They took Palm branches and went out to meet him, shouting ‘Hosanna’. Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.. Blessed is the King of Israel. John 12.13
Passover - A Conversation
Sister Ann Marshall interviews her friend Judy Rochwerg and they discuss Passover 2021.
Judy was my physiotherapist in 2004 following surgery, and since then, I am happy to say, that our lives have become intertwined. After all, we are daughters of the Patriarch Abraham.
Judy worships with a Reform Jewish Temple in Hamilton, Ontario. She has been happily married to Lorne for 45 years; they have two married sons and two healthy grandsons.
We have chosen to make this interview both a conversation as well as an educational opportunity.
Q. Thank you, Judy, for agreeing to this interview. As the Jewish and Christian world prepares to celebrate Passover and Easter, I am wondering what was it like for you as a child to learn about the sacred story of Passover?
A. Passover, or Pesach, in Hebrew, is my favorite holiday in the Jewish calendar. It is a holiday celebrated mainly at home, rather than in the Synagogue. Passover connects me to my family, to Jews in my community and around the world who are celebrating the Exodus of the Jews from Egypt some 3000 years ago. As a child, I would look forward to celebrating with my family including grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles, and cousins.
Q. Can you give us some background on the rituals surrounding Passover?
A. Passover is celebrated for eight days. The most important Passover dates are the first 2 evenings where Jews celebrate at a dinner called a Seder. Seder means order as each Passover ritual is performed in a certain order on these evenings. In 2021 the Seders fall on March 27 and March 28.
The Haggadah is the prayer book that is used during the two Seders on Passover eve. There are dozens of Haggadah’s available for purchase. A modern Haggadah can include elements of social activism, environmental responsibility, feminism, comedy, minimalist, and Family Seder, to name a few. I have written my own Family Haggadah that while having all the necessary ritual components, also includes additional commentary unique to my Passover experience.
The word Haggadah means “telling” as its primary purpose is to facilitate the telling of the story of the Exodus from Egypt. Children are encouraged to participate by asking “Why is this night different from all other nights”?
A Seder Plate is placed on the table and each item on the plate has its own significance, as follows:
Maror or bitter herbs symbolize the harshness of the lives of the Jews in Egypt.
Charoset is a delicious blend of sweet wine, apples, cinnamon and nuts that resembles the mortar used as bricks of the many buildings the Jewish slaves built in Egypt.
Karpas is a green vegetable, often parsley or lettuce that is a reminder that Spring is sprouting up all around us. The Karpas is dipped in salt water to symbolize the tears of the Israelis.
Zeroah or roasted shank bone symbolizes the sacrifice made to the great Temple on Passover.
Beitzah or egg represents Spring and new life.
Matzah is the unleavened bread we eat to remember that when the Jews fled Egypt, they did not even have time to let the dough rise in the bread. During Passover Jews do not eat bread or bread products.
Through the course of the Seder we drink 4 cups of wine. There are numerous explanations of why four. In Genesis 40: 11-13 when Joseph interprets the dream of the butler, the butler mentions the word “cup” four times.
The Passover meal is a festive meal that may contain time-honoured favorites, like chicken soup and gefilte fish, as well, there are usually selections of meats, vegetables, and desserts.
Each Seder is unique. I have participated in Seders from 4 -40 participants. The Seder Leader sets the tone – traditional or liberal, ancient or modern, lecture or participatory. Prayers are adapted according to the ages of guests. If the Seder leader is more traditional, as was the case with my husband’s grandfather, the Seder was entirely in Hebrew with no participation from the guests. A Seder teaches, and re-tells the story of the Exodus to all present. This can range from puppets for the very young to researching topics specific to Passover for adult participants.
Q. Was there a time in your growing up years that you drifted from this tradition and if so, what caused you to return.
A. No, I have been connected to my Reform Jewish faith all my life while growing up in my parents’ home, and later I taught the faith for many years in my Temple. I carried on this tradition when establishing my own home with my husband.
Q. What are some of your fondest memories surrounding the celebration of Passover?
A. My father and his 2 brothers would take turns hosting Passover. Each year we would attend a Seder at one of their houses. Living room furniture was often moved out to the way to accommodate the long table, always set with the best china. My father and uncles would lead the Seder and encourage discussion on what we were reading in the Haggadah. I remember wearing my newest dress and enjoying time with my cousins.
Q. Tell me why you look forward to celebrating Passover with your family and especially with your grandsons?
A. I feel fortunate that my 2 sons each married Jewish women who understand and have memories of their own childhood Passovers. When my children were younger, I enjoyed teaching them the story of the Exodus and the rituals of the Passover Seder. I would often create games for my children, nieces, and nephews such as Passover Jeopardy to teach and entertain.
Q. Will you be able to celebrate Passover this year if COVID is still among us, and is the celebration of Passover important enough for a contingency plan to be in place?
A. Last year my husband and I led a Zoom Seder. Guests included family members who zoomed in from their own homes. I imagine this will be our plan for this years’ Seder on March 27 and 28.
Sticks and Stones
-Sister Margo Ritchie, Congregational Leader, CSJ
Little Design Communities - A Series: Part I of III
BEGINNINGS…
“Beams of Love” © Mary Southard, CSJ, www.marysouthardart.org [i]
Welcome to a mini-series of conversations with Sisters Wendy Cotter and Rosemary O’Toole talking about Little Design Communities.
Wendy: Rosemary, I know that your Upper Room ministry has been unfolding for quite some time now. How did the Little Design Communities begin in Ottawa?
Rosemary: That is a very beautiful story, Wendy! We were thirteen years into our Upper Room ministry when throughout the year 1996-1997 eighteen women just happened to ask me in their spiritual direction visit if they could meet and share their journey with some of the other women who came to the Upper Room. Evelyn and I discerned that this was a strong Spirit-nudge. It was our “perhaps in time” moment! So, in our 1997-98 brochure we extended an invitation to anyone who felt called to explore and discern the ‘Little Design’ way of life. We welcomed nineteen women to that first gathering on Saturday afternoon, September 20, 1997.
Wendy: What did they tell you was their reason for wanting to come together?
Rosemary: These women were seriously committed to the spiritual life and desirous of growing in a more conscious and intimate union with God, others, and creation. They expressed a desire to share in our Upper Room contemplative lifestyle and mission. When we told them about the possibility of becoming associates or vowed members, they asked, “Is there another ‘kind of community’ that could support and enhance our lives?” They did not want anything too structured, institutionalized, or hierarchical. Feeling interiorly no need for canonical vows, or a distinctive ministry, public recognition, or any formal ceremonies with a Rule of Life, they seemed to embrace the freedom of moving in the Spirit to become “whatever God, in His infinite mercy, will deign to make of his design” (E.L. par 2). We decided to gather every six weeks for the coming year, trusting the Spirit to guide us in our discernment. I shared copies of The Eucharistic Letter [ii] for our second gathering and so began the exploration into Little Design communities.
Wendy: Actually, this sounds very much like our own beginning in Le Puy... just six women, from various parishes, coming together to share their desires! And I think they all met in Lucrece de la Planche’s [iii] living room! Rosemary, how did you know they were asking for a ‘Little Design’ community?
Rosemary: As their spiritual director, I knew all of these women well and I knew well the prophetic and mystical text of The Eucharistic Letter. They were in harmony and unison at their core essence but I wanted to give them time to recognize it and own it within themselves. They believed they were already consecrated to God (baptismal) and committed to a way of holiness based on the Gospel as they lived in their own homes. Their deepest desire seemed to be an urgent longing to share hearts with like-minded companions where trust and freedom to grow and explore would be welcomed. They loved the littleness, hiddenness and even the self-emptying way of moving into Great Love. Evelyn and I intuited that they were being drawn into the mystery of a simple way of life that Father Médaille described in The Eucharistic Letter. Here was an attractive little way of “loving Love and letting Love love through us.” It was Spirit-gift arriving for all of us!
Wendy: Did you find they could relate with a Letter that was written for our Sisters in 1660?
Copy of The Eucharistic Letter
Archives of the Motherhouse of the Sisters of St. Joseph, Lyon, France. [iv]
Rosemary: Actually Wendy, some of the women would have participated in the courses on Médaille Spirituality that I had offered over the years at various parishes. They would have been somewhat familiar with Father Médaille’s writings, especially the Maxims. As you know, The Eucharistic Letter is the core document for all Little Design communities. Within its forty-two paragraphs, one finds the entirety of its vision and mission. I think I can honestly say that most women seemed to just ‘get it’ right away! We would read a few paragraphs, sit awhile in silence, and then go off to share in small group conversations at the dining room table, living room or library. The way of Little Design started to become real and tangible, grounded in our everyday lives. It started to feel like ‘home’ in our spirituality.
Wendy: You must have found your Little Design community growing beyond your living room!
Rosemary: Oh yes! In 1998 The Upper Room moved to a new townhouse on 68 Centrepointe Drive and everything seemed to accelerate from then on! Within a year, we began to welcome newcomers who asked to join us. In just a few years, with the larger numbers gathering at our Home of Prayer, we as a core community knew we needed to have a ‘state of the house’ discernment. It was time to manage this next important step in the movement. What do we do when we grow larger and attract more members? The answer was already found in The Eucharistic Letter (par. 34-35) but we now had to make that critical response. Gratefully, in 2004, four women offered to become home hostesses. Core members and newcomers had the opportunity then to choose their own Little Design small community. They arranged their own dates and times for gathering in each other’s homes. Today there are fourteen Little Design communities (sixty-seven women) in the Ottawa Valley area who gather regularly in their own homes … or … these days on Zoom.
Wendy: What a graced “beginning”. In our next blog, I’d like to ask you about the Médaille Online Course.
[1] Mary Southard, CSJ, LaGrange, Illinois, USA. Gratefully, Mary gave us permission to use Beams of Love for our Little Design Communities website logo in 2012 and for all printed LDC materials.
[11] Jean-Pierre Médaille, S.J., The Eucharistic Letter. Open link to read PDF. In the latest research of Marguerite Vacher, Nuns Without Cloister, (pp. 312-313) she confirms that it was sometime in 1660 when Father Médaille received a Divine revelation which he wrote down in The Eucharistic Letter. She estimates that he gave the Letter to Marguerite Burdier, one of the first six Sisters. Apparently the Letter was not circulated, or very little, among the communities. Since Vatican II, we Sisters of St. Joseph are revisiting all our original documents.
[111] Marguerite Vacher, CSJ, Letting in Joy, (pp. 15-17). She tells the story of how Lucrece, the Catholic wife of a Protestant nobleman in Le Puy, opened her home to the first sisters for several months before they could officially become a community. This very virtuous demoiselle continued an active collaboration with the sisters until her death in 1653.
[1v] Photo courtesy of Michele Melowsky, an Ottawa pilgrim to Le Puy, France, participating in the second Rebirthing session, June 2013.
Right to Truth Day - Remembering Saint Oscar Romero
Archbishop Oscar Arnulfo Romero.
We remember Saint Oscar Arnulfo Romero who was assassinated on March 24th, 1980.
Canonized on October 14, 2018, Romero was a vocal critic of the violent atrocities of assassinations and torture in his country, El Salvador. He preached openly against prevailing poverty and social injustices.
In 2010, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed March 24th as the “International Day for the Right to the Truth Concerning Human Rights Violations and for the Dignity of Victims”, in recognition of the role of Bishop Romero in defense of human rights. (Wikipedia)
We remember Saint Oscar Romero reflecting on his own words:
“If God accepts the sacrifice of my life, may my death be for the freedom of my people. A bishop will die, but the Church of God, which is the people, will never perish. I do not believe in death without resurrection. If they kill me, I will rise again in the people of El Salvador.”
Submitted by Sister Mabel St. Louis
