Pesach

This week’s newspapers pose an enormous question: Can American democracy survive unregulated corporate money poured into elections? This week’s Torah points toward an answer.

Last Sunday, Part 1 of my essay on “The Meaning of the 21st Century: Domination or Community?” sketched how the war in Afghanistan, our dysfunctional health un-care system, the disemployment crisis, and the stalemate over climate all were evidence that one necessary aspect of our lives — Control — has run amok, turning into Domination and leaving the other necessary life-aspect — loving-kindness, interbeing — choking to death.

Now we have just received a stunning kick in the teeth to Community and a great victory for Domination — in the decision of the Supreme Court that corporations can pour as much money as they like into supporting the election of candidates for public office.

This enormously increases the power of our modern Pharaohs – the top-down pyramidal Global-Gobble corporations that have barely been under public control before, and now will be able to control the public in unprecedented ways.

This is not just an American issue. Big Oil and Big Coal corporations have made it extremely hard to deal with the dangers of global scorching. Now the powers of Big Coal and Big Oil have been multiplied. The web of life -– our most important community of all, in which the interplay of control-over and connectivity-with is crucial to the continuity of life — is thus endangered by increasing the power of corporations to control the climate of our planet.

The snows of the Himalayas are melting under the pressure of global scorching, and with them will disappear the future drinking water of a billion Indians and Pakistanis. Can we save them? No. For Exxon Mobil says, “No problem,” and now will be able to drown in its money any US candidate who says the burning of fossil fuels must be checked.

So the Supreme Court of the United States has just condemned a billion people to slow death by parching drought.

In last week’s Torah we read how Pharaoh let all the waters of his kingdom become undrinkable in order to pursue his despotic course against his people. Now, like Pharaoh, in stubborn arrogance, the Court has transformed itself from an instrument of Justice into a make-believe and lethal “God.” An idol.

In this week’s Torah reading, when God sends Moses to face Pharaoh, God says, “Bo el Pharaoh.” Most English translations say, “Go to Pharaoh.” But “Bo” means “come,” not “go.”

Come to Pharaoh!”

How could God be saying “Come!” unless God was already there? — already within Pharaoh!

Come toward Me.”   Read more »

The Shalom Center has created a 40th Anniversary New Interfaith Freedom Seder for the Earth to help us free ourselves from the greatest dangers of our time: What are the Ten Plagues endangering the earth and human life today, and what are the Ten Blessings we ourselves can bring to heal the earth and our own societies?

If you want to use this text, or part of it, for an Earth Seder in your own community -- perhaps a week before Pesach or for Earth Day on April 22, or the weekend before or after -- please do so -- and we ask you to make a contribution to The Shalom Center to help us do this and similar work. We suggest a donation of $18 plus $1 for each participant in your Seder. Click on the "Donate" headline near the top of the left-hand column on this page to contribute, and please let us know what you are doing by writing Office@shalomctr.org.

Click just below to download a full pdf of the New Freedom Seder for the Earth.! (It includes an amazing full-color graphic cover by Avi Katz.) If you prefer to have a text copy that you can easily edit, click here   Read more »

SEDER FOR THE EARTH: Facing the Plagues & Pharaohs of Our Generation

The Shalom Center has created the text and the organizing mechanisms for you to shape a new Freedom Seder for the Earth in your own community, challenging the plagues and pharaohs of our day and undertaking healing actions by us all.

Copyrights by the authors of their specific passages. Copyright © 2009 by The Shalom Center for the Seder as a whole.    Read more »

"Avatar," Exodus, & Kabbalah

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 3/10/2010

The film AVATAR weaves together what we usually call the spiritual and the political. Indeed, whether its director realized it consciously or not, AVATAR echoes two major strands of religious wisdom that began in Jewish thought but have had deep influence on cultures far beyond the boundaries of Jewish peoplehood. The two strands of ancient wisdom are “archetypal” — that is, they appear over and over again in human thought because they arise in human experience and yearning — with or without conscious transmission of the stories.   Read more »

Freedom Seder --expanded 2d edition (1970)

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 2/23/2010

The original Freedom Seder was published in 1969 by Ramparts magazine, thanks to the editorial creativity of Warren Hinckle and Robert Scheer, and in a tiny pocket-size booklet by a tiny independent publishing house — the Micah Press — out of contributions from the Waskow household and other members of Jews for Urban Justice in Washington DC.   Read more »

By Rabbi Balfour Brickner
To the Editor, Commentary Magazine
 1971:

Most everyone of the “religious type” smiles wryly when he hears the quip, “Converts are the worst kind.” They either know from experience, or have heard, that those born to a religious tradition frequently do not match the zeal with which a convert approaches his new religious identity. In Judaism, it is not uncommon to find the convert. Now the magazine and its to, and involved in, the practices of Jewish life, than one who has lived for a lifetime “within the mishpocha.” And as often, they embrace and express the most fundamental forms of the faith with uncritical ardor.   Read more »

By Elana Levy and Carole Resnick for Syracuse Jews for Peace (April, 2009)

The material in this hagada is in part taken from the hagada by this name, written by Rabbi Arthur Waskow. Material from many other sources has also been included.

SEDER PLATE
A traditional seder plate includes five items:
- zeroa, a roasted shank bone representing the Paschal lamb, the holiday offering
made in Temple days (vegetarians today often use a roasted beet for its bloodred
color, or a roasted sweet potato for the pun of calling it the Paschal Yam;)   Read more »

A Sun of Justice with Healing in its Wings

By Rabbi Arthur Waskow | 3/24/2009

[This article, along with Avi Katz’ illustration of scorching danger and solar healing, is appearing in the Jerusalem Report as my “word of Torah” concerning the Shabbat of April 4, 2009, just before Passover. For important connections between this article and the Passover and Blessing of the Sun that follows, see the note at the end of this message. – Arthur Waskow]

Jewish tradition assigns the last chapter of the last of the classical prophets – Malachi, who spoke about 2500 years ago — to be read on the Shabbat just before Passover. Read this year, the passage takes on an uncanny significance for our generation:   Read more »

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