| How did our Karpas go from a coat to a vegetable? | | Print | |
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Kevin writes... To whom this may concern, I am creating my own Haggadah and after doing some research I came up with 2 questions on Ur'chatz and Karpas. I wanted to know if you would be able to answer them for me. Ur'chatz: Karpas: Thank you very much !!! Rabbi Isaac Levy responds... Cleanliness is next to Godliness, because the Hebrews lived in the darkness of slavery and had no enlightenment of Torah; so having the Israelites crossing the Red Sea was as if Adonai has purged them of their iniquity. A green vegetable or Karpas (in Hebrew) symbolizes the time of Spring. It also symbolizes the bitter times the Israelites had to endure in slavery. It is believed the stem of the lettuce is bitter and as it grows up from the ground, the leafy part begins to taste less bitter, which speaks of the transtition from slavery into freedom via the exodus from Egypt. The Karpas is dipped into salt water at the beginning in order to invoke the children asking the question, "why"? In closing , the Karpas has nothing to do with the coat of Yoseph; the rabbis like to "connect the dots" which in turn makes for a good story. |

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