Each year there are moments when the earth trembles, a seismic event or series of events that changes the very nature of how we view our world, our nation, and our communities.  We, who place ourselves into this story each year, cannot look at these moments without being profoundly affected by an inner voice that says, ‘This is Mitzrayim here and now.’

In March of this year the Justice Department of the United States issued two reports regarding the shooting of an unarmed black man, Michael Brown August 9, 2014 in Ferguson Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis.

Many media outlets focused on the report clearing the officer involved of civil rights violations in the shooting.  There was, however, a second report; a scathing indictment of 

rampant racial bias in the town’s municipal and law enforcement systems.   

The Washington Post reported federal investigators determined that in “nearly every aspect of Ferguson’s law enforcement system,” African Americans are impacted a severely disproportionate amount. The report included racist e-mails sent by police and municipal court supervisors, repeated examples of bias in law enforcement and a system that seemed built upon using arrest warrants to squeeze money out of residents.

Key excerpts in the report detailed in the Washington Post include:

The 67% of African Americans in Ferguson account for 93% of arrests made from 2012-2014.

The disproportionate number of arrests, tickets and use of force stemmed from “unlawful bias,” rather than black people committing more crime.

From October 2012 to October 2014, every time a person was arrested because he or she was “resisting arrest,” that person was black.

The city’s practices are shaped by revenue rather than by public safety needs.

A Ferguson woman parked her car illegally once in 2007. It ended up costing her more than $1,000 and 6 days in jail.

A singled missed, late or partial payment of a fine could mean jail time.

Arrest warrants are “almost exclusively” used as threats to push for payments.

And if time is served, no credit for jail time is received and the length of time isn’t even recorded by the court.

How is this event tied in to our Seder tonight?

Is this one isolated event?

What is required of us?

What other moments from the past year have rocked your world?


haggadah Section: Introduction
Source: Esther Heimberg