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Wednesday
Apr162008

148: PASSOVER Prayer Crosses 150 Years -- and Now Circles the World

Poet_dinah_berland
    We have several spiritual gifts for you today.

    If you're preparing for Passover, here's a prayer that crosses 150 years and has circled the globe to reach you. It was part of Fanny Neuda's Book of Prayers for Jewish Women -- the first complete prayer book for Jewish women ever published and, before the Holocaust, a huge influence in households across Europe.
    American poet Dinah Berland (at right) has found her own life deeply intertwined with Fanny's life. She has adapted Fanny's prayers for a modern, English-speaking audience and is allowing us to reproduce this particular prayer today. (Links to read more about Dinah, the prayer book and this unfolding global story appear below.)

    Plus, if you love Poetry, this is National Poetry Month (some cool poetry links are at the end of today's story, too). On Saturday, when Passover begins at sundown, the following prayer will be that day's featured poem on the Alfred A. Knopf Poem-A-Day Email service.
    We suspect that Saturday is so close to Passover -- plus it's sabbath for observant Jews -- so that you may want to be aware of this prayer and share it with others right now, before Passover starts on Saturday night. (If you want to get the free Poem-A-Day Email service from Knopf -- yes, we've linked to that, below, as well.)

In a profound way, poetry is sacred.
    It's the form in which much of the world's scriptures are voiced and endure to this day.
    Fanny's -- and now Dinah's -- contribution to that ongoing transmission of spiritual truth weaves important communities into our legacy of faith and poetry. In lines like these, the lives of nearly forgotten women are woven into our fabric, the lives of eastern European communities that now are extinct spring to life in these lines -- and, all of us are just a bit richer by having paused in these inspirational waters to let prayers that once were part of millions of lives -- live among us once again.

Hours_of_devotion_berland
Here, then, is Dinah's adaptation of Fanny's Prayer On the First Days of Passover:

Dear God, the festival of Passover has come --
The joyful feast memorializing the days of jubilee,
When you redeemed our ancestors
From inhuman oppression and carried them
With an outstretched hand
Into the beautiful land of liberty,
From the dark dwellings of error and false belief
Into the sunny realms of knowledge and the pure,
Gladdening faith in you and your divine word.

With deep emotion and joy, we celebrate this holiday,
Which reminds us of that happy time
When you chose Israel for your inheritance,
Elected her from all nations,
Wedded her to you as a bridegroom weds his bride
And bound her to you with the ties of grace and love --
The time when your people, in return, clung to you,
As a youthful bride to the heart of her beloved,
As a child to its mother's breast --
When they followed you, full of love and faithfulness
Into a strange, unknown land,
Followed you into a vast desert wilderness.

A long space of time has since passed,
And the heart of your people has often changed,
But your love has always remained the same.
You have been a help and refuge
To our ancestors from eternity,
A shield and a help to their children after them
Throughout all generations.
You are our guide, our protector, our guardian.
As you have been in all times.

Early_edition_of_fanny_neudas_praye
We have passed through more than one Egypt.
Hatred and prejudice have set
A heavy yoke around our necks,
But through the darkness of misery and oppression
A ray of your grace has continually shone above us
And has at last brought a morning of redemption
In which our human dignity is recognized
And we live free and undisturbed
Under the protection of mild and just laws.
Oh, may you, O God, continue to be with us.
As in the days when you burst the chains
In which we sighed, and with an awful hand
Broke the yoke of bondage and tyranny,
So may you deliver and redeem our souls
That they may rise above all attacks
From within or without.
As you hurled the many idols and gods of Egypt
From their altars, so may your boundless mercy
Release us from the idols that attract us today,
And let every cell and organ of our bodies be filled
With your incomparable, exalted and glorious being.
May we be thoroughly infused by faithfulness and love,
By unconditional, unwaivering confidence
And boundless attachment to you.
You are the shield and savior of every human being
As well as of whole nations.
You comfort them
In the midst of trouble and suffering.

Amen.

    Dinah closes her Preface to Fanny's prayer book with a plea:
    "May this book of prayers, which has survived for so long and through so much upheaval, continue to endure to bring comfort, healing, and renewal of spirit to all who use it."

    To that, we join in saying: Amen.

National_poetry_month
    WANT TO EXPLORE THIS STORY FURTHER?
    FIRST, here are some links to our coverage of poet Dinah Berland's globally significant work in recovering the long-lost gifts of Fanny Neuda's Book of Prayers.
    Here's our review of this new edition of Fanny's prayer book. It's also part of our Amazon store and you could order a copy, if you wish.
    Here's are very first story on how Fanny's book, adapted by Dinah, caught our attention.
    Here's David's Conversation With Dinah about her work with Fanny's book.
    Then, we included Dinah in a story about writers' "voices" -- around the time she debuted her new Web site.
    Finally, we also wrote about a ReadTheSpirit reader who felt a personal connection to Dinah's and Fanny's work.

    THEN, want to know more about National Poetry Month?
    Here's the main Academy of American Poets Web site -- and it's packed with resources, including a way to search for poetry readings in various parts of the country.

    OR, would you like to sign up for the Alfred A. Knopf / Borzoi Reader Poem-A-Day service?
    On the 19th, you'll get Dinah Berland's adaptation of Fanny Neuda's Passover prayer -- and you'll get so much more, if you love poetry, by the end of this special month. Here's the Borzoi Reader page to sign up for Poem-A-Day during National Poetry Month.

Ihm_sisters_oak_savanna_ecosystem_2
     ARE YOU LOOKING FOR OUR EARTH DAY INSPIRATIONAL READINGS?
    Monday and Tuesday, we published meditations by Sister Mary McCann, IHM.
    Then, on Wednesday, we started our PASSOVER series with a story about Rabbi Jamie Korngold's ministry in the wilderness -- AND we included links to two more of Sister Mary McCann's reflections.

    TELL US WHAT YOU THINK, please! Click on the "Comment" link at the end of the online version of this story -- or you can email ReadTheSpirit Editor David Crumm directly.

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