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Pesah: Shirley & Jacob Fuchsberg Center for Conservative Judaism in Israel United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism The meaning of a Seder ritual after the destruction of the TempleBy Joshua KulpIn the year 70 C.E. the Temple in Jerusalem was destroyed by the Romans. From the time that the Jews had returned from their exile in Babylonia (around 500 B.C.E.) they had observed Pesah every year in Jerusalem at the Temple. The central celebration of the holiday was the offering of the Pesah sacrifice, and its being eaten by groups of Jews, praising God and telling the story of the Exodus from Egypt. Now that the Temple was destroyed they were left with the greatest of dilemmas. Without a Temple how could they fulfill the ritual of the Pesah sacrifice? We shall see this dilemma reflected in the following sources. Two laws are necessary to understand these sources:
Tosefta Beitzah 2:15
Mishna Pesachim, 7:2
According to Todos and Rabban Gamliel, who both lived after the destruction of the Temple, Jews should continue to eat roasted meat on Pesah, probably in order to commemorate the Temple ritual as much as possible. The contrary opinion, which became the law, said that rituals done in the Temple can only be done there, and are corrupted by being done elsewhere. Hence, the meat we eat at the seder must not be fully roasted. Why do Rabban Gamliel and Todos want to continue eating the Pesah after the destruction? Why do the other sages try to forbid this? What might the generations that lived immediately after the destruction of the Temple have thought about the continuation of Judaism? What different strategies may they have employed in order to ensure such continuity? Today we live after the Shoah, one of, if not the greatest tragedy in our history. How do our responses to the Shoah reflect some of the choices that Rabban Gamliel and the other sages were forced to make? If you have comments or questions about this topic and would like to further discuss the issue with the Yeshiva teachers, please contact us through our e-mail yeshcon@netvision.net.il or visit our website: http://www.uscj.org/israelcenter/yeshiva/us-yesh.htm.
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