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Passover: The Feast of Freedom |
| 15 Nisan
- 22 Nisan
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| You
were strangers in Egypt: Do not
oppress the stranger
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| First Seder: April 12, 2006 (April 2, 2007)
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- Utah Hillel Passover
Student Seder. Organizer
needed! (For downloadable materials,
including traditional and creative haggadas,
see Bibliography/Links"
below.)
- "Let all who are hungry,
come in and eat." Mazon:
A Jewish Response to Hunger offers
Seder supplements and contribution forms.
- Pesah Seder Match-up Program:
Do you need a first Seder to attend,
or can you offer a student a place at
your Seder? Please call or e-mail Hillel and
we will try to match up student guests
with hosts. Please specify which night
and the level of kashrut sought or offered.
- Non-students: Kol Ami offers
a similar match-up service for the
first night. Call Kol Ami at 484-1501.
- Community Seders. Hillel offers
a student seder. [More precisely, it
has offered one for most of the past
several years and will this year if
a student steps forward to lead it.]
Other community seders - most of which
require reservations - are sponsored
by:
- Kol Ami (second night, using the
Baskin Haggadah, open to non-members,
contact Kol
Ami for details),
- Chavurah B'Yachad (second night,
contact CBY
for details),
- SL Rosh Chodesh group (contact the
Rosh
Chodesh group for details), and
- the Jewish Singles group (contact
the JCC
for details).
- Passover Shopping.
- Kol Ami offers shopping for members
and non-members. This is a major Kol
Ami fund raiser. Call Kol Ami at 484-1501
for details: "the widest selection
of Passover foods and wine ever, plus
a fine selection of Passover Haggadot,
Seder plates and gift items."
- Dan's, Smiths, Wild Oats and some
of the other local supermarkets also
carry Passover items.
- In past years, dates and fresh horseradish
have tended to disappear at the last
minute; try Liberty Heights Fresh.
- For items that aren't available
locally (and sometimes for better
prices) try our Kosher food on the web page.
- Sell your hametz
on line, through Koach, the Conservative
movement's student wing. Visit the
Koach web site for details. If you
prefer human contact, Kol Ami and Bais
Menachem will sell your hametz
for you.
- Submit your
favorite Passover recipes and we'll
post them.
- The Food Rules.
- General Guidelines:
The short explanation of the Passover
food rules is that one must eat matzah
at the seder and hametz is
forbidden for all of Pesah: not just
to eat, but even to have in your possession.
Exodus 13:3.
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For more details, see:
- Conservative: Passover
Guide (includes: what is hametz,
which foods require a hechsher,
how to prepare your kitchen and utensils
for Passover use).
- Orthodox: OU
Passover Guide (a listing of which
foods do and do not require an OU
hechsher).
-
The Kitniyot Controversy.
Since the Middle Ages, Ashkenazim,
but not Sephardim, traditionally haven't
eaten various foods known as "kitniyot"
-- often mistranslated as "legumes"
(the word itself comes from the root
meaning "small," so "bits" might be
a better translation) -- during Pesah.
Kitniyot are not hametz
and Ashkenazim who observe the ban on
kitniyot are free to attend a seder
at which they are served and eat food
cooked in the same pot as kitniyot.
Which foods exactly are kitniyot is
a matter of some dispute, but generally
kitniyot are small fleshless seeds of
annual plants that someone might make
into flour, and more precisely you must
consult the list of your preferred halachic
expert. Usually, lentils and dried beans,
dried peas, rice, corn, sesame seeds
and caraway seeds are kitniyot;
but quinoa, potatoes and coffee are
not. Peanuts, fresh peas and
fresh green beans are controversial.
The ban is considered a minhag
-- a custom -- rather than a mitzvah
and was called "foolish" by some early
authorities, who note that it has no
Talmudic basis, that the traditional
justifications for the rule don't match
what is actually classified as kitniyot,
and that it distracts from the more
important aspects of the holiday, such
as, "do not oppress the stranger for
you were strangers in Egypt." Most Ashkenazi
Orthodox and traditional authorities
disagree, on the ground that traditional
stringencies should be accepted. However,
due to these disagreements, some authorities
say the kitniyot category should not
be expanded to include:
- new (or New World) foods (such as,
e.g., peanuts, permitted by R. Moshe
Feinstein, the leading modern Orthodox
posek (legal decisionmaker)),
or
- derivative foods (such as oils
made from kitniyot, permitted by Litvak
poskim a century ago (e.g.,
the Netziv of Volozhin) but considered
suspect in many Orthodox circles today).
Other authorities, as one might expect,
go the other direction. For example,
the Remah, Orach Chaim 464, bars mustard
because it is "similar" to kitniyot
(although he permits anise and coriander
seeds, id 453.)! Corn, despite its New
World origin, seems to be resolutely
fixed in the kitniyot category
on the ground that its name in Yiddish
(korn) is the same as rye. (Click for
a detailed discussion of the traditional
commentaries and some modern (Orthodox)
views, a detailed dvar on kitniyot
including many citations, Aish
HaTorah's explanation of the kitniyot
rules or a funny description of the
problems of frum Pesah
shopping in Israel).
The Conservative movement in the US
as a general principal accepts the Talmudic
view that it is forbidden to create
stringencies (humras). On this issue,
however, it officially bars kitniyot
generally, but allows peanuts and kitniyot-derived
oils (see the RA Pesah
Guide). The Conservative responsa's
reasoning is not entirely clear (as
is the case with everything regarding
kitniyot): if the idea is not to expand
a "foolish tradition," then presumably
all the New World beans and grains -
- including corn -- should be permissible
along with all modern derivative products
(oils, sweeteners). If the idea is that
peanuts are not "legumes," as the Responsa
states, the problem is deeper. First,
unlike many other kitniyot, peanuts
actually are legumes. More to the point,
kitniyot is not a biologically based
category (the traditional list of kitniyot
includes grains (rice) and dried beans
(peas, lentils), but allows fresh string
beans). If the category is meant to
reflect things that someone might confuse
with prohibited flours (as the Smak
contended in 13c France) or grains that
are sometimes mixed with prohibited
grains (as the Beit Yosef explained
in 16c Israel), perhaps rice, corn and
lentils ought to be barred, but why
peas, corn oil or corn sweeteners? And,
in a day and age when few people make
their own flour, why bar whole rice,
corn and lentils, none of which resembles
flour at all? Indeed, is mixing really
plausible in a modern inspected factory?
Most importantly, why not ban potatoes,
which Ashkenazim actually do use in
pumpernickel bread?
The Masorti (Conservative) movement
in Israel ruled that the bar on kitniyot
should not be observed in Israel at
all (click for responsa text in Hebrew
or English
summary (Va'ad Ha Halakha, Vol.
3, R. David Golinkin)) because it is
foolish and creates unnecessary distinctions
between Sephardim and Ashkenazim and
the majority custom (in Israel) ought
to be followed. Rabbi Michael Lerner and
Benjamin Mordecai Ben-Baruch urge the
same result for the similar reasons
in the US. Click for Lerner and Ben-Baruch opinions.
-- Daniel Greenwood
- Bibliography
- Noam Zion and David Dishon, The
Family Participation Haggadah--A Different
Night (1997: Shalom Hartman Inst.).
Email: AFSHI@INTAC.com.
Website: http://www.jajz-ed.org.il/hartman/.
An elaborately annotated study haggadah
to study and discuss. Despite the name,
at the Seder it can be a little overwhelming
unless you've done a good editing job
before hand; the leader's guide has
good suggestions.
- More Pesach links and Hagadot
- Mazon:
A Jewish Response to Hunger offers
Seder supplements and contribution forms.
"Let all who are hungry, come in
and eat."
- Passover: This Year We Are Slaves, Next Year We Will Be Free by David Arnow: an interesting set of suggestions for fulfilling the
mitzvah of introducing some change into the seder from the New Israel Fund. (If the direct link, doesn't work, go to www.nif.org,
then "NIF Indepth", then "Haggadah Supplements". Several other Haggadah supplements are also available).
- Rabbis
for Human Rights' Pesach
Seder Supplement on economic justice.
- JewishFreeware.org
offers free and fun seder materials
including shortened & customizable versions
of Noam Zion & David Dishon's Family
Participation Haggadah; Passover
Songs Old and New, Silly English and
Traditional Hebrew Songs; Passover guide
with explanations of how and why, etc.;
supplemental materials for seders; charoset
recipes from around the world; and more.
- Habonim-Dror
Labor Zionist semi-secular haggadah.
- JTS (Conservative Seminary) Learn
about Passover site.
- Jerusalem Post 2006 Passover Guide, including recipes, features, etc.
- Kosher4Passover.Com:
on-line Passover store.
- Tara Jewish Music:
tapes, CDs and sheet music.
- Animated
Email Passover Cards.
- Passover on
the Net.
- The Interactive Haggadah
CD-ROM computer game from JEMM.
-
Passover (and other Jewish holiday)
Jokes.
Return to Utah Hillel Home Page (http://www.utah.edu/hillel).
Contact Utah Hillel.
You are visitor number
since March 16, 1999.
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