Shalom All,
In about ten days, we will be celebrating Pessach. The holiday of our
freedom, of our becoming a nation. Here in Israel, these days are filled
with spring, cleaning, cooking, preparing. A 3500-year-old holiday, that our
people have been celebrating year after year, throughout hardship and
prosperity. I always feel moved by our holidays, knowing that I m another
ring in a long chain of tradition. A tradition that, despite alterations of
fashion and time, has basically remained the same. Some 3000, and 2000, and
1000 years ago, there was always a Jewish woman who prepared the Seder for
her family, taking care of all the details so she could set a beautiful
table for the holiday, always complaining that it is a lot of hard work,
most likely receiving the help of her family, always grateful at the end
that it will be a whole year before she needs to do it again...and
nevertheless, regardless of the work, complain and fatigue, never once
thinking to defy the tradition. Knowing that the continuity of our story and
showing our children how to continue it is the only way to ensure that it
doesn't die. "Vehigadeta lebincha" - and thou shall tell thy son - the
greatest Mitzvah of the Haggada.
I couldn't help but think about this mitzvah when the IDF caught yet another
12 year old Palestinian child bomb only yesterday. I remembered something I
learned many years ago: why did Pharoa let the People of Israel go only
after all the first-born of the Egyptians were killed? Why did he not let
them go much sooner, why did he wait for this horrific tragedy to occur? One
of the answers that our sages give is the following: all the other
catastrophes, plague, lice, bloody water - they can all be overcome. They
are catastrophes, but life can indeed go on in spite of them; but when your
children are dying, the future itself is dying. That, no people can
overcome.
What are these People telling their children? What is their message? No
desperation, no occupation and no anger can justify the message they are
sending: that the best future for their own children is to murder and die.
In ten days, we will be telling our children our story. And as always, we
will end it with a prayer for peace and prosperity, next year, in Jerusalem.
It is the teaching, the tradition and the prayer that have kept us for the
past 3500 years. Nothing can give a more solid, proof-based promise for our
future than that.
Shabbat Shalom,
Liat