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The Haggadah
May 3, 2026 | 11:00 AM - 12:15 PM
Zoom

Haggadah means "telling." The Passover Haggadah is a framework, an order, for the telling of the Exodus from Egypt. The word Seder actually means Order.  But the story of the Exodus itself is certainly not told in any clear, linear way in the Haggadah. In every  generation, maybe even every year, Jewish people reinvent the actual story, using the traditional framework provided by the Haggadah. Many of us got used to the Maxwell House version of the Haggadah which was widely distributed by the coffee company in the twentieth century. There are also many other historical and contemporary versions of the  Haggadah. Let's delve into the priceless sacred formula for celebrating spring and liberation. What makes a Haggadah a Haggadah? What must it include and where can creativity and contemporary relevance have a voice?
 
Third Session
 
In 1968 Arthur Waskow opened up the Seder experience for his generation and beyond
by celebrating the first Freedom Seder. The Freedom Seder spread across the world. Its
Haggadah was built on the traditional rubric which you will recognize from our previous
sessions, but updated to reflect the liberation issues of these times. This was followed
by Feminist Haggadot, including one edited by our own Rabbi Sue Elwell for the Reform
Movement. The creators of the Reconstructing Judaism Haggadah that we use in our
Leyv Ha-Ir Seders followed the time-honored process of knowledgeably building on
tradition while integrating contemporary innovations. For this session you will need any
relatively new Haggadah such as The Open Door (Reform movement), A Night of
Questions (Reconstructing Judaism) -- we own many copies -- or any creative
Haggadah that you have used with family or friends. We will examine how these
post-1968 Haggadot meet the requirements of a traditional Haggadah and how they
offer meaningful changes.
 
You can access a PDF version of the Reconstructionist Haggadah "A Night of Questions" here
 
Assignments
Using a post-1968 Haggadah, see if you can track some of the key features of all
Haggadot that we have discussed in this series. How true is your version of the
Haggadah to the “seder” or order of the service? What does your Haggadah add to speak to this moment? If you want a creative deep dive, work with a partner to design a Haggadah for this year that follows the required stages of the Haggadah but adds resources for today. This renewal is a tried and true Jewish tradition.

 
This program will be presented on Zoom.  The link will be sent to all Leyv Ha-Ir members.  Guests are welcome and must register to receive the Zoom information. 
 
Anyone can attend regardless of whether they attended the earlier sessions.
 
There is no charge for this program, although donations from guests are welcome here to support our programs. 
 
Questions: Contact Leyv Ha-Ir at info@leyvhair.org or 215.629.1995.