I edit and print a Haggadah nearly every year (and have done this since 1976/5757). This year (2020/5780), for the first time in many years, I have updated and taken much (if not most) of the printed version and posted it here. This version differs from the printed version in a variety of ways.
Consider using this version of the Haggadah as a text you can have before you if you gather for a "virtual seder".
The electronic version can change at any time. You can read it both linearly and hypertextually. The hypertext links connect various parts of the Haggadah and they also lead out from the Haggadah to the rest of the WWW. The printed version is static and only changes (at most) annually. I designed it for linear reading at the Seder and includes songs activities and pages for drawing (or visualizations). The current (5779/2019) PDF version of the Haggadah is available as a free download. I have received orders from across the US and Canada, Israel, Australia and someone from South Africa even wrote to ask permission to download portions to use at his Seder. Friends have "subscribed" to the Haggadah, receiving a printed update each year a few weeks before Pesach.
The original 1997 Web version is available here.
I have recently begun to consider Pesach and the Seder as a pointer to Shavuot. We begin counting the Omer at Pesach. Many Omer calendars exist. I imagine a different one here. It follows the color wheel. If you begin counting in the upper right corner on the first day of Sefirah, you begin with the "bright red of rebellion" and end forty-nine days later at the "brilliant violet of royalty" ready to receive Torah. Each day of Sefirah we focus on that color (and its qualities) as it appears in our world.
Danyel Fisher, a second year graduate student in the Computer Sciences Department at UC Berkeley saw my Omer Calendar and accepted the challenge of creating the Javascript version that presents [ah, link rot!] a page of the appropriate color each day. I have lost contact with Danyel but hope to reconnect. Thank you! In the meantime, the good people at Bababanewz seem to have been able to implement the a-color-a-day Omer Calendar,
which served as part of the inspiration of the Omer Calendar in the Nisan issue of the hard copy of Babaganewz. Babaganewz has also borrowed "The Four Questions".
I express my sincere appreciation to the good people at Babaganewz, in particular: Ina Miller Lerman, Managing Editor and Sue Edelman, Web Editor for recognizing the value of these tools and encouraging their use elsewhere.
A recent review appears on the WWW.
The Haggadah (the 5756 edition) was written up in "Judaism on the Web" by Irving Green, 1999, MIS:Press, New York (sorry the link is no longer active).
A list of links to outside the Haggadah
Links to outside generally appear in a separate window so as not to disturb their display.
Buy your own copy of the printed Haggadah.
©Mark Hurvitz 2004
A Starting Point | |
Site last modified:
text (20/03/26)
internal links (98/06/03)
external links (98/02/23)
Number of visitors |
Number of visitors |
Number of visitors |
Number of visitors since |
Number of visitors since move to Davka.org unknown |
Visitors since 2007/03/01 - 04/17 (March 1, to April 17, 2007): 5,855
This Jewish Ring site Want to join the Jewish Ring? Click here for info. | |||||
Mark Hurvitz, | |||||||
| |||||||
Join: here... |