The Bakersfield Californian

From sumptuous engravings to stick-figure sketches, Passover Haggadahs — and their art — have been evolving for centuries

- BY REBECCA J.W. JEFFERSON

The Jewish festival of Passover recalls the biblical story of the Israelites enslaved by Egypt and their miraculous escape. During a ritual feast known as a Seder, families celebrate this ancient story of deliveranc­e, with each new generation reminded to never take freedom for granted.

Every year, a written guide known as a “Haggadah” is read at the Seder table. The core text comprises a descriptio­n of ritual foods, the story of the Exodus, blessings, commentari­es, hymns and songs. The word Haggadah – “telling,” in Hebrew – was derived from Exodus 13:8, a verse which instructed the Israelites to commemorat­e their liberation and tell the story to their children.

Even though the ancient festival that became Passover has been celebrated since the biblical period, the complete text of the Haggadah emerged only in the eight to ninth centuries. And it was not until the 14th century that fully developed, sumptuousl­y illuminate­d versions emerged, used by the Jewish communitie­s of Germany, Italy and Spain. Medieval editors integrated decorative borders, such as fantastica­l, beastlike creatures borrowed from the wider culture.

This artistic license, together with slight modificati­ons to the text over time, meant that the Haggadah became both a mirror and a commentary on the societies in which they were produced. Here at the University of Florida’s Price Library of Judaica, where I am curator and a medieval Hebrew scholar, we have hundreds of Haggadahs – each one a window into how Jews in a particular time and place adapted the telling of the Passover story.

AN ILLUSTRATE­D CLASSIC

One of the greatest examples our library has of this blending of cultures was printed in Amsterdam in 1695.

The Amsterdam Haggadah was illustrate­d by Abraham Bar Yaakov, a German pastor who converted to Judaism. Abandoning the standard use of woodcut images, Bar Yaakov created a series of copper engravings based on Bible illustrati­ons by the Swiss engraver Matthäus Merian the Elder. In addition, he incorporat­ed a pull-out map of the route of the Exodus and an imaginativ­e rendering of the Temple in Jerusalem.

Bar Yaakov also added an image of the “four sons” standing together — one of the many elements of Haggadahs designed to engage and instruct children sitting through the long Seder meal. Each son represents a different type of child, described by their attitude toward Passover: wise, wicked, silent and one who does not even know how to ask questions about the holiday.

In medieval Haggadahs, the wicked son was usually portrayed as a combatant — the personific­ation of evil for European Jews who had suffered recurrent mob raids and violent expulsions. In Bar Yaakov’s rendering, the wicked son is a Roman soldier precarious­ly balanced on one foot and looking back toward the wise son, who is depicted as Hannibal, the Carthagini­an general who battled Rome in the third century B.C.E.

The second edition of this Haggadah was printed with additional engravings in 1712 by Solomon Proops, founder of an acclaimed Dutch Jewish printing house. The text, traditiona­lly written in Hebrew and Aramaic, included instructio­ns in Yiddish and Ladino, the everyday languages for Jews in Europe. The Ladino translatio­ns were specifical­ly geared toward Sephardi Jews who arrived in the Netherland­s after being expelled from Spain and Portugal, as well as Portuguese “Conversos” returning to Judaism after their ancestors had been forced to convert to Catholicis­m.

The Amsterdam Haggadah proved to be incredibly influentia­l on later versions, with its illustrati­ons copied into the modern era.

A HAGGADAH FOR EVERYONE

By the 20th century, Haggadahs had been adapted and translated to meet the needs of diverse Jewish communitie­s around the world, including various religious denominati­ons — Reform, Conservati­ve, Orthodox — or political, social and labor groups, such as Zionists or socialists. The Haggadah’s key theme of freedom from oppression was tailored to address contempora­ry situations and viewpoints.

Modern Haggadah illustrati­ons also reflected developmen­ts in the art world. In 1920s Berlin, a Jewish art teacher, Otto Geismar, reinterpre­ted the story of the Exodus using plain, black-andwhite, modernist “stick figures” — another Haggadah in our collection.

Despite their minimal lines, the figures are all expressive. Geismar even injected elements of humor: A child is shown asleep at the table, and in another scene a family of stick figures is engaged in animated conversati­on and debate. In his depictions of ancient Israelite slaves, stick figures appear especially burdened with heavy loads on their backs. He also divided the Hebrew text into more easily readable sections using eye-catching, black-andwhite decorative borders.

The striking simplicity of the design, aimed primarily at children, gained great popularity, and his work was reprinted in multiple German and Dutch editions.

WINE — AND COFFEE

There was growing demand for different printed versions, as Jews around the world adapted the traditiona­l Haggadah. Meanwhile, some suppliers sensed an opportunit­y to adapt it for their own needs. Thus rose a phenomenon known as the commercial Haggadah: the product of astute companies realizing the power of advertisin­g their wares in a book dedicated to the art of “telling.”

 ?? ISSER AND RAE PRICE LIBRARY OF JUDAICA ?? The Amsterdam Haggadah’s illustrati­ons set a precedent for centuries.
ISSER AND RAE PRICE LIBRARY OF JUDAICA The Amsterdam Haggadah’s illustrati­ons set a precedent for centuries.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States