Mah nishtana ha layla ha zeh? What is different about tonight? 

Tonight we enter Pesach. These are days that remind us of leaving Egypt. But on a deeper level, it is also a chag of doing Tshuva, of being liberated from our own slavery, our own Egypt. 

We read the same story of Exodus every single year in order to remind us not to repeat the same mistakes. 

At the beginning of the seder we are told to ask questions. Mah nishtana ha layla ha zeh? What is different about tonight?  But also, we ask questions about our religion, about ourselves and about all human beings.

For some religions, questions are frowned upon. "Accept G-d and just believe with blind faith." But in Judaism, even our Prophets ask questions! Take the Prophet Chabakuk for example:

"1:1The vision that Chabakuk the prophet saw. 2 How long, O God, will I call for help, and You will not hear? I cry out to You,“violence!” Yet You do not save. 3 Why do You make me see injustice, and force me to look at wickedness?"

We ask questions to better understand the world and to come closer to the truth. By asking questions we purify ourselves and do Tshuva. By asking questions we discover our true "I". 

So as we are all now seated at the Pesach seder, lets not waste any more time. May the asking of questions begin! 

Why do we eat matzah on Pesach?

מארק הושע נובאק


haggadah Section: -- Four Questions