Haggadot.com is now Recustom!
All your favorite Passover content from Haggadot.com is now here.
Explore Nirtzah
Mix-and-match
Explore content in our extensive library and pull it together into your own Jewish ritual booklet that honors and recognizes whatever life has brought your way.
Share a ritual
Add your own original content as a clip to our extensive library - a poem, blessing, or something else entirely. Someone out there is looking for exactly what only you can create.
Support us
with your donation.
Help us build moments of meaning and connection through home-based Jewish rituals.
Featured ritual books

In Every Generation: A Haggadah Supplement for 5784
Preview

showing
1-6
of
8788
Page
1
of
1465
Featured clips

In Every Generation: For Weeks I've Been Bleeding Poems
Preview
More
Nirtzah marks the conclusion of the seder. Our bellies are full, we have had several glasses of wine, we have told stories and sung songs, and now it is time for the evening to come to a close. At the end of the seder, we honor the tradition of declaring, “Next year in Jerusalem!”
For some people, the recitation of this phrase expresses the anticipation of rebuilding the Temple in Jerusalem and the return of the Messiah. For others, it is an affirmation of hope and of connectedness with Klal Yisrael, the whole of the Jewish community. Still others yearn for peace in Israel and for all those living in the Diaspora.
Though it comes at the end of the seder, this moment also marks a beginning. We are beginning the next season with a renewed awareness of the freedoms we enjoy and the obstacles we must still confront. We are looking forward to the time that we gather together again. Having retold stories of the Jewish people, recalled historic movements of liberation, and reflected on the struggles people still face for freedom and equality, we are ready to embark on a year that we hope will bring positive change in the world and freedom to people everywhere.
In The Leader's Guide to the Family Participation Haggadah: A Different Night, Rabbi David Hartman writes: “Passover is the night for reckless dreams; for visions about what a human being can be, what society can be, what people can be, what history may become.”
What can we do to fulfill our reckless dreams? What will be our legacy for future generations?
Our seder is over, according to Jewish tradition and law. As we had the pleasure to gather for a seder this year, we hope to once again have the opportunity in the years to come.
לְשָׁנָה הַבָּאָה בִּירוּשָׁלָֽיִם
L’shana haba-ah biy’rushalayim
NEXT YEAR IN JERUSALEM!

In Every Generation: Next Year in Jerusalem--Messages of Hope
Preview
More
showing
1-6
of
67861
Page
1
of
11311