We will dedicate each of the four cups of wine to an attribute of nationhood that the Israelites acquired on their journey from peoplehood to nationhood. This first cup is dedicated to the most basic consequence of the going out from Egypt, the travel to a new homeland. Although generally accepted as a necessary attribute of nationhood, the Jews survived without their own state on repeated occasions for tens, hundreds and over a thousand years.

We are thankful and fortunate for the existence of the Jewish State in our time. But when we had no homeland, the Exodus story and the Passover Seder gave us hope that once again we would be able to stand on our nation’s soil.

David Ben Gurion, first prime minister of the State of Israel, described the importance of the memories preserved on Pesach as he argued at the United Nations for the right to a Jewish State in 1947:

“Three hundred years ago a ship called the Mayflower set sail to the New World. This was a great event in the history of England. Yet I wonder if there is one Englishman who knows at what time the ship set sail? Do the English know how many people embarked on this voyage? What quality of bread did they eat? Yet more than three thousand three hundred years ago, before the Mayflower set sail, the Jews left Egypt. Every Jew in the world, even in America or Soviet Russia knows on exactly what date they left - the fifteenth of the month of Nisan; everyone knows what kind of bread the Jews ate. Even today the Jews worldwide eat matza on the 15th of Nisan. They retell the story of the Exodus and all the troubles Jews have endured since being exiled. They conclude this evening with two statements: This year, slaves. Next year, free men. This year here. Next year in Jerusalem, in Zion, in Eretz Yisrael. That is the nature of the Jews.”


haggadah Section: Kadesh
Source: Original