Matzah with Meaning

Question

Dear Rabbi, what’s the idea of eating Matzah on Passover? Happy Passover!

0

Answers

  1. On the simplest level, the only difference between a loaf of bread and matzah is that bread is inflated and matzah is flat. Matzah is the food of a humble slave — someone who doesn’t have the time to let the bread rise and therefore eats food that leaves him feeling full for hours afterwards. For this reason, matzah is also called “the bread of affliction.” Matzah commemorates the bread of slavery that the Jewish People ate in Egypt. It was prepared in haste without the luxury of having time to let it rise.

    On a deeper level, the fact that the Jewish People ate matzah — slave food — at the moment of their exodus from slavery indicates that they were powerless to save themselves. They were slaves up until the very last moment — and they became free only through Divine intervention.

    Happy Passover to you as well!

    Best wishes from the AskTheRabbi.org Team