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Rabbi Avi Shafran
What's with the fours?
http://www.jewishworldreview.com |
Despite the late hour and exhaustion (not to mention wine), many a Jewish
mind has wondered long and hard during a Passover Seder about all the
Haggadah's "fours." Four questions, four sons, four expressions of
redemption, four cups. There's clearly a numerical theme here.
While some may superficially dismiss the Haggadah as a mere compendium of
random verses and songs, it is in truth a subtle and wondrous educational
tool, with profound Jewish ideas layered through its seemingly simple text.
The rabbis who formulated its core, already extant in pre-Talmudic times,
wanted it to serve as a tool for planting important concepts in the hearts
and minds of its readers --- especially its younger ones, toward whom the
Seder, our tradition teaches, is aimed. And so the authors of the Haggadah
employed an array of pedagogical methods, including songs, riddles and
puzzles, as means of conveying deeper understanding. And they left us
clues, too.
When it comes to the ubiquitous "fours," we might begin by pondering the
essential fact that Passover is when the Jewish people's identity is
solemnly perpetuated; the Seder, the ritual instrument through which each
Jewish generation inculcates our collective history and essence to the next.
Which is likely a large part of the reason so many Jewish parents who are
alienated from virtually every other Jewish observance still feel compelled
to have at least some sort of Seder, to read a Haggadah, or even - if they
have strayed too far from their heritage to comfortably confront the
original - to compose their own. (I once joked before an audience that a
"Vegetarian Haggadah" would likely appear any year now, and someone in
attendance later showed me precisely such a book - though it lacked the
"Paschal Turnip" I had imagined.)
And so the role we adults play on Pesach night, vis a vis the younger Jews
with whom we share the experience, is a very specific one. We are teachers,
to be sure, but it is not information per se that we are communicating, but
something more: identity.
At the Seder we are seeking to instill in our children the realization that
they are not mere individuals but rather part of a people, members of a
nation that unconstrained by geographical boundaries but linked by history
and destiny all the same. We seek to impress them with the fact that they
are links in a shimmering, ethereal chain stretching back to the Jewish
nation's birth, to when it was divinely redeemed from mundane slavery in
Egypt and entered a sublime servitude of a very different sort - to God - at
Sinai.
So, on Passover, as we celebrate the birth of the Jewish nation and plant
the seed of Jewish identity in the minds of smaller Jews, we are in a sense
ourselves "birthing" -giving life to the Jewish future. And, while it may
be the father who traditionally leads the Seder, he is acting not as teacher
but rather in something more akin to a maternal role, as a spiritual
nurturer of the children present.
Jewish identity, indeed, is dependent on mothers. According to halacha, or
Jewish religious tradition, while a Jew's tribal genealogy follows the
paternal line, whether a child is a member of the Jewish people or not
depends entirely on the status of his or her mother.
It's only speculation, but might the recurrent numerical theme in our
exquisite Haggadah, employed each year to instill Jewish identity, be
reminding us of that? After all, the book has its own number-decoder built
right in, toward its end, where most good books' keys and indexes are found.
It's a little hazy once it's reached, after four cups of wine, but it's
unmistakably there: "Echad Mi Yodea" or "Who Knows One?" - the song that
provides Jewish associations with numbers.
"Who knows four?"
If you don't, you can look it

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