Passover 5768
Celebrate Passover with Hillel at UCLA!
Hillel at UCLA is proud to offer a variety of programs and events for Passover. To find out more information, click on any of the links below and you will be directed to the appropriate page.
Regional Reform Passover Seder at USC
On Saturday night, April 19 at 6:30pm, we will celebrate Z’man Cheruteinu, the Season of our Freedom, at a community-wide Passover Seder. Led by Rabbi Jonathan Klein and members of the Los Angeles Jewish student community, our seder will feature memorable music, delicious food prepared by kosher caterer Kohava Yosef, and joyous customs which transport us back in time, to fulfill the commandment, “In each and every generation, one is obligated to see oneself as if s/he has left Egypt...” We will use the critically-acclaimed Haggadah, A Different Night, The Family Participation Haggadah. Besides the famous “Four Questions,” we hope you come with your own: How can I understand the depth of pain felt by slaves? Who are the enslaved today? Do I remember to enjoy my freedom? Discover the answers to these and other questions during our heimish/sweet Passover seder.
Cost - $20 students, $45 each Parents and family
Seder parking available at Hebrew Union College on Hoover St., North of 32nd St.
Traditional Seder at Hillel at UCLA
Hillel invites all students to join its traditional Passover Seders, led by Rabbi Aryeh and Sharona Kaplan, on Saturday night April 19th and Sunday night April 20th. The Seder, beginning at 8:30 pm each night, will last approximately 3 hours and will be an interactive celebration incorporating the recitation of the Haggadah, a festive holiday meal (at approximately 10:00pm), study and song. Students from all backgrounds are welcome to experience a classic Passover celebration at the Hillel at UCLA! Register now for Seders and meals!
The registration deadline has been extended!!! Due to popular demand and in the holiday spirit - we are waiving late fees. Register now for meals!!!
Passover Meals
Hillel at UCLA – Gindi Dining Center (2nd Floor)
BBC Café Catering
Lunch: 11:30 am – 2:00 pm
April 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25 & 27 (April 19 & 26 Shabbat lunch are free – but please register!)
$10.25/meal for registration by April 17th at 4 pm / late registration & walk-ins: $2.00 late fee per meal
Dinner: 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
April 21, 22, 23, 24 & 26 (April 18 & 25 Shabbat dinners are free – but please register!)
$12.75/meal for registration by April 17th at 4 pm / late registration & walk-ins: $2.00 late fee per meal
Please register at www.uclahillel.org/passovermeals
An alternative dinner get together for Sunday, April 27th will be taking the place of a formal dinner at Hillel. Please contact Rabbi Aryeh for more information. If you have already registered, please be aware that you have been refunded your donation.
Learn more about Passover here.
Passover Teaching by Rabbi Chaim Seidler-Feller

When one considers the debilitating and dehumanizing persecution and enslavement that Israel endured under the Egyptian rod, as per the Biblical narrative, it is remarkable that during the Seder’s commemoration of the Exodus, nary a word of self-pity nor a suggestion of vengeance towards our oppressors is uttered (consistent with Deuteronomy 23:8 – “You shall not abhor an Egyptian, for you were a stranger in his/her land.”). Rather the thrust of the Haggadah is to prod the celebrants to focus on the ba’avoor zeh –“for this purpose did God do for me when I went free from Egypt,” (Exodus 13:8). The clear message is that the suffering in Egypt and the subsequent redemption was for a purpose – to reach Sinai, where, by accepting the commandments, we assumed the obligation to remember that we were once strangers in a land not our own. This remembrance imposed upon us a mission: to eradicate slavery, to promote equality, especially for the vulnerable, and to pursue justice and righteousness. Instead of concentrating our attention on our experience of victimhood the Haggadah emphasizes the charge to develop a constructive memory that is socially transformative and personally liberating – “in every generation one is obligated to see oneself as one who personally went out from Egypt.” We bring to the world a grand vision of human equality and moral responsibility.
So too is it remarkable that merely three years after the conclusion of the most catastrophic episode in our history, the Jewish people determined that it would build a future and not wallow in the past. To emerge from the darkness of the Holocaust and to reconstruct ourselves as a nation and establish a state constituted nothing less than a miracle. It was a miracle that was accomplished by a people that was inspired by a tradition that taught the acceptance of responsibility and that memorialized the rejection of victimhood and survivalism in favor of renewal and renaissance. Purposive living in a Jewish state that would facilitate our national revival while we aspired to fulfill the dreams of the prophets was our goal. And it is precisely this miracle, this work in progress, our state of Israel, whose 60th anniversary we are celebrating this May.
But there is another story of renewal that we are witnessing these days: the rejuvenation of Jewish life on campus. It draws from the Passover a programmatic lesson to always remember and to act and it derives from modern Israel a collective sense of belonging to a family and a pride in the ideals and values that are essential to the Zionist endeavor. Here at UCLA this renaissance has meant that we have succeeded in doubling the number of students who participate in the Hillel program. This significant increase in breadth has been accompanied by an even greater growth in depth: more Hillel students are currently engaged in Jewish learning than at any prior time in our history. The community is both numerically larger and Judaically more knowledgeable. And the students have assumed complete responsibility for planning and organizing their programs.
So my friends your time to act is NOW. As we undertake our annual journey from Egypt to Sinai, from the freedom from subjugation to the freedom to make a difference, please think about your responsibility for the Jewish future and contribute generously to our successful and inspirational Hillel Center for Jewish Life at UCLA.
With blessings of renewal and redemption,
Chag Pesach Sameach v’Kasher,
Rabbi Chaim Seidler-Feller
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