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Passover Songs
Passover Songs Standing at the Sea by Peter and Ellen Allard Standing at the sea - mi chamocha (3x) Freedom’s on our way. Singing and dancing - mi chamocha (3x) Freedom’s on our way Freedom… The sea she parts… Walking through the water… Freedom… On the other side… *clap* one God… Freedom… Ha Lachma Anya Ha lachma, ha lachma anya Di achalu, achalu avhatana B’ara, b’ara d’Mitzrayim 4 Questions Ma nishtanah ha-lailah hazeh mikol haleilot? Mikol haleilot? Sheb’chol haleilot, anu ochlin chameitz u-matzah? Chameitz u-matzah? Ha-lailah hazeh, ha-lailah hazeh, kulo matzah (2x) Sheb’chol haleilot, anu ochlin sh’ar y’rakot? Sh’ar y’rakot? Ha-lailah hazeh, ha-lailah hazeh, maror, maror (2x) Sheb’chol haleilot, ein anu matbilin afilu pa’am echat? Afilu pa’am echat? Ha-lailah hazeh, ha-lailah ha-zeh, sh’tei f’amim (2x) Sheb’chol haleilot, anu ochlin bein yoshvin u-vein m’subin? Bein yoshvin u-vein m’subin? Ha-lailah hazeh, ha-lailah hazeh, kulanu m’subin (2x) Avadim Hayinu Avadim hayinu, hayinu Ata b’nei chorin, b’nei chorin Avadim hayinu Ata, ata b’nei chorin Avadim hayinu Ata, ata b’nei chorin, b’nei chorin Bang Bang Bang Bang, bang, bang, hold your hammers low, Bang, bang, bang, give a heavy blow For it’s work, work, work, every day and every night, For it’s work, work, work, when it’s dark and when it’s light. Dig, dig, dig, dig your shovels deep, Dig, dig, dig, there’s no time to sleep, For it’s work, work, work, every day and every night, For it’s work, work, work, when it’s dark and when it’s light. -
Haggadah April 12Th 2020
Community Seder Haggadah April 12th 2020 This Haggadah was prepared by University of Orange and The HUUB for our online community seder on April 12th, 2020. We are celebrating the 130th anniversary of the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Essex County. We have pulled from a few of our favorite haggadahs and made some modifications to the traditional order. We hope to evolve it every year. 1 Seder Activities 1) Opening and Welcome to the First Unitarian Universalist Church of Essex County 130th Anniversary and Seder on Easter 2) Lighting the candles 3) The First Cup of Wine: To Spring 4) Removal of Chametz 5) Song: Zum Gali Gali 6) 6 Symbols of Seder 7) Second cup of wine: To our Ancestors and Teachers 8) The 4 Adults 9) Song: If I Had a Hammer 10) The Telling & The 10 Plagues 11) Third cup of wine: To Resistance, Action, Liberation 12) Elijah’s Cup 13) Miriam’s Cup 14) Song: Dayenu 15) Fourth Cup of Wine: To the Future 2 Opening & Welcome Welcome to our Passover Seder. We made this Haggadah for The HUUB, University of Orange & First Unitarian Universalist Church of Essex County community. It challenges us to connect our history with our present and to act. Let us celebrate our freedom and strengthen ourselves to join the fight against injustice wherever it exists today. For as long as one person is oppressed, none of us are free. The first Pesach was celebrated 3,000 years ago when the people of Israel liberated themselves from the oppression of Egyptian slave masters and began their march toward freedom. -
SEDER Activities 2014
SEDER Activities 2014 Assignments to Prepare in advance: a.What the seder means to me in 6 words. Deposit in basket and pull out. Someone reads it and others guess to who wrote it. b. Write up two questions each about Pesach ritual, about Exodus and about Judaism – one simple fact question and one one-ended thought question. Deposit in basket and ask child to pick out four. c. This is your journey: Freedom from and freedom to: From what this year have you freed yourself and toward what new goals have you progressed. d. Dayenu. What have you experiences where yopu were so grateful you said: Dayenu. This is so satisfying that it has made my life worthwhile and me overjoyed. f. Shifra and Puah Award. Pick story of resistance to tyranny like midwives. g. Bring prop to tell one episode of Exodus (like backback, boots, basket). Then arrange all props in order of episodes from Biblical tale and and ask each person to retell their part in order. h. Nahshon Award. When did I stand up or see someone stand up to show courage against conformity or take first step in difficult process. i. Miracle. When did I experience that I felt was miraculous in colloquial usage (not necessarily supernatural) j.Favorite Peach memory or most bizarre seder. k. Choose quote about freedom and slavery that you agree with. Read outloud. Why did you choose it? l. What part of haggadah gives a message you think relevant to the President or prime Minister for his next term? m. -
How to Run a Passover Seder
How to Run a Passover Seder Rabbi Josh Berkenwald – Congregation Sinai We Will Cover: ´ Materials Needed ´ Haggadah ´ Setting up the Seder Plate ´ What do I have to do for my Seder to be “kosher?” ´ Music at the Seder ´ Where can I find more resources? Materials Needed – For the Table ü A Table and Tablecloth ü Seder Plate if you don’t have one, make your own. All you need is a plate. ü Chairs – 1 per guest ü Pillows / Cushions – 1 per guest ü Candles – 2 ü Kiddush Cup / Wine Glass – 1 per guest Don’t forget Elijah ü Plate / Basket for Matzah ü Matzah Cover – 3 Compartments ü Afikomen Bag ü Decorations Flowers, Original Art, Costumes, Wall Hangings, etc., Be Creative Materials Needed - Food ü Matzah ü Wine / Grape Juice ü Karpas – Leafy Green Vegetable Parsely, Celery, Potato ü Salt Water ü Maror – Bitter Herb Horseradish, Romaine Lettuce, Endive ü Charoset Here is a link to four different recipes ü Main Course – Up to you Gefilte Fish, Hard Boiled Eggs, Matzah Ball Soup Haggadah If you need them, order quickly – time is running out Lots of Options A Different Night; A Night to Remember https://www.haggadahsrus.com Make Your Own – Print at Home https://www.haggadot.com Sefaria All English - Jewish Federations of North America For Kids – Punktorah Setting Up the Seder Plate Setting Up the Matzah Plate 3 Sections Conducting the Seder 15 Steps of the Seder Kadesh Maror Urchatz Korech Karpas Shulchan Orech Yachatz Tzafun Magid Barech Rachtza Hallel Motzi Nirtza Matza Conducting the Seder 15 Steps of the Seder *Kadesh Recite the Kiddush *Urchatz Wash hands without a blessing *Karpas Eat parsley or potato dipped in salt water *Yachatz Break the middle Matza. -
Hosting a Passover Seder 101
Hosting a Passover Seder 101 Stephanie Grossman via JewishColumbus 1 Many people are going to be leading Passover seders for the first time this year. You might be used to attending an extended family or community seder and just bringing a side dish, leaving all the prepration to the hosts. If being the host of the seder is new to you, here's a quick guide with some tips to help keep your Passover easy and stress-free. Inside this booklet, you’ll find information about the seder plate and what goes on the seder plate, other items you should have at your seder, the order of the seder, and how to pick the right Haggadah. Please note that this is only to serve as a guide! One of the beauties of Judaism is the freedom to customize your seder however you want. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to reach out to us. Young Jewish Columbus and JewishColumbus are here to help you as much as we can. We wish you a safe, healthy, and a happy Passover. Chag Pesach Sameach! Stephanie Grossman via JewishColumbus 2 What goes on a seder plate? Two different kinds of bitter herbs. (Hebrew: maror and chaz eret) Most people use grated horseradish and either romaine A hard-boiled lettuce or endive. egg. (Hebrew: beitzah) A roasted lamb shank Many people like to give bone. (Hebrew: zeroa) the egg a roasted Some prefer to use a appearance. chicken neck. A green Apple nut vegetable. (Hebrew: kar paste. (Hebrew: charos pas) Parsley is the most et) This is a mushy common, but celery is mixture of chopped apples, nuts, and wine. -
A Trilingual Humanist Haggadah for Passover
A Trilingual Humanist Haggadah for Passover Compiled and edited by Cecilia Kremer and Sandra Mayo We have come together to honor our Jewish deep historic roots and its old important memories. Each of us is an extension of the past. We are more than individuals. We have connections. We receive our inheritance; we leave our legacy. We are here to remember the old story of the liberation of our people from slavery in Egypt (Mitzraim), a great struggle for freedom and dignity. We are here also to remember all people – Jews and non-Jews – who are still struggling for their freedom. To set the tone for the night, let us sing: Hee-nay Ma Tov ִהנֵּה ַמה טוֹב ַוּמה ִנָּעים ֶשׁ ֶבת ִאָחים ַגּם יַ ַחד Hine(y) ma tov u’ma-nayim Shevet ach-im gam ya-chad Behold, how good and pleasant it is For brothers and sisters to live together in unity 1 Welcome to our Seder Bienvenidos a nuestro Séder We come from many places. Our collective experience encompasses different cultures, faiths, traditions, and beliefs. We are in so many ways fundamentally different from one another. But just as we are different, so are we alike. We are all capable of loving, caring, being compassionate and empathic. We are all capable of hating, fearing, being blinded by prejudice and xenophobia. We all share feelings. Feelings of joy, feelings of sadness, feelings of wholeness, feelings of pain. Our lives are defined by the contrast between sweet moments and moments of sorrow. In spite of all that makes us different, let us be capable of sharing and receiving from one another. -
Earth Justice Seder
Earth Justice Seder THE PASSOVER HAGGADAH FOR ENVIRONMENTAL JUSTICE PREFACE We invite you to use this Haggadah companion to remind ourselves how Jewish tradition teaches us to care for all living things of the earth and all of our neighbors. You are free to use this adapted service either as a companion to your favorite Haggadah or as an independent Haggadah. We chose to focus on the frame of climate change and the celebration of our earth, as it relates to the agricultural celebration of Pesach. We recognize that there are missing pieces like Miriam’s Cup, and other modern adaptations of the Passover seder. We welcome you to add in or substitute any of the pieces included here, and hope that you may make the seder your own. This haggadah was compiled by Liya Rechtman of Coalition on Environment and Jewish Life, Elana Orbuch of AVODAH and Interfaith Power and Light-D.C. Maryland and Northern Virginia, Isabel Zeitz-Moskin of Lutheran Volunteer Corps and Interfaith Power and Light - D.C., Maryland and Northern Virginia and Rachel Landman of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism. We gratefully acknowledge all of our contributors: Adam Gorod, Joelle Novey, Rabbi Fred Scherlinder-Dobb, Rabbi Warren Stone, Stewart Vile Tahl and are grateful to Joe Gindi and Jackie Temkin for the editing of this project. 1 ORDER OF THE SEDER Introduction – Preparing for the Seder: Continuity with the Future, by Joelle Novey Kadesh – The First Cup: Access to Clean Water Urchatz – Handwashing: The Importance of Water Karpas – Dipping Greens: If the Earth -
Shiurim for the Pesach Seder
Shiurim for the Pesach Seder What shiur do we have to eat or drink in order to fulfill the mitzvah of the four cups, matzah, marror and afikomen? In this article we will present a practical guide to the correct amount that one should eat and the allotted time frame (see page 3) in which it should be eaten. The Four Cups The amount that one must drink is a reviis,1 which ranges from 3 oz. to 5.3 oz.2 Initially, one should drink the whole reviis.3 This applies to the first three cups. One must drink the whole reviis of the fourth cup in order to recite the beracha achrona.4 A beracha achrona is only said after the fourth cup.5 If the cup holds more than a reviis, one should, l’chatchilah, drink all the wine in the cup.6 However, drinking most of the reviis even in this situation is sufficient.7 In order to fulfill all the shitos, the poskim suggest that one use a cup that only holds a reviis and drinks the entire cup.8 A child does not have to drink a reviis. He may drink the amount that fills up his cheek.9 One should drink the reviis without a hefsek.10 If it took longer than kedei achilas peras to drink, you have to drink the shiur again.11 1 Shulchan Aruch 472:9, Shulchan Aruch Harav 17, Mishnah Berurah 28-29, Aruch Ha’shulchan 12. 2 Refer to Horav Eider Shlita on Hilchos Pesach 2:page 229. -
Pesach Candle-Lighting for the Second Night of Yom Tov Should Not Be Before 8.12Pm
31 March 2018 15 Nissan 5778 Volume 30 No. 28 Pesach Candle-lighting for the second night of Yom Tov should not be before 8.12pm. Yom Tov ends in London on Sunday night at 8.22pm. Shabbat and Yom Tov end in Jerusalem at 7.34pm. In loving memory of Harav Yitzchak Yoel ben Shlomo Halevi The Birds' Head Haggadah, Southern Germany circa 1300 “This is the bread of poverty that our ancestors ate in the land of Egypt. Anyone who is hungry should come and eat, anyone who needs should come and partake of the Pesach sacrifice” (Pesach Haggadah). 1 Sidrah Summary: Pesach Days 1 & 2 First Day Torah Reading (Shemot 12:21-51) lasts seven days, we eat matzot. The first and last This reading is a section of parashat Bo, in which days are Yom Tov, on which we refrain from Moshe relates the laws of the Pesach offering. specific prohibited activity (melacha). The blood on the door frame will ‘indicate’ to God On the second day of Pesach, the barley Omer to ‘pass over’ the Israelite houses and only smite offering is brought. There is a mitzvah (Sefirat the Egyptians. HaOmer) to count 49 days from 16 Nisan (the The tenth plague strikes Egypt at midnight, second night of Pesach) until the night before leaving no house without a death. Pharaoh Shavuot. The mention of Sefirat HaOmer is why searches frantically for Moshe and Aharon (Rashi) this section from parashat Emor was chosen for and tells them to leave. The Jews take their the second day reading. -
Hebrew Seder Bingo
B I N G O B I N G O Salt Salt Elijah Zeroa Firstborn Miriam Zeroa Passover Seder Moses water water Maggid Egypt Urchatz Wine Motzi Motzi Yachatz Miriam Dayenu Matzah 4 Matzah Passover Charoset Plagues Maggid Free! Frogs Free! Wine Children Dayenu Exodus Questions Yachatz Moses Plagues Urchatz Exodus Karpas Charoset Beitzah Maror Frogs Karpas Haggadah Egypt Maror Haggadah Haroset Firstborn B I N G O B I N G O Motzi Beitzah Zeroa Egypt Dayenu Karpas Matzah Yachatz Questions Passover 4 Maggid Passover Charoset Dayenu Maggid Haggadah Moses Children Zeroa Elijah 4 Exodus Exodus Elijah Miriam Free! Maror Maror Free! Egypt Children Firstborn Plagues Karpas Matzah Yachatz Frogs Haroset Seder Charoset Beitzah Salt Questions Wine Urchatz Haggadah Urchatz Motzi Firstborn Miriam Wine water B I N G O B I N G O Salt 4 Urchatz Frogs Firstborn Questions Seder Firstborn Maror Egypt water Children 4 Yachatz Charoset Exodus Questions Maror Karpas Elijah Children Motzi Miriam Haggadah Elijah Free! Plagues Maggid Beitzah Zeroa Free! Haggadah Plagues Salt Matzah Egypt Dayenu Moses Afikomen Frogs Exodus Haroset Wine water Passover Haroset Wine Karpas Zeroa Moses Dayenu Yachatz Passover Matzah B I N G O B I N G O Salt 4 Wine Moses Haroset Passover Urchatz Plagues Dayenu Haroset water Children Maggid Haggadah Matzah Maror Zeroa Beitzah Elijah Exodus Charoset Zeroa Salt Yachatz Elijah Free! Questions Seder Haggadah Motzi Free! Maror water Passover Frogs Beitzah Plagues Miriam Miriam Afikomen Questions Frogs Seder 4 Charoset Dayenu Urchatz Exodus Maggid Yachatz Egypt Moses Children Egypt. -
Ask the Rabbi
Ask The Rabbi... March 19, 1994 Issue #15 This edition contains: 1. What to do when Pesach occurs on Saturday night. 2. An insight into the meaning of Dayenu. Balint from Grinnel, Iowa wrote: Also, Professor David Mitchell from SMU asks: I'm very confused about how to proceed this Pesach. 1. When is the Fast of the First-Born? In the song “Dayenu” we say that if G-d brought us to 2. When Erev Pesach occurs on Shabbat when is Mount Sinai and did not give us the Torah it would Bedikat Chametz (checking for chametz)? have been enough. How can that be? Could you 3. Do we eat bread at all of the Shabbat Meals? explain? First of all, a few relevant points of Jewish Law: Challah with a light meal, and recite Birkat Hamazon. 1. This year, the Fast of the First Born is on Thursday, You then leave the table for a short while, wash again, eat March 24. It begins at dawn and ends after the Evening bread, and again say Birkat Hamazon. All of this must be services. Preferably, one should not eat until after Bedikat completed by the end of the fourth daylight hour. Later Chametz, but may have a snack after the Evening prayers in the day you sit down to a meal of Kosher for Passover if hungry. Many people attend a Siyum (a celebration of food (meat, fruit, salads). If the end of the fourth hour is the completion of a Tractate of the Talmud), a Brit Mila, approaching -- don’t risk having another meal of chametz. -
Dayenu Seder DIE-AY-NU SAY-DER
rsx Dayenu Seder DIE-AY-NU SAY-DER A Virtual 10 Minute Celebration ubhs APRIL 2020/NISAN 5780 PREPARATION Leader: Welcome to all who have joined us this evening for our Ready, Set, Go! 2020 [NAME OF FAMILY] Seder. We are so grateful that we can be together, if only to see one another for these few minutes. If Directions for k only these few minutes... participating in a large Zoom group: ALL: Dayenu!!! It would have been enough. Leader calls on Reader: How different is this night from all other nights? Mah participants to read. nishtnah ha-lailah hazeh? We have been asking this question ever since the Seder was created so that we could ask many Family groups rotate other questions. If only the questions... readings to all who want to read in their group. ALL: Dayenu! When finished, reading Reader: Passover means something different to every responsibility will generation of Jews. The Virus that has separated us has also brought us together in unexpected ways. pass to the next screen participant. Reader: The rabbis gave us rituals to help us tell the story of our passage from slavery to freedom. If only the rituals... Seder means “order”. ALL: Dayenu! Reader: Kiddush We lift our cup of wine and say: Blessed are you God, Sovereign of all, Creator of the fruit of the The Fours vine. Four questions: Why matzah? Baruch Ata Adonai Eloheinu Melech ha’olam, borei p’ri ha’ Why maror? gafen. Why dip twice? Leader: Shehecheyanu Why recline? Blessed are you God who has kept us alive, sustained us and Four kinds of children: brought us together on this very different and sacred night of The wise one Passover, and may we be together again at the same time next The rebellious one year.