What is Freedom?: Reflections on Passover and Disability– Reposted and Recast from 2008
A good resource for learning about Pesach (Passover).
Here is a helpful reflection on Pesach titled: Passover: Why Redemptive Things Happen to Good People.
One of the questions from the article that I find interesting is:
Is freedom escape from pain or is it embracing our challenges and using them as a catapult for inner growth?
I would be interested to know how other people with disabilities experience the G-d of Pesach and what freedom looks like in the live of people with disabilities.
Reading this reflection and looking at the questions it poses Makes me want to share a reflection of my own:
I must first say that I am not Jewish, but as a person who identifies as a Christian with a disability I find resonance and hope in the story of the Passover. Because the Jewish community is about to begin the observance of Pesach I wanted to comment about the significance the holiday holds for me.
The story of passover has always had a resonance with me as a person who lives with a disability. The are ways people with disabilities are made disabled by the barriers communities erect. Some of these barriers include buildings without ramps and systems that do not prepare for the presence and participation of people with disabilities.
Some of the barriers to freedom also include the ways I erect barriers for myself that keep me from realizing the fullness of who G-d has called me to be.
In the light of this, I need to read and hear stories about a G-d who partners with people to overcome the ways we enslave ourselves and others. The G-d of the Passover is a G-d who hears and responds to the cries of G-d’s people.
The G-d of the passover is with us as we work to build communities where everyone, persons with and without disabilities, have opportunities to be who they are without the barriers of shame, inaccessibility, ignorance, fear, and isolation.
At Passover and everyday may we partner with G-d to be agents of liberation, hope, and possibility in communities where hopelessness too often rules the lives of too many.
What are the stories in your life that speak of the the journey you are making toward freedom?
Another helpful question may be to ask are there ways in which my actions and/or inactions are keeping others from freedom/liberation?





