Shalom
Auslander’s column, “A ‘fallen Jew’ on what to read this Passover” is so full
of mistakes and misconceptions it more properly should have appeared in the
column on the same page of the Outlook section entitled “myths.” It could have been called “Auslander’s myths
about Passover,” and refuted his points.
Contrary
to what he asserts, as any Jew, even “fallen Jews”, (a term which I have never
heard before) know, the story is not about any one single man, but rather the
emergence of a people from bondage. The
point of Passover is for each and every Jew to feel as though he or she was a
slave in Egypt and was liberated. We are
called upon to have compassion and to identify with what it means when others
do not enjoy freedom. We are reminded
that in each and every generation there have been those who sought to destroy and
annihilate the Jewish people.
Passover
invites each participant to engage in a dialogue with oneself and one’s
heritage, with contemporary concepts and ancient, time-honored traditions, to
explore issues of identity and meaning, to interact with the dialectic between
the potentially conflicting pulls of particularism and universalism and to
counteract complacency.
I find it
surprising that a novelist, one who deals in metaphor and meaning is so trapped
by literalism that he dismisses the greater significance of the holiday and misses
the power of the metaphors and symbolism of the story.
The
Passover story has inspired countless other oppressed peoples throughout the
ages. At our seder we sing the spiritual
sung by African slaves brought in slavery to this country who saw in the
deliverance of the Hebrew slaves a message of hope, reminding us of the role
Judaism has played throughout history. I
recall when I was a youngster in the 1960’s family seders when we read the
story and understood the imperative to support the civil rights movement and to
work for social justice.
Maybe the
problem isn’t so much with Passover, but
the seders Auslander attended.
1 comment:
Shalom auslander needs to read this article to appreciate what pesach means: http://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Passover-1945-A-Jewish-soldiers-story-452284
Unfortunately he carries too much anger towards his family
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