When I came out of Egypt

In every
generation, each of us must see ourselves as if we, ourselves, came out of
Egypt , as it is written: And
you shall tell your child on that day saying, This is what God did for me, when
I came out of
Egypt . (Exodus 13:8 )

What are you? Are you a Jew? What is your story? What do you
tell your children? Do you tell the story of coming out of Egypt? Do you tell it as your story?

Describing our challenges and proudest moments help define a picture of who we
are. This helps frame and set a context for our story. We tell our story of a
great people to keep our history alive. Stories of our families and our people
are important for children to learn about who they are and to provide an
identity and a connection to their heritage.

Our people have a long and brilliant history of underdogs struggling and
overcoming. Over the years we have lived under many difficult regimes then
succeeded beyond the expectations of the nations we embraced.

Under slavery and horrible conditions of an oppressive kingdom in Egypt we
struggled. We left Egypt and
made our way to the land
of Israel and built a
great nation. Then the story repeats itself in history. In every generation we
encounter a struggle against rulers. And in every generation we succeed and
change the world. Within the ups and downs, each year we connect our children with the story of coming out of Egypt.

This is our history. Interestingly, G-d knew this would be valuable to sustain
and connect this group of people we call Jews. We are given the mitzvh “And
you shall tell your child on that day saying, This is what God did for me, when
I came out of
Egypt .

Our tradition helps define regular intervals and the context to tell the story.
We created a Haggadah and seder so that every year at Passover we tell our
story.

Our history, traditions and beliefs help sustain
and empower us as a community. G-d did this — brought us out of Egypt
to accept the Torah, to teach it to our children and to remain a
special community in the light of G-d. Teach this to your children as a
personal journey and your children will identify and be proud to be
Jews.

This Passover is your opportunity to tell your children about the family
struggles and family triumphs. You have an opportunity to do a mitzvah and
include the story of Exodus this Passover holiday.

Happy Pesach and good feasting.

Writing On Torah

I have been asked to write for the Temple’s newsletter Hineni. Here is the portion I have been asked to focus on:

In every generation, each of us must see ourselves as if we, ourselves, came out of Egypt , as it is written: And you shall tell your child on that day saying, This is what G-d did for me, when I came out of Egypt . (Exodus 13:8 )

The Holy One who is Blessed did not redeem only our ancestors, but G-d delivered us as well, as it is said: God redeemed us from that place, in order to bring us out and to give us the land that G-d had promised to our ancestors. (Deuteronomy
6:23)

I have a couple of ideas of how I may want to approach this. One is what does this mean from my experience and the other is what does it mean to us as Jews. I think I am going to choose the latter.

I was thinking about how this commandment focuses you on your history. Each year you are commanded to take a moment to focus on how this story is your story. In each generation every year people have been thinking of this. Each generation meets its challenges and each time the Jewish people have come out and risen above the problems. Several thousand years of history, always a small percentage of the population and sometime with land and sometimes without. Every generation someone looks to subjugate or kill the Jewish people. They still survive and have a vigorous community as ever.

When you read that you are supposed to tell your children that you came out of Egypt and use to explain your pride as a Jewish person and your connection with the history. This lesson provides your children with a sense of pride and longevity, a sense of connection and importance.