{
"clip_details": {
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "quote-6",
"title": "Quote",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "We do not want freedom without bread, nor do we want bread without freedom. ",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>We do not want freedom without bread, nor do we want bread without freedom. </p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Nelson Mandela",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "-- Cup #2 & Dayenu",
"slug": "cup-2-amp-dayenu"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 202,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/quote-6",
"og:title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
"contributed_by": {
"author": "Liam Davis",
"handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"total_books": 0,
"total_clips": 11,
"total_followers": 0,
"is_following": 0
},
"user_book": null,
"clips_by_author": [
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "introduction-399",
"title": "Introduction",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "Here’s a game: If you were allowed to only keep one Jewish ritual, what would it be? It could be anything—fasting on Yom...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>Here’s a game: If you were allowed to only keep one Jewish ritual, what would it be? It could be anything—fasting on Yom Kippur, refusing to intermarry, shatnez—but you have to choose only one. My answer, in case you haven’t already guessed, is the Passover Seder, which I’d argue gives you more bang for the buck than any tradition, of any religion: a long drama that rivals Game of Thrones, with babies floating on rivers, sticks turning into snakes, plagues, a knockout liberation scene, plus a formal Q&A session, a series of bizarre food items imbued with utterly ingenious symbolism, and more.</p>\n\n<p>And yet, even with all this competition, Passover’s most inspired feature is still its meta-message: A group of people had a terrifying, transcendent experience together, and they built themselves into a cohesive religious and political entity by telling the story of that complex, painful, magical, problematic event over and over and over again. The point couldn’t be clearer: Narrative is vital to life—the engine of progress, both for individuals and for civilization.</p>\n\n<p>But what if the narrative, or a part of it, makes you uncomfortable? There’s certainly no shortage of triggers in this one. What then?</p>\n\n<p>A few years ago, I attended a Seder hosted by a friend who, in her fifties, married a man who isn’t Jewish. Suddenly she found herself about to preside over a dinner during which the death of non-Jews is celebrated and Jews declare themselves “chosen”—all in front of her now-beloved non-Jewish spouse and stepchildren. Her first inclination was to replace the Hagaddah she had used her whole life with a more anodyne one. But, as she explained to me while we set the table together that night, she soon realized that doing so would actually subvert the entire purpose of the Seder, which is to challenge and engage. If she did not believe in or could not support one or more of these things, she should take the opportunity explicitly encouraged by the Seder to say so.</p>\n\n<p>For her, a commitment to the tradition and its text went hand in hand with overtly rejecting parts of it, and doing so in front of her new family members made it even more memorable. “It’s not like we Jews have kept the whole chosen idea a secret,” she said, wryly. “I think it was meaningful for my stepdaughter to hear it explained in historical context, and also frankly a relief to hear me say that I personally didn’t believe it.”</p>\n\n<p>It’s worth noting here that there’s no dictate against adding anything to the Seder; in fact, it’s the whole point: talk, talk, question, question, talk. Do you hate the idea that innocent Egyptians had to be killed in order for Jews to be liberated? Say so. Disgusted by the commandment to “blunt the teeth” of a young boy for the crime of phrasing a question in legitimately skeptical terms? Rant away!</p>\n\n<p>What you mustn’t do, though, is airbrush or censor or rewrite out of history the parts that make you squirm, or worse. This is an anxiety disorder. Though pandemic these days in American society, it has long afflicted this country’s Jews, whose solution to discomfort has often been humor. But at some point you simply must engage with the ideas of dead babies, slavery, faith, and the excruciating choice between subservient survival and precarious autonomy. This year, when we are instructed to feel “as though you yourself came out of Egypt,” do just that: Feel the feelings inherent in this whole story, inside of the context of your life, and this unsettling moment in history. Feel betrayal, feel threat, feel terror, feel burdened. But also feel the relief that comes from choosing to not be alone in the world—and the promise that comes with believing in something.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Maya Katz",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Introduction",
"slug": "introduction"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 229,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Introduction | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/introduction-399",
"og:title": "Introduction | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "kadesh-418",
"title": "Kadesh",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "Where ignorance is our master, there is no possibility of real freedom. Because of this, freedom must be characterized b...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>Where ignorance is our master, there is no possibility of real freedom. Because of this, freedom must be characterized by a sense of Universal responsibility―a responsibility to knowledge, to teaching not only human to human but nation to nation. The people who are free on the earth are charged with the liberation of others. You must go out and free people of ignorance with knowledge, of prejudice with understanding, and of anger with love.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Dalai Lama",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Kadesh",
"slug": "kadesh"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 192,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Kadesh | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/kadesh-418",
"og:title": "Kadesh | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "first-cup-25",
"title": "First cup",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "Kadesh, the first section of the seder, is the first of four cups of wine. Why, do we begin the seder by drinking wine?...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>Kadesh, the first section of the seder, is the first of four cups of wine. Why, do we begin the seder by drinking wine? It is to acknowledge our freedom. Tonight we are free from oppressors, and we are no longer in Mitzrayim. But kabbalah teaches us that only half of the moral of Passover is that freedom is great. Kabbalah also speaks of working for the gains of another. Of hard, harsh labor and Egyptians who deserve to be stripped. It teaches of the true meaning of Mitzrayim: <em>\"from narrow places\"</em>. America today has become a narrow place. Many people are currently stuck in miserable working conditions, and most Americans are beneficiaries, if not perpetrators. <em>We</em> are given the choice to buy into modern slavery or not to, although not everyone has that choice. Passover teaches of the work we have to do, the workplaces to reform. We drink this first cup, not only to thank God for our freedom, but also to vow to do the work to never become the Egyptians.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Rabbi Howard Rose",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Kadesh",
"slug": "kadesh"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 188,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "First cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/first-cup-25",
"og:title": "First cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "fourth-cup-35",
"title": "Fourth cup",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "As our Seder draws to an end, we take up our cups of wine one last time. The redemption is not yet complete. The fourth...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>As our Seder draws to an end, we take up our cups of wine one last time. The redemption is not yet complete. The fourth cup recalls us to our covenant with the Eternal One, to the tasks that still await us as a people called to the service of God, to a great purpose for which the people of Israel lives: the preservation and affirmation of hope.<strong> </strong>So we dedicate this fourth cup to all those who labor for the common good in large ways and small, regardless of their origin, station, or faith. And we take heart from the fact that there will yet come a day that all those who yearn for the good and who help sustain it will yet prevail.Each day, around the world and here at home, there are cries going unanswered by our fellow human beings. We must work to bring freedom to those still in the depths. It will not be easy. To truly address slavery, we cannot just free individual slaves but must also address the root causes of poverty, prejudice, and inequality that make slavery possible. Our eyes are now open: let us take action on what we see.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Rabbis for Human Rights",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Commentary / Readings",
"slug": "commentary-readings"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 190,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Fourth cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/fourth-cup-35",
"og:title": "Fourth cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "second-cup-57",
"title": "Second cup",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "Why did the Israelites wander for a generation in the wilderness? It was clear to God that the Israelites who had been e...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>Why did the Israelites wander for a generation in the wilderness? It was clear to God that the Israelites who had been enslaved in Egypt were unprepared to be free. And why? Because the Egyptians had taken away their sense of self. By insinuating enslavement into the lives of the Israelites, the oppressors had removed their ability even to think of themselves as free and autonomous human beings.</p>\n\n<p>When any government seeks to dismiss the capacity of a person to think of herself as a free and autonomous human being, that government wants to take us back to Egypt. We worked too hard to be free to go back, and there is no reason to wander in another wilderness when that freedom is already at hand. Let this cup of liberation remind us that freedom is already within us and must not be taken away. No matter your age, your race, your gender, or your orientation (which is to say, no matter your practical concern), each of us and all of us were liberated from enslavement and none of us is going back.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Rabbi Jack Moline",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Commentary / Readings",
"slug": "commentary-readings"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 192,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Second cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/second-cup-57",
"og:title": "Second cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "third-cup-31",
"title": "Third cup",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "Our land is blessed with material abundance, as well as the liberty to speak, gather, love and so much more. However, th...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>Our land is blessed with material abundance, as well as the liberty to speak, gather, love and so much more. However, the liberty to cross borders has been stolen from many individuals who are enslaved by our own prejudices. Today many politicians labor to enshrine their personal faith restrictions, denying the religious freedoms of others by upending their human rights, subjecting them to undue restrictions and scrutiny. As we celebrate Passover, we renew a commitment to safeguard those who do not celebrate Passover, who are fleeing their own Egypts in search for a modern Canaan. So we raise the cup and recall: Our heartaches, our promises, their fulfillment and our commitment to establish fairness and freedom for all. And we recommit ourselves to strengthen and extend the promise of religious freedom to people of all religions from all parts of the globe.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Rabbi Dennis S. Ross",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Commentary / Readings",
"slug": "commentary-readings"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 188,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Third cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/third-cup-31",
"og:title": "Third cup | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "quote-7",
"title": "Quote",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": " We may strike blows against terrorist networks, but if we do not cleanse ourselves of the instability and intolerance...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p> We may strike blows against terrorist networks, but if we do not cleanse ourselves of the instability and intolerance that fuels extremism, our own freedom will eventually be endangered. We may no longer live in fear of global annihilation, but if we refuse to free ourselves of our own nuclear weapons, we are not truly safe. We may enjoy a standard of living that is the envy of the world, but so long as hundreds of millions endure the agony of an empty stomach or the anguish of unemployment, we can not truly prosper. </p>\n\n<p>Our values call upon us to care about the lives of people we will never meet. When we lead with our hopes instead of our fears, we do things that no other nations can do, no other nations will do. So we have to lift up our eyes today and consider the day of peace with justice that our generation wants for this world. </p>\n\n<p>I'd suggest that peace with justice begins with the example we set here at home, for we know from our own histories that intolerance breeds injustice. Whether it's based on race, or religion, gender or sexual orientation, we are stronger when all our people -- no matter who they are or what they look like -- are granted opportunity, and when our wives and our daughters have the same opportunities as our husbands and our sons.</p>\n\n<p>When we respect the faiths practiced in our churches and synagogues, our mosques and our temples, we're more secure. When we welcome the immigrant with his talents or her dreams, we are renewed. When we stand up for our gay and lesbian brothers and sisters and treat their love and their rights equally under the law, we defend our own liberty as well. We are more free when all people can pursue their own happiness. And as long as lines exist in our hearts that separate us from those who don’t look like us, or think like us, or worship as we do, then we're going to have to work harder to wash the divisions that exist outside of our hearts away. </p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Pres. Barack Obama",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Urchatz",
"slug": "urchatz"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 188,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/quote-7",
"og:title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "karpas-396",
"title": "Karpas",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "The saltwater on our table traditionally represents the tears of the Israelite slaves. The green vegetables we dip in th...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>The saltwater on our table traditionally represents the tears of the Israelite slaves. The green vegetables we dip in the water suggest the possibility of growth and renewal even in the midst of grief.</p>\n\n<p>The greens on the table also remind us of our commitment to protect the planet from ecological destruction. Instead of focusing narrowly on what we may “realistically” accomplish in today’s world, we must refocus the conversation on what the planet needs in order to survive and flourish. We must get out of the narrow place in our thinking and look at the world not as a resource, but as a focus for awe, wonder, and amazement. We must reject the societal story that identifies success and progress with endless growth and accumulation of things. Instead we will focus on acknowledging that we already have enough; we need to stop exploiting our resources and instead care for the earth.</p>\n\n<p>We are descended from slaves, people who staged the first successful slave rebellion in recorded history. Ever since, our people has kept alive the story of liberation, and the consciousness that cruelty and oppression are not inevitable “facts of life” but conditions that can be changed.</p>\n\n<p>The task may seem more overwhelming to us today than in previous moments. Today there is no longer some easily identifiable external evil force playing the role of Pharaoh. Instead, we live in an increasingly unified global economic and political system that brings well-being to some even as it increases the misery of others.</p>\n\n<p>We are in the midst of a huge spiritual and environmental crisis. Our society has lost its way. Yet most of us are even embarrassed to talk about this seriously, so certain are we that we could never do anything to transform this reality, and fearful that we will be met with cynicism and derision for even allowing ourselves to think about challenging the kind of technocratic and alienating rationality that parades itself as “progress” in the current world.</p>\n\n<p>Affirming that, we dip the greens on our Seder plate in joy at the beauty and goodness of this earth and its vegetation, and recommitting ourselves to do all we can to stop those processes in our society that are contributing to the destruction of the earth.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Rabbi Michael Learner",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Karpas",
"slug": "karpas"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 206,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Karpas | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/karpas-396",
"og:title": "Karpas | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "quote-8",
"title": "Quote",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "In the Lenca worldview, we are beings who come from the Earth, from the water and from corn. Our people are the ancestra...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>In the Lenca worldview, we are beings who come from the Earth, from the water and from corn. Our people are the ancestral guardians of the rivers, and our people are, in turn, protected by the spirits of young girls, whose fervent passion and dedication maintain our old ways. Our ways teach us that giving our lives in various ways for the protection of the rivers is giving our lives for the well-being of humanity and of this planet.</p>\n\n<p>Let us wake up! Let us wake up, humankind! We’re out of time. We must shake our conscience free of the rapacious capitalism, racism, and patriarchy that will only assure our own self-destruction. The Gualcarque River has called upon us, as have other gravely threatened rivers. We must answer their call. Our Mother Earth, militarized, fenced-in, poisoned, a place where basic rights are systematically violated, demands that we take action. Let us build societies that are able to coexist in a dignified way, in a way that protects life. Let us come together and remain hopeful as we defend and care for the blood of this Earth and of its spirits.</p>\n\n\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Berta Cáceres",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Karpas",
"slug": "karpas"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 186,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/quote-8",
"og:title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "yachatz-266",
"title": "Yachatz",
"author": "Liam Davis",
"author_handle": "lrd16142176",
"author_initials": "LD",
"covertext": "Is matzo poor man's bread or the food of free men? Can it be both? If we regard it as halachma anya, the Bread of Affl...",
"user_image": "",
"user_image_original": "",
"body": "<p>Is matzo poor man's bread or the food of free men? Can it be both? If we regard it as <em>halachma anya</em>, the Bread of Affliction, why are we eating it now, when we are free, when we can choose to eat this matzo? Can one Matzo be both a symbol of wretchedness and deliverance?</p>\n\n<p>Matzo is a paradox.</p>\n\n<p>The matzo enables us to taste slavery— to imagine what it means to be denied our right to live free and healthy lives. We eat this matzo to relive the oppression our ancestors experienced, but in doing so, we also exercise our privilege. We exercise the privilege of suffering, the opportunity to feel pain for a moment but not have it last for longer than we wish. We can break our bread of affliction, just as we can choose to end our suffering.</p>\n\n<p>But, while we will soon enjoy a large meal and end the seder night as free people, millions of people around the world can not leave the affliction of hunger behind. As we break the middle matzo, let us awaken to their cries and declare:</p>\n\n<p><strong>Kol dichfin yeitei v’yeichol—let all who are hungry, come and eat</strong></p>\n\n<p>Let us bring autonomy to all people over their sources of sustenance.</p>\n\n<p>Let us end the exploitation of natural resources so that the land may nourish its inhabitants.</p>\n\n<p>Let us assist communities in bolstering themselves against the destruction wrought by our own community.</p>\n\n<p>Let us bring our world leaders to recognize food as a basic human right and to implement policies and programs that put an end to world hunger.</p>\n\n<p><strong>Hashata avdei—this year we are still slaves. Leshanah haba’ah b’nei chorin—next year we will be free people.</strong></p>\n\n<p>This year, hunger and malnutrition are still the greatest risks to good health around the world. Next year, may the bread of affliction be simply a symbol, and may all people enjoy the bread of plenty, the bread of freedom.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "Alida Liberman",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Yachatz",
"slug": "yachatz"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 185,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Yachatz | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/yachatz-266",
"og:title": "Yachatz | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
}
],
"clip_remake_history": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"keywords": "",
"og:type": "article",
"og:url": "https://www.haggadot.com/clip/quote-6",
"og:title": "Quote | Passover haggadah by Liam Davis",
"og:description": "Our simple platform allows you to create a custom Passover Haggadah, with access to unique content contributed by our community. Find artwork, family",
"og:image": ""
}
}
Quote
Haggadah Section: -- Cup #2 & Dayenu
We do not want freedom without bread, nor do we want bread without freedom.
Source:
Nelson Mandela
Inspired to create
your own Haggadah?
Make your own Haggadah and share with other Seder lovers around the world
Have an idea
for a clip?
People like you bring their creativity to Haggadot.com when they share their ideas in a clip
Support Us
with your donation
Help us build moments of meaning and connection through
home-based Jewish rituals.
OUR TOP CONTRIBUTORS
Passover Guide
Hosting your first Passover Seder? Not sure what food to serve? Curious to
know more about the holiday? Explore our Passover 101 Guide for answers
to all of your questions.