the wine, pour it into a bowl and dump all of it into the street. The characterization of Judaism as tribal/national and humanitarian/universal is expressed in the same event of the Exodus. The diminishing of the cup of wine with a drop for each plague suggests that we must diminish our joy even when our enemies, also created in the Divine image, suffer and perish. This custom, observed by most Jews today, was first initiated by Isaac Abravanel (1438-1508 – born in Portugal and died in Italy) who fled Portugal during the Spanish Inquisition after 1492. This tradition can be introduced this year in the context of Israel’s war against Hamas and the death and injury of so many Palestinian civilians.

22. Moses’ Family – Yocheved (mother), Miriam (sister), Aaron (brother), Zipporah (wife – daughter of the Midianite priest and possibly of Ethiopian origin).

23.  Blood on the Lintels – The Israelites were instructed to smear the blood of the lamb on the lintels and door posts of their houses so that the angel of death (מלאך המוות – mal’ach ha-mavet) would “pass over” their houses while striking dead all the first born of Egypt. Hence, the English word (“Passover”) for the holiday. The word Pesach, however, refers to the Paschal offering in the Temple in Jerusalem and has nothing to do with the angel of death “passing over” the Israelite community.

24. Fast of the First-Born Son – Traditionally, the first-born son fasts on the day before Passover to recall with gratitude God’s saving the first-born sons through the Hebrew mid-wives Shifrah and Puah. In Sephardic homes, the first-born son eats the egg last to recall this personal redemption.

25. Sections of the Seder – Kadesh – urchatz – karpas – yachatz – maggid – rachtzah – motzi/matzah – maror – korech – shulchan orech – tzafun – barech – hallel – nirtzah. At the beginning of the Seder, Sephardim (Jews originally coming from Spain) pass the Seder plate over the heads of the guests symbolizing the passing of the angel of death over the Israelite homes thus sparing the damage caused by the angel of death. While the plate is passed, the sections of the Seder are sung.

26. The Biblical Story of the Exodus – Found in the Book of Exodus, the Israelites had settled in the land of Goshen after a severe famine in the land of Canaan. Joseph brought his father and the 12 sons and 1 daughter to Goshen. But then there “arose a Pharaoh in Egypt who knew not Joseph” (Exodus 1:8) and put all the Hebrews into slavery and hard labor to build his cities. The story is believed to have taken place around the year 1250 B.C.E.  Jews did not build the pyramids, which date from the middle of the 2nd millennium B.C.E. Though the Biblical story says our people were slaves for 400 years, it is likely that they were slaves for a generation (perhaps 40 years). The Bible also says that over 600,000 were freed from slavery (Exodus 1:11). An unruly number, it is more likely that between 10,000 and 15,000 Hebrews and others (i.e. a mixed multitude) came out of Egypt. A people used to slavery, they would be condemned to wander for 40 years (a generation) until the generation of slaves died. Moses himself never entered the land of Israel primarily because of his defiance of God at the incident of M’ribah – מריבה (Exodus 17:2) – Moses was disgusted by the Israelites’ complaining in the desert for a lack of water. God commanded Moses to “speak” to the rock and water would gush forth. However, Moses struck the rock out of anger and his defiance of God’s instruction. He paid the ultimate price for a failure to at once respect God’s command and the failure of leadership of the people to behave peaceably and with compassion as their leader. The Exodus story is completed by the giving of the Torah at Mount Sinai (Exodus 19 and 20), thereby establishing a covenant between God and the people. Following this most important event in the history of Judaism, the people were instructed under the leadership of the architect/artist B’tzalel to build the Tabernacle (Exodus 31:1-6) so that God may dwell amongst the people. The people wandered for 40 years in the desert and they entered and settled the Land of Israel (ארץ ישראל – Eretz Yisrael) (circa 1200 B.C.E.). They ultimately built the First Temple in Jerusalem. For Jews, freedom, responsibility, accountability, engagement with community, and ethical living are part of the Covenant with God.

27. The Very First Seder – The first Seder was held in Egypt at night before the Exodus itself.  Consequently, the Seder is not a celebration of redemption because the redeeming event had not yet taken place. Rather, the Seder is an expression of faith that there will be redemption in the future, that the world is not yet perfected and that there is to be a better more peaceful and more just order of human affairs.

28. The Seder as a Night-time Ritual – The Seder is the only ritual in Judaism that customarily occurs during the dark of night. This is the only time that the Hallel is said at night, and is the only full ritual conducted in the home. Rabbi Levi Meier z’l (1946-2008) suggested that whereas in daylight everything is public, during the nighttime our higher selves are evoked. When Jacob wrestled with divine beings at the river Jabok (Genesis 32) we learn that following the struggle that Yaakov shalem – יעקב שלם (Jacob became whole). This night-time ritual provokes us towards wholeness and integration – i.e. the unification of body, mind, heart, and soul with God. Note that Rabbi Meier was trained as a Jungian therapist.

29. The Miracle of the Sea – Rabbi Lawrence Kushner (b. 1943) wrote: “All of Pesach is concealed within one self-contradictory verse: בתוך הים ביבשה – B’toch haYam b’yabashah — And the children of Israel went ‘into the midst of the sea on dry ground.’ (Exodus 14:22) The miracle, you see, was not that the waters parted but that we all drowned and were reborn free on the other side. You want to be reborn? You must be willing to walk into the midst of the sea on dry ground and risk it all.” 

30. Jews in Every Era – The Hagadah includes elements that were introduced in every period in Jewish history including the Bible, Greek, Roman, Arab-Muslim, Ottoman, Christian Europe, 19th Century Enlightenment, Zionism, the State of Israel, the Holocaust, the establishment of the State of Israel, post Shoah, modern Diaspora, and Israel. We are instructed that every Jew must see him/hers/themselves as if each of us personally went free from Egypt and from our individual “constricted places.” Consequently, when we sit down at the Seder table, if we are sensitive to the history and subtleties of the Seder and the context of the different customs, when and why they were introduced, Jews of every age join us and we link ourselves with them across time and place.

31. The Messiah and Next Year in Jerusalem – The hope of the Jewish people is for a world redeemed of its pain and at peace. The coming of the Messiah symbolizes that dream, and our people’s historic yearning for Jerusalem is a sign of the end of days. Freedom, therefore, involves not only freedom from oppression by dictators, but spiritual freedom from enslavements of our own making. Traditionally, at the conclusion of the Seder all say together לשנה הבאה בירושלים – L’shanah ha-ba-ah biY’rushalayim – Next year in Jerusalem. A new Israeli Reform Hagadah changes the final ending to: לשנה הבאה של שלום – L’shanah ha-ba-ah shel Shalom – May the next year be one of Peace.

32. Contemporary Traditions and Suggestions to Add Depth and Meaning to your Seder:

  1. Include an orange on the Seder plate – an idea introduced by Dr. Susanna Heschel (b. 1956). She asked everyone to take a segment of the orange, make the blessing over fruit (Baruch Atah Adonai Eloheinu Melech ha-olam borei p’ree ha-eitz) and eat it as a gesture of solidarity with Jewish LGBTQ individuals and others who are marginalized within the Jewish community, including widows, in particular. This tradition was changed, as Dr. Heschel explains, by homophobic men and/or women, who felt they could not celebrate and include homosexuals at their Seders. Instead, someone came up with the statement that in response to women becoming rabbis: “That is as appropriate as having an orange on a Seder plate.”
  2. Include Olives on the Seder Plate – olives are grown plentifully in the land of Israel and placing olives on our Seder plates connects us with Israelis and our people living in our historic Homeland.
  3. Place a Kos Miryam – כוס מרים next to the כוס אליהו – Kos Eliyahu – In honor of the matriarch Miriam and older sister of Moses we remember the role women played in the Exodus story and throughout Jewish history by having a glass of water next to the Cup of Elijah. This tradition reminds us of Miriam’s Well believed (in the Midrash) to have sustained the people throughout the period of wandering until Miriam’s death when the wells dried up (Numbers 20:1-2).
  4. Introduce Poetry – Ask members of your family/friends to bring poetry on the themes of freedom, change, redemption, and salvation, and intersperse this poetry (original or from established poets) throughout the Seder.
  5. Invite Personal Testimonies – Ask individuals to share transitional experiences from this past year that enabled them to escape from constricted places – מצריים – of their own making. Ask participants to bring a concrete item that represents a liberating experience from the last year and share throughout the Seder.
  6. Invite Personal Memories – Ask individuals to share the most meaningful Seder they ever attended and why it was so meaningful and transformative.

Notes on the Number “32” – I deliberately stopped at 32 items. The Hebrew for 32 is Lamed-Bet לב and spells lev (meaning “heart”). Number symbolism in Judaism is a long-standing tradition and is found in the Talmudic literature. The mystical tradition of Kabbalah teaches that there are 32 pathways to the heart. 22 is the number of letters in the Hebrew aleph-bet – א-ב. The Hebrew aleph-bet are regarded as the building blocks of creation – we are the people of “The Book” and words are holy. 10 represents the 10 Words (or commandments) – 22 + 10 = 32 (Lev).

May this Passover season be one of liberation for the Israeli hostages languishing in Gaza, and may there be rejoicing, rebirth, and renewal for you and your dear ones. May our people in the State of Israel and around the world experience peace with security in the coming year. We hope for the security and peace for the innocent among the Palestinians caught up in the Hamas-Israel War, and for those living in Ukraine, Africa, Latin America, and every place where violence threatens life and well-being, especially of the innocent.

חג פסח שמח

Happy Pesach

Moses and God’s Tears – A Midrash for Parashat Vayikra

07 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in Divrei Torah, Inuyim - Prayer reflections and ruminations, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life, Poetry

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D'var Torah, Faith, Poetry

So often God called upon Moses – / Three times they met; / first at  the flaming bush, / then on Sinai amidst rock and stone,  / and finally before the Tent of Meeting,  / that Moses might intuit God’s mind / and soothe God’s broken heart / as a lover brings comfort to her beloved.

Since creation / God yearned to bridge the chasm / formed when the Creator pulled away / to open space for the universe.

Alone – exiled within the Divine Self / The holy Name, YHVH, / was divided from Itself as well / when the vessels holding the light shattered / and matter was flung to the far reaches of the universe – / the upper spheres were divorced from the lower, / male from female, / the primal Father from the Mother, / Tiferet from Malchut, / Hakadosh Baruch Hu from Sh’chinah, / Adonai from K’nesset Yisrael.

God yearned to restore what was once whole, / And not remain alone.

Before time and speech / and earth hurled into space / God appointed the soul of the Shepherd-Prince Moses as prophet / and endowed him with hearing-sight / and intuitive-wisdom / and integrated-knowledge.

No one but Moses / came so near to God / for all the rest of humankind / has inadequate vision and understanding.

Moses alone saw with his ears / and heard with his eyes / and tasted with his mind / to withstand the Light.

The prophet descended from Sinai aglow, / the primordial Light shielded through a veil / with divine ink-drops touched to his forehead  / radiating everywhere  / and illuminating the earth’s four corners.

Moses descended as if upon angel’s wings, / weightless cradling the stone tablets / in the eye of raging winds.

Despite his soaring soul, / the prophet was the aleph of Vayikra / most modest of all the letters / unheard – only seen, / to be known internally, intuitively, / as the most humble of anyone / ever to walk the earth.

Though Moses appeared as a Prince in Egypt / his destiny was to be a lonely shepherd / to gather his sheep and God’s people / to draw them by example / nearer to God.

There was so much God needed from Moses – / to bring the plagues / to overpower Pharaoh, / to liberate the people and lead them to Sinai, / to commune with God and pass along the Word, / to construct the Tabernacle and create a home for God / that divinity / might dwell within every Israelite heart  / and thereby comfort God from loneliness.

After all God’s expectations and demands /we might expect Moses’ strength to be depleted, / that he would be exhausted to the bone / and ready to say; / “Enough! O Redeemer – find a new prophet!  / I can no longer bear the burden / and be Your voice and create bridges! / You are Almighty God! / I am but flesh!  / My strength is gone! / My time expired!”

“Nonsense!” proclaimed the YHVH. / “I am not yet ready for your retirement! / My world remains shattered, / My light obscured, / My heart still broken and aching? / I need you to teach My people / and instill in their hearts / a deep love that may heal My wound. / for I cannot do this for Myself.”

Alas, the Creator-Redeemer’s needs were clear – / to be close, so very close to Moses / that the prophet and Israel together / might wipe away God’s tears / and restore God’s heart  / and heal God’s Name.

For a Sweet Pesach Seder – J Street Karpas Reading

15 Friday Mar 2013

Posted by rabbijohnrosove in American Jewish Life, Holidays, Inuyim - Prayer reflections and ruminations, Israel and Palestine, Israel/Zionism, Jewish History, Jewish Identity, Musings about God/Faith/Religious life, Uncategorized

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Faith, Holidays, Israel and Palestinians, Israel and Zionism, Israel/Zionism, Jewish History

On behalf of J Street, we are proud to send you Rabbi Richard Levy’s stirring meditation on the karpas, the vegetable dipped in salt water during Seder. Rabbi Levy urges us to become as courageous as Nachshon ben Aminadav, the leader of the tribe of Judah and the first Israelite to brave the waters of the sea. The Midrash recalls that he went forward while others hesitated. He demonstrated conviction when others wavered.

Today, our hope for Israel and for peace calls upon us to aspire to Nachshon’s courage. Around us are our many sisters and brothers who vacillate, who hesitate to step forward and act with resolution for peace and Israel’s long term well-being. Deliver Rabbi Levy’s message to your Seder participants and, as they dip their karpas, call on them to act with alacrity. In the year to come may every one of us, in the spirit of Nachshon, eagerly advocate for the end of occupation and the beginning of peace, security, hope and freedom for Israelis and their neighbors. As a supporter of J Street, tell them, “This is our time to lead!”

Click here to download the J Street Seder supplement, Dipping into Salty Waters: A Karpas for Our Time https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.jstreet.org/images/J_Street_PassoverGuide_Flat_0313.pdf

Warmest wishes for a sweet Pesach,

Rabbi John Rosove and Rabbi John Friedman
J Street Rabbinic Cabinet

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