Friday, April 06, 2012

Passover During Another Arab Spring

On Passover, we completely disrupt our nightly dinner routine. Some of us host extravagant seders with meals that took hours to cook, and others travel to nearby homes or faraway places. By using a number of symbols throughout the service, we recount how the Jews departed Egypt in the name of God and freedom. In Hebrew, seder means "order". From Beijing to Berlin, Jews around the world start the seder with reciting Kiddush, and we continue through the same sequence. The way we tell the story varies in each household, yet we repeat a similar seder every year. By the time a Jew reaches adulthood, the Passover story comes to mind as easily as one of Aesop's fables or Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet". Most Jews know how Pharaoh enslaved the Jewish people, and God freed us through the leadership and bravery of Moses. The Passover seder serves one primary purpose; we wish to teach the next generation of Jewish children about this most holy event. If we fail to retell this story, complacency will rage throughout the Jewish nation. We not only rejoice about God's miracles in Egypt, but we force ourselves to seriously acknowledge them. Many Jews celebrate Passover in praise of God, and the rest observe the holiday to commend the literal courage of their ancestors. The holiday represents a new dawn in the history of Judaism, our age of freedom. As Moses and his caravan cross the Red Sea, God deems them the Jewish nation. We reached the Promised Land of Israel, and we spread across the world preserving our culture through many eras. Just as parades and fireworks remind Americans on the fourth of July, we eat matzah and bitter herbs to fill our minds with thoughts about freedom.

Towards the end of every seder, we recount the toils of enslaved peoples in the present. We declare to help these people as God answered the Jewish people's ancient cries. Traditionally, we open the door for the prophet Elijah. This old sage represents all of the world's kindness and charity. Elijah allegedly drinks a sip of the Passover wine at each household, showing the prophet's commitment to redeem the entire world. Many haggadot includes, "This year we are here, next year we will be in the Land of Israel. This year we are slaves, next year we will be free." The lines means to encourage Jews to strive for the liberation of Jews in other places where their leaders restrict their freedom. We conclude the seder with a message of hope, a mission to perform Gemulut Hasidim, acts of love and kindness. By coming together on this holiday, we establish ourselves as individuals who share the ability to revolutionize humanity. Moses liberated a nation with only his words, and we too possess this ability.

Last year, our Arab brothers and sisters took hold of their inner voice. We witnessed a wave of revolution, which most recently compares to the turbulent year of 1968. In December 2010, a man in a Tunisian square engulfed himself in flames. That fire roared across the Sahara and Arabian Peninsula. Within a month, the people overthrew their horrid dictator. Egypt soon followed suit, toppling the oppressive regime of Hosni Mubarak. By autumn, organizers created a new, more democratic Egypt. As the spring turned into a passionate summer, Libyans fought a civil war against their malignant leader, Moammar Gadhafi. When each protested ended, Israelis hoped the new leaders would reconsider long-term peace in Israel. This year in Jerusalem, we see a spread of newly freed people. Rather than Jews fighting for the sake of other Jews, the world experienced a revolution on a scale unseen anywhere else in history.

Now, we face a growing problem in this volatile region. We see others in oppression, like the ongoing revolutions in Bahrain and Syria. From our memories of Pharaoh, we know how it feels to face a stubborn dictator, yet the reality of supporting extremists brings fear. Just this week, Egyptians fired missiles into Israel's tropical city, Eilat. After thirty years, it appears young Egyptians want to break a seemingly stable pact negotiated by Anwar El Sadat and Menachem Begin. Is this the mission we want Elijah to complete over this next year? We strive for our reconvening as a nation in the land of Israel, but Israel appears fragile in the face of complete freedom. Overall, I believe supporting democracy across the world holds more importance than the issue of peace between Israel and these Arab neighbors. For every anti-Israeli Arab, another denounces their practices. Over each summer, I spend a couple weeks with a few native Israelis and Palestinians. They know the possibility of peace, for they coexist at my camp during a long, six week stretch in the Catskills. The hopes Israelis held last year were not forsaken. On this night of teaching the children, I seek to deliver this message; all people deserve the same liberties people in Israel and the United States take for granted every day, and next year in Jerusalem, we will come together, not as a nation but as a world.

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