Urban Family Passover Haggadah
Second edition
by Arielle Mir and Tsilli Pines
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About the Book
Old traditions, new perspectives. A modern haggadah that includes English text, as well as Hebrew blessings and their transliterations. Written by Arielle Mir and designed by Tsilli Pines.
FROM THE FORWARD:
"This book began as a few pages of supplemental readings at a potluck Passover seder in Washington, DC in 2004. That night there were only two Jewish people present, and most of the guests had never been to a seder. As I explained the symbols and put the narrative into context, I was–for the first time in my life–really telling the story of Passover.
Like anyone who hears a story for the first time, my guests asked questions and made connections between this story and other stories they knew. Sitting among my urban family–the connected group of friends, colleagues, neighbors, and classmates–I began to comprehend the power of this ritual to connect us to one another and to history. As the tradition continued in subsequent years, the questions asked and stories told at the urban family seders inspired the addition of new and different meditations and explanations. Eventually, those elements became the Urban Family Passover Haggadah.
While the Torah does not refer explicitly to urban families in Exodus, the fact that it refers to the Jewish people not as individual family units, but as a community, is significant. The Torah tells of a people who suffered together in Egypt as a community, and who were freed together as a community. However you celebrate Passover with your family–however you characterize them–may you feel the strength of this community."
– Arielle Mir
FROM THE FORWARD:
"This book began as a few pages of supplemental readings at a potluck Passover seder in Washington, DC in 2004. That night there were only two Jewish people present, and most of the guests had never been to a seder. As I explained the symbols and put the narrative into context, I was–for the first time in my life–really telling the story of Passover.
Like anyone who hears a story for the first time, my guests asked questions and made connections between this story and other stories they knew. Sitting among my urban family–the connected group of friends, colleagues, neighbors, and classmates–I began to comprehend the power of this ritual to connect us to one another and to history. As the tradition continued in subsequent years, the questions asked and stories told at the urban family seders inspired the addition of new and different meditations and explanations. Eventually, those elements became the Urban Family Passover Haggadah.
While the Torah does not refer explicitly to urban families in Exodus, the fact that it refers to the Jewish people not as individual family units, but as a community, is significant. The Torah tells of a people who suffered together in Egypt as a community, and who were freed together as a community. However you celebrate Passover with your family–however you characterize them–may you feel the strength of this community."
– Arielle Mir
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Religion & Spirituality
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Project Option: 5×8 in, 13×20 cm
# of Pages: 64 - Publish Date: Feb 19, 2012
- Language English
- Keywords Progressive, Haggadah, Passover, Pesach, Judaism
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