Remembering humble beginnings
Danette Goulet
NEWPORT-MESA - It is one of our oldest celebrations.
For 3,313 years, Jews have continuously observed the feast of
Passover.
The eight-day observance commemorates the freedom and exodus of the
Jewish slaves from Egypt during the reign of Pharaoh Ramses II.
“Passover, we celebrate the historical freedom of Jewish people from
Egyptian bondage,” said Rabbi Reuven Mintz of Chabad in Newport Beach.
“That concept actually manifests itself every year with the hope of true
peace for all mankind -- freedom from oppression, war and bloodshed with
the vision of a perfect world, a world of no war and famine.”
In the Book of Exodus, Moses, a simple Jewish shepherd, was instructed
by God to go to the pharaoh and demand the freedom of the Israelites.
Moses’ plea of “let my people go” was ignored. Moses warned the
Pharaoh that God would send severe punishments to the people of Egypt if
the Israelites were not freed. But again the Pharaoh ignored Moses’
request.
And as the Bible reports, God unleashed a series of 10 terrible
plagues on the people of Egypt -- blood, frogs, lice, flies, blight,
boils, hail, locusts, darkness and the slaying of the first born.
Israelites were told to mark their dwellings with lamb’s blood so that
God could identify and “pass over” their homes.
It is this salvation that is celebrated during the first two days of
Passover with the traditional Seder meals and is the focal point of the
celebration that began Saturday night, the 15th night of the Jewish month
of Nissan.
The next four days of Passover are what are known as intermediate
days, which are semi-holiday days, Mintz said.
“The last two days actually represent when they left Egypt and crossed
the sea of reeds,” Mintz said. “We crossed, heading toward Sinai and the
Jews became a people.”
It was in Israel, the promised land, that the Jews became God’s chosen
people and he gave them the Torah, Mintz said.
It is crucial for Jews to study their heritage, said Rabbi Mark S.
Miller of Temple Bat Yahm in Newport Beach.
“While many people, when they look back at their heritage, try to
identify the leaders and great people, the warriors and wealthy, in
Judaism we are identifying slaves, a humble origin,” he said. “So it’s
not a point of pride so much as humility as we look back. Passover is a
call to empathy.”
It is much more than a history lesson, Miller said. It is also about
the present and what Jews hope to keep the future from being.
“We are all enslaved in one way or another,” Miller said. “We are all
in chains and Passover calls us each year to go forth from what restricts
our lives.”
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