{
"clip_details": {
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "ritual-hand-washing-0",
"title": "Ritual Hand Washing",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "We will now ritually wash our hands. In washing our hands, we also think of those who don't get to share in the basic hu...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>We will now ritually wash our hands. In washing our hands, we also think of those who don't get to share in the basic human right of abundant, clean water.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 213,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Ritual Hand Washing | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/ritual-hand-washing-0",
"og:title": "Ritual Hand Washing | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "Lily Kaplan",
"handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"total_books": 1,
"total_clips": 14,
"total_followers": 0,
"is_following": 0
},
"user_book": null,
"clips_by_author": [
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "welcome-164",
"title": "Welcome",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "Welcome to our Passover seder. Together we celebrate the festival of liberation of the Jewish people, who are linked thr...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>Welcome to our Passover seder.\nTogether we celebrate the festival of liberation of the Jewish people, who are linked throughout history with all peoples in the passion for justice and human liberty.</p>\n\n<p>As we retell this ancient story, let us remind ourselves of those people around the world\nwho are living this story today, struggling for basic human rights. Let us celebrate our freedom and strengthen ourselves to join the fight against injustice wherever it exists. For as long as one person is oppressed, none of us are free.</p>\n\n<p>For it is said: Every person, in every generation, must regard his or her self as having been personally freed from bondage in Mitzrayim, the Hebrew name of ancient Egypt and a metaphor for a time of enslavement. </p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 196,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Welcome | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/welcome-164",
"og:title": "Welcome | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "whats-goin",
"title": "What's Goin' On?",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "The Seder Plate We place a Seder Plate at our table as a reminder to discuss certain aspects of the Passover story. Each...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>The Seder Plate</p>\n\n<p>We place a Seder Plate at our table as a reminder to discuss certain aspects of the Passover story. Each item has its own significance.</p>\n\n<p>Maror – The bitter herb. This symbolizes the harshness of lives of the Jews in Egypt.</p>\n\n<p>Charoset – A delicious mix of sweet wine, apples, cinnamon and nuts that resembles the mortar used as bricks of the many buildings the Jewish slaves built in Egypt</p>\n\n<p>Karpas – A green vegetable, usually parsley, is a reminder of the green sprouting up all around us during spring and is used to dip into the saltwater</p>\n\n<p>Zeroah – A roasted lamb or shank bone symbolizing the sacrifice made at the great temple on Passover (The Paschal Lamb)</p>\n\n<p>Beitzah – The egg symbolizes a different holiday offering that was brought to the temple. Since eggs are the first item offered to a mourner after a funeral, some say it also evokes a sense of mourning for the destruction of the temple.</p>\n\n<p>Orange - The orange on the seder plate has come to symbolize full inclusion in modern day Judaism. Susannah Heshcel started this tradition in response to students at Oberlin College, who wanted to include a symbol on the seder plate to include lesbian jews. </p>\n\n<p>\"When lecturing, I often mentioned my custom as one of many new feminist rituals that had been developed in the last twenty years. Somehow, though, the typical patriarchal maneuver occurred: My idea of an orange and my intention of affirming lesbians and gay men were transformed. Now the story circulates that a MAN stood up after I lecture I delivered and said to me, in anger, that a woman belongs on the bimah as much as an orange on the Seder plate. My idea, a woman's words, are attributed to a man, and the affirmation of lesbians and gay men is simply erased. Isn't that precisely what's happened over the centuries to women's ideas?\"</p>\n\n<p>Susannah Heschel, April, 2001<br />\nEli Black Professor of Jewish Studies Dartmouth College</p>\n\n<p> Matzah - Matzah is the unleavened bread we eat to remember that when the Jews fled Egypt, they didn’t even have time to let the dough rise on their bread. We commemorate this by removing all bread and bread products from our home during Passover.</p>\n\n<p>Elijah’s Cup The fifth ceremonial cup of wine poured during the Seder. It is left untouched in honor of Elijah, who, according to tradition, will arrive one day as an unknown guest to herald the advent of the Messiah. In order welcome strangers (who may be Elijah), an extra place is set at the table.</p>\n\n<p>Miriam’s Cup - Another relatively new Passover tradition is that of Miriam’s cup. The cup is filled with water and placed next to Elijah’s cup. Miriam was the sister of Moses and a prophetess in her own right. After the exodus when the Israelites are wandering through the desert, just as god gave them Manna to eat, legend says that a well of water followed Miriam and it was called ‘Miriam’s Well’. The tradition of Miriam’s cup is meant to honor Miriam’s role in the story of the Jewish people and the spirit of all women, who nurture their families just as Miriam helped sustain the Israelites.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 200,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "What's Goin' On? | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/whats-goin",
"og:title": "What's Goin' On? | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "order-seder-15",
"title": "The Order of the Seder",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "The Order of the Seder: The word Seder means order. Tonight's ritual is performed in a specific order, as it has been fo...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p><strong>The Order of the Seder:</strong></p>\n\n<p>The word Seder means order. Tonight's ritual is performed in a specific order, as it has been for thousands of years. The steps represent the <em>Shir Ha'ma’alos</em> in Psalms - the fifteen songs of ascent. Our Seder follows a fifteen-step ascent.</p>\n\n<p><strong>The SEDER of the SEDER</strong></p>\n\n<p><strong>Kadesh</strong> - We say the Kiddush - the first cup of wine</p>\n\n<p><strong>Ur'chatz</strong> - We wash our hands</p>\n\n<p><strong>Karpas </strong>- We dip a vegetable in salt water, and say a blessing</p>\n\n<p><strong>Yachatz </strong>- We break the middle matzah, and hide the larger half, the Afikomen</p>\n\n<p><strong>Maggid </strong>- We tell the story of Passover, including the four questions, and the second cup of wine</p>\n\n<p><strong>Rachtzah </strong>- We wash our hands with a blessing</p>\n\n<p><strong>Motzi - </strong>We say the blessing for bread</p>\n\n<p><strong>Matzah </strong>- We say the blessing for matzah</p>\n\n<p><strong>Maror </strong>- We dip bitter herbs in charoset, and say a blessing</p>\n\n<p><strong>Korech </strong>- We eat a sandwich of matzah and bitter herbs</p>\n\n<p><strong>Shulchan Orech</strong> - We eat the festive meal</p>\n\n<p><strong>Tzafoon </strong>- We eat the Afikomen</p>\n\n<p><strong>Barech </strong>- We say the blessings after the meal, say the blessing over the third cup of wine. We welcome Elijah, the prophet</p>\n\n<p><strong>Hallel </strong>- We sing songs of praise</p>\n\n<p><strong>Nirtzah </strong>- We complete our Seder, praying that god accepts our service</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 224,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "The Order of the Seder | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/order-seder-15",
"og:title": "The Order of the Seder | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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-507",
"title": "Kadesh",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "All Jewish celebrations, from holidays to weddings, include wine as a symbol of our joy – not to mention a practical way...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>All Jewish celebrations, from holidays to weddings, include wine as a symbol of our joy – not to mention a practical way to increase that joy. The seder starts with wine and then gives us three more opportunities to refill our cup and drink.</p>\n\n<p><strong>בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה יְיָ, אֱלֹהֵינוּ מֶלֶךְ הָעוֹלָם, בּוֹרֵא פְּרִי הַגָּפֶן</strong></p>\n\n<p>Baruch Atah Adonai, Eloheinu Melech ha-olam, borei p’ree hagafen.</p>\n\n<p>We praise God, Ruler of Everything, who creates the fruit of the vine.</p>\n\n<p><strong>בָּרוּךְ אַתָּה יְיָ, אֱלֹהֵינוּ מֶלֶךְ הָעוֹלָם,<br />\nשֶׁהֶחֱיָנוּ וְקִיְּמָנוּ וְהִגִּיעָנוּ לַזְּמַן הַזֶּה</strong></p>\n\n<p>Baruch Atah Adonai, Eloheinu Melech ha-olam,<br />\nshe-hechiyanu v’key’manu v’higiyanu lazman hazeh.</p>\n\n<p>We praise God, Ruler of Everything,<br />\nwho has kept us alive, raised us up, and brought us to this happy moment.</p>\n\n<p>Drink the first glass of wine or juice!</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 198,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Kadesh | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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-507",
"og:title": "Kadesh | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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-469",
"title": "Karpas",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "KARPAS Pesach is a springtime holiday. The karpas (or parsley) reminds us of springtime and hope. We dip the karpas twic...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>KARPAS<br />\nPesach is a springtime holiday. The karpas (or parsley) reminds us of springtime and hope. We dip the karpas twice in salt water because tears taste salty. We remember the tears of our people who cried in Mitzrayim when we were slaves. We are mindful of the tears of other peoples who are not free. And may we never be so comfortable that we become complacent and forget the pain of others. May we always be able to feel the connection between our own struggle for freedom so long ago and today’s struggles against oppression, wherever they occur.</p>\n\n<p>[POUR SALT WATER INTO BOWL, EAT KARPAS DIPPED TWICE IN SALT WATER] </p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 190,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Karpas | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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-469",
"og:title": "Karpas | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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-breaking-middle-matzah-57",
"title": "Yachatz-Breaking the Middle Matzah",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "There are three pieces of matzah stacked on the table. We now break the middle matzah into two pieces. The host should w...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "\n\n<p>There are three pieces of matzah stacked on the table. We now break the middle matzah into two pieces. The host should wrap up the larger of the pieces and, at some point between now and the end of dinner, hide it. This piece is called the afikomen, literally “dessert” in Greek. After dinner, the guests will have to hunt for the afikomen in order to wrap up the meal… and win a prize.</p>\n\n<p>We eat matzah in memory of the quick flight of our ancestors from Egypt. As slaves, they had faced many false starts before finally being let go. So when the word of their freedom came, they took whatever dough they had and ran with it before it had the chance to rise, leaving it looking something like matzah.</p>\n\n<p>[UNCOVER AND HOLD UP THE THREE PIECES OF MATZAH AND SAY:]</p>\n\n<p>This is the bread of poverty which our ancestors ate in the land of Egypt. All who are hungry, come and eat; all who are needy, come and celebrate Passover with us. This year, there is war; next year we will be in peace. This year we are slaves; next year we will be free.</p>\n\n<p>These days, matzah is a special food and we look forward to eating it on Passover. Imagine eating only matzah, or being one of the countless people around the world who don’t have enough to eat.</p>\n\n<p>What does the symbol of matzah say to us about oppression in the world, both people literally enslaved and the many ways in which each of us is held down by forces beyond our control? How does this resonate with events happening now?</p>\n\n<p>[HIDE THE AFIKOMEN AT SOME POINT]</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 215,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Yachatz-Breaking the Middle Matzah | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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-breaking-middle-matzah-57",
"og:title": "Yachatz-Breaking the Middle Matzah | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "maggid-179",
"title": "Maggid",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "[POUR THE SECOND GLASS OF WINE OR JUICE] The Haggadah doesn’t tell the story of Passover in a linear fashion. We don’t...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p><em>[POUR THE SECOND GLASS OF WINE OR JUICE]</em></p>\n\n<p>The Haggadah doesn’t tell the story of Passover in a linear fashion. We don’t hear of Moses being found by the daughter of Pharaoh – actually, we don’t hear much of Moses at all. Instead, we get an impressionistic collection of songs, images, and stories of both the Exodus from Egypt and from Passover celebrations through the centuries. Some say that minimizing the role of Moses keeps us focused on the miracles God performed for us. Others insist that we keep the focus on the role that every member of the community has in bringing about positive change.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "-- Four Questions",
"slug": "four-questions"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 206,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Maggid | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/maggid-179",
"og:title": "Maggid | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "telling-story-part-1",
"title": "Telling the Story Part 1",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "The symbols and the story of Passover reflect the struggles against injustice, both old and new. This is the story of Pe...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>The symbols and the story of Passover reflect the struggles against injustice, both old and new.</p>\n\n<p>This is the story of Pesach. Let us turn to our ancient tradition.<br />\nDuring a famine, Jews came to Mitzrayim. Their children multiplied and prospered.<br />\nThey held important positions and played an important role in the political, cultural, and economic life of the country. The old Pharaoh died, and there arose a new Pharaoh, who said: “Look! The Jewish people are too mighty for us.” So Pharaoh put the Jews into labor gangs and set taskmasters over them with heavy loads. He made them slaves and treated them harshly.</p>\n\n<p>In spite of the many cruel decrees of Pharaoh, the Jewish people continued to live and grow strong. Hard work could not destroy them. Pharaoh now hit on a new and more terrible plan. He commanded the Jewish midwives to kill every boy born to a Jewish family. The heroic midwives defied this decree. They continued to help the women give birth and their babies grew healthy and strong.</p>\n\n<p>Shortly thereafter, two defiant midwives, Shifra and Pu-ah helped a son to be born into the house of Levi, to Yocheved and her husband Amram. Yocheved, frightened by Pharaoh's law, hid her son in a basket and placed it on the River Nile.</p>\n\n<p>Pharaoh's daughter rescued the baby; the baby’s sister Miriam, who was hiding in the bulrush plants, offered to find a woman to nurse him. She ran to get Yocheved, the baby’s mother. So Moses, Moishe, which means, “drawn from the water,” was raised by his own mother, his sister, and the Pharaoh’s daughter.</p>\n\n<p>He grew up as a prince, but aware that he was a Jew. One day he tried to stop a taskmaster from beating a slave. Moses hit the taskmaster and accidentally killed him. He was forced to flee the palace. The story goes that one day he saw a bush that was on fire and yet alive and green. Moses saw this as a sign that he must rescue the Jewish people from slavery. Moses saw his people's suffering in Mitzrayim and wanted to set them free. Some say that Moses was the first community organizer, helping Jews see their treatment as unjust and leading them in a fight against oppression and an escape to freedom, building a sense of unity and peoplehood.</p>\n\n<p>The story says that ten plagues ravished Mitzrayim, and then Pharaoh finally agreed to let the Israelites leave. Soon after, however, Pharaoh had a change of heart and mobilized his soldiers to recapture the Jewish slaves, who were now on the shores of the Red Sea. The Jews looked back and saw Pharaoh’s army approaching. The only way out was to jump into the sea before them. According to the book of Exodus, the sea parted, creating a path.</p>\n\n<p>Legend has it that the waters did not divide until one man, Nachshon, walked into the sea. As he walked in, the water rose above his ankles, above his knees, above his waist, above his shoulders, above his mouth and nose - and he kept walking. In doing so he acted as a free person ready to take the ultimate risk for his freedom, and only then did the waters of the Red Sea part for the Jews to walk through. When they reached the other side, the waters flowed back together, catching the army of Mitzrayim and drowning them.</p>\n\n<p>When the Jewish people had crossed the Red Sea, they looked back at Pharaoh’s army and realized that they who were drowning had suffered as well. The Israelites’ joy at escaping slavery was not complete because of the suffering of the others.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "-- Exodus Story",
"slug": "exodus-story"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 201,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Telling the Story Part 1 | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/telling-story-part-1",
"og:title": "Telling the Story Part 1 | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "telling-story-part-2",
"title": "Telling the Story Part 2",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "In the Jewish tradition, Moses is the highest example of a leader. Many have been compared to him. A Hasidic tale urges...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>In the Jewish tradition, Moses is the highest example of a leader. Many have been compared to him. A Hasidic tale urges us not to compare ourselves to Moses. In the tale, Rabbi Zusya tells his students that when he leaves this life and arrives in the World to Come, he will not be asked, “Why were you not Moses?” but rather, “Why were you not Zusya?” Trying to be</p>\n\n<p>Moses, or Gandhi, or Cesar Chavez, or Martin Luther King Jr., can limit our confidence and stifle our own creativity.</p>\n\n<p>Yet we might ask, what did Moses do that I can learn from? When Moses had grown up, “he went out to his kinsfolk and looked on their burdens; and he saw an Egyptian beating a Hebrew, one of his kinsmen. He looked here and there and seeing that no one was about, he struck the Egyptian and hid him in the sand.” The rabbinic commentators point out that Moses’ first experience as an activist was to see his fellow with his eyes and his heart, and suffer on his or her account. Not only that, but when he “looked here and there, seeing no one,” it means that he saw no one who was ready to champion the cause of justice.</p>\n\n<p>The first step to standing up, whether to taskmasters or to Pharaoh or to bullies or to any injustice, is this simple act: look and see. You may not feel personally threatened. You may be perfectly comfortable. You may want to run away. But the minute you see someone else’s suffering, your heart can’t help but be moved.</p>\n\n<p>Still, in this one action, Moses did not succeed in freeing the oppressed Hebrews. The liberation did not begin with Moses, but with the cry of the Hebrews themselves: “They were groaning under the bondage and cried out; and their cry for help from the bondage rose up to God. God heard their moaning, and God took notice of them.” The Jewish tradition understands these verses to mean that until the people actually cry out, until they speak about their suffering, until they come together to say “we won’t take it anymore,” nothing changes. The midwives were ready to be leaders, Yocheved and Miriam were ready, Pharaoh’s daughter was ready, and Moses himself was ready. But no one could take the Israelites out of Egypt until the people were ready. Each of us has a role to play in the task of liberation; when we lift our voices together, we can crash through all obstacles to justice.</p>\n\n<p>“When I dare to be powerful — to use my strength in the service of my vision, then it becomes less and less important whether I am afraid.”</p>\n\n<p>— Audre Lorde</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Maggid - Beginning",
"slug": "maggid-beginning"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 198,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Telling the Story Part 2 | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/telling-story-part-2",
"og:title": "Telling the Story Part 2 | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "if-not-now",
"title": "If Not Now",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "For Jews forced into the diaspora 2,000 years ago, wandering always in countries which were sometimes safe harbors and s...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>For Jews forced into the diaspora 2,000 years ago, wandering always in countries which were sometimes safe harbors and sometimes nightmares, the dream of Jerusalem was more than the city itself.</p>\n\n<p>To dream that next year would be in Jerusalem is to dream of a land and a time of autonomy, safety, self-determination, the right to one's own culture, language and spirituality, to live on a land that can't be taken from you by the whim of an outside power. To live with the basic right to be who you are. Jerusalem comes from the same root as \"shalom,\" which is usually translated as \"peace,\" but actually means \"wholeness.\"</p>\n\n<p>This year in Jerusalem, wholeness is sitll very far away. And yet, when we look for the sparks of resistance, we see them everywhere. Fed by an aching for ustice, some sparks have already grown to small brush fires, and grow in strength each day. This year we say instead:</p>\n\n<p>L'Shana ha'ba'a b'shalom!</p>\n",
"cliptype": "image",
"clipsource": "",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/clips/15249/waterlily1-1.png",
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": "https://assets.haggadot.com/clips/15249/conversions/waterlily1-1-cover.jpg",
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Nirtzah",
"slug": "nirtzah"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 237,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "If Not Now | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/if-not-now",
"og:title": "If Not Now | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "https://assets.haggadot.com/clips/15249/conversions/waterlily1-1-cover.jpg"
}
}
},
{
"clip": {
"is_admin": 0,
"is_owner": 0,
"handle": "if-not-now-0",
"title": "If Not Now",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "For Jews forced into the diaspora 2,000 years ago, wandering always in countries which were sometimes safe harbors and s...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p>For Jews forced into the diaspora 2,000 years ago, wandering always in countries which were sometimes safe harbors and sometimes nightmares, the dream of Jerusalem was more than the city itself.</p>\n\n<p>To dream that next year would be in Jerusalem is to dream of a land and a time of autonomy, safety, self-determination, the right to one's own culture, language and spirituality, to live on a land that can't be taken from you by the whim of an outside power. To live with the basic right to be who you are. Jerusalem comes from the same root as \"shalom,\" which is usually translated as \"peace,\" but actually means \"wholeness.\"</p>\n\n<p>This year in Jerusalem, wholeness is sitll very far away. And yet, when we look for the sparks of resistance, we see them everywhere. Fed by an aching for ustice, some sparks have already grown to small brush fires, and grow in strength each day. This year we say instead:</p>\n\n<p>L'Shana ha'ba'a b'shalom!</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "Nirtzah",
"slug": "nirtzah"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 196,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "If Not Now | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/if-not-now-0",
"og:title": "If Not Now | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "dayenu-reform",
"title": "Dayenu-Reform",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "Dayenu Eeloo hotzee hotzee anoo Hotzee anoo mimitzraim Hotzee anoo mimitzraim DAYENU (x4) Eeloo natan natan lanu Natan l...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "<p><u>Dayenu</u></p>\n\n<p>Eeloo hotzee hotzee anoo</p>\n\n<p>Hotzee anoo mimitzraim</p>\n\n<p>Hotzee anoo mimitzraim</p>\n\n<p>DAYENU (x4)</p>\n\n<p>Eeloo natan natan lanu</p>\n\n<p>Natan lanu et ha Shabat</p>\n\n<p>Natan lanu et ha Shabat</p>\n\n<p>DAYENU (x4)</p>\n\n<p>Volt kayn seyder nit gevezn</p>\n\n<p>Kayn hagode nit gevezn</p>\n\n<p>Ober kneydlekh yo gevezn</p>\n\n<p>DAYEYNU (x4)</p>\n\n<p>Translation</p>\n\n<p>If God had only taken us out of Mitzrayim</p>\n\n<p>That alone would have been enough. If God had only given us the Sabbath,</p>\n\n<p>That alone would have been enough.</p>\n\n<p>If there were no seder<br />\nIf there were no Haggadah<br />\nBut if there were matzo balls!<br />\nThat alone would have been enough.</p>\n\n<p>What does this mean, “It would have been enough?” Surely no one of these things would indeed have been enough for us. Dayenu means to celebrate each step toward freedom as if it were enough, then to start out on the next step. It means that if we reject each step because it is not the whole liberation, we will never be able to achieve the whole liberation. It means to sing each verse as if it were the whole thing — and then sing the next verse. </p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"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": 236,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Dayenu-Reform | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/dayenu-reform",
"og:title": "Dayenu-Reform | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "avadim-hayinu-47",
"title": "Avadim Hayinu",
"author": "Lily Kaplan",
"author_handle": "lily-kaplan",
"author_initials": "LK",
"covertext": "עֲבָדִים הָיִינוּ לְפַרְעֹה בְּמִצְרָיֽם עַתָּה - בְּנֵי חוֹרִין Avadim hayinu lepharo bemitzrayim, ata – benei chorin W...",
"user_image": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/conversions/profile10208627757711553-thumb.jpg",
"user_image_original": "https://assets.haggadot.com/users/108559/profile10208627757711553",
"body": "\n\n<p>עֲבָדִים הָיִינוּ לְפַרְעֹה בְּמִצְרָיֽם עַתָּה - בְּנֵי חוֹרִין</p>\n\n<p>Avadim hayinu lepharo bemitzrayim, ata – benei chorin</p>\n\n<p>We were slaves to Pharaoh in Egypt – now we are free.</p>\n",
"cliptype": "text",
"clipsource": "",
"featured": 0,
"featuredIn": null,
"is_public": 1,
"is_published": 1,
"media": {
"image": null,
"audio": null,
"video": null
},
"thumbnail": null,
"clip_section": [
{
"haggadah_section": "-- Exodus Story",
"slug": "exodus-story"
}
],
"likes": 0,
"downloads": 203,
"tags": [],
"themes": [],
"language": "0",
"is_bookmarked": "0",
"is_liked": 0,
"meta_tags": {
"title": "Avadim Hayinu | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/avadim-hayinu-47",
"og:title": "Avadim Hayinu | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": "Ritual Hand Washing | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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/ritual-hand-washing-0",
"og:title": "Ritual Hand Washing | Passover haggadah by Lily Kaplan",
"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": ""
}
}
Ritual Hand Washing
Haggadah Section: Urchatz
We will now ritually wash our hands. In washing our hands, we also think of those who don't get to share in the basic human right of abundant, clean water.
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.