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    Urchatz - Dip Hands

    The beginning of the seder seems strange. We start with kiddush as we normally would when we begin any festive meal. Then we wash, but without a blessing, and break bread without eating it.What’s going on here?It seems that the ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Lisa Friedman
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  • Urchatz

    Urchatz- (Washing of the hands) According to the Jewish law we are obligated to ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Anna Lelonek
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  • Urchatz-- Washing Without Bles

    Why is this washing of the hands different than al ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Ben Herskowitz
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    Why wash hands before Karpas?

    Jewish law requires the ritual washing of the hands before eating bread. This washing is accompanied by a blessing. But why do we wash before eating the green vegetable and why in this case is no blessing recited?    ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Miriam Shaviv
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  • Urchatz

    Each person takes the water jug and washes the hands of the person next to them. ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Heather
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    URCHATZ

    We wash our hands, without saying the blessing. Each person washes the hand of the person next to her (pouring it over a bowl). Imagine that you are washing away all cynicism and despair, and allow yourself to be filled with the ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Rabbi Michael Lerner
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    Urchatz: Why Wash?

    Why Wash? Humorous Bangitout.com Let your HANDS take the first step, nose ahead, do the talking:  R' Yitzchak Mirsky, in his Hegyoni Halachah Haggadahi, writes about the significance of Urechatz--of the additional washin ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Michelle
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    Washing Our Hands

    In the Torah, only the priests of the Temple are commanded to wash, and only before they partake of the sacrificial meal. Today, we have no Temple in Jerusalem, no altar, no priests and no sacrifices. Instead, every home can be a ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by VBS
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    Wash the Hands

    Why do we wash our hands all the time? This washing, even though it is an official task of the Seder, is done without a blessing. It is strictly for cleanliness purposes. And why not? We're about to handle food. It seems so easy ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Mark Hurvitz
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    The First Hand Washing

    The first hand-washing of the seder is unusual. The rabbis point out that even a child would wonder at least two things: why do we wash without a blessing and why do we bother to wash when we will not be eating our meal for some t ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Kalsman Institute
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    First Handwashing

    Not Just Handwashing Ask for two volunteers: one to carry a pitcher of water and to pour water over each guest’s hands, and one to carry a basin and a towel. Use ice water to remember people who do not have warm water.  ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Rabbi Zoë Klein
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    THE ANONYMOUS HAGGADAH - Urcha

    URCHATZ      The Leader of the Seder only, now washes his/her hands from an ewer into a bowl held by another celebrant, wiping them dry on a hand towel. We have acce ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Jewish Alcoholics, Chemically Dependent Persons and Significant Others
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    Washing Before Eating Matza

    When we have been to a cemetery, it is customary to wash our hands before entering a building. It is a remnant of the Biblical idea that contact with the dead puts an individual into a different state. Purification by water is nec ...
    Urchatz
    contributed by Kalsman Institute
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    Urchatz

    Ritually wash hands without reciting the blessing.
    Urchatz
    contributed by Eileen Levinson
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