A Passover writing exercise, offered by my friend, the Rabbi
(who is also a writer, and a damned good one): write a short
something-or-other, based upon a given prompt, every day for the 15 days of
Nisan that lead to the first seder of Passover. I tried, I really did, I tried
to write something every day. A noble attempt, but it didn’t happen. Even so, I
managed to kick something out for one prompt: Tell.
Of course, the first thing I thought about, given that
Passover prompt, was Chanukah. I just couldn’t get that Chanukah song to stop
running through my head. You know the one - "Who can retell the things
that befell us...?" (And now it's running through yours as well; no good
deed and all). It works, just the same. At least the opening verse. Just
substitute Moses and Aaron and Miriam and that cast of hundreds of thousands
for all those Maccabees, and you can pretty much retell the story of oppression
and slavery and freedom and bloodshed and war and miracles and redemption,
there and back again.
That's the part that I get stuck on, the "...and back
again." We tell and we tell and we tell. It’s an awesome story, filled
with heroes and pyrotechnics that could keep the special effects masters at
Industrial Light and Magic on their toes and at their drawing boards for years.
Decades. Forever. The stuff of life is present in every word of this story we
tell, all the drama and majesty and love and passion and danger and discovery
and betrayal and loss.
Tell this story. Tell it to those who ask and those who
don't even know there's a story to tell. Tell it as if you were there, part of
the original action. Tell it as if you are still there, that we are all still
there, living and experiencing it all right now.
Tell it, and tell it again. It is that important.
But here's what I'm thinking these days (as if my statement
above were not hint enough): there are far too many "again's" in our
story. That is, how many times do we find ourselves in need of heroes and
miracles? How many times must we tell the story of soldiers and blood and war
and terror?
Yes, and redemption. And yes, God. I love that these are the
base of all of the stories we tell.
When, though, do we learn? When do we change? Of course we
must tell the story of the Exodus! Of course we must celebrate our journey from
the very narrow places into the wide open space of the wilderness where we meet
God! Of course we must tell the story of our journey from slavery to freedom.
It just seems that we tell this same story, with only slight
variations, of oppression, of idols and enslavement and fear and war in every generation since then. That's a
lot of generations, a lot of oppression and fear and bloodshed.
Here's a secret. I love Passover. It’s my favorite holiday.
How could it not be? I love that we are commanded to tell this story. As a
writer, how could I not? But sometimes, in the quiet, away from the fury of the
cleaning and preparing and the cooking, sometimes I wish we could tell the
story with a different ending.
I'm a dork. I get that. Sometimes, I wish we could tell the
story of a world that, because of our wondrous redemption, there in the
wilderness, we needed no heroes, no magic, no soldiers, no war to save us yet
again. That the story we tell, year after year after day after month, ever and
always is the story of everyday miracles, of peace and wholeness and grace...
Once we were slaves, now we are free.