Healing a Divided People

The Secret of the Afikoman

by: Rabbi YY Jacobson

Afikoman

For children, it is the highlight of the seder. Over the years they discovered that because the seder could not be concluded until this final piece of matzah is eaten, they could “steal” it in order to coerce their exhausted parents, desperate for sleep, into granting them whatever ridiculous demands they should choose to impose, hence the American idea of “Afikoman presents.” For adults, it just seems like an ingenious trick to give kids an authorized “recess,” a chance to run around and have fun while at the same time keeping them involved in what is happening at the table.

 

What is the Afikoman?

 

One of the first things we do at the Passover seder, following Kiddush and Karpas, is “Yachatz” which is the breaking of the matzah. Typically a matzah will break into two incongruent pieces. The larger piece, the Afikoman, which literally means “desert,” is stowed away, to be saved for later, and the smaller piece is set in front of us. It is on this smaller piece, that we now recite the entire Haggadah. Many of the most crucial and integral parts of the seder experience are prefaced with the instruction: “Uncover the broken matzah” or “raise up the broken matzah.” This matzah, precisely because it is small and broken, aptly represents our “bread of affliction,” and “the food of poverty.” It is the quintessential matzah, and it plays a leading role throughout the seder drama. If the seder were a play, this would be one of the main actors. Finally, after concluding the recitation of the entire Haggadah, it is the first thing eaten, and with it we fulfill our biblical obligation of eating matzah. 

 

The larger piece, meanwhile, is hidden away, sidelined and absent; it must wait patiently until its return much later into the night. Only after reciting the Haggadah, after eating matzah, maror, korech, the egg, and after the entire holiday meal do we remember it and retrieve it from its hiding place, and this becomes our “dessert.” Preferably, it is the last thing to be eaten that night so that we sleep with the taste of matzah lingering in our mouths and in our memories. Although seemingly relegated to a secondary part in the play, and cast into some sort of supporting role, the Afikoman is just as integral, crucial, and necessary to the seder experience as its “younger brother.” Our Sages tell us, “ain maftirin ad acharei hapesach afikoman,” meaning “The seder cannot be concluded without the Afikoman.” It also replaces and represents what was the biblical highlight of the seder, the Pascal sacrifice.

 

A Tale of Two Matzos

The Passover story—enslavement followed by liberty—is the eternal story of the Jew. “For not only once did they stand up against us to destroy us, rather in every generation they attempt this again. And only G-d saves us from their hands,” we state in the Haggadah.

 

It is fascinating to observe the prestigious place the seder held and continues to hold in the lives of so many Jews. More Jews conduct some form of Passover Seder than attend even High Holiday services. The seder strikes a chord deep within us. Many of our warmest and fondest childhood memories were created at our parent’s seder table. Somehow the Jew feels that he or she cannot ignore the seder story; it is our personal story as individuals and as a people.

 

Now we can understand the deeper symbolism behind the breaking and separation of the matzah. Perhaps the matzah represents the Jewish people, the Congregation of Israel, who throughout history have continuously been crushed, flattened and humbled (like matzah), and have been given to eat the “bread of poverty,” the “bread of affliction.” Time and time again we were not allowed to wait until our dough rose, we had to take the wandering stick and leave with nothing but “matzah,” literally and figuratively.

 

The Division


But for a long time now, our matzah has been divided; we are a divided people. One part of our people, the smaller part of our matzah to be sure, still stubbornly sits at the “seder table,” they sit around the table of their ancestors, following the traditions, continuing the rituals, studying the laws and telling the story. This is the smaller part of the matzah, the minority of our people, which refuses to get up of from the Passover table and find other alternatives for life and for happiness. Yes, they sometimes sit there with closed eyes, half asleep, but they are present. These are the Jews who wake up each morning remembering that we are part of a long narrative—beginning with Abraham, culminating with Moshiach—and we ought to live our lives inspired by this narrative. They don a tallis, wrap tefilin, go to the synagogue, pray to G-d, and send their children to Jewish schools to receive an intense Torah education. These are the Jews who celebrate Shabbos, eat kosher, would not eat a meal outside of a Sukkah, or wear a garment made of wool and linen.  

 

The larger part of the matzah—the majority of our people—have wandered from the seder table, into foreign pastures. They have found alternatives to Torah. Indeed, most of our nation remains ignorant and in many ways apathetic to our heritage and its wisdom, millions of our brethren people feel alienated from our people and its story.

 

And we can identify the moment in history when the matzah was “split.”

 

Around 250 years ago, with the French Revolution, and what was known as the age of “Enlightenment,” or “The Age of Reason,” the shtetl walls crumbled and many, indeed the majority, of Jews have ultimately said goodbye to their ancient ideology in lieu of the leading ideologies of the day. Voltaire replaced Moses; Rousseau replaced Rashi. Kant and Nietzsche supplanted Abaye and Rava. In France and Germany, enlightenment led to alienation of hundreds of thousands of Jews from tradition. Some decades later, in Eastern Europe, millions of Jews bid farewell to the Torah for a host of new “isms” that seemed far more promising than ancient Juda-ism.

 

Secular Zionistic nationalism, for example, captured the imagination of countless young Jews, substituting a transcendent G-d with a concerete homeland. In Russia, Jews flocked to found and support Marxism, communism and socialism. In America, over one million Jews assimilated between 1840 and 1930 alone. In the last few decades in the USA, we lost another million of our children.


And the split of the matzah continues. We continue to be a divided people. The small part of the matzah often looks with disdain at the larger piece of the matzah: “I am at the seder table; you are lost and estranged;” while the big part of the matzah often looks at the small piece of matzah with bewilderment and pity, wondering how it manages to remain so isolated and detached from modernity and the new world.

 

Here we will discover the secret of the Afikoman. Open your hearts…

 

The Rebbe’s Calling

This coming Tuesday marks the 110th birthday of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (1902-1994), who was born on the 11th of Nissan, April 18, in 1902, in the Ukraine, just days before Passover. Growing up at the height of the revolutions which swept the world and captured the hearts and souls of millions of Jews, the Lubavitcher Rebbe observed first hand the “matzah” being split, fragmented, broken, and then almost completely consumed by the flames of Stalinism and Nazism.

 

Providence had the soul of the Lubavitcher Rebbe grace our world a few days before the seder, perhaps because his life’s message captured the great story of the afikoman.

 

What was the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s message for our generation?

 

That the larger part of the matzah may be absent from our seder table, but it is our Afikoman; that our matzah may be divided, but we are still one matzah. Millions of Jews may be absent from the seder table, but they may never be forgotten. Most importantly: we cannot conclude our seder if we do not bring back the larger piece of matzah which has been gone from the seder table.

 

The small piece of matzah will never be capable of reaching the culmination its seder if it will not reach out to its brother-matzah and bring it back to the seder table, recognizing the truth that we are one people and each of us has a place of dignity at the eternal table of Jewish history and consciousness.

This, the Lubavitcher Rebbe believed, was the mission of our time. The seder is almost complete, the story is almost finished. Moshiach is at our doorstep. The meal has been eaten, and we have had our share of maror, of bitter herbs and suffering. And now we must remember the Afikoman. We must search for the afikoman, and with much love and sensitivity bring it back to the table, and let it reunite with its own essence, with its own story, with its own soul.

 

At times the Afikoman is hard to locate, the assimilated Jew is difficult to identify. Sometimes he struggles to even identify himself. But at the end of the night, at the end of this exile, he will return, to listen to the story of the Exodus, to take part in the mitzvah and pass it along to his own children. For no Jew will be left behind.

 

Only then will we be able to conclude our journey and truly be “Next year in Jerusalem.”

My thanks to Rabbi Zalman Schmukler (Los Angeles) for sharing the nucleus of the above idea, and to Rabbi Avi Shlomo for his assistance in transcribing this essay.


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Comments (11)

Divided matzah

Tuesday, Apr 12 2011 - ח' ניסן תשע"א
Barry
I enjoyed your essay. I believe that people in both halves need to try to respect and understand each other, because the world is a tough place, and united we will stand, divided we will fall.
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two halves

Tuesday, Apr 12 2011 - ח' ניסן תשע"א
Silvia
Heartwarming, healing message. Beautiful!
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Forgetting Zion

Tuesday, Apr 12 2011 - ח' ניסן תשע"א
Isaac Ashkenazy
Very inspirational commentary, even emotional - thanks. Small/big reminder - that while a percentage of European Jewry and the historical "emanicipation" distanced Zion from their hearts; from Morrocco and all along North Africa, from Palestine, Turkey, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Afghanistan, Persia, South East Asia all the way to Shanghai - the Jewish community dedicatingly and bitterly "wept for Zion". What "modernity" might have distanced in the "mind" - the heart and soul still remembers - if not today - then tomorrow. (Not forgetting the multitude that joined other streams of religion and spirituality). And for those distanced souls - with "open hearts" let us leave the entrance to our home ajar on Seder Night. For eventually it will be "in each individuals" "humility" and "un-egoistical love" (that we follow ardently for thousands of years since the Exodus) that will eventually draw back our "not-so-distanced" brethrens in soul. It wont be the physical time that will correct - but the Creator and his spiritual love that he endows us with! Chag Sameach!
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Thank You

Tuesday, Apr 12 2011 - ח' ניסן תשע"א
Leah Weintraub
Thank you Rabbi Jacobson, for saying this, as it is, with such gentility and softness and kindness; with factual evidence and historical proof. You are very fortunate that you can call on the Rebbe's life and his teachings to inspire and educate. We are very fortunate that you and all the Chabad Shluchim around the world, are his true emissaries. May all who WILL eat of the Afikomen this Pesach reach deep into what you say here, and continue to use the larger piece of the "puzzle" to bring our people, and all mankind, home. L 'shana haba'a b'Yerushalayim.
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Re: Thank You

Friday, Apr 15 2011 - י"א ניסן תשע"א
Michale
L 'shana haba'a b'Yerushalayim.
לשנה הבאה בירושלים I am here already! A lot American are coming this summer too.

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thank you Rabbi Jacobson

Wednesday, Apr 13 2011 - ט' ניסן תשע"א
Yehudis
Beautiful.And if I may bring to front the fact that it is the chilren that bring back the afikoman to the seder table.. The Rebbe has given the job over to each one of us,even if one may feel like he is much too young,inexpirienced or ignorant to inspire a jewish brother or sister to come back,remember it tis the children ,that have sincerety and pure emuna ,that do the job.May we indeed get the "dessert" now!
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To Yehudis

Friday, Apr 15 2011 - י"א ניסן תשע"א
:)
You make a good point "tis the children" who bring the afikoman.
V'haishiv lev avot al banim. Its happening.
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Even Lubavitchers have to remember this!

Monday, Apr 18 2011 - י"ד ניסן תשע"א
tzipi glick
beautiful essay. made me cry. WE ARE ONE! And each jew is so precious and essential. So we all have to REALLY accept and love every Jew and understand that a secular kibbutznik or a totally assimilated Jew in LA is doing a mitzva that is so dear to Hash-m.
Thank you Rabbi jacobson.
Have a wonderful Pesach!
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Typo

Friday, Mar 30 2012 - ז' ניסן תשע"ב
Avremel Blesofsky
"This coming Tuesday marks the 1109th birthday" "1109th" should be 110th. A Kosher un freilichin Pesach.
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Re: Typo

Friday, Mar 30 2012 - ז' ניסן תשע"ב
Rabbi YY Jacobson
Thank you. We fixed it
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now I get it!

Friday, Mar 30 2012 - ז' ניסן תשע"ב
Malka
I  have never heard an explanation of the significance of the 2 pieces of "yachatz" before, aside from the obvious practical explanation, and it was over 35 years ago that the Rebbe so lovingly pulled me out of the cold secular world into the warm world of Torah though Chabad.  And this explanation, WOW!!!  I'm a really big fan  of YY Jacobson, but sometimes, like now, he's over the top!

Let's give the Rebbe the ultimate birthday present this Yud Aleph Nissan (or even before...)--let's get our act together, totally, and end this galus.  Oh, to be reunited with the Rebbe, and to offer the korban Pesach in the third, final, and everlasting Bais Hamigdash!!

 A kosher and freilichen Pesach to everyone!!  
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