We’re having a Seder.
And I am about to be in charge of it.
It’s going to be different.
Different from what?
From the Seders of my youth.
Short-pants Seders, where my chin ascended barely above the
table. Our Seders were presided over by
my Uncle Irving (my late Dad’s younger brother). Uncle Irving could speed-read Hebrew. Or at least he could fake speed-read Hebrew, which is undistinguishable from the genuine
article – rapid mumbling with an occasional “ch”. (A throat-clearing vocalization denoting the
eighth letter of the Hebrew alphabet.)
My earliest Seders were elaborate affairs – twenty-five or
so members of my immediate family. My
grandmother, “Bubby” Jennie, cooked the Passover dinner days in advance,
freezing the traditional dishes, and then thawing them out before mealtime. Her timing was less than impeccable. When the chicken soup arrived, the matzo
balls at their centers were still frozen.
You’d try to slice them with your soupspoon and they’d go flying off of
the plate.
The opening prayer of the Seder is called the “Kiddush”. Our familial habit was for every adult male
(over the age of thirteen) to individually chant the “Kiddush”, in descending
order based on their age, kindling playful disagreements concerning who was definitively
older than who. (Emigrants from Eastern Europe
did not always have birth certificates, relegating the final determination to
the “Honor System”.)
This calendarial
haggling expanded the “Kiddush” element of the Seder. Additionally, my Uncle Jack, an excruciating
Hebrew reader’s rendition of the “Kiddush” felt agonizingly endless.
An hour into the process, we were still on Page One.
(And everyone knew – because we had all thumbed ahead – that
we would not be eating until Page 37. By
then, many of the children would be asleep.)
In the ensuing years, with the inevitable attrition of time,
the Seder size declined to less than a dozen.
My Uncle Irving remained at the helm, his Seder stewardship bubbling
with competence, enthusiasm and fun.
Plus, he read Hebrew like the wind, so we ate before we were unconscious.
When my older brother and I reached our twenties, Uncle
Irving rewarded our active Seder participation with Tuero cigars, sheathed in cylindrical metal tubes, a cancerous (who
knew?) Medal of Obligational Accomplishment:
We had traversed the Red Sea of the Seder, smoking tired but
contentedly on the other side.
FLASH FORWARD TO
TODAY
And now I’m
leading the Seder. Though there is no
diminution of love around the table, no one at our gathering can read
Hebrew. (I myself am not actually
reading; I am reciting from memory.)
It’s not the same.
I remember becoming a counselor after being a camper for
numerous summers. My reaction to that abrupt
elevation was “Me?” I felt distinctly…
well, I guess “Me?” says it all.
I feel the same way about leading the Seder.
“Me?”
I understand the intended purpose of the Seder. It’s
to tell the story to children so that they will someday tell it to their children and that story will
remain eternally alive. I have a four
year-old (step) grandson named Milo.
Being an imaginative storyteller, I can transform the Passover narrative
into a yarn about “Good Guys” and “Bad Guys” for Milo’s age-appropriate
consumption. (A “Superhero” aficionado
since he was two, Milo has readily absorbed this Manichean dichotomy. Though he would not use those exact words to
describe it.)
The thing is…
Uncle Irving and the family of my childhood – I don’t know
if they were devoutly religious; my recollection is that few of them were – but they seemed viscerally connected
to the “material” in a way I am unable to duplicate. It is not easy for a “non believer” to infuse
credibility into a story where the “Propelling Character” may not actually
exist.
And the Passover story itself? – the liberation of an
oppressed people from bondage? I recall
taking a course in Near-Eastern literature in college where I learned that both
the Biblical flood and the Story of Esther had been “lifted” from earlier
mythologies. (For the “Esther” story in
particular, my reaction was akin to the young baseball fan learning that “Shoeless
Joe” Jackson had deliberately “thrown” the World
Series. “Say, it ain’t so, Esther!”)
I mean, if Purim and “The Flood” can be co-opted, what about
Passover?
Still…
We’re doin’
it.
I wrote a song for camp once, capsulizing universal Jewish
membership in the word “Togetherness.”
To me, it feels…I don’t know… “right” participating an age-old tradition
still practiced around the world.
I may lack the enthusiasm and conviction of my familial forbearers. I may be woefully deficient, compared to the All-Star
Seder-running abilities of my Uncle Irving.
But I am happily content to be a member of the team and humbly honored
to perpetuate the tradition.
Happy Passover, everyone (who’s interested.)
A cup of blessing to all at your table, Earl.
ReplyDeleteAlso a non-believer. Not sure if it is a different god that I don't believe in. Still have Christmas dinner. Untroubled by the hypocrisy.
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