Empty chairs for hostages as Israel at war marks Passover
The Hindu
Jerusalem Jews mark Passover with empty chairs for hostages, dampened by war and captivity, as freedom remains elusive
Jewish people marked April 22 the start of Passover, a celebration of freedom, and around many holiday tables in Israel chairs stood empty for hostages still held captive in Gaza.
The week-long Jewish festival, also known in Hebrew as the "holiday of freedom", celebrates the Israelites' liberation from Egyptian slavery, as told in the Bible.
Passover is traditionally observed with a seder: a holiday feast when families eat symbolic foods and read the Haggadah.
The more than millennium-old text recounts the Exodus and Jewish people's ties to, and their yearning to return to, the Holy Land.
For many this year, Passover will be stained by absence and anguish; particularly the relatives of the hostages, grieving families and more than 120,000 Israelis displaced from their homes in the north and south of the country because of the war in the Gaza Strip.
"All of the symbolic things we do at the seder will take on a much more profound and deep meaning this year," said Rachel Goldberg-Polin, whose son Hersh is one of the hostages.
"The bread of affliction, the bitter herbs, the saltwater that represents the tears of the Jewish people when they were in captivity, in slavery."