Less-than-inspired by the traditional Passover seder? Burnt out on the
same old Four Questions? Searching for soup sans chicken, or a song
to replace "Who Knows One"? Why not shake things up with an alternative
or themed seder? Here are five ideas to get you started. Try one, or mix them up.
Eco-Seder
Buy all organic foods, from local venders, when possible.
When you’re
dealing with fresh veggies and kosher meat or fish you don’t have to
worry about things being kosher for Passover, so you won’t spend insane
amounts of money buying margarine made in Monsey or whatever.
Plan on
talking about freedom from oil dependency, and about the benefits of
living a greener life. Remember, we were heading towards a land of milk
and honey, not of formula and corn syrup.
You can list ten plagues of
waste, four sons who react differently to global warming, and four
questions about how we can change our individual and collective behavior in the future.
Birkenstocks
optional.
Freedom Seder
There are still literally millions of slaves in the world. On a holiday
when we celebrate our freedom as Jews, it makes sense to spend some
time exploring the issue of contemporary slavery.
Head to Not For Sale
to get educated on the issue, learn about abolition activism, and
donate money to free slaves.
Stories of redemption told side by side, whether
they involve crossing the Red Sea of using the Underground railroad,
are always thought provoking, and you can brainstorm ways to get the larger community
more involved in abolition advocacy and programming.
Interfaith Seder
If you can gather a mix of faiths at one table and talk about how each
person views their personal slaveries and redemption (because remember,
it’s as if you personally came out of Egypt), you’re bound to have an
interesting evening.
If you want some help guiding your
seder, try the one at Interfaith Family.
Ask each guest to bring a kosher for Passover
interpretation of a classic dish from their community, and host a discussion about the ways that communities pigeonhole each other,
and how interfaith dialogue can redeem us from self-imposed slavery.
Open the door for a Unitarian, instead of Elijah. Be sure to have grape
juice on hand for those who can’t drink wine, and ask everyone to teach a
song at the end.
There’s nothing free or fair about the lives of animals raised for
food. Passover is an opportunity to reflect on our own freedom, as well
as the lack of freedom other living creatures face.
Talk about what you can sacrifice in your own lives to replace and honor the symbolic, sacrificial lamb.
Replace the egg on the traditional seder plate with a flower to represent life and Spring.
Replace the shank bone on the traditional seder plate with a beet, as allowed in the Talmud.
Use this quote from Einstein as a jumping off point for discussion: "A human being is a part of the whole, called by us the 'Universe',
a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts
and feelings, as something separate from the rest - a kind of optical
delusion of his consciousness. This delusion is a kind of prison for
us, restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few
persons nearest to us. Our task must be to free ourselves from this
prison by widening our circle of compassion to embrace all living creatures
and the whole of nature in its beauty. Nobody is able to achieve this
completely, but the striving for such achievement is in itself a part
of the liberation and a foundation for inner security."