Passover is probably the best known
of the Jewish holidays, mostly because
it ties in with Christian history
(the Last Supper was apparently a
Passover seder), and because a lot
of its observances have been reinterpreted
by Christians as Messianic and signs
of Jesus.
Passover begins on the 15th day of the Jewish month
of Nissan. It is the first of the three major festivals
with both historical and agricultural significance
(the other two are Shavu'ot and Sukkot). Agriculturally,
it represents the beginning of the harvest season
in Israel, but little attention is paid to this aspect
of the holiday. The primary observances of Passover
are related to the Exodus from Egypt after 400 years
of slavery. This story is told in Exodus, Ch. 1-15.
Many of the Passover observances are instituted in
Chs. 12-15.
The name "Passover" refers
to the fact that G-d "passed
over" the houses of the Jews
when he was slaying the firstborn
of Egypt. In Hebrew, it is known as
Pesach (that "ch" is pronounced
as in the Scottish "loch"),
which is based on the Hebrew root
meaning "pass over". The
holiday is also referred to as Chag
he-Aviv (the Spring Festival), Chag
ha-Matzoth (the Festival of Matzahs),
and Zeman Herutenu (the Time of Our
Freedom) (again, all with those Scottish
"ch"s).
Probably the most significant observance
related to Passover involves the removal
of chametz (leaven; sounds like "hum
it's" with that Scottish ch)
from our homes. This commemorates
the fact that the Jews leaving Egypt
were in a hurry, and did not have
time to let their bread rise. It is
also a symbolic way of removing the
"puffiness" (arrogance,
pride) from our souls.
Chametz includes anything made from
the five major grains (wheat, rye,
barley, oats and spelt) that has not
been completely cooked within 18 minutes
after coming into contact with water.
Traditional Jews of Ashkenazic background
also avoid rice, corn, peanuts, and
legumes (beans) as if they were chametz.
All of these items have been used
to make bread, thus use of them was
prohibited to avoid any confusion.
Such additional items are referred
to as "kitniyos." We may
not eat chametz during Passover; we
may not even own it or derive benefit
from it. We may not even feed it to
our pets or cattle. All chametz, including
utensils used to cook chametz, must
either be disposed of or sold to a
non-Jew.
The process of cleaning the home
of all chametz in preparation for
Passover is an enormous task. To do
it right, you must spend several days
scrubbing everything down, going over
the edges of your stove and fridge
with a toothpick and a Q-Tip, covering
all surfaces that come in contact
with foil or shelf-liner, etc., etc.,
etc. After the cleaning is completed,
the morning before the seder, a formal
search of the house for chametz is
undertaken, and any remaining chametz
is burned.
The grain product we eat during Passover
is called matzah. Matzah is unleavened
bread, made simply from flour and
water and cooked very quickly. This
is the bread that the Jews made for
their flight from Egypt. We have come
up with many inventive ways to use
matzah; it is available in a variety
of textures for cooking: matzah flour
(finely ground), matzah meal (coarsely
ground), matzah farfel (little chunks,
used as a noodle substitute), and
full-sized matzahs (about 10 inches
square, a bread substitute).
The day before Passover is the fast
of the firstborn, a minor fast for
all firstborn males, commemorating
the fact that the firstborn Jewish
males in Egypt were not killed during
the final plague.
On the first night of Passover (first
two nights for traditional Jews outside
Israel), we have a special family
meal filled with ritual to remind
us of the significance of the holiday.
This meal is called a seder, from
a Hebrew root word meaning "order."
It is the same root from which we
derive the word "siddur"
(prayer book). There is a specific
set of information that must be covered
in a specific order. This is the seder.
An overview of a traditional seder
is included later in this page.
Passover lasts for seven days (eight
days outside of Israel). The first
and last days of the holiday (first
two and last two outside of Israel)
are days on which no work is permitted.
See Extra Day of Holidays for more
information. Work is permitted on
the intermediate days. These intermediate
days on which work is permitted are
referred to as Chol Ha-Mo'ed, as are
the intermediate days of Sukkot.
The Passover
Seder
The text of the Passover seder is
written in a book called the Haggadah.
The content of the seder can be summed
up by the following Hebrew rhyme:
Kaddesh, Urechatz,
Karpas, Yachatz,
Maggid, Rachtzah,
Motzi Matzah,
Maror, Korech,
Shulchan Orech,
Tzafun, Barech,
Hallel, Nirtzah
Now, what does that mean?
1. Kaddesh: Sanctification
The word is derived from the Hebrew
root Qof-Dalet-Shin, meaning holy.
This is a blessing over wine in honor
of the holiday. The wine is drunk,
and a second cup is poured.
2. Urechatz: Washing
A washing of the hands without a blessing,
in preparation for eating the Karpas.
3. Karpas: Vegetable
A vegetable (usually parsley) is dipped
in salt water and eaten. The vegetable
symbolizes the lowly origins of the
Jewish people; the salt water symbolizes
the tears shed as a result of our
slavery. Parsley is a good vegetable
to use for this purpose, because when
you shake off the salt water, it looks
like tears.
4. Yachatz: Breaking
One of the three matzahs on the table
is broken. Part is returned to the
pile, the other part is set aside
for the afikomen (see below).
5. Maggid: The Story
A retelling of the story of the Exodus
from Egypt and the first Passover.
This begins with the youngest person
asking The Four Questions, a set of
questions about the proceedings designed
to encourage participation in the
seder. The Four Questions are also
known as Mah Nishtanah (Why is it
different?), which are the first words
of the Four Questions.
The maggid is designed to satisfy
the needs of four different types
of people: the wise son, who wants
to know the technical details; the
wicked son, who excludes himself (and
learns the penalty for doing so);
the simple son, who needs to know
the basics; and the son who is unable
to ask, the one who doesn't even know
enough to know what he needs to know.
At the end of the maggid, a blessing
is recited over the second cup of
wine and it is drunk.
6. Rachtzah: Washing
A second washing of the hands, this
time with a blessing, in preparation
for eating the matzah.
7. Motzi: Blessing over
Grain Products
The ha-motzi blessing, a generic blessing
for bread or grain products used as
a meal, is recited over the matzah.
8. Matzah: Blessing over
Matzah
A blessing specific to matzah is recited,
and a bit of matzah is eaten.
9. Maror: Bitter Herbs
A blessing is recited over a bitter
vegetable (usually raw horseradish;
sometimes romaine lettuce), and it
is eaten. This symbolizes the bitterness
of slavery. The maror is eaten with
charoses, a mixture of apples, nuts,
cinnamon and wine, which symbolizes
the mortar used by the Jews in building
during their slavery.
10. Korech: The Sandwich
Rabbi Hillel was of the opinion that
the maror should be eaten together
with matzah and the paschal offering
in a sandwich. In his honor, we eat
some maror on a piece of matzah, with
some charoses (we don't do animal
sacrifice anymore, so there is no
paschal offering).
11. Shulchan Orech: Dinner
A festive meal is eaten. There is
no particular requirement regarding
what to eat at this meal (except,
of course, that chametz cannot be
eaten). Among Ashkenazic Jews, gefilte
fish and matzah ball soup are traditionally
eaten at the beginning of the meal.
12. Tzafun: The Afikomen
The piece of matzah set aside earlier
is eaten as "desert," the
last food of the meal. Different families
have different traditions relating
to the afikomen. Some have the children
hide it, while the parents have to
either find it or ransom it back.
Others have the parents hide it. The
idea is to keep the children awake
and attentive throughout the pre-meal
proceedings, waiting for this part.
13. Barech: Grace after
Meals
The third cup of wine is poured, and
grace after meals is recited. This
is similar to the grace that would
be said on any Sabbath. At the end,
a blessing is said over the third
cup and it is drunk. The fourth cup
is poured, including a cup set aside
for the prophet Elijah, who is supposed
to herald the Messiah, and is supposed
to come on Passover to do this. The
door is opened for a while at this
point (supposedly for Elijah, but
historically because Jews were accused
of nonsense like putting the blood
of Christian babies in matzah, and
we wanted to show our Christian neighbors
that we weren't doing anything unseemly).
14. Hallel: Praises
Several psalms are recited. A blessing
is recited over the last cup of wine
and it is drunk.
15. Nirtzah: Closing
A simple statement that the seder
has been completed, with a wish that
next year, we may celebrate Passover
in Jerusalem (i.e., that the Messiah
will come within the next year). This
is followed by various hymns and stories.