Passover in my day
When I was a child seders
seemed to last for eons. All my mother's family, my parents, my two
uncles and their wives and children were always present, because
anything bubbe hosted was a command performance. The good linens, china,
and silver made the table gleam under the light of bubbe's two
candelabras.
We children were excited beyond hysteria until the
ceremony began, and we were forced to come to the table and stop hanging
upside down from the sofa, climbing the walls, and knocking down the
furniture. I particularly enjoyed the presence of my cousins because I
was an only child at the time, and lonely. My eldest cousin, three and a
half years older than me, was a goddess of sophistication to me; her
brothers were rowdy playmates. Uncle Doc's little girls were too young
to play with but they were mighty cute and dressed to the nines.
Once
the youngest child present had recited the four questions the prayer
competition began. Both my uncles and my cousin Bernie read the haggadah
aloud --individually--in Hebrew as quickly as they could. The
conversation went like this:
Uncle I: It's time for the first (or second, third, or fourth) cup of wine.
Uncle II: I haven't gotten there yet. You read too fast.
Uncle I: It's a long service.
Uncle
II: All right, all right. Come on everybody. Drink the fourth (or
third, or second) cup. Where's the bottle? Pass me the wine, somebody.
They
raced through the prayers and then had to stop and wait impatiently for
the others to catch up. It was rather like riding in a car that
alternately speeded up and stopped dead, causing you to lurch forward
and back.
Meanwhile, my cousin Sam and sometimes one or two of
the other children would drink too much wine and slip quietly to the
floor. It taught me the meaning of drinking yourself under the table.
After a brief nap the culprit would re-appear, refreshed.
The two
little girls were too small to read, so they raced around the table
fighting with each other until Uncle Doc started yelling at them and
threatening to spank them. My aunt, his wife, would burst into tears
because he had shouted at the girls. She would threaten to leave. They
would yell some more until he calmed down and apologized to the girls
and gave them some candy or gum he just happened to have in his pocket.
The girls, of course, would stuff themselves with sweets and would not
eat the festive meal when it appeared.
The festive meal! Chicken
soup with matzoh balls. We called bubbe's matzoh balls cannon balls.
They were heavy but nourishing. Then we had chicken. With the chicken
came potato kugel and chopped liver. Gefilte fish. Someone probably
slipped a green vegetable in there somewhere, but I don't remember it.
Bubbe didn't hold with all this greenery anyway. Her idea of a salad
was: take one cucumber; add pint of sour cream; eat. And we couldn't
have that, this was a fleisheke meal.
Bubbe would heap each of
the children's plates with massive portions of food and then bawl them
out for not eating it all. We were starved and ate voraciously. If
someone had thrown one of us into the river we would have plummeted to
the bottom and sunk without a trace.
Dessert featured, but was not limited to, Manischevitz macaroons, served in the can. The featured wine was Mogen David.
After eating, there was a timeout while the children searched for the afikomen and the adults sat still and burped.
Since
I was not used to staying up late, the remainder of the seder was one
big blur to me, except for opening the door for Eliyahu hanovi. Then
came Chad Gadya, which meant the end of the service and blessed release.
And then we did it again the next night.
(Recycled)
2 comments:
Do you still do all that for yourself now?
Thank goodness for Israeli wine from the upper Galilee. It is is so much better. Although I must say reading the details of the ten plagues would put anybody off their appetite.
You begin to see why the Jews and the Egyptians still don't get along.
I don't do it--we went to a community Seder and it was much the same; especially the children. There was not enough room for them to run around the table so they went into another room, from which we heard occasional cries and bursts of laughter.
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