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Playlist: Passover

Compiled By: Raymond Pang

Caption: PRX default Playlist image
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Two Moons

From KVNF | Part of the Mystics Almanac series | 05:53

Easter/Passover/Wesak: Freedom

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Two Moons
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The full moon in April marks Passover, the remembrance of the Hebrew's flight from slavery. Jesus transformed these Passover symbols to remember our flight from death. The next lunar cycle marks Wesak, honoring the major passages of Guatama Buddha's life. All three of these celebrations, over two lunar cycles, celebrate freedom: from slavery, death, and illusion.

Ladino Chorus Commemorates Passover by Keeping Endangered Language Alive

From Rhonda J. Miller | Part of the Ladino: The Endangered Language of the Spanish Jews series | 04:46

As Jews around the globe celebrate Passover to commemorate the exodus from slavery in Egypt, a community chorus in Los Angeles is keeping alive the language of another group of Jewish refugees - those who were expelled from Spain in 1492. They carried with them a Judeo-Spanish language called Ladino, which picked up words from the countries they crossed.

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As Jews around the globe celebrate Passover to commemorate the exodus from slavery in Egypt, a community chorus in Los Angeles is keeping alive the language of another group of Jewish refugees - those who were expelled from Spain in 1492.  They carried with them a Judeo-Spanish language called Ladino, which picked up words from Turkish, Italian, French, Hebrew and Arabic, as they traveled in search of more welcoming territory. Rhonda Miller has the story of a community chorus in Los Angeles singing to keep the endangered Ladino language alive.

We'll Be Here All Night

From Tablet Magazine | 59:00

Stories for Passover about family, slavery, food, and... well, lice.

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“We’ll Be Here All Night: Stories for Passover” is a one-hour Passover-themed special from Tablet Magazine’s National Magazine Award-winning podcast, Vox Tablet, and PRX.

The special features funny, poignant, and thought-provoking stories and conversations that touch on the plagues, on slavery, on food, on the act of story-telling and more, and are meant to appeal to people of all religious (and non-religious) backgrounds. Hosted by Sara Ivry (Vox Tablet) and Jonathan Goldstein (WireTap, This American Life), the show’s contributors include Israeli writer Etgar Keret, DC food historian Michael Twitty (Afroculinaria), and radio producers Sally Herships (Marketplace), Debbie Nathan (This American Life), and Jonathan Groubert (The State We’re In). The show was produced by Julie Subrin (Vox Tablet, The Next Big Thing) and mixed by Pejk Malinovski (Studio 360, The Next Big Thing).

In the first (A) segment of the show, hosts Sara and Jonathan briefly lay out the basics of the holiday of Passover, and then Jonathan speaks with writer and filmmaker Etgar Keret about the narrative strengths and weaknesses of the Passover story, from a Hollywood producer’s point of view, ending with an animated discussion of the ten plagues.

Next, Sally Herships takes us into the home of Abigail Rosenfeld, one of Brooklyn’s "lice ladies,” the women (usually Orthodox Jews) who make a living helping desperate parents rid their schoolchildren of this pest. Rosenfeld is therefore an expert on this plague which was visited upon the ancient Egyptians, though she’s quick to note that today’s lice bears little resemblance to the ones we read about in the Passover story.

In our B segment, Debbie Nathan shares a moving, probing, and funny story on learning that her Southern Jewish great-great-grandparents owned slaves in Mississippi, on the history of Jewish slave owners in the American South (with historian Stuart Rockoff, Mississippi Humanities Council), and on her elderly aunts and cousins' responses to this revelation.

In the final segment of the show, we hear from Michael Twitty, a Washington, DC based food historian and Jewish educator on how he's adapted one of Passover’s symbolic rituals to reflect his ancestors' slave history.

We also hear from Jonathan Groubert, a Brooklyn-raised radio journalist and host based in Amsterdam, as he recounts the joke his Sheepshead Bay dad used to tell at the seder every year.