Opinion

Some of us are spending Passover apart – but we are a people still together

Jewish people achieved the Exodus through strength of unity – and it’s a lesson that applies every bit as much today, says Israel’s acting ambassador to the UK

March 30, 2026 12:10
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MIAMI BEACH, FL - MARCH 25: People take part in eating matzo during a community Passover Seder at Beth Israel synagogue on March 25, 2013 in Miami Beach, Florida. The community Passover Seder that served around 150 people has been held for the past 30 years and is welcome to anyone in the community that wants to commemorate the emancipation of the Israelites from slavery in ancient Egypt. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
3 min read

This year, like many others, as Israel confronts an existential threat posed by the Iranian regime and ballistic rockets fill the skies of the Middle East, I will not be sitting around the Passover table with my family in Israel. I am not alone in that. Across Israel, the United Kingdom, and around the world, Jewish families are separated, yet preparing to mark the same festival of freedom and our shared historical path.

Passover is not just a historical commemoration. It is a living reminder of who we are, how we got here, and what it takes for us to remain free and secure. Even in the shadow of ongoing conflict, as we prepare to celebrate here in London, we are reminded why we are still fighting, and why we are still here.

There is an old Jewish joke around that is told around the seder table: they tried to kill us, we survived, let’s eat. It captures something essential about our story. Generation after generation, despite those who sought to destroy us, we have endured and defended our right to exist.

But this year, the story feels closer than usual. Beyond Operation Rising Lion, which will reshape the region and will bring stability and prosperity, there is another front, one much closer to home for Jews in the diaspora. It is the battle over the safety, legitimacy, and future of Jewish life outside Israel.

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