
Passover Publications & Resources
Pesach:
the Inside Version
Four Other Questions
Every Passover, the Haggadah says, I should feel as if
I, personally, were being liberated from
The Hebrew for "
R. Levi Yitzchak of Berditchev asked this question: when
does my freedom begin? I might think it begins with leaving
It is written that the Torah was given in the third month
after leaving
Asking the two questions, when does freedom begin, and
how do I know I have acquired freedom re-fashions the liberation concept,
re-formulating my notion of freedom from something that I have or don't
have, to the process, re-thinking freedom from a matter of arrival to
the matter of the journey, re-envisioning the liberation saga from a
matter of achievement to a matter of simply being on the road. It's not
about arrivals, but about process, not about goal but about journey,
not about there but all about here. Radically here, on my own freedom
trail. A link in my own freedom chain.
I put out the chometz, all the leavened food, from my life
for this journey. What is this chometz that I remove from my life during
Pesach? The chometz is anything inflatable, all the inflatable aspects
of self that prevent God. The inflatable sense of self aggrandizement,
the inflatable narcissism of self -- this is chometz, and this is what
I take out of my life during Passover. There is no room for God in a
person too full of self (Baal Shem Tov). I get, in a word, humble.
We call humility "bittul" which means suppression
of self. Less self, more other, less self more Other--this is the emerging
Jewish spirituality. When I eat matzah, that substance of no chometz,
I am reminded that chometz takes me away from God.
Born in
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JEWS UNITED FOR JUSTICE