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Contents
Versions
The Story of StoriesA Tale of Two CivilizationsPesah, Freud, and Jewish IdentityBuilding a Society of FreedomHistory and MemoryNot Only OnePesah and the Rebirth of IsraelAn Afternoon in JerusalemThe Universal StoryThe Omer and the Politics of TorahTime as a Narrative of HopeThe Sages in Benei BrakWomen and the ExodusThe Missing FifthThe Art of Asking QuestionsThe Wicked Son What Does He Say?Begin with Shame, End with PraiseBen Zoma and the SagesThe First PesahThe Unasked QuestionOne Little Goat
About This Text
Author: Jonathan Sacks
Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks wrote the Jonathan Sacks Haggadah during his tenure as chief rabbi of the United Hebrew Congregations of the Commonwealth in the United Kingdom. It includes English translations of the haggadah texts, Rabbi Sacks’s commentary, and essays on the themes and motifs of the holiday. Topics in the essays range from the contrasting natures of ancient Egypt and nascent Israel to the role of women in the Exodus. A recurring theme in the essays is the role of Jews and Judaism in building modern civilization.