Next Year In Jerusalem

Passover Amidst the Refugee Crisis

Gregory Uzelac
2 min readApr 11, 2017
‘The Shore’ (2017) (Original photo by Freedom House, Digital art by the author)

For generations in Diaspora, Pesach (Passover) beckoned a call from my people, the Jewish people, looking to a day when we could celebrate our freedom from Egyptian bondage within our homeland: “Next year in Jerusalem!” Since 1948 we have technically been able to do just that, but despite the modern luxury of Tel Aviv or the ability to visit the holy city, our homeland is still unsafe and therefore unfulfilled. This year, we continue to pray for an Israel where peace reigns instead of political and military belligerence.

Nevertheless, to have a safe homeland at all is a privilege in this day and age.

In 2017 there are millions of people in new diasporas, desperate to return to their homes, which have been overrun with violence and true evil. They simply cannot. It means certain death and despair.

South America is ravaged by poverty and violence. Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, and many West African states — these places have been torn asunder by forces far worse than the famine that forced my ancestors to flee to Egypt. And yet some people — and most embarrassingly some Jewish people — turn a blind eye.

What happened when the Egyptians saw us poor, “uncivilized” people at their gates? But for a brief moment of solace in the time of Joseph, the Egyptians enslaved us when we were refugees, fearful of what was foreign to them, and murdered our children in the name of national security. And after we finally were freed? We, a nation of former slaves, had to face bitter enemies refusing us entry to our own home.

To my fellow Jewish Americans and Westerners today, let us not follow the cruel example of the Egyptians of ancient times…

Read the full piece at The Times of Israel.

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Gregory Uzelac
Gregory Uzelac

Written by Gregory Uzelac

Writer & artist. New York-raised, Diaspora style. www.guzelac.com

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