Emor Project » GATEWAY TO TORAT HAYIM » GATEWAY TO MITZVOT OBSERVANCE » PESACH / PASSOVER » Seder & Haggada
Pesach Haggadah Ashkenaz, commonly used in Ashkenazi communities (available in Hebrew with English translations or full English transliteration)
Pesach Haggadah Edot Hamizrach, commonly used in Sephardic and Mizrachi communities (available in Hebrew with English translations)
The Jonathan Sacks Haggadah, published by Koren Jerusalem (available in Hebrew with English translation by Jessica Sacks)
Emor Project » GATEWAY TO TORAT HAYIM » GATEWAY TO MITZVOT OBSERVANCE » PESACH / PASSOVER » Seder & Haggada
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Havdala is the ceremony that marks the end of Shabbat and the transition back to the regular week. It includes blessings over wine, spices, and fire.
Havdala consists of the following stages:
The leader must drink at least a cheekful (approximately 44 cc). Ideally, a full revi’it (86 cc) is consumed, requiring an after-blessing.
Separation and Integration: Light and darkness represent distinct realms, as do sacred and mundane and Shabbat and the rest of the week. However, light illuminates the darkness, the holy illuminates the mundane, and Shabbat illuminates the rest of the week. Havdala demonstrates that these different realms must remain distinct but that Shabbat can impact the rest of the week, bridging sanctity with the material world.