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The primary purpose of the seder-night service is to inculcate our
descendants with proper education, to deliver the torch of Torah
values unto posterity. The keyword of the seder-night is "Vihigadita
Lebincha" (Shmos 13:8), tell your progeny!
It is insufficient to just "show" a practical example of Torah
practice - one must deal in oral discussion, the give-and-take of
question and answer. This mitzvah of education is truly all year long
"Veshinantem Lebanecha," and comes before the mitzvah of "Vedibarta
Bam" (Dvarim 6:7). This is because Torah study is an ongoing process,
constantly in action. It is not just introspective but it entails
delivering unto others, guaranteeing permanency.
This point is imperative especially as regarding children. The
characteristic of youth is to question, they take nothing for granted.
One indication of premature old age is the blasé attitude of
disinterest, an aloof disregard for all worldly matters not directly
attached to one's individual welfare or close circle of interests. The
younger one is, the more one marvels at the beauties of nature, at a
butterfly or at a tiny beetle. The older (in spirit) one is, the more
he reacts with a yawn of boredom, so to say, answering "so what?".
This bland response is considered "sophistication". The Torah attitude, however, is to be constantly delving, hence we have sources that tell us "There is not a Bet Midrash session without a chidush" Hagiga 3a). Any question asked is similar to a spade unearthing marvelous mental treasures.
With this focus on the important role of questions within Judaism in mind, there are four basic questions asked during Seder night: The famous
"Mah Nishtana". The first one is: Why on all nights of the year we may
eat regular bread, but this Pesach night only Matza? The answer is
that we left Egypt hurriedly and couldn't wait till the yeast
leavened. We ate in haste (Shmos 12:11). Since we were banished is a
haste (Dvarim 16:3). The "Missilas Yeshorim" (beginning of Chapter IX)
teaches that we are similar to soldiers on the battle front, who have
no time to put spices or seasoning in their food. They eat impromptu,
since they have matters of great importance to deal with. So too, if
all year long we may occasionally eat tasty bread, salted and
leavened, when we have to keep an alert mind, when we have to be
vigorous in spiritual activity (as we were upon exiting from Egypt on
our way to Israel) then we eat simple and plain fare for we have a
sublime and significant task before us: to praise the Lord for His
wonders!
The second question is why all the year long we Jews sometimes eat
general green produce and sometimes bitters. But for Pesach night, the
major ceremony is to eat bitters! The answer is given by Rabbi
Shimshon Raphael Hirsh ("Haggadah" published by Feldheim, p. 71):
"Jewish thinking realizes that it is far easier to trust in G-d during
dark prospects than it is to remain faithful to our obligations in the
bright sunlight of success". Many are those who derelicted their
duties due to riches, honor, fame or general well-being. The
bitterness of salt only increases culinary appetite. The problem of
ascending a steep mountain only increases physical proficiency and
causes sturdier muscles and stamina. The fact that the great majority
of Jewish history is replete with stories of persecution, with
fantastic chronicles of international anti-Semitism, only underlines
the credo "stress causes success, duress causes durability". Our
ability to chew on bitters and yet survive (we are the oldest nation
in the world) shows our G-dly inner spark.
The third question is, why all the year long don't we always immerse
foods in relishes, but Pesach night we do this twice! The answer to
this is to recognize the implication of reliance upon G-d (Bitachon).
The point is that the child asks "Mah Nishtana" since immediately
following "Kiddush" and the first goblet of wine, he was given
"karpas" as an appetizer. Nevertheless, immediately when the matzos
should be eaten, (as is the normal process after every Yomtov
Kiddush,) these matzos were covered and concealed (before the "maggid"
part of the Seder ceremony). Having his appetite aroused and then to
be denied food appears most odd! So too the bitters are dipped into
the sweetener (Charoses), but then the sweetener is shaken off so that
the taste of the bitters should not be canceled or altered (Shulchan
Aruch 475, paragraph one). What is the logic of these contradictory
acts?
The answer is that G-d satiates all recipients of His bounty with
"satisfaction". (Tehillim 145 verse 16). The "Noda Bi'Yehuda" asks why
doesn't Psalms say "G-d gives food" or "sustenance" or "providence".
Of what good is psychological "satisfaction"? The answer is that no
matter if a person has much material riches, or if he has only minor
finances, if he has "Ratzon" (satisfaction) he is constantly blessed.
Rabbi Hanina ben Dosa only had carob fruits but it was "dy lo", enough
for him. He did not request more. (Ta'anis 10b). True we have the
ability to eat matzos immediately following Kiddush. We also have the
ability to eat the bitters together with the charoses sweeteners. But
we are "above it all". We are not slaves to physical desires.
The fourth question is why all the year long we sometimes recline (on
sofas) and sometimes sit erect (on chairs). but Pesach night we all
lounge on sofas as if we were Kings! The answer is that in ancient
Egypt commoners were considered to be rabble. The majestic monuments,
the pyramids that we see today only attest to superb engineering
prowess. The ancient Egyptians had great skill in harnessing the
forces of nature so that the overflow of the Nile River would bring
great productivity to adjacent agriculture. The marvelous aqueducts,
the myriad channels dug into the ground alongside that Nile show great
acumen. However, what was individual human fortune then? Nothing. All
were slaves. the entire nation, officers, courtiers, soldiers,
merchants, all were drawn down into the morass of king-worship.
Pharaoh himself knelt in worship to the deity he believed resided in
his breast. The lash, the chains, the instruments of torture, these
are the true emblems to the great achievements of ancient Egyptian
culture. But G-d willed otherwise. His miracles proclaim that humans
are not supreme. Using science and harnessing nature with
technological advances is just not enough. Man is to be free, to be
reclining as master of his body and of his soul. This freedom is what
we proclaim on Pesach night. We teach that the true "Ben Horin" is he
who observes divine dictates (Avos, Chapter VI). The ultimate question
is if man is to be pulled and pushed by his evil instincts, or if his
divine spirit, his soul will overcome.
The word "Pesach" (in Hebrew) means "to jump", "to hop". Just as G-d
hopped and passed over the houses in Egypt, so too we must skip,
hurdle and jump over our animalistic tendencies. We must not be
bedazzled with civilization's great progress. True we have wonderful
technologies, but unless used properly they easily lend themselves to
war casualties and terrorists. Without Torah, humanity suffers.
(Article written by Rabbi Moshe Tzuriel and provided courtesy of Yeshivat Shaalvim.)
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