Beit Midrash
  • Shabbat and Holidays
  • Jewish Holidays
  • Passover - Pesach
קטגוריה משנית
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The Talmud quotes Rav Eliezer: "The Matzot are
grabbed on the night of Pesach so that the
children will not fall asleep." The Rambam says
that it is the parents who "grab" the Matza so
that "the children will see this & ask." In other
words, it is to pique their curiosity & help keep
them awake until the end of the Seder (when most
of the songs are sung!). In some families, the
adults hide the Afikoman but in other families it
is the children who take the Afikoman & hide it,
holding it "hostage" until the parents "trade" a
prize or a present for it (since technically the
Seder cannot end until the Afikoman is eaten).
Rav Rimon says that even when the adults are
tired by Seder’s end & forget about the Afikoman,
the kids will certainly remind them about it!
This is a sign that if we do our job
successfully, the next generation (i.e. our
children & grandchildren) will react positively
to Jewish tradition & continue the process of
passing on our traditions in the future, assuring our Geula - Redemption.
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