But the challenge
of Seder night is not just to remember the past, not just to recall the
extraordinary longevity of our story with its roots in servitude and its mythos of ourselves as a people
liberated into a different kind of servitude – servitude to a vision of how
things could be, how freedoms of many
kinds could be the inheritance of all peoples; as Rabbi John Rayner z”l expressed it: ‘freedom from oppression, freedom from want, freedom
from hunger, freedom from hatred, freedom from fear; freedom to think, freedom to
speak, freedom to learn, freedom to love, freedom to hope, freedom to rejoice -
soon, in our days’. The Seder night is, of course, all of that. But it is more than
that.
For how can we celebrate these freedoms we have - and those
we wish for - with integrity, wholeheartedly, when we live in an
as-yet-unredeemed world? A world of
homelessness on our doorsteps and food banks around the corner; a world where
women are sold into sexual slavery, and wage slavery in China, India and
Pakistan underpins the technology we use, the clothes we wear, sometimes the
food we eat; a world where polio has
broken out in Syrian refugee camps, where West Bank settlers uproot Palestinian
olive groves, where militias are on genocidal marches in Africa, a world where
the richest 85 people on the planet
control as much wealth as the poorest half of the global population put
together...dayyeinu.
Yes, dayyeinu, we sing, in thankfulness of
all we have. ‘It would have been enough’.
‘It should be enough’. Dayyeinu. But
the bitter herbs remind us of all we have not done, and all that remains to be
done, as long as bitterness remains the
daily life of others created, like us, in the image of the Divine One, our Redeemer
- who waits for us to continue the work of redemption, with our own ‘strong
hands and outstretched arms’.
The challenge of
the Seder night is its call to action. To take that Biblical image – the metaphor
of power-filled hands and arms - culled
from Exodus and Deuteronomy, the image of a redeeming energy transforming the fate
of a whole people, to take this part of the mythic narrative and incarnate it in our own lives. What
a challenge! What an expectation! What a destiny! Dare we embrace the
challenge, the expectation? Dare we live in alignment with our task, our
destiny as the people of God?
Interesting, thoughtful; but I think the mass punishment and humiliation of the Palestinian populations are much more than a mere uprooting of olive groves.
ReplyDeleteA complementary view is:
http://micahsparadigmshift.blogspot.co.uk/2014/04/in-every-generation-how-passover-locks.html
12 April 2014 21:48