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Night of Beginnings is a groundbreaking new haggadah for the Passover seder from acclaimed poet, translator, and liturgist Marcia Falk, beautifully designed and illustrated with original color drawings by the author. Unlike both traditional and new haggadahs, which do not contain a full recounting of the biblical story, Night of Beginnings presents the Exodus narrative in its entirety, providing a direct connection to the ancient origins of the holiday. This retelling highlights the actions of its female characters, including Moshe's sister, Miriam; Pharaoh's daughter, who adopts the baby Moshe; and the midwives Shifrah and Pu'ah, who save the Hebrew male infants. Falk's revolutionary new blessings, in Hebrew and English, replace the traditional, patriarchal seder blessings, and her kavanot-meditative directions for prayer-introduce a genre new to the seder ritual. Poems, psalms, and songs are arranged to give structural coherence to the haggadah. A new commentary raises interpretive questions and invites us to bring personal reflections into the discussion. Like the author's widely acclaimed previous prayer books, The Book of Blessings and The Days Between, Falk's poetic blessings for the seder envision the divine as a Greater Whole of which we are an inseparable part. The inclusive language of Falk's blessings makes room for women to find and use their voices more full-throatedly than they were able to do with the male-centered prayers inherited from the early rabbis. Men, too, will encounter here a spiritually moving and thought-provoking experience.
Filled with vivid, often dreamlike pictures from the natural world,
the poems of Zelda Schneurson Mishkovsky, known to her Hebrew
readers simply as Zelda, are unlike anything else in Hebrew
literature. Zelda was the daughter and granddaughter of prominent
Hasidic rabbis from the Habad dynasty. Born in Russia in 1914, she
immigrated to Palestine in 1926, studied in religious girls'
schools, and became a schoolteacher. She began writing her
imagistic, mystical-religious poetry early in life. When her first
book was published, in 1967, it was an overwhelming critical and
popular success, appealing to the diverse (and predominantly
secular) Israeli public. Five more volumes followed, winning the
poet numerous literary awards, including the prestigious Bialik and
Brenner prizes.
The Jewish High Holidays--the ten days beginning with the New Year
Festival of Rosh Hashanah and culminating with Yom Kippur, the Day
of Atonement--constitute the most sacred period of the Jewish year.
During this season, religious as well as nonaffiliated Jews attend
synagogue services in unparalleled numbers. Yet much of what they
find there can be unwelcoming in its patriarchal imagery, leaving
many worshipers unsatisfied.
Striking in its appeal to the senses, the Song of Songs--the Bible's only book of love poems--is remarkable for its lack of sexual stereotyping and its expression of mutuality in relationships between men and women. Marcia Falk's rich and lyrical translation, praised by poets and scholars alike, is paired here with the original Hebrew text.
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