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    PESAH: EARNING REDEMPTION, THEN AND NOW

    Twice during the Seder
    on Pesah we take a piece
    of food and dip it into a
    liquid before eating it.
    First, after Kiddush, we
    take the Karpas – a vegetable – and dip it in salt
    water. Later, after eating the Masa, we dip the
    Marror in Haroset. What do these two dippings
    represent?
    The Karpas, it has been suggested, hearkens back
    to the early history of the Egyptian exile – to the
    story of Yosef and his brothers. Yosef’s brothers
    despised him, resenting his favored status, which
    was symbolized by the “Ketonet Pasim” – the
    special cloak which Yaakob had made for him.
    Rashi, in explaining the word “Pasim,” writes
    that this word stems from the same root as the
    word “Karpas,” which means a “fabric that
    covers.” The word “Karpas,” then, is associated
    with Yosef’s special cloak. As we know, at the
    time Yosef’s brothers assaulted him and threw
    him into a pit – before eventually selling him as
    a slave to merchants who brought him to Egypt
    – they tore off his “Ketonet Pasim” and dipped
    it in goat’s blood, in order to make it appear as
    though he was attacked by a beast. Therefore, as
    we begin the Seder, we dip “Karpas” in liquid
    – to commemorate the tragic event of Mechirat
    Yosef (the sale of Yosef), which resulted in our
    ancestors’ relocation in Egypt, thus facilitating
    the bitter exile.
    The second dipping, which we perform later,
    after we study the story of the Egyptian bondage
    and the Exodus, commemorates the dipping
    which occurred on the night our ancestors
    achieved their freedom. They were commanded
    to slaughter the Pesah sacrifice, and to then
    dip a bundle of hyssop in the blood, and place
    some blood on their doorposts. The bundle of
    hyssop (“Agudat Ezob”) represents the nation’s
    unity, the peace and harmony that prevailed at
    that time, their coming together into a single
    “bundle,” a single unit. As such, it reflects the
    drastic transformation that they had undergone
    – from the time of Mechirat Yosef, when they
    turned against their brother, to the point where
    they merged into a single “bundle,” bound
    together by mutual love and devotion.
    This is the transformation that we, too, are to
    undergo at the Seder. We are to reflect upon the
    cause of the Egyptian exile – internal strife and
    conflict – and on the need to come together in
    peace and harmony in order to be worthy of
    redemption.
    Rav Eliyahu Dessler (1892-1953), in his
    Michtab Me’Eliyahu, observes that the current
    exile which we endure is characterized by Sin’a
    – senseless hatred toward the Jewish People.
    Over the course of the nearly two millennia of
    this exile, we have been despised for so many
    different reasons. Jews have been despised
    for being rich, and despised for being poor.
    It seems entirely irrational, and it is. But Rav
    Dessler teaches us the harsh reality about this
    experience – that the hatred toward us is a mirror
    image of the hatred that exists among ourselves.
    The Gemara famously teaches that the Second
    Temple was destroyed because of Sin’at Hinam
    (baseless hatred), and this scourge continues to
    be the reason why our final redemption has yet
    to arrive. Our nation has suffered baseless hatred
    from other nations because of our baseless hatred
    toward one another.
    I once took a trip to the town of Radin in Belarus,
    and visited the yeshiva of the Hafetz Haim (Rav
    Yisrael Meir Kagan, 1839-1933). It was there
    where the Hafetz Haim wrote his legendary work
    on the laws of Lashon Ha’ra (negative speech
    about other people). We then crossed the street
    to the Hafetz Haim’s grave, and prayed. Not far
    from the grave, we noticed a memorial plaque.
    The plaque commemorated the liquidation of
    Radin by the Nazis in June, 1941. The Nazis
    killed 1500 Jews, and they were buried in a mass
    grave. I was struck by the proximity of these two
    sites – the yeshiva and grave of the Hafetz Haim,
    who devoted much of his life to teaching the
    importance of avoiding negative speech about
    our fellow Jews, and the senseless hatred which
    the Nazis harbored toward the Jews. It is almost
    as though the Hafetz Haim prophetically saw
    the irrational hostility and crimes that would be
    perpetrated at that site, and set out to teach us
    to combat this hatred by eliminating the hatred
    among our own nation, our own families and our
    own communities.
    The Arizal (Rav Yishak Luria of Safed, 1534-
    1572) observed that the letters of the name
    “Pharaoh” spell the words “Peh Ra” – “evil
    mouth.” The root cause of the oppression we
    suffered at the hands of Pharaoh was the “evil
    mouth,” the harsh words spoken to and about
    one’s fellow. We rectify this ill, the Arizal taught,
    through “Pesah,” which can be read as “Peh Sah”
    – “the mouth that speaks,” referring to proper
    speech, to speaking words of Torah, prayer,
    praise of G-d, and expressions of friendship, love
    and kindness to our fellow Jew.
    The Egyptian exile, and the Exodus, serve as the
    prototype of all future exiles and redemption.
    We sit at the Seder to not simply recall the
    past, but to apply the lessons of the past to the
    present. Let us, then, spend some time reflecting
    on the transformation from the first dipping to
    the second – from the tragic hatred of Mechirat
    Yosef to the “bundle” that was formed through
    the people’s friendship and harmony at the time
    of the Exodus. And let us commit to making this
    transformation in our own lives, as well, so we
    will be worthy of our final redemption, speedily
    and in our times, Amen.