My People's Passover Haggadah Vol 2: Traditional Texts, Modern Commentaries
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My People’s Passover Haggadah
Traditional Texts, Modern Commentaries
In two volumes, this empowering resource for the spiritual revival of our times enables us to find deeper meaning in one of Judaism’s most beloved traditions, the Passover Seder. Rich Haggadah commentary adds layer upon layer of new insight to the age-old celebration of the journey from slavery to freedom—and makes its power accessible to all.
This diverse and exciting Passover resource features the traditional Haggadah Hebrew text with a new translation designed to let you know exactly what the Haggadah says. Introductory essays help you understand the historical roots of Passover, the development of the Haggadah, and how to make sense out of texts and customs that evolved from ancient times.
Framed with beautifully designed Talmud-style pages, My People’s Passover Haggadah features commentaries by scholars from all denominations of Judaism. You are treated to insights by experts in such fields as the Haggadah’s history; its biblical roots; its confrontation with modernity; and its relationship to rabbinic midrash and Jewish law, feminism, Chasidism, theology, and kabbalah.
No other resource provides such a wide-ranging exploration of the Haggadah, a reservoir of inspiration and information for creating meaningful Seders every year.
“The Haggadah is a book not just of the Jewish People, but of ordinary Jewish people. It is a book we all own, handle, store at home, and spill wine upon! Pick up a Siddur, and you have the history of our People writ large; pick up a Haggadah, and you have the same—but also the chronicle of Jewish life writ small: the story of families and friends whose Seders have become their very own local cultural legacy.... My People’s Passover Haggadah is for each and every person looking to enrich their annual experience of Passover in their own unique way.”
David Arnow, PhD
David Arnow, PhD, a psychologist by training, is widely recognized for his innovative work to make the Passover Seder a truly exciting encounter each year with Judaism's most central ideas. He has been deeply involved with many organizations in the American Jewish community and Israel and is a respected lecturer, writer, and scholar of the Passover Haggadah. He is author of Creating Lively Passover Seders: A Sourcebook of Engaging Tales, Texts & Activities and coeditor of the two-volume My People's Passover Haggadah: Traditional Texts, Modern Commentaries, with Rabbi Lawrence A. Hoffman, PhD (Jewish Lights).
Read more from David Arnow, Ph D
My People's Passover Haggadah Vol 1: Traditional Texts, Modern Commentaries Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Creating Lively Passover Seders (2nd Edition): A Sourcebook of Engaging Tales, Texts & Activities Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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My People's Passover Haggadah Vol 2 - David Arnow, PhD
COMMENTATORS:
DAVID ARNOW: The World of Midrash
CAROLE B. BALIN: Modern Haggadot
MARC BRETTLER: Our Biblical Heritage
NEIL GILLMAN: Theologically Speaking
ALYSSA GRAY: Medieval Commentators
ARTHUR GREEN: Personal Spirituality
JOEL M. HOFFMAN: Translating the Haggadah
LAWRENCE A. HOFFMAN: History of the Haggadah
LAWRENCE KUSHNER AND NEHEMIA POLEN: Chasidic Voices
DANIEL LANDES: The Halakhah of the Seder
WENDY I. ZIERLER: Feminist Voices
9. A LONG ANSWER: A MIDRASH ON MY FATHER WAS A WANDERING ARAMEAN …
10. THE ROLE OF GOD
A. GOD BROUGHT US OUT OF EGYPT—NOT BY AN ANGEL …
B. GOD’S PUNISHING MIGHT: THE PLAGUES IN EGYPT AND AT THE SEA
C. GOD’S SAVING MIGHT: DAYYENU
11. SUMMING IT ALL UP …
A. SYMBOLS OF THE NIGHT: PASSOVER, MATZAH, BITTER HERBS
B. THE ESSENCE OF THE NIGHT: IN EACH AND EVERY GENERATION …
C. … TO PRAISE AND REDEMPTION
12. PRAISE
—HALLEL, PART ONE, PSALMS 113–114
A. AN INTRODUCTION TO HALLEL
B. PSALM 113
C. PSALM 114
13. REDEMPTION: BLESSING AND MEAL
A. THE BLESSING OF REDEMPTION AND THE SECOND CUP
B. BLESSINGS OVER THE MEAL: THE SECOND WASHING (ROCHTSAH); MOTSI; MATZAH; MAROR; AND HILLEL’S SANDWICH (KOREKH)
C. THE MEAL
D. CODA TO THE MEAL: THE HIDDEN
AFIKOMAN (TSAFUN); GRACE AFTER MEALS (BAREKH); AND THE THIRD CUP
D. YEARNINGS AND HOPES
14. MEDIEVAL ADDITIONS
A. WELCOMING ELIJAH
B. GOD’S TRIUMPH OVER EVIL: POUR OUT YOUR WRATH …
15. PRAISE
—HALLEL, PART TWO, PSALMS 115–118, 136
A. PSALMS 115–118 AND CONCLUSION
B. PSALM 136 (THE GREAT HALLEL) AND CONCLUSION
16. FORMAL CONCLUSION
A. THE FOURTH CUP AND FINAL BLESSING
B. PRAYER FOR ACCEPTANCE
OF THE SEDER (NIRTSAH)
C. A MESSIANIC HOPE: NEXT YEAR IN JERUSALEM!
17. FOUR SEDER SONGS
A. KI LO NA’EH, KI LO YA’EH (FOR IT FITS AND BEFITS HIM
)
B. ADIR HU (HE IS MIGHTY
)
C. ECHAD MI YODE’A (WHO KNOWS ONE?
)
D. CHAD GADYA (ONE KID
)
APPENDIX I
Two Early Seders: Mishnah and Tosefta
APPENDIX II
A Haggadah from the Cairo Genizah
Notes
List of Abbreviations
Glossary
Annotated Select Bibliography
About the Contributors
List of Searchable Terms
Copyright
Also Available
About Jewish Lights
Here’s What You’ll Find in Volume 1
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION: HOW TO GET THE MOST OUT OF THIS BOOK
Lawrence A. Hoffman and David Arnow
PART I CELEBRATING PASSOVER:
CONTEXTUAL REFLECTIONS
1. WHAT IS THE HAGGADAH ANYWAY?
Lawrence A. Hoffman
2. PASSOVER IN THE BIBLE AND BEFORE
David Arnow
3. PASSOVER FOR THE EARLY RABBIS: FIXED AND FREE
David Arnow
4. THIS BREAD: CHRISTIANITY AND THE SEDER
Lawrence A. Hoffman
5. THE SEDER PLATE: THE WORLD ON A DISH
David Arnow
6. PEOPLEHOOD WITH PURPOSE: THE AMERICAN SEDER AND CHANGING JEWISH IDENTITY
Lawrence A. Hoffman
7. WHERE HAVE ALL THE WOMEN GONE? FEMINIST QUESTIONS ABOUT THE HAGGADAH
Wendy I. Zierler
8. MOVING THROUGH THE MOVEMENTS: AMERICAN DENOMINATIONS AND THEIR HAGGADOT
Carole B. Balin
9. GOOD TO THE LAST DROP
: THE PROLIFERATION OF THE MAXWELL HOUSE HAGGADAH
Carole B. Balin
PART II THE PASSOVER HAGGADAH
A. SETTING THE STAGE
1. PREPARING THE HOME
A. THE CHECKING OF LEAVEN
(B’DIKAT CHAMETS)
B. PERMISSION TO COOK FOR SHABBAT: THE MIXING OF FOODS
(ERUV TAVSHILIN)
C. ARRANGING THE SEDER PLATE
2. THE ORDER OF THE SEDER: KADESH URCHATS …
3. BEGINNING THE SEDER
A. LIGHTING CANDLES
B. DEFINING SACRED TIME (KIDDUSH AND THE FIRST CUP)
C. DISTINGUISHING TIMES OF HOLINESS (HAVDALAH)
D. GRATITUDE FOR BEING HERE (SHEHECHEYANU)
E. THE FIRST WASHING (URCHATS) AND DIPPING KARPAS
F. BREAKING THE MATZAH
(YACHATS) AND RESERVING THE AFIKOMAN
G. BREAD OF AFFLICTION,
HA LACHMA ANYA: BEGIN MAGGID (TELLING
)
4. QUESTIONS OF THE NIGHT: MAH NISHTANAH,WHY IS THIS NIGHT DIFFERENT?
B. FROM ENSLAVEMENT …
5. A SHORT ANSWER: ENSLAVEMENT IS PHYSICAL—AVADIM HAYYINU, WE WERE SLAVES
6. HOW WE TELL THE TALE
A. EVERYONE TELLS THE STORY: EVEN IF ALL OF US WERE SMART …
B. TELLING AT LENGTH: THE FIVE SAGES’ SEDER
C. TELLING AT NIGHT? "ALL THE DAYS OF YOUR LIFE …"
D. TELLING THE NEXT GENERATION: THE FOUR CHILDREN
E. TELLING AT THE PROPER TIME: AT THE BEGINNING OF THE MONTH?
7. A SHORT ANSWER: ENSLAVEMENT IS SPIRITUAL—WE WORSHIPED IDOLS
8. PROMISES—PAST AND PRESENT
A. THE PROMISE TO ABRAHAM: BLESSED IS THE ONE WHO KEEPS HIS PROMISE …
B. THE PROMISE TO US: THIS KEPT OUR ANCESTORS AND US GOING …
Notes
List of Abbreviations
Glossary
About the Contributors
List of Searchable Terms
Part II: The Passover Haggadah (continued)9. A LONG ANSWER: A MIDRASH ON MY FATHER WAS A WANDERING ARAMEAN …
¹Note well what Laban the Aramean wanted to do to our father Jacob, for Pharaoh’s decree only concerned the males, while Laban wanted to uproot everyone, as it says, ²My father was a wandering Aramean. He descended to Egypt and lived there in small numbers, and there he became a large, mighty, and populous nation.
³Descended to Egypt
—this means compelled by the word of God.
⁴Lived there
—this teaches that our ancestor Jacob didn’t go down to Egypt to plant himself there, but rather to live there, as it says, ⁵They told Pharaoh, ‘We have only come to live in this land because there is no pasture for your servants’ flocks and because the famine in the Land of Canaan is severe. So now, sir, let your servants stay in the Land of Goshen.’
⁶In small numbers
—as it says, Numbering seventy people, your ancestors went down to Egypt, and now Adonai your God has made you populous like the stars of the sky.
⁷Became a nation
—this teaches that Israel was distinct there.
⁸Large, mighty
—as it says, The children of Israel were fertile and multiplied and became very, very populous and mighty, and the land was filled with them.
⁹Populous
—as it says, I made your population like wildflowers, and you were populous and large, and you grew into a woman. Your breasts grew and your hair sprouted, yet you remained naked and bare.
¹⁰I passed by you and I saw you wallowing in your blood. And I said to you, live in your blood. And I said to you, live in your blood.
¹¹The Egyptians were evil toward us and afflicted us and imposed harsh labor upon us.
¹²The Egyptians were evil toward us
—as it says, Let us be clever about them lest they multiply and in the event of a war they be added to those who hate us and, having waged war, leave this land.
¹³Afflicted us
—as it says, They put taskmasters over them to afflict them in their suffering. They built garrison cities for Pharaoh: Pithom and Rameses.
¹⁴Imposed harsh labor upon us
—as it says, With severity the Egyptians made the children of Israel work.
¹⁵We cried out to Adonai our ancestors’ God, and Adonai heard our voice and saw our misery and our work and our distress.
¹⁶We cried out to Adonai our ancestors’ God
—as it says, After a long time, the king of Egypt died, and the children of Israel sighed because of their work and cried out, and their plea rose to God because of the work.
¹⁷Adonai heard our voice
—as it says, God heard their groaning, and God remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob.
¹⁸Saw our misery
—this is the separation from worldly ways, as it says, God saw the children of Israel and God knew.
¹⁹And our work
—this is the boys, as it says, You shall throw every boy who is born into the Nile, while you shall let every girl live.
²⁰And our distress
—this is the persecution, as it says, I also saw the distress that the Egyptians inflict upon them.
SIGNPOST: A LONG ANSWER
DAVID ARNOW (THE WORLD OF MIDRASH)
CAROLE B. BALIN (MODERN HAGGADOT)
MARC BRETTLER (OUR BIBLICAL HERITAGE)
NEIL GILLMAN (THEOLOGICALLY SPEAKING)
ALYSSA GRAY (MEDIEVAL COMMENTATORS)
ARTHUR GREEN (PERSONAL SPIRITUALITY)
JOEL M. HOFFMAN (TRANSLATION)
LAWRENCE A. HOFFMAN (HISTORY)
WENDY I. ZIERLER (FEMINIST VOICES)
borderSIGNPOST: A LONG ANSWER
WE HAVE RECEIVED TWO BRIEF ANSWERS TO THE CENTRAL QUESTION OF WHAT THIS NIGHT IS ALL ABOUT: ENSLAVEMENT MAY BE PHYSICAL OR SPIRITUAL (SEE MY PEOPLE’S PASSOVER HAGGADAH, VOLUME 1). WE NOW PLUNGE INTO FULFILLING AN ANCIENT INJUNCTION TO TELL THE STORY OF OUR ENSLAVEMENT AND FREEDOM THROUGH A COMPLEX MIDRASH ON DEUTERONOMY 26:5–8. WE ARE CHALLENGED TO FIND ITS ORIGINAL INTENT AND WHAT IT MIGHT MEAN FOR US TODAY.
ARNOW (THE WORLD OF MIDRASH)
¹Laban wanted to uproot everyone
The Haggadah’s particular animus toward Laban reflects the physical and spiritual threat he posed to the Jewish future. The Sifre on Deuteronomy (Piska 301) notes that Laban is considered as if he had destroyed [Jacob].
According to Pirkei D’rabbi Eliezer, Laban took all the men of his city, mighty men, and pursued [Jacob], seeking to slay him.
¹ And although Laban did not in fact harm Jacob—they made a treaty with one another—a talmudic tradition holds that God counted his evil thoughts as if they had been carried out (PT Peah 5a, 1:16:b). Had Laban destroyed Jacob and his family, it would indeed have ended the Jewish story. On the other hand, had Jacob returned to live with Laban, the outcome may have been the termination of Jacob’s spiritual legacy through the adoption of his father-in-law’s idolatry.
³Compelled by the word of God
The Bible itself hints at Jacob’s discomfort about going to Egypt. Why else would God suddenly appear to reassure him: Fear not to go down to Egypt …
(Gen. 46:3). According to an ancient legend, without God’s intervention, it would have required chains to drag Jacob down to Egypt. This may be compared to a cow that resisted being dragged to the slaughterhouse. What did they do? They drew her calf before her, whereupon she followed, albeit unwillingly. Similarly, God brought Joseph there first, to entice Jacob to go despite himself.
²
⁴Lived there
The Sifre on Deuteronomy (Piska 301), an early parallel to the Haggadah’s midrash, makes an intriguing comment: Should you say that [Jacob] went [to Egypt] in order to assume the crown of kingship for himself, the Bible goes on to say [he only went to live there temporarily].
The term "crown of kingship (keter malkhut), appears three times in the Bible, all in the Book of Esther, all in reference to figures—Vashti, Esther, and the king’s horse—who wear the keter malkhut but whose real power is limited, to say the least.³ The midrash puts a damper on any hope that Jacob or his descendants would long enjoy Joseph’s quasi-regal status.
⁶Numbering seventy people
The listing of the clan that went down to Egypt with Jacob totals sixty-six souls. Adding Joseph and his two sons brings the figure to sixty-nine and sets the midrashic stage for identifying the party who would bring the total to seventy. Pirkei D’rabbi Eliezer (eighth century) avers that it was God, as God says: I Myself will go down with you …
(Gen. 46:4). Other traditions implicitly argue against the Bible’s general exclusion of Jacob’s female descendants from the list. One midrash identifies the seventieth soul as Yocheved, mother of Moses, who was born by the gates of Egypt.
Another holds that Serach, daughter of Asher and the only female mentioned in the enumeration, was counted twice due to her extraordinary longevity! (Gen. Rab. 94:9).
⁷Israel was distinct
The second-century Mekhilta D’rabbi Yishmael attributes four virtues for which Israel merited redemption: they abstained from sexual relations with the Egyptians, refrained from tale-bearing, did not change their names, and did not give up their language.⁴ A twelfth-century midrash offers a different perspective on this passage: Their clothing, food, and language were different from those of the Egyptians. They were marked and known as a nation apart and separate from the Egyptians
(Lekach Tov, Ki Tavo, 46a). This may allude to the realities of Jewish life in Islamic countries where Jews (and Christians) had to wear identifying clothing.
⁸Very, very populous
Midrashic sources make much of the fecundity of Jacob’s descendants. Exodus Rabbah (1:8) imagines women giving birth to six or even a dozen children at once! More modestly, the ninth-century Midrash on Proverbs (19) interprets the phrase very, very populous
(bim’od m’od) to mean double the number there had been.
A medieval Yemenite source (Midrash Hagadol on Exod. 1:7) reads that phrase to mean that as Israel increased very greatly in the past, so it will again in the future.
Exodus Rabbah connects Israel’s fruitfulness with the preceding verse about the death of Joseph and his brothers: "Although Joseph and his brothers were dead, their God was not dead." They might have thought God was dead because about two hundred years had elapsed between God’s last appearance in the Book of Genesis (46:4) and Moses’ encounter with God at the burning bush. But, as Israel fell into slavery, the miracle of procreation provided a glimmer of God’s otherwise distant presence.
⁹–¹⁰Naked and bare … live in your blood
The allegorical interpretation of these verses from Ezekiel first appears in Mekhilta D’rabbi Yishmael, among the most ancient of all midrashim. The time had come for God to fulfill the promise of redemption made to Abraham at the splitting covenant
or the Covenant between the Pieces (Gen. 15; see My People’s Passover Haggadah, Volume 1): "But as yet the Israelites had no religious duties to perform by which to merit redemption, as it says: ‘… you remained naked and bare (Ezek. 16:7),’ which means bare of any religious deeds. Therefore [God] assigned them two duties [mitzvot], the paschal sacrifice and circumcision, with which to merit redemption. For thus is it said, ‘I passed by you and I saw you wallowing in your blood. And when I passed by you, and saw you wallowing in your blood [literally, in your bloods,
i.e., the blood of the paschal sacrifice and of circumcision], I said to you, Live!’ … (Ezek. 16:6).… For one cannot obtain rewards except for deeds."⁵ This midrash anchors the Exodus in a covenantal context: God and humanity each play a role in bringing about redemption—then and now!
¹²The Egyptians were evil
The midrash attributes a measure of responsibility for Israel’s ordeal to the Egyptians,
not just Pharaoh. One view holds that the Pharaoh of the Exodus was not a new king—A new king arose over Egypt who did not know Joseph
(Exod. 1:8)—but the same ruler just issuing new decrees. [His court] said to him: Come and let us team up against this people. Pharaoh objected … ‘Were it not for Joseph [the Egyptian population] would be dead. How can you team up against them?’ Since Pharaoh would not go along with them, they immediately dethroned him for three months. When Pharaoh saw that they had brought him down, he conceded: ‘I will do whatever you say’
(Tanchuma on Exod. 1:8).
¹²Let us be clever about them
Ever careful readers of the Bible, the Sages noticed that Pharaoh says, "Come let us deal craftily with him, not
them. Reading
him as
Him, the third-century talmudic sage Rabbi Chamah bar Chaninah imagines Pharaoh strategizing how to outwit God. Knowing that God punishes measure for measure and that God had promised Noah never to destroy the entire world by a flood, Pharaoh
craftily" reckons that the Egyptians can drown the newborn Israelite males with impunity. But Pharaoh fails to appreciate that God’s promise to Noah would not prevent God from visiting a flood upon a particular people, that is, drowning the Egyptians in the Red Sea (Sot. 11a). Trying to outwit God is not so smart after all.
¹³Taskmasters over them
Again the singular rather than the plural ("taskmasters over him instead of
them) provided an opportunity for midrash.
It should have read ‘over them’! [The midrash now identifies him
as Pharaoh.] It indicates that they brought a brick-mold and hung it round Pharaoh’s neck; and every Israelite who complained that he was weak was told, ‘Are you weaker than Pharaoh?’ [As if to say, Pharaoh’s not complaining, so why are you!]" (Sot. 11b). To humiliate the Israelites, clever Pharaoh winds up doing the work of a slave.
¹⁴With severity
The Talmud (Sot. 11b) interprets b’farekh, with severity,
as b’feh rakh, with a tender mouth
—sweet words,
as it were. Midrash Aggadah (twelfth century) elaborates: The Egyptians said to them, ‘For every brick you make each of you will receive payment in gold.’ So the Israelites worked quickly: one made a hundred bricks and another made two hundred. It was immediately decreed that from then on everyone had to produce that same number of bricks [without pay].
Another interpretation of with severity
: They gave the men’s work to the women and the women’s work to the men
(Sot. 11b).
¹⁶After a long time
Sekhel Tov, a thirteenth-century midrash, highlights a subtle, subjective aspect of Israel’s servitude in Egypt. The period when the Israelites groaned under their burdens is called ‘after a long time,’ literally ‘many days.’ Thus Scripture says, ‘Israel has gone for many days without the true God, without a priest to give instruction and without Torah’ (2 Chronicles 15:3). When the Israelites serve in joy it is ‘but a few days.’ As it says, ‘So Jacob served seven years for Rachel and they seemed to him but a few days because of his love for her’ (Gen. 29:20)
(Sekhel Tov on Exod. 2:23). Work, even slavish, for a finite period and for a valued goal, speeds the passage of time. Labor with no end in sight and without purpose—devoid of spiritual content, as in the verse from Chronicles—slows time to a crawl.
¹⁷God heard their groaning
A wordless cry initiates the process of redemption. Midrash Tanchuma finds an unyielding, stubborn hope in that cry: Rabbi Pinchas Hakohen son of Chamah said, ‘If your hope is not fulfilled, hope again.’ David said, ‘Hope in God, be strong and strengthen your heart, hope in God’ (Ps. 27:14). If your hope is fulfilled, great. If not, return and
hope in God" again. And David said, ‘I put my hope [kavo kiviti] in God’ (Ps. 40:2).⁶ On account of hope ‘God inclined toward me and heeded my cry’ (Ps. 40:2). ‘God heard their groaning, and God remembered His covenant with Abraham, with Isaac, and with Jacob’ (Exod. 2:24)."⁷ The Israelites cry out—in pain, but in hope.
¹⁸Separation from worldly ways
According to one legend, Moses’ father, Amram, decreed the separation from worldly ways,
⁸ i.e. from conjugal relations, but he had the good sense to take the advice of his daughter, Miriam, and revoke the decree! Amram was the greatest man of his generation; when he saw that the wicked Pharaoh had decreed, ‘You shall throw every boy who is born into the Nile, while every girl you shall let live (Exod. 1:22), Amram said, ‘In vain do we labor.’ He divorced his wife. When the Israelites saw this, then all divorced their wives. His daughter said to him, ‘Father, your decree is more severe than Pharaoh’s; because Pharaoh decreed only against the males, whereas you have decreed against the males and females…. In the case of the wicked Pharaoh there is a doubt whether his decree will be fulfilled or not, whereas in your case, because you are righteous, your decree will certainly be fulfilled.… He remarried his wife; and the other men remarried theirs
(Sot. 12a).
¹⁹The boys
Pharaoh’s drowning of the boys
reminds us of Moses, a survivor, as it were, of Pharaoh’s genocide. Pirkei D’rabbi Eliezer elaborates on the role Pharaoh’s daughter plays as a rescuer. The daughter of Pharaoh suffered terribly from leprosy. Unable to bathe in hot water, she came for a bath in the river. There she saw the baby Moses. She stretched out her hand, touched him and was healed. She said: ‘This child is righteous and I will preserve his life. One who preserves a life is as though one had kept alive the whole world’ (Mishnah Sanhedrin 4:5). Therefore she merited life in this world and in the world to come.
⁹ Midrash Hagadol (on Gen. 23:1) counts Bithyah, or Batya as she is sometimes known, among the Bible’s twenty-two most righteous women. Hence her name—daughter of God.
²⁰The distress
The Midrash on Psalms (42:5 and 43:1) poignantly illustrates the angry disappointment Jews have expressed over the generations when bereft of a redeeming hand—divine or human. It pictures Jews in later generations saying, Why don’t You work miracles for us as You did for our ancestors…. In Egypt, they obeyed just one commandment [slaying the paschal offering] and went free that very night; but what of me? I have obeyed all the commandments…. From what did You redeem our ancestors from Egypt? Was it not from the oppression of the Egyptians of which God said, ‘And I have also seen the distress …’? (Exod. 3:9). For me too, life is nothing but oppression by an enemy. Did You not send redemption via two redeemers [Moses and Aaron] to that generation…? Send two redeemers like them to this generation!
BALIN (MODERN HAGGADOT)
²My father was a wandering Aramean
¹ The requirement to recount the story of the Exodus by means of midrashic elaboration on several verses from the Book of Deuteronomy (26:5–8) dates back to one of the very earliest post-Temple descriptions of a Passover Seder, that found in the Mishnah. Mishnah Pesachim 10:4 instructs the Seder leader to gear his midrash to the level of the youngest present at the Seder: The father instructs the son according to the understanding of his son … he expounds from ‘My father was a wandering Aramean’ to the end of the passage.
The Conservative Movement’s 1982 Haggadah, The Feast of Freedom, takes this guidance to heart. It uses the prescribed verses from Deuteronomy as the basis for a midrash on the Exodus that elaborates on contemporary issues affecting the younger generation, namely the role of women. The Feast of Freedom’s midrash tells a talmudic story attributing the Exodus to the merit of the righteous women of that generation
(Sot. 11b). The presence of this statement in the Conservative Haggadah coincided with the movement’s embrace of egalitarianism. Work on the Haggadah began in 1977, the year the Jewish Theological Seminary created a commission to study the ordination of women. It adopted that position—not without some conflict—in 1979, the same year in which the movement published a preliminary draft of its new Haggadah.
²⁰And our distress
This bourgeois ideal is inscribed in Seder Hagadah: Domestic Service for the Eve of Passover (1898), a precursor to the Reform movement’s first self-contained Union Haggadah: Home Service for the Passover Eve (1907), as in the following passage to be uttered by the Mother of the house
in empathy with her Israelite foremothers in Egypt:
And oh, how void of comfort was the lot of the loving wives and mothers in Israel. While the men went out to heavy tasks, they were waiting at home with fear in their hearts, lest their loved ones should never return, and they become widowed and childless!²
BRETTLER (OUR BIBLICAL HERITAGE)
¹Laban the Aramean
Laban, father of Rachel and Leah and thus father-in-law of Jacob, is depicted negatively in Genesis—as conniving and miserly—but the sentiment expressed here goes far beyond the biblical text.
²My father was a wandering Aramean
This begins another reprise of the early history of Israel (see My People’s Passover Haggadah, Volume 1), from Deuteronomy 26:5–8. (It continues through 26:9, with the gift of the land, but this is not relevant to the Haggadah.) The phrase explicated here, arami oved avi, has both syntactic and semantic difficulties, though most scholars understand it in its biblical context as My father [= Jacob] was a fugitive Aramean
(so NJPS), and thus having nothing to do with Laban. It is very striking that in the Haggadah’s reworking of these biblical passages, Moses, the human hero of the Haggadah, is never mentioned by name. The Bible sometimes depicts Moses as God’s partner in redeeming Israel; for example, it is noteworthy that immediately before the Song of the Sea, Exodus 14:31 notes, They believed in Adonai and in Moses His servant.
It is likely that in the biblical period there was a cult of Moses, which is why the biblical text polemically states in Deuteronomy 34:6 concerning Moses, And no one knows his burial place to this day.
The Rabbis, like some biblical authors, are trying to ensure that Adonai, rather than Moses, remains the hero of the story.
³Compelled by the word of God
This modifies the plain meaning of the text in Deuteronomy, which may suggest that Jacob left the Land of Israel voluntarily and makes it fit with Genesis 46:4, I Myself [= Adonai] will go down with you to Egypt, and I Myself will also bring you back….
⁵To live
Quoting Genesis 47:4, which also uses the root g-(w)-r, to sojourn,
thereby showing that Deuteronomy and Genesis tell the same story.
⁶Seventy
Citing Deuteronomy 10:22, which specifies exactly how few in number
they were: seventy.
⁷Became a nation
This follows an implicit assumption of the biblical story, that Israel maintained its ethnic identity in Egypt; how this was accomplished is not narrated in the biblical text.
⁸Fertile and multiplied
Here the end of Deuteronomy 26:5 is filled in using Exodus 1:7; the latter uses language of Genesis 1 in describing the fertility of Israel, suggesting that Israel (rather than all of humanity) has fulfilled the divine blessing of Genesis 1:28, and thus has a special relationship with God.
⁹–¹⁰I made your population … your blood
Citing Ezekiel 16:7 and then 16:6. This difficult chapter from the prophet describes how Adonai found Israel as an abandoned foundling, wallowing in blood from birth, and then adopted Israel, and eventually married her when she attained puberty, described in 16:7–8. Uncharacteristically, the order of the verses in the biblical source is changed here (from vv. 6–7 to v. 7 and then v. 6). This allows the author to end with the section about blood,
further anchoring these verses to Passover, where blood plays a crucial role. This passage from Ezekiel needs to be connected to Deuteronomy 26, since it too is a short history of Israel, albeit in parable form. The connection between the word varav, and numerous,
of Deuteronomy 26:5, and r’vavah, populous,
of Ezekiel 16:7, facilitates this connection.
¹¹The Egyptians were evil
Deuteronomy 26:6, which will now be explicated phrase by phrase.
¹²Let us be clever
Here the phrase is filled in by Exodus 1:10.
¹³They put taskmasters
From Exodus 1:11.
¹⁴With severity
From Exodus 1:13.
¹⁵We cried
Deuteronomy 26:7, which will now be explicated phrase by phrase.
¹⁶And cried out
From Exodus 2:23, which uses the verb z-‘-k rather than Deuteronomy’s ts-‘-k. The two verbs seem identical in meaning, and this reflects a case where letters pronounced similarly may sometimes interchange.
¹⁷God heard
Exodus 2:24.
¹⁸God saw the children of Israel and God knew
Exodus 2:25. This is the last of three consecutive verses in Exodus used to explicate three consecutive phrases from the base text in Deuteronomy. Its appropriateness to this context is not obvious and is probably based on a sexual understanding of affliction
(‘-n-h) and of yada, to know in the biblical sense.
¹⁹‘And our work’—This is the boys
The Hebrew word amal may refer to hard labor of the type typically performed by men, as in Ecclesiastes 2:22, For what does a man get for all the toiling and worrying he does under the sun?
It is thus understood here to refer to males.
¹⁹You shall throw
From the second half of Exodus 1:22.
²⁰The distress
The second half of Exodus 3:9, which uses the same word, lachats, as Deuteronomy.
GILLMAN (THEOLOGICALLY SPEAKING)
¹What Laban the Aramean wanted to do to our father Jacob
This is the third beginning of the story, the third form of the disgrace or the bad things,
the one that the Mishnah (Pes. 10:4) suggests we use as the skeleton for telling the story. We are to expound the biblical passage that begins My father was a wandering Aramean …
(Deut. 26:5). In order to turn it into a form of disgrace, the Haggadah reinterprets the verse to mean an Aramean sought to destroy my father.
This passage (Deut. 26:5–8), interpreted word for word, now becomes the text for the telling of the story.
We have, then, three versions of the disgrace that marks the point of departure for the telling of the story of the Exodus: our ancestors’ enslavement in Egypt, our pre-Abrahamic ancestors’ idol worshiping, and Jacob’s oppression at the hands of Laban. In contrast, there will be only one agreed-upon theme for the glory or the praise that will conclude the story. That theme will be redemption, mainly the redemption from Egypt, but with adumbrations of the ultimate, messianic redemption to come.
Of the three versions of disgrace, the second has nothing to do with our origins as a people and the third demands a tortuous translation of a biblical passage. The first, however, We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt …
is a clear and unambiguous biblical verse (Deut. 6:20). We can only wonder why the Mishnah did not choose this passage to recommend as the basic text with which to tell our story.
⁶Numbering seventy people
The Hebrew word nefesh, people,
in this passage, is often mistranslated as soul.
The Bible itself does not know of a disembodied spiritual entity that is separate and distinct from the material body. In the Bible, nefesh and its parallel term n’shamah mean a living human being, a person. This passage indicates that a total of seventy people went down to Egypt. (See the more extended reference in Gen. 46:26–27.)
Only in the post-biblical tradition do these terms come to mean what we today refer to as soul,
distinct from body. That usage stems from Greek philosophy, which had a dualistic view of the human person: we are constituted as two separate entities: a material body, and a nonmaterial spirit or soul. In the Bible itself, the view is that the human person is a single, vivified body. Genesis 2:7 teaches that God created