U.S. Investment in Israel Pays Off
More than foreign aid.
April 22, 2016
We owe a legacy of anger to the past.
In what might be the Haggadah’s least-politically-correct component, the door to the house is opened to welcome Elijah the prophet and a series of verses are read that begin with the line, “Pour at Your wrath on the nations who know You not.” David Wolpe explains why this passage ought not be skipped over, even if it sits uncomfortably with modern sensibilities:
More than foreign aid.
Does the region still matter?
We owe a legacy of anger to the past.
The regressive left at work.
Not a bad time for an Aryan artist.
In what might be the Haggadah’s least-politically-correct component, the door to the house is opened to welcome Elijah the prophet and a series of verses are read that begin with the line, “Pour at Your wrath on the nations who know You not.” David Wolpe explains why this passage ought not be skipped over, even if it sits uncomfortably with modern sensibilities:
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