REFLECTIONS ON PASSOVER 2023

Tonight, I will gather with my family to celebrate and commemorate the Exodus of the Jews from slavery in Egypt to Israel the locus of our faith. It was a major link in the unbreakable chain that sustained us through millennia of dispersion and persecution and harassment and forced conversions and genocide. While mighty empires have fallen, we are still here.

We will hail the revelation of the Ten Commandments during the Jewish wandering in the Sinai- the first guide for decent behavior which has inspired people of all faiths for centuries.

We will recall how on Passover 1943 hungry, cold and wretched Jews of the Warsaw ghetto rose up against the Nazis and with no military training, using stolen guns, iron rods, knives and crafted explosives they held off the Nazis for twenty-eight days.

But this year I am filled with rue and misgiving.

The youngest member will then ask the four questions. The first should be: “Why have so many of our faith violated the Second Commandment and worship the “graven images” and false idols of radical “progressive” and “woke” policies which threaten democracy the cornerstone of our religious freedom, continuity and protection?”

In Israel there is a civil war waged against a leader elected by the majority in a scrupulously monitored election. Protesters, like the Hellenist Jews of antiquity embrace partisan ideology and hypocritical virtue signaling at a time of greatest danger and threats from modern Pharaohs and their allies.

Conor Cruise O’Brien, the late Irish politician, writer, historian and academic lamented: “Antisemitism is a light sleeper.” Indeed! It has awakened with gale force throughout the world, and alas, in the corridors of power in America our beloved nation.

But hope, Tikvah in Hebrew, has sustained our faith and continues to do so.

So, we will eat and be merry and hope for better days.  Happy and sweet Passover to all who observe.

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