Tag Archives: kibbutz

From Farm to Table – Organic Israeli Judaism

a visit to the Shittim Institute; The Kibbutz Institute for Holidays and Jewish Culture, situated on kibbutz Beit Hashita in Northern Israel

On the last day of a wartime visit to Israel, I visit the Shittim Institute; The Kibbutz Institute for Holidays and Jewish Culture, situated on kibbutz Beit Hashita in Northern Israel. The Shittim Institute has over 1,000 Kibbutz Haggadot and a million documents constituting the most extensive and unique archive of what I now recognize as Yehardut Yisraeli, organic Israeli Judaism produced on the kibutzim from the 1920’s to the 1960’s. Join us as we learn about the archive, it’s history and it’s potential to build resiliency and unity in Israel and the diaspora.

Sefaria Source Sheet: www.sefaria.org/sheets/558858

To support the Shittim Institute go here: https://pefisrael.org/charity/machon-shittim/

Transcript:

Welcome to Madlik. My name is Geoffrey Stern, and on the last day of my trip to Israel, I visited the  Shittim Institute; The Kibbutz Institute for Holidays and Jewish Culture, situated on kibbutz Beit Hashita in Northern Israel. I recently discovered this amazing institute when I purchased a first edition kibbutz Be’eri Haggadah from 1950. I was researching the provenance of this new edition to my collection when I learned that Machon Shittim has the most extensive and unique archive of what I now recognize as Yehardut Yisraeli, organic Israeli Judaism.

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0:42 – GS:

So join me in conversation with Iran Yarkoni, Anna Gilboa, and Ari Bar-El.

0:54 – Iran Yarkoni

So this archive was established by a man called Aryeh Ben-Gurion. Aryeh Ben-Gurion was the nephew of the first Prime Minister of Israel. Aryeh was born in Ukraine. And his father was murdered. And after this, Tzipora (his mother) took her two sons. One of them was Aryeh, and the other one was Immanuel. And because of the… Because of Ben Gurion, he was the head of the Jewish Agency. They got the certificate to go to, to arrive to Israel, and they arrive in the early 30s to Haifa. And Aryeh studied there in the Reali School.

1:46 – Iran Yarkoni

And after he finished 12 years, he decided that he wants to be a pioneer. He was a part of the youth movement, the one who settled in Beit Hashita. And because he was the one who graduated 12 years at school, the only one who graduated 12 they said, OK, you graduated, you will be the educator in our kibbutz for the first group that was born here. Because Aryeh got the job of the educator from the perspective of an educator, he started to collect answers how to deal with the first generation of young Jews who were born in Israel.

2:36 – Iran Yarkoni

But you know that kibbutz was the first Jewish settlement without a synagogue…. because they had the Cheder Ochel (Dining Room) and they had…

2:46 – GS

Maybe in 2,000 years.

2:50 – Iran Yarkoni

Yes. So he looks for the right way how to connect them to the roots and to the tradition on the one hand. On the other hand, they were secular. He wanted them to stay secular. And he started to find the right combination how to deal with this. And from this perspective of an educator, he started to collect answers for different other educators from other kibbutzim.

And he collected and collected.

3:25 – Iran Yarkoni

And actually, he collected most of his life. And when he died in the late 90s, he left behind more than one million documents. Now, all the documents deal with a culture that was created in the different kibbutzim, with two sections, a section of holidays, the annual cycle, and a section of ceremonies, of life cycles. And this is what we have here on the upper floor, and we will show you later. So this is the story, the short story of this place. I will tell that in the early 2,000s, this, after a hard decade of this kibbutz, of this community, they decided to quit from the responsibility of this archive, and then we heard about it, and a minute before they decided to throw it away, we said, okay, there is…

4:47 – GS

Who’s we?

4:48 – Iran Yarkoni

We. Okay, yeah, it’s a long story, but we are… We were from… A youth movement, we were elder, but we were a youth movement, we called them HaMahanot HaOlim, and we already settled in Kibbutz Naaran to create an elder movement for our groups after the army, and we were seeking for missions to do and to create for the society in Israel, and to renew the ideas and ideals of the kibbutz movement. And from this area, with this scope, we heard about the story about this place. And we knew one year before, and we decided to take the responsibility on this place.

5:43 – Iran Yarkoni

Because we understood that this is kind of a treasure trove, that according to all the challenges of the Israeli society, here there are a lot of answers that can be relevant. So, we start to open it, and we found that it’s much bigger than we thought. Because to open a trove with one million documents, it takes years. And also, to build for us a place in schools …., we will tell you about it later. So, it takes years, but this is what we are doing here.

6:29 – GS

Now let’s start to talk a little bit about the Haggadah because this is what you came

GS: I can just say as someone who comes from the goal of it especially America where there are so many variations of judaism and you come to Israel and you see the monopoly of the orthodox and more importantly the Hilonim (Secular Jews) who when they look for spirituality, they might go to uh… What they call hodu (the Far East) … They look elsewhere because they’ve been robbed of alternatives and then you look at uh…

7:03 – GS

Things like conservative Judaism and Reform Judaism, and you say, they might work in America, but why would they work here because they weren’t grown here? They’re exports from outside. And what excites me about the kibbutz and what you saved is that this was an organic creation of Israeli Chilutzim (pioneers), secular, of their interaction with Judaism. And I think that’s the value of this archive and what you’re doing is extremely important.

7:38 – Ari Bar-El

If I can just add.

7:39 – Ari Bar-El

So, my name is Ari and I’m one of the archive staff. I’m one of the members of the archive staff, and just referring to what you said, I came here about two or three years ago, so I’m not from a machanot ha-olim, which is, Eran didn’t say it, but as an outsider I can say it, this is, in a way, the new avant-garde of the kibbutzim. They are the ones that now, think in these terms of contributing to the society as a whole, et cetera. But when I came here and I was, this is not the area.

GS: What is your background?

8:28 – Ari Bar-El

I’m a historian. I wrote my PhD on David Ben-Gurion’s attitudes and policy towards science and technology. So, Zionism, I taught about Zionism, so that was close enough to come here. And when I came here and I saw this, the second thought I had that this is like a fourth church of Judaism. If you’ve got Orthodox and you’ve got Reforms and Conservative, this is in a way a fourth church. And I think that connects to what you’ve… Not the church, a stream. How do you say it?

9:10 – Multiple Speakers

But how do you… Okay, so…

9:12 – Iran Yarkoni

It’s a stream. Kibun, or…

9:15 – Ari Bar-El

Zerem.

9:17 – Multiple Speakers

Zerem, yes.

9:17 – GS

The reform started in Germany. The reform is…

9:20 – Multiple Speakers

In America, we call them movements.

9:22 – Ari Bar-El

Movements.

9:22 – Multiple Speakers

So this is the fourth.

9:23 – GS

Unfortunately, some of the movements don’t move very often. Okay. They’re supposed to be movements, and we have Reconstructionism, we have alive Judaism. Much more. But Lut has been a Petri dish. Of alternative ways. And Israel, unfortunately, has been robbed of that. So whether it’s a fourth or I think it’s unique is what you can definitely see.

9:48 – Ari Bar-El

I heard your podcast, so I know you would agree with us that this is a remarkable, a remarkable culture and a remarkable thing. And as an outsider, this is not a usual archive. The founding fathers did not just collect material. The main job was to do cultural job and educational job. So, it’s, they didn’t do, I mean, in archive terms they, you know, you would find Aryeh Ben-Gurion cutting papers and doing all things, documents, but he had a mission of educating and spreading this kind of Judaism.

10:42 – Ari Bar-El

And this is why this archive is organized differently than classical archives. The classical archive would be organized around the principle of provenance. Okay, so if you document an organization, the archive would document, as it is, all the different divisions inside. And most archives are, this is the classical archives, this archive is a thematic archive. So, it follows the needs of this cultural activist and the needs were, I need material for holidays, I need material for life, all kinds of life ceremonies, and I need material to document the kibbutz as it evolves.

11:35 – Ari Bar-El

So these are our three main sections that will be the circle of the year or the year circle, circle of life and kibbutz culture. And then within these sections we will have, if it’s the year, the circle, so it’s different holidays and the circle of life would be different life ceremonies, birth, death, and all and all that kibbutz culture and and then they would we have different kinds of material within this Different sections, I’ll give you some of them. But the first one which is Maybe the prime material.

12:22 – Ari Bar-El

I don’t know what the translation in English. So maybe say Masechet Hag…  So Haggadah is a Masechet Chag of Pesach. But this kibbutz, or the kibbutz movement, has developed Masachtot for many holidays.

12:42 – Orna Stern

It’s like the program, the description of the holiday.

12:46 – Ari Bar-El

Tractat is a Masechet.

12:48 – GS

You’re a word that comes from the Talmud, which is Masechet.

Ari Bar-El Exactly.  Okay.

12:54 – GS

And the idea is, if you look on YouTube, you see that for Shavuot and Pesach, they had programs. If you have programs, you have people writing texts. You have people writing songs. And so what you’re saying is that it was grouped into…

13:10 – Ari Bar-El

So the Massechet is taking all these parts and putting it into one… Like a ceremony. ….one ceremony with all the instructions how to do the ceremonies and the content. So this is like, that would be the prime material in a way, and the Pesach is the prime of the prime, or… And then we would have, like, you can envision it as parts of this Masechet. We will have sections dealing with blessings and all kinds of ceremonies, but…

13:48 – GS

They had a Tekkes.

13:49 – Ari Bar-El

Yes.

13:49 – GS

They had a ceremony, and because they were kibbutzim, they weren’t in individual homes. They were typically all public. That’s right. So even it’s the, it’s a form following function. Yes. And because they were all public organized, they had a committee and the kibbutz, everything was by committee. So you have a lot of thought, you have a lot of archival material, I’m sure.

14:09 – Ari Bar-El

That’s right. And now you understand why in the 80s and 90s when the kibbutzim got into trouble, these ceremonies were less and less, and the production of this material deteriorated as well. So again, form and content. Exactly. And then they would have like, there is a section about sources, different sources, biblical or from Mishnah, Talmud, or from Chalutzim. And then thoughts and essays. That would be another. A lot of illustrations and graphic material. Beautiful.

14:51 – Ari Bar-El

And, you know, even a six-year-old kid that draws the Haggadah or something. A lot of this kind. This is… The archive is from the… Melematah ad lemalah..

15:02 – Multiple Speakers

From the people… From the bottom up.

15:05 – GS

And correct me if I’m wrong, but some of them were published. And some want a mimeograph machine that might be changed every year. So it’s very fluid.

15:16 – Iran Yarkoni

Most of them, until the 70s, would change every year. I will give you some examples.

15:22 – Multiple Speakers

It’s a part of the idea that it must be relevant.

15:27 – GS

That in and of itself is a radical idea for anything that is close to religion or culture, because it’s changing. In terms of the culture of the kibbutz, the first thing I do when I get a Haggadah, I want to see if it’s traditional or if the kibbutz has changed it, is I look at the Ma Neshtana. And typically in the Ma Neshtana, You can say, why in all other nights the children live, separately from the adults. But it references the kibbutz culture. And that’s the first place where you say, okay, this one’s going to be interesting.

16:01 – Ari Bar-El

That’s right. And there are other sections and other kinds of material. One more kind of material that might be interesting is the one that has two, reports on the conduct of the holiday. Ben-Gurion, in a way, Aryeh Ben-Gurion was like a cultural, not dictator, but commissar, and he would ask every kibbutz, to report what happened, what was good, what was bad, what worked, what didn’t work. And following these reports, he would, I think some of the Haggadot they have conducted later, they have set up later, refer to that, and many of their publications were then…

16:51 – Ari Bar-El

So this is a very interesting, and the other interesting kind of material is ideas and suggestions how to celebrate a holiday.

17:03 – Iran Yarkoni

Yes, the traditional Haggadah is based on Midrashim.

17:09 – Iran Yarkoni

And the Kibbutz HaKadah is based on the Bible.

On the Bible. The Tenach

17:15 – Iran Yarkoni

Yes, the book of Shemot, Exodus, and the book of Devarim… How do you say that?

GS: Deuteronomy.

Iran Yarkoni : Both of them are the basics. Why? Because they understand that what we missed in the traditional Haggadah is the story. And they wanted to bring the story back into the Haggadah, because this is the main command of the seder to tell the story of Exodus from Egypt. So, they brought the story into the Haggadah, the two parts of the story, the part of the slavery and the part of the Exodus. I want to show something interesting.

18:12 – Iran Yarkoni

The main midrash of the traditional Haggadah is called Arami Oved Avi. Arami Oved Avi is a paragraph from Sefer Devarim.

GS: Deuteronomy.

Iran Yarkoni: It’s a very unique paragraph that tells, in a few sentences, the whole history of the Jewish nation.

18:38 – GS

But the context is the Bikurim.

Iran Yarkoni :Nachon. Nachon.

GS: Of bringing the first fruits, and you come in front of the Kohen, and this is the statement you say. So it’s a quote within the Bible, which many people feel is fairly ancient. In reference to other things in the Bible, things like the Shirat HaYam, Oz Yashir, is considered fairly ancient, and this is certainly one of those.

19:04 – Iran Yarkoni

Yes, and now this Midrash, when it comes on the traditional Haggadah, First of all, it divides into parts, so it’s hard to understand it, but never mind. It ends, yes,

אֲרַמִּי֙ אֹבֵ֣ד אָבִ֔י וַיֵּ֣רֶד מִצְרַ֔יְמָה וַיָּ֥גׇר שָׁ֖ם בִּמְתֵ֣י מְעָ֑ט וַֽיְהִי־שָׁ֕ם לְג֥וֹי גָּד֖וֹל עָצ֥וּם וָרָֽב׃

וַיָּרֵ֧עוּ אֹתָ֛נוּ הַמִּצְרִ֖ים וַיְעַנּ֑וּנוּ וַיִּתְּנ֥וּ עָלֵ֖ינוּ עֲבֹדָ֥ה קָשָֽׁה׃

וַנִּצְעַ֕ק אֶל־יְהֹוָ֖ה אֱלֹהֵ֣י אֲבֹתֵ֑ינוּ וַיִּשְׁמַ֤ע יְהֹוָה֙ אֶת־קֹלֵ֔נוּ וַיַּ֧רְא אֶת־עׇנְיֵ֛נוּ וְאֶת־עֲמָלֵ֖נוּ וְאֶֽת־לַחֲצֵֽנוּ׃

וַיּוֹצִאֵ֤נוּ יְהֹוָה֙ מִמִּצְרַ֔יִם בְּיָ֤ד חֲזָקָה֙ וּבִזְרֹ֣עַ נְטוּיָ֔ה וּבְמֹרָ֖א גָּדֹ֑ל וּבְאֹת֖וֹת וּבְמֹפְתִֽים׃

This is all a quote from Dvarim. It’s like in the origin. Here on this point, the quote from the traditional Haggadah stops.

וַיְבִאֵ֖נוּ אֶל־הַמָּק֣וֹם הַזֶּ֑ה וַיִּתֶּן־לָ֙נוּ֙ אֶת־הָאָ֣רֶץ הַזֹּ֔את אֶ֛רֶץ זָבַ֥ת חָלָ֖ב וּדְבָֽשׁ׃

Okay? When he took us out from Egypt, but What we missed here, we missed the last sentence. And the last sentence is, This part is missing in the traditional Haggadah. Now, when it’s missing, it’s just a miss all the idea, because the idea of this story is, Va Yotzienu, take us out, and Va Yevienu El HaEretz Hazot. (And he took us into this land)

20:35 – Iran Yarkoni

But what is the problem? The problem is that the traditional Haggadah was created during the exile. So, they could not say around the table, Va Yevienu El HaEretz Hazot, because they are not sitting here.

They didn’t sit there.

20:50 – Iran Yarkoni

And when the first generations of pioneers came to Israel, they could not put this text on their table because they are sitting here. And so, they need to renew it and to add the missing sentence that was not a part of the Haggadah for 2,000 years. And this is, I think, one of the main renewals that they did. And because they were part of the history, they needed that the text will be full “Shalem”. So, this is one of the main changes that they did.

21:35 – GS

But let’s just stop there for a second, because you say it’s very easy to say a change, but the truth is they made a better Haggadah that was more loyal to its source, because Magid is the most important part and it’s telling the story, and the traditional Haggadah doesn’t tell the story. And then in terms of the last part of the Bikurim, the Mishnah in Pesachim says you have to say it “ad hasof”. And they don’t do it. Yes. And so what’s ironic is that the kibbutznikim, as Chiloni as they were, were actually fulfilling the original intention of the Haggadah more than the quote-unquote traditional Jews.

22:15 – Iran Yarkoni

This is it.

Yes. This is it.

22:17 – GS

But all the three Regalim were agricultural holidays initially. And the other thing that the Haggadah does, which I’m sure you’ll get into, is it gets into Tal (The prayer for rain/dew) and it gets into Aviv and celebration. So they again brought it back to its source. At the traditional Seder, you say, why is there salt water and parsley? And you say, because it’s aviv, or egg aviv. But they put it back into the Haggadah. So everything that they did was actually authentic and going back to the original roots.

22:52 – GS

You said in the beginning that they took us back to Tanakh and the story, but they did actually add two midrashim that are not part of the traditional Haggadah, but a lot of people discuss. One is that when the Egyptians were drowning, the angels started to sing, and God says, why are you singing when my children, meaning the Egyptians, are dying? So, I always thought that was a reform movement in America of a Western humanist, but this is part of Haggadot that are from Nitzuli Shoah (survivors of the Holocaust) that Seconds later, they’ll have talks about Shavuot Hamadka and actually talk about the Holocaust or talk about members of the kibbutz who were killed in guard duty.

23:41 – GS

So they weren’t, these were not kumbaya pacifists, but nonetheless, they brought this amazing midrash. At my seder, we always take a little bit of the wine and we dip it on the side. When we talk about the plagues, for the Egyptians that drowned. So that to me is always amazing. And then the other Midrash that they always bring is about Nachshon Ben Amin Adav, which again, in the Torah itself, it says Moses prayed right before the Yom Suf split. And the Midrash says, God said to Moshe, what are you praying for?

24:20 – GS

This is not a time to pray, it’s a time to act. And Nachshon, was the one who walked into the water and opened it up. And he was a chalutz, so when Ben-Gurion created the campaign to break the matzur, the siege of Jerusalem, that was Operation Nachshon. And there are at least three other operations in the military that are named after Nachshon, and they were Nachshonim, they were kibbutzim called. He was a critical semmel. For the Zionists, and they put that into…

24:56 – Iran Yarkoni

This is one of the first Haggadot that we have. This is from the group who established Beit Hashita, before the time of Reu, in 1928. There were a group that trained themselves to be pioneers in Hadera, and Passover arrived, Passover Eve, and they decided to write to themselves an Haggadah. Now, During the 20s This is the first generation of the Kibbutz Haggadot. The situation was that every Passover Eve there was only one generation around the table. Because they didn’t have sons yet.

25:41 – GS

And their parents might still be in Europe.

25:44 – Iran Yarkoni

Yes, their parents were in Europe. And they didn’t have children. So the main idea of Passover VeHigadata l’bincha (and you shall tell it to your child) didn’t fit. So, they decided to write a special text that it will fit to them and will tell them the story. It’s become a kind of a idyllic booklets with all the typical text and the ideological ideas that they wanted to promote. And because this is the holiday of redemption. So the brought all their ideals of the redemption into this booklet called Haggadah. So this, listen, we have here more than 2,000 copies of Haggadot, of different Haggadot.

26:44 – GS

So, you know, the collection is huge.

26:45 – GS

That’s just the first. But this is the reason that we’re here.

26:49 – GS

I buy Haggadot at auction. And this is, I bought this year the first edition of the Haggadah from Be’eri. In 1938, so I have this at home, and I looked at the notes that came with it from the auction house, and it was the first time I learned about your institute. It’s crazy that I hadn’t heard about it before, but this is what brought me here.

27:18 – Iran Yarkoni

Because I told you about the only one generation that sat around the table, so after a decade more or less, then when they already had children, they had a question what to do now, because from one hand, on one hand, this became the main holiday of the group when they brought all their, as I said, all their important texts into the Haggadah and they didn’t want to miss it. On the other hand, You can’t bring children to sit around a seder that takes two hours of reading and talking. So, they had to decide if they are going to quit from their seder or find a different solution.

28:17 – Iran Yarkoni

And they found a radical solution that during the Passover Eve, they will separate from their children. And they created a Haggadah for children. And you can see here the story from Sefer Shemot, from Exodus, and you can see here all the symbols of the Seder, just for children. So, the children had their own seder with their educators, and the adults sat in the Cheder Ochal (dining room) and did their seder with… (In Hebrew Aya Gur “But that contradicts the whole point of the seder?”)  because, as I said, it’s a radical idea to separate it. I mean, it’s less educational.

29:04 – Iran Yarkoni

All the education people were very qualified and they took it very seriously as a mission to make it a different Haggadah for the kids to how you teach it and educate and it’s not like it’s not important.

29:18 – GS

But what it did was, it made it from a pedagogic point of view, if a typical kid sits through the traditional service, they get nothing. And so they created, they realized that, I mean, we’ll get to another part of the Haggadah, the four children. In the Kibbutz Haggadah, you see different types of pictures. You see the Rasha (evil) sometimes dressed as a bourgeois in a suit and tie like a yeka (German – Bourgeois Jew) . And the Chacham is, doesn’t studying books, he’s out in the fields. So, they’re all using it for teaching, and that is a great segue into what this institute does, where it’s not just historical data here, it’s how do we continue the pedagogy, the teaching of what was behind the Haggadah.

30:09 – Iran Yarkoni

We talked before about the Man Nishtana. This is from 1915. Gvar Am. Gvar Am is one of the kibbutzim that today is still evacuated. And you can see about the Man Yishtana here. “When all the Jews will come to Israel?” “Why we held weapon?” “When will there be peace in our land and in the whole world?” This is from the 50s. Because they said that if we have an opportunity to ask questions, we need to ask the most difficult questions.

31:04 – Multiple Speakers

Banal and difficult.

31:06 – GS

So last year, when the demonstrations were going on, they created a Haggadah. Yes. But they used a traditional Haggadah and they supplemented it.

31:17 – Multiple Speakers

And it was such a lost opportunity. Yes.

31:20 – GS

But it’s because to write a Haggadah like this you have to be very knowledgeable. And the kibbutznikim were very knowledgeable because they were just one generation away from very strong Jewish learning.

31:33 – Iran Yarkoni

And you need a community that will come with you. And I think this is it because people are afraid not to use the traditional Haggadah or I don’t feel comfortable with this. And this is something that you have a large community

GS: And they don’t feel comfortable changing it.

The joke about Israelis is that the synagogue they don’t go to is Orthodox. Or the God they don’t believe in is Orthodox. As opposed to saying, that’s your Judaism, this is mine. And they’re afraid to change the Orthodox because somehow, they think it’s authentic. And they (the kibbutzniks) didn’t have that problem. You mentioned rites of passage. How did the kibbutz handle marriage? Did they write their own ceremonies?

32:25 – Ari Bar-El

Yes, yes. I mean, this is a part we haven’t yet reached organizing, but they have their own ketubot and they have their own ceremonies.

32:35 – Iran Yarkoni

This is Haggadah for Independence Day. This is not for Passover. Now, this was written by Aaron Meged, one of the famous authors in Israel, and he wrote it in 1949, after the end of the Independence War. Now, one of the questions or one of the challenges he wanted to deal with is what will be the text of Independence Day? Because he was afraid, and you’re also right, that if we will not have a text, This important holiday will be empty and we will stay only with the barbecue.

GS: Like July 4th in America.

33:33 – Iran Yarkoni

So, he creates a Haggadah. That takes of the same template of the Haggadah, the Passover Haggadah, but the story is not the Exodus from Egypt, the story is the Independence War. According to the different stages of the Independence war this Haggadah was copied to Tzahal because the IDF, they asked for a text for Independence Day. This Haggadah was copied to the Army because the Zahal asked for a text for Independence Day. But what happened in this Haggadah, he created on the same language of the Passover Haggadah, he created a new Haggadah. Now, one of the paragraphs, it said,I and not an Angel

לֹא עַל־יְדֵי מַלְאָךְ, וְלֹא עַל־יְדֵי שָׂרָף, וְלֹא עַל־יְדֵי שָׁלִיחַ, אֶלָּא הַקָּדוֹשׁ בָּרוּךְ הוּא בִּכְבוֹדוֹ וּבְעַצְמוֹ.

 Now, because of this, The Rabbinate of the IDF.

35:03 – GS

So just to translate, he took a very traditional saying that when the Jews were redeemed from Egypt, it wasn’t by the hands of an angel. It wasn’t by any intermediary. It was just from God alone. And here they quote the whole text verbatim, except at the end, they say at the hands of the defense forces of Israel, Tzahal.

And so you’re saying the Rabbanut was not happy. So what happened? The Rabinate was not happy?

35:31 – Iran Yarkoni

The Rebbinate decided to destroy all the copies of this Haggadah, and this Haggadah never arrived to soldiers. And we have here in the archive only one copy.

Dror Zilberstein: How much? (laughs)

Iran Yarkoni : And for the Fiftieth anniversary of Israel, we decided to print it again. So, this is a copy of the first original. But till we did it, it was, you know, ganuz (hidden) nobody knows about this text. Only because of this paragraph.

36:14 – GS

Okay, so that’s amazing, but we just threw out a word here, ganuz. In Jewish studies, there’s the Cairo Geniza, changed everything about a study of traditional texts, because in the Geniza, which is an archive, but in traditional societies, instead of throwing out a book that had a terror in it and God’s name, they would put it into the Geniza. But that is what you’re doing here, and this has the potential of change, just like the Cairo Geniza changed. So we’re not going to tape everything.

36:49 – GS

What I’d like to do, just to end our podcast, is to segue into how the institute, your institute, …. what your plans and activities are in terms of spreading the thoughts, the ideology, the creativity of the kibbutz movement in Judaism around the rest of the country and the world.

37:17 – Anna Gilboa

Basically, so we have talked a lot about the past and the history and the legacy. But we’re here now and there is a very strong connection between the past and the future. We cannot have the future without the past, obviously. So based on all the amazing collection that we have here, we’re doing educational work in several levels. And I must say that our work has become much more relevant than ever after the events of October 7. And so just to name a few and then we will elaborate later.

38:00 – Anna Gilboa

We work with educators and agents of change. So, this is, for example, army IDF officers and teachers and cultural coordinators in the kibbutzim. And so, we work with them to train them to bring into the study also humanistic and Zionist values, and pluralism also, so that everyone can find their own voice within the variety of Judaism. This is exactly what you were talking about, Geoffrey. So this is one level. Another type of work that we are about to do now is the restoring the resilience of the evacuated communities from Western Negev and this is a new project that was we’re launching now actually this Passover due to the terrible events and we’re about to work with 12 communities, the Kibbutz community that were evacuated from Western Negev and the Gaza envelope.

39:15 – Anna Gilboa

And the ultimate goal of that is to bring them home eventually as a community, not just as individuals, with hope, with the values of settling the borders, of taking responsibility for this region and healing and rebuilding. And this is something that you can do with means of culture and cultural work. And our work will be based on a unique model that we developed with the help of two leading mental health professionals on the field that deal with post-traumatic growth. This is Dr. Miriam Shapira and Professor Yossi Levy-Belz, who are specialists in this field, how to implement cultural and Jewish-Israeli texts and content. In order to build resilience in a society that was really obviously very distorted and shaken up. And to bring more cohesion, more feeling of belonging, of togetherness, and to build the communities back again from this abyss.

Note from Anna:

As to Dr. Miriam Shapira and Prof. Yossi Levy-Belz (this is the exact spelling of their names) – our model is based on the extensive research of Prof. Levy-Belz – please see here more info about him and his research. In addition, we received professional guidance from Dr. Shapira, who is a clinical psychologist and a leading scholar in the field of resilience and post-traumatic growth. Here is an article about her and her work (in English), maybe you will find it interesting. 

40:40 – GS

I mean, everywhere you go, you see signs of the b’yachad yinatzeach together we will be victorious. Unity is so important, but to have unity, you need a safa meshutepeh, a shared voice and our texts. Since everybody, one way or the other, is going to be celebrating Pesach or Shavuot or whatever, it’s the opportunity to bring us all together, which is becoming more and more important. So there’s an exhibit that you’re putting on in Palma in Tel Aviv that’s opening up?

41:10 – Anna Gilboa

Yes, we’re participating in an exhibition, a unique exhibition, and our part is the part of the Haggadot, that it will be open to the public and some of the evacuated community, that the exhibition will travel to them, and present them the collection and also have some experiential activity for the community.

41:37 – GS

Well, I’m sure that our seders this year will be different than every other year. For sure. And what you’re doing will enrich it and I think even this conversation will enrich how we conduct our seders this year.

So, thank you very much.

41:51 – Anna Gilboa

Thank you.

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Protest Haggadah cont.

parshat tzav, preparing for the seder

Join Geoffrey Stern and Rabbi Adam Mintz recorded on Clubhous on March 29th 2023. We continue our exploration of the many faces of the Torah as reflected in the Kibbutz Haggadot written at the rebirth of the Jewish People in the Promised Land of Israel.

Sefaria Source sheet: https://www.sefaria.org/sheets/477153

Transcript:

Welcome to Madlik.  My name is Geoffrey Stern and at Madlik we light a spark or shed some light on a Jewish Text or Tradition.  Along with Rabbi Adam Mintz, we host Madlik Disruptive Torah on clubhouse  and share it as the Madlik podcast on your favorite platform. This week’s Torah portion is tzav but since Passover will be soon upon us, we continue our exploration of Haggadot that break with the past.  Today we will focus on Kibbutz Haggadot which were written for the most part by secular Jews who had a deep understanding of Jewish texts and traditions. In these Haggadot these self-proclaimed New Jews reimagine the message of the Seder and inspire us to do the same.  So join us for Protest Haggadah continued.

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Well, welcome back Rabbi. And it’s so amazing that you were in Israel over the last week.  Israel is always the center of the universe. But these days a little more.

Adam Mintz  01:09

More so this past week. That is for sure. Right.

Geoffrey Stern  01:13

So last week, we looked at some Haggadot that were really protest Haggadot they were written by the so-called Black Panthers in the 70s. In Israel, we saw Haggadot of that were written in the first DP camps coming out of the Holocaust at really pivotal moments. And we ended on a note from the Holocaust DP camp Haggadah that was talking about all the divisions within the Jewish people and how the Shelichim came and tried to grab each of these survivors to their own party. And it ended up saying that really all this diversity is good, it prepares the ground for all kinds of beliefs, so that people can go and die for the tip of every letter in their own Torah. So, we ended on a note that there really are many Torahs, we all write our own Torah. And so, I like, no matter what we’re talking about, to tie our discussion to the parsha. And this parsha begins in Leviticus 6. And it talks, as the rest of the book of Leviticus will; about sacrifices. And it says, this is the ritual of the burnt offering זֹ֥את תּוֹרַ֖ת הָעֹלָ֑ה . And Rashi explains because it’s really in a sense, you can always sense that it’s a different use of the word Torah, it’s not referring to the Five Books of Moses, it’s not referring to Revelation, and he says, שֶׁכָּל תּוֹרָה לְרַבּוֹת הוּא בָּא that the word Torah can be used to really talk about a group of laws, if I will have a little literary license, I would say, to talk about a weltanschauung, an approach to something. And the truth is that even in Samuel II, 7: 19 you have this word וְזֹ֛את תּוֹרַ֥ת הָאָדָ֖ם that there are rules for the people. And we have the most famous of all in Mishlei; in Proverbs. And it says My son, heed the discipline of your father, וְאַל־תִּ֝טֹּ֗שׁ תּוֹרַ֥ת אִמֶּֽךָ , but do not forsake the instruction of your mother. So, I really do believe that one of the things that we will see today is that you really can have a different Torah a different whole direction. And it is part of this discussion. And we don’t always have to be pinned down to a precise corpus. I think one of the surprising things that I found when I prepared this week was, I actually learned Torah from these secular Jews on the kibbutzim. Rabbi, have you ever seen a kibbutz Haggadah? I became infatuated with them about 5-10 years ago, and I have a little collection?

Adam Mintz  04:15

That’s great that you have a collection.  I have seen them. I’ll just tell you on something that’s kind of connected one step away. I’m reading a book now called the Jews of Summer, written by a professor named Sandra Fox. I don’t know if you went to summer camp growing up. Did you go to summer camp?

Geoffrey Stern  04:33

I did. Yes.

Adam Mintz  04:35

And part of the book describes the following. You know, many of the camps they were Zionist camps, they were Yiddish, his camp, they were not religious camps, Conservative camps, Reform camps. You know, Orthodox camps were only one little piece of the puzzle. And what she describes in the book, she has an entire chapter about how they rethought is only one holiday in the summer. That’s Tisha B’ Av, how these how the reform and the conservative Jews the secular Jews, rethought Tisha B’Av, in a way that made sense to them. And I thought about that in regard to the kibbutz Haggadot, they don’t reject the tradition. They reframe the tradition. I think that’s a wonderful Jewish trait.

Geoffrey Stern  05:17

And I have to say that one of my pleas last week was this. We are going through a moment in history. And my God we need a Haggadah written…  and I called it the Protest Haggadah. And sure enough, just this afternoon, it’s called Haggadah HaHerut. But if you look at the PDF, the name of the file is Haggadah, Machaa, which literally means a Protest Haggadah. But before you all rush out to get it and I, what I hope to do is if they don’t translate it, I hope to put together as a Sefaria Sheet that has all of the translations in it. They really didn’t touch the traditional Haggadah. They have little articles from famous thought leaders and, and poets and songwriters and political leaders. They did not touch the traditional Haggadah. And what we are going to do today is to see what these first-generation Jews who came out of all of the richness of a Jewish culture … they were totally literate Jews who knew all of the sources, and they re-wrote to a large degree the Haggadah, so let’s jump right in. I really suggest that you go to the Sefaria source sheet, because I have images of the Haggadot. But the first Haggadah that we look at actually begins by quoting the verses הַחֹ֧דֶשׁ הַזֶּ֛ה לָכֶ֖ם רֹ֣אשׁ חֳדָשִׁ֑ים  , we celebrated Parshat haHodesh, about two weeks ago, and it literally is the first commandment and it says, this month shall be to you. The first of all the years רִאשׁ֥וֹן הוּא֙ לָכֶ֔ם לְחָדְשֵׁ֖י הַשָּׁנָֽה , and then it says that it is in the spring, and what all of the kibbutz Haggadot do. No big surprise they’re all agricultural communes that literally celebrate the spring. And I had always seen that I think it kind of works its way into some of our Haggadot, where you have verses from Shir Hashirim, the Song of Songs, and I’m not even going to quote those because those seem to be so obvious, but all of them start with a celebration of spring. And in this one, it then brings up a piece of Talmud I had never heard of before. It says כל העולם כלו אומרים בו הלל , the whole world says  הלילה הזה אוצרות טללים נפתחים בו . Because tonight, the treasuries of dew are open. And I had never really seen that expression. Through the magic of Sefaria, you can put a few words from any phrase into Sefaria, and lo and behold, it comes from Pirkei D’ Rabbi Eliezer 32: 14. And it has an amazing story, we all know the story of how the birthright of Isaac was, are given to Jacob and not Esau, and it rewrites or I should say re-imagines that story, as having happened on the night of the Seder. And we have the old Isaac saying to his son, Esau Tonight the whole world is saying Hallel. And this night the treasures of dew are opened. And this the blessings of the dew so we asked him to bring him savory meat; he wants the Passover sacrifice. Rebecca hears about this, she delays Esau and she gives this advice to. And she says to Jacob on this night, the treasures of dew will be opened and on this night the angels utter a song make savory meat for thy father that he may eat while he still lives to bless thee. So, I had never heard of this Midrash and so I through my hands already and I say so these kibbutz Haggadot and the writers of them knew their Torah and they bring this beautiful story about passing on the blessing, literally on the night of Passover had Had you realized that Rabbi?

Adam Mintz  10:01

No, it’s very good. No, it’s very, very good. I did not realize that.

Geoffrey Stern  10:06

So then it goes, and it starts talking about the dew and it has Tal. And you know, again, you could assume this is a beautiful poem about Tao. But for those of us who spend a lot of time in synagogue around the holidays, we know that on the first day, I believe of Yom Tov, you have Tefilat HaTal.

Adam Mintz  10:33

And that’s important to say, right meaning Tal, it’s not just related to spring, we actually say Tefilat Tal.

Geoffrey Stern  10:42

We say it. And the kibbutzniks put this into the Haggadah, because they realized again, they were accentuating the connection between the spring and the birth of the new nation. The so we already have now with Jacob getting the blessing … the birth of the nation the first time. And then we have in the Tefilat Tal words like תְּחַדֵּשׁ יָמֵֽינוּ  rejuvenate our days הַעֲמֵד שְׁמֵנוּ  reaffirm or name in other words give us an identity…  it talks about קוֹמֵם עִיר בָּהּ חֶפְצָךְ  re-establish presumably Jerusalem, the city of your desire through dew. So now already through bringing in this, this prayer of the dew they are bringing in our homeland, our country, our capitals, our name and self-appreciation of ourselves. It’s so amazing that they’re adding things but they are taking from our rich tradition to the Haggadah that is already telling the story in a new way of the rebirth of the Jewish people.

Adam Mintz  12:04

It’s amazing and you didn’t mention the fact that on the side, there are instructions Mikra means to read and Makhela means that the choir would sing it and on the bottom, it’s called Makehla Yeladim, so they actually had a children’s choir so that everybody participated in this.

Geoffrey Stern  12:25

And it looks like this particular Haggadah is from Mishmar haSharon; a kibbutz in central Israel. To give you an idea, it was started in 1924 by 10 Russian immigrants who were later joined by immigrants from Poland. It was agricultural. It was the birthplace of Prime Minister of Israel, Ehud Barak. And more importantly, and I’ve been to this kibbutz. It is the home to Ulpan Mishmar HaSharon.  I visited it because we (at PEF Israel Endowment Funds, Inc.) have a donor who gave a million dollars to fix up this ulpan because he was a delinquent teen in Canada. And his parents said, we got to get him out of the house. They sent him to this ulpan. It changed around his life, and now he’s giving back. But when you ask the kibbutz why they do it, they say it’s our gift to the Medina. It’s our gift to our country. It’s how we contribute. I mean, I went there, and I felt I was back forty years. They have one beit knesset there, I said, Do you have another? And he looked at me like I just screamed fire in a theater. He goes, No, we have one Beit Keneset

Adam Mintz  13:43

Do they still eat together. Does everybody eat in a Heder Ochel?

Geoffrey Stern  13:48

Yes. He said, Let’s have lunch first and then we’ll tour and I got on line with my tray and had lunch.

Adam Mintz  13:54

Tha’s great and everybody eats together.

Geoffrey Stern  13:58

Absolutely. So what I’m getting at is that this Haggadah, if you can see the source sheet, it was written on a typewriter, it was mimeographed. I mean, this was something that you can see a kibbutz council putting together and it’s real Torah here. It made me think about the Haggadah in a new way, it made me discover Perkei d’Rav Eliezer, and to look at Tefilat Tal in a new way,

Adam Mintz  14:29

And somebody knew all that to put it together And that’s really impressive.

Geoffrey Stern  14:35

Well, absolutely, and I think a lot of times we think of spring with regard to the Haggadah as a bug not a feature as they in software, but for the kibbutzniks, it was the critical message. And so, I have another picture from the Haggadah of Hashomer Hatzair and they were the Marxists, Zionist the youth movements. And they start also HaChodesh HaZeh, and then they talk about the new year starting with Nissan in the spring. And again, all they’re doing really is quoting traditional sources and setting the stage for what is to follow. It’s truly amazing. And I only have maybe four or five Kibbutz Haggadot…. this theme, this way of beginning the Seder and celebrating it, tying it to we’ll see the land, but certainly tying it to the spring and horticulture was universal for the kibbutznikim and I think is totally founded on tradition.

Adam Mintz  15:54

Yeah, I mean, all that’s true. But relevant to them, because on the kibbutz, the change of season was much more important even than it is in the city.

Geoffrey Stern  16:06

But you can almost turn that statement around and say, How can you actually, not only how can you celebrate the Seder outside of Israel, but how can you celebrate the Seder outside of being tied to the land, I mean, make such a strong point that it really becomes part and parcel of the story. So, the next thing that they all seem to do, and they’ve taken this from traditional Judaism is to have what I would call a Kavannah or an intention, or an invocation. So one of the Haggadot says Hineni Muchan uMezuman l’Kayim Mitzvot Aseh I am prepared and focused to fulfill the positive commandment, U’lesapir B’yitziat Mitzrayim ,  the positive commandment to tell the story of Ytziat Mitzrayim Yachad im Kol Yisrael. . So, there’s no mention of God. There’s mention of the Jewish people that we are doing this commandment, they’ve kept the concept of a positive commandment. And what they’ve connected it to is Klal Yisrael. Again, something beautiful. They could have easily gotten rid of this sense of obligation, this sense of you have to; are obligated to to do something they didn’t they kept it. I love that too.

Adam Mintz  17:41

Yeah, I mean, it’s really so interesting. I mean, what you really want Geoffrey is you want to be in that room when they compose this Haggadah, because obviously they composed it in the kibbutz. Right, you said it was it was created on the typewriter. There were a group of people who wrote it together. And that’s what’s so great.

Geoffrey Stern  18:02

So that last one was from Neut Mordechai, which is a kibbutz; the home of Teva Naot, a shoe factory branches all over Israel. We’ve heard of these kibbutzim and each one, the populations have dwindled. You’re talking about 600 people in each one of these kibbutzim, but you’re absolutely correct. You can almost see them sitting around a table not planning their harvest and not planning how the kids are going to be educated. But planning the Haggadah and throwing stories around, and Midrashim and prayers from the youth. So in the Hashomer Hatzair hineni; the kavanah,  it harkens to what I was talking about last year, that there’s almost not only a license to be Mahadesh to be innovative here. There’s almost a commandment because it says Bikol door Vador Haiyav adam l’rot et atzmo… that every generation we have to see ourselves as coming out of Egypt. So maybe we have to find our pharaohs and we have to find our Egypt’s and our promised lands. So here it says Ki gam anu Yatzanu m’bet avadim, because we also….  now we’re talking to the rest of the Kibbutznikim who are survivors possibly who have come from the four corners of the world? We all nidchei Yisrael al admatom… . We are the scattered of Israel back on our land. And therefore, it says And here’s a beautiful innovation. It says al ken yached layla zeh therefore let us dedicate this night mikol halelot  from all of the other nights v’narbeh l’sapir beyetziat mizrayim  and to talk about the story of going out from Egypt b’yamim haHem b’zman hazeh so picking up on the concept that we say every Hanukkah that we celebrate now for something that happened then b’yamim hahem b’zman hazeh that’s how they interpret that we have to literally and it was easy for them to see themselves coming out of Egypt and into a new promised land. But I love that innovation as well.

Adam Mintz  20:39

Yeah, and the fact that they again take the tradition and apply it to them. that’s the way they feel. These kibbutzim . You know, these are people who came from Europe, right? Mostly before the Holocaust, right? These are people who came on on the Aliya and it was very difficult living in Israel then very, very difficult. And they were making a tremendous sacrifice and to live in a kibbutz was really difficult. And, you know, in the early kibbutzim The children didn’t even sleep with the parents. So, it was a whole different kind of socialist view, and they see themselves as really being freed and, you know, and committed to building the land. It’s really, it’s so positive. You and I were talking before about this weekend in Israel and the power of peaceful protests. And like you said in the Haggadah, Haggadat Machja’a (Protest Haggadah) They were really making a statement about what the future of the State of Israel was going to be like.

Geoffrey Stern  21:46

Absolutely. And how they say…. So the next one for Mishmar HsSharon it says Savri! Nikvachei Golyiot , “Savri” we all know “Savri”  we say it before we say Boreh Pri Hagafen and before Birkat HaMazon … it’s this welcome. It says Savri to those gathered from exile. Let us sanctify my comrades and my leaders this holiday of Pesach. Let us raise our hearts the memory of the holy ones, the fighters who established Israel in our land, bless the pioneers of our people that immigrated, that prepared the way and built the earth that was barren and renewed for us a holiday of joy, festivals and times of celebration, this holiday of freedom, a commemoration of the Exodus from Egypt, and then it says, Kol Hanishama T’halellyah, Kol Hanishama T’halellyah the seamlessness with which it blends this renewal of the land, the renewal of spring, the ingathering of the exiled. It’s so powerful, it’s so beautiful, and they were telling all of the children in their kibbutz their own story.

Adam Mintz  23:02

Yeah, you said it. It was their story. It was the story of the Exodus, but it was their story. And it really required tremendous creativity by somebody in the kibbutz who was able to put these things together. I’m really fascinated by that. I would love someone to write an article about who actually wrote these Haggadot, what was their background? How did how did they know so much? You know, Geoffrey, you found that Pirkei d’Rav Elizer because we have Sefaria…   you know how to put in those words and it popped up But how did they find that before the days of Sefaria

Geoffrey Stern  23:42

I think this was part of their upbringing,

Adam Mintz  23:45

It was part of their culture which means that even though they were secular in the kibbutz, but they had some background, whatever that story was, they had some background, that’s also interesting.

Geoffrey Stern  23:56

So, I have to say I mentioned earlier that there is a Haggadah that just came out published by the protesters, but it leaves the original traditional text of the Haggadah. 100% intact. And to me, that’s a metaphor of giving to the traditional rabbis call them Haredi, call them religious Zionist. Give them the realm of religion. We’ll write a commentary. But these kibbutzniks felt literate enough. They owned their tradition. As you say, Rabbi, is it a protest? I don’t really know because I don’t know if they cared what anybody else thought about them, but they were harvesting their traditions for their Seder. Now in one have in the Haggadah that just came out. It’s all kind of commentary on the side. The next thing that I’m going to read, I don’t know whether it’s a prayer or it’s commentary because it’s all written in Hebrew. For me, it feels like it’s part and parcel of the Haggadah. But maybe it’s narration. Here’s what it says, “You do not have a record of historical recognition more profound than this. And you do not have a confluence of the individual and the society in the widest sense of the globe of the world. And the depths of the generations larger than this ancient pedagogic imperative.” He’s talking about the Haggadah.  “I do not know of a literary creation, that teaches a loathing for subjugation more than this, and he love for freedom, comparable to this story of enslavement and exodus from Egypt. And I do not know of any historical narrative that is so totally directed toward welcoming the future that is so totally a symbol of a vision, and to our future, such as the memory of the Exodus from Egypt, such a deep desire for freedom embedded in the heart of a nation in the spring of its days, to create a brilliant creation like this. And to transfer it from generation to generation.” You have to read it in the Hebrew, I have never heard someone speak with so much love and respect for our traditions as this Kibbutznik.

Adam Mintz  26:25

I mean, that’s an amazing thing. Because he’s really saying that our experience is their experience. He’s drawing a straight line from the exodus in Egypt 3,500 years ago, to the experience in the kibbutz. Right?

Geoffrey Stern  26:38

Yeah.

Adam Mintz  26:39

And that’s an amazing thing. I mean, the truth of the matter is that one of the paragraphs in the Haggadah says,  בכל דור ודור חיב אדם לראות את עצמו כאלו הוא יצא ממצרים . In every generation, you need to feel as if you yourself left Egypt. So the truth is, that’s the challenge for each one of us to make it feel as if we left Egypt. Now we fall short on that, because how many people think feel as if we left Egypt, how many people feel as if our year was Egypt? And now finally, we know, finally, we’re free. We don’t really feel that way. It’s so encouraging to read these, these Kibbutz Haggadot, written by basically Jews who had adopted something other than traditional religion, but they connect so much to this idea of the Exodus, and they see their experience as an experience of freedom. Now, that’s a that’s an interesting thing, you know, because the kibbutz is actually the opposite of freedom, because the kibbutz had a lot of rules, but they embrace the rules. So, they felt as if they were free. Right, there’s a lot to be said about that, you know, to analyze the kibbutz kind of mentality.

Geoffrey Stern  27:51

But you picked up on that thang that I said a second ago, where it said, mitzvot aseh it’s a positive commandment, they knew what commandments and obligations were,

Adam Mintz  27:59

That’s what I’m saying.  they know exactly what that is. Right. And they draw that direct line. What it sounds to me if I had to write a story about it, is that these people on the kibbutz, had traditional backgrounds. They gave that up, they adopted the kibbutz. But when it came to Pesach, they felt the need the desire to combine the tradition of their youth, and the reality of where they were now. And I think that’s a beautiful, beautiful thing. And that’s really a model. And I want to tell you something, Geoffrey, that when I speak on Pesach, I’m going to use some of this material from these Haggadot. Because this stuff, you cannot make this stuff up. This stuff is amazing. You can’t find this stuff anywhere. So, I give you a lot of credit for finding this material.

Geoffrey Stern  28:47

Thank you. The only thing and I think we might be saying the same thing. I don’t because of the moment in history that these people were, I don’t think they were reclaiming their Judaism and taking the traditional Haggadah and picking and choosing from it. I think they were writing their Haggadah; I think that they felt that they were the fulfillment of 2,000 years of Jewish history. And they were carrying those traditions with them. And if anything, and we discussed this last week, a little bit with some of the pictures of the four sons. They were the wise son. And the people with the Payot, who was still living in medieval times, were the ones who didn’t know how to ask a question. didn’t know how to challenge themselves. So let me read just a few more. Here is from the another Haggadah for from Ne’er Rechovot. It says we were slaves in every generation and in all places, we were scattered between the nations. We were choked in the darkness of the Diaspora for millenniums, we were subjugated in every corner of the earth, we knew not rest. And our lives were dependent on our enemies. And we looked at the land that was under our feet, and it was like iron, and the heavens that were above our heads, and they were like copper. And it was like a threatening shadow to all the nations on the land, and we cry to the Lord or God, and he did not answer. And we carried it in the depths of our hearts, the wrath and fury of our sins and the glory of our hope, from generation to generation. Now, listen, and now behold, we have risen to cast off from us the yoke of the exile, and to make for us a new land and new heavens with a mighty hand and a steady arm to find a resting place for our weary feet. And to renew our covenant with the land and with the plants. And great is the path in front of us. This kind of combines all of those themes that we’ve been talking to, they pick up on the language of a mighty hand and an outstretched arm. And lo and behold, it’s their hand. It’s the hand of the Halutz, they pick up on the concept of renewing the covenant. And it’s again with the land and with the horticulture. It’s just so, so strong, the biblical references to the earth that is iron and the skies that are copper. It’s all there and it’s telling their story. And I wish if I was sitting around a Seder, whether it’s in Israel today, or here, that our children have to hear our story of how we came to be identifying Jews, how we came, I think now I’m thinking of Israel, they have to appreciate yes, these kibbutzniks they had rules. Some of the children who grew up in these kibbutzim feel that they need therapy, and help. And there were a lot more Ashkenazim on the kibbutzim. They had a lot of faults, no question about it. But they did create this land and it was thoughtful and they were 10 Jews from Odessa that came and they shivered and they give their lives. We have to tell our story, because we can’t come together and do what we need to do in terms of appreciating the other story unless we can celebrate our own also.

Adam Mintz  32:44

And of course, that’s right. And I would just add to that, you know that they connect their story to the text of the Haggadah b’yad Hazakah, rightthe Yad Hazaka is their Yad Hazakah.. a great Midrash that they made up themselves. They didn’t need the rabbis to make it up. That’s a Midrash and that’s actually a good way to end. That’s really our challenge at the Seder. Can we write our own Haggadah this is what you talked about with Rabbi Bronstein last week? Can we write our own Haggadah and I want to wish everybody a Hag Samayach and Geoffrey, this is the perfect way to go into it. Our wish to everybody is that you write your own Haggadah, that you connect the traditions to our lives into our challenges, and we look forward to hearing from you if you want to share some of your ideas with us. We’d love to hear from everybody so Shabbat Shalom, everybody Hag Samaeach

Geoffrey Stern  33:38

thank you so much Rabbi Hag Kasher v’Samaeach. You’re going to be where?

Adam Mintz  33:43

we’re going to be Portofino Italy.

Geoffrey Stern  33:45

Okay, so any of our listeners who find themselves in Portofino Italy,

Adam Mintz  33:52

I’m looking forward to learning with all be well everybody.

Geoffrey Stern  33:57

So, my friends, my family, I tell you, I have so much more material here. I’m going to go through it kind of quickly because I am just so in love with these Haggadot you know most of what they’ve done is just quote selectively. One of them quotes from Ezekiel the bones coming alive. You think that would be the last thing that a secular Jew would quote, the miraculous story of the bones coming back to life. But guess what, it wasn’t miraculous to these Jews. They saw it with their own eyes. They talk about the Midrashim that we have discussed in the past. If you recall when we had a podcast called High five, and we talked about Hamushim, which is the five fingers also meant arms. Hey, guess what the kibbutz Nick came didn’t have to hear the podcast. You’ll see they quoted Hamushim aluh bnai yisrael, they quote both of the verses, then they say Byad Rama with a high hand, we came out, they are, in a sense, celebrating the military victory. They quote, The Midrash that we found in a footnote from pseudo-Philo, about there were three groups of Jews at the Red Sea or the Sea of Reeds. One of them says, let’s just jump into the sea and give up the other said, let’s go back into Egypt. And the third one says, let us fight. And they all celebrate that

Loren Davis  35:40

This takes me back 60 years because I lived in Israel in 1970.  maybe 50 years ago. And I lived on a kibbutz during Pesach. And I’m telling you, it was one of the most incredible….  I now think about what I saw. And it was the most celebrated and special holidays because these kibbutzniks brought the land into the equation, and they were proud of themselves. And they were liberated. And it was, it made Pesach so different than what I ever had ever experienced. And I remember that today.

Geoffrey Stern  36:23

Wow. Well, that just confirms what I was finding on the pages. And you can go on YouTube and find stuff in Hebrew, but it’s so richly connected to the land. The other thing that I found in every single one of the Haggadot from the kibbutzim? Some of them celebrated the military might the way the one that I just quoted did, but all of them quote, that Midrash where the angels want to sing a song, when the Jews have come through the split Red Sea, and God says, Ma’sey Yadiei Tovim B’yam v’atem omrim shira l’fanai , God says, the creations of my hands are drowning in the water in the sea, and you want to sing my praises. They were not pacifists by any means. But they were looking for peace in a sense that Midrash that they bought, where you have Esau and Jacob, both preparing the Passover sacrifice, they all have this midwife said if you would have asked me because we all know it in the States was probably introduced by some Reform or Conservative humanist, ….  they were humanists clearly. But it was all in every one of these Haggadot and certainly these people had plenty of reason to have bitterness against their, their enemies. But they, Hashomer Hatzair brings the Isaiah verses about the lamb lying down with the lion. So, it’s the verses that they pick from our tradition. These people were not going elsewhere for their inspiration. They owned Judaism. And that I believe is one of the things that has happened in Israel, from the day maybe that you were at the Seder, and where they were using Haggadot like this to where we are today, when the movement that is protesting in the streets, takes a traditional Haggadah and puts commentary on the side. They don’t seem to have the tools or the desire to actually own the Haggadah. And I was thinking recently, you know, if in America, some was to one was to outlaw all other forms of Judaism besides orthodoxy, and 20 years later, you would come back and you’d say it’s a (spiritual) wasteland out there. Would you really be surprised that it was a wasteland? You know, you have pictures of these kibbutzim, where they had to have a rabbi from the Rabbinate come and officiate at their weddings, in order to make it official. And after reading these Haggadot, you say to yourself, that’s absurd. Why would they need to reach out from anywhere else in terms of doing a Jewish tradition if they can do the Haggadah and the Seder, they can take care of Rites of Passage? It’s really such a fascinating exploration. And I would say that, you know, rather than try to import into Israel, American and European forms of Judaism, I think they just have to look back into their own very rich history. They have to look back to their grandparents, who came with that rich history to this country and rebuild it from there and take ownership of it and say, no one’s going to take my Judaism away from us. They have beautiful poems by Bialik that I encourage you to read. Anyway, I just was tied up with this oil week because I’m fortunate to have the originals of these Haggadot in my hand to feel them to touch them to look at the graphics. Some of them are calligraphy. Some of them are written on a mimeograph machine. It’s just so inspiring. So, I hope I shared with you a little bit of that inspiration, and that we can all use it to inspire ourselves to rediscover our Judaism and to reinvent and rejuvenate our Judaism at this festival after-wall of spring and rebirth.

Sefira Source Sheet:

Protest Haggadah cont. | Sefaria

We continue our exploration of the many faces of the Torah as reflected in the Kibbutz Haggadot written at the rebirth of the Jewish People in the Promised Land of Israel.

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