Passover food – keeping the traditions alive

From pesach past to pesach present matzah is still the staple food

Seder night 1925

When shall we do the ‘big shop’? How many boxes of matzah do we need? Are we buying ‘kosher cola’ this year? Such burning questions are raised each year in the build up to one of the biggest ‘Fresstivals’ in the Jewish Calendar. And I say ‘fress’ because the majority of Pesach is about what you can eat, can’t eat, refuse to eat and what your Rabbi has ordained as acceptable to eat. (Remember the quinoa debate of 2014?)

Seder is a time for families to come together and remember when the Israelites took their last meal in Egypt, with no time to wait for their breads to rise before their exodus.

 

The Last Supper by Leonardo da Vinci

The idea of a ‘last supper’ was also notably the focus of Leonardo Da Vinci’s iconic, ‘The Last Supper’, which, according to Gospels, was also a Passover feast, depicting the last meal in Jerusalem taken by Jesus and shared with his apostles before he was betrayed by Judas and finally crucified. This meal was incredibly significant to Jesus’ followers whereby he would ‘become’ the Pascal Lamb, offering himself up as the ultimate sacrifice to G-d.

Fortunately, modern-day seders do not require such extreme sacrifices, but for all the food forfeits, the range of Passover food seems to be a rapidly expanding market, including ‘cauliflower rice’ – a delicious addition to the Ashkenazi menu, mirroring the permittance of rice for Sephardi Jews over Passover. Depending on ‘which side you Seder’, the Sephardi Passover menu boasts rice as far as the eye can see, with aromatic-smelling foods – not so much as a whiff of gefilte fish.

No matter your origins, matzah is still the staple food of Passover, and each year seems to bring about an even more varied style. A welcomed addition is ‘matzah crack’: matzah topped with melted chocolate and toffee, then sprinkled with pecans. This moorish snack is gone before you can say ‘chad gadya’.

With so much foodie fun to be had and the ease with which we can now buy Kosher for Passover foodstuffs, it’s grounding to remember a much tougher time. Passover eve, 19th April 1943: Germans entered the Warsaw ghetto, rounding up the final numbers to take to concentration camps, as families fearfully continued with their Seders.

Children’s Home, Berlin; Passover Seder Table

Forever remembered as a survivor of Auschwitz, Pearl Benisch’s story recounts her kitchen cleaning job whilst in Plaszow. With the help of some brave and remarkable friends, they managed to collect flour, mix it with water and bake matza biscuits on top of the stove for the men forced to work in the ‘library’, sorting books and manuscripts. During Passover, so the story goes, Pearl managed to sneak a turnip back to her barracks, which was cut into three, representing the three matzot that we have on our Seder tables. It was all they had, but it was enough to bless and give them the strength to continue the fight for life and liberation.

US Army Chaplain Eli Bohnen, right, a rabbi serving with the 42nd Infantry Division in World War II, leads a seder service in Germany March 28, 1945

When the war finally ended, thousands of European refugees remained in displacement camps, unable to return to their communist-controlled homelands. As they waited for the chance to immigrate, the ‘JDC’ (Jewish Joint Distribution Committee) provided matza, wine and other supplies to nearly 1 million Jews throughout Europe.

Chabad House Nepal

It seems that even in the face of adversity, Jewish tradition continues across the globe sometimes in places you would least expect it. The Chabad House Nepal are Seder-masters: what started in 1989 with just 50 people, now plays host to what has grown to be a world-famous communal Seder for over 1,000 guests from all over the world. With the assistance of the Israeli embassy, enough kosher food and supplies are brought in to ensure this is a Seder like no other, with Bangkok and Koh Samui now also vying for the Super-Seder title.

So, when you’re struggling for storage space for 20 boxes of ‘Rakusens’, spare a thought for the 3,210 kg of matzah needed for the seders in Thailand.

 

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