By

NWJew

Opinion

Passover is Finally Over

August 23, 2011 16:58
2 min read

Passover is finally over. The more religiously observant amongst you may find this a rather unusual statement to make in the middle of August, but this week I finally found the pizza cutter languishing at the back of a kitchen drawer where we throw all those daft things and tape up for the week of affliction. I marked the discovery by returning the boxes of Pesach crockery, cutlery and cooking utensils to the garage. They had been waiting patiently by the front door for me to perform the task. You’ll have gathered that it’s not something I see as a particular priority, but my wife had, a couple of days earlier, threatened to leave me if she tripped over the frying pan handle that protrudes from the opening of one of the boxes one more time.

August is not my record. A few years ago I succeeded in not returning the boxes for the entire year simply by hiding them under a large sheet. However, since we had the hall decorated Mrs J has put her foot down. Frankly, I don’t see the point of stowing it all away. It’s always such a balagan unpacking it all. Inevitably one box of particularly heavy items will collapse under its own weight and all for what, exactly? A week of eating off the tatty crockery we inherited from my grandmother, that’s what. It was tatty crockery when I was a child. Now the dog looks upon us with pity before turning back to eat from his shiny stainless steel bowl.

The almighty will, I hope, forgive me when I tell you that Pesach is my least favourite festival. It doesn’t even make my top ten. I’d happily do all the fasts instead of Pesach. In fact the only reason I don’t currently observe all the fasts is in anticipation that the Lord will somehow offer me the deal I have in mind. If nothing else, such an arrangement would free me from the havoc that Passover food plays with my constitution. Every morning for days I’m reminded of what a pitiful soul I have become.

Nothing drags on like Seder night, not even 25 hours without food, and from me that’s really saying something; I’m a man who doesn’t eat between meals, but only because I eat eight meals a day. Having to spend two nights in a row in the company of some fifty family members ranging from screaming overtired infants to snoring overtired geriatrics seems to be a more profound form of penitence than sitting in synagogue without food for a day. It’s on Seder night that I make my silent petition for forgiveness for the sins I must clearly have committed to be punished in such an excruciating way, not Yom Kippur.

To get more from opinion, click here to sign up for our free Editor's Picks newsletter.

Support the world’s oldest Jewish newspaper