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<h1>Shefokh Chamatekha in Art</h1>
 
<h1>Shefokh Chamatekha in Art</h1>
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<div class="overview">
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<h2>Introduction</h2>
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<p>At the Seder, immediately before reciting the second part of the Hallel, several verses<fn>See below that there are varying customs as to the number and identity of these verses.</fn> are read which call for Divine revenge on the nations which are the enemies of Israel.  The first of these begins with, "Pour out Your wrath upon the nations" ("שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ אֶל הַגּוֹיִם"). The three Haggadot shown here, the Washington Haggadah,<fn>The Haggadah is signed by Joel ben Simon, also known as Feibush Ashkenazi, a scribe and illuminator active in Germany and Italy in the second half of the 15th century. Simon writes that the Haggadah was completed on the 25th of Shevat, 5238, or January 29, 1478.  It was given to the United States Library of Congress in 1916 and is known as the Washington Haggadah in honor of the US capital.</fn> the Sassoon Haggadah,<fn>This Haggadah dates to the first half of the 14th century and is of French-Provencal origin. It is part of the Israel Museum collection.</fn> and the Mantua Haggadah,<fn>This Haggadah is one of the earliest illustrated printed editions, published in 1560 and again in 1568.  It reproduced the text of the Prague Haggadah of 1526, but introduced new illustrations and marginal decorations reflecting Italian styles.  It is housed in the Israel Museum.</fn> all illustrate this passage. While both the Washington and Mantua Haggadot share similar iconography and connect "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ" to Messianic times, the Sassoon Haggadah illustrates a more literal reading of the passage, depicting a cup being poured over several figures' heads.  The artists' choices suggest both different interpretations of this section of the Haggadah and varying customs related to it.</p>
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<category>Contrasting Images
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<subcategory name="">Washington Haggadah
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<p>The upper two thirds of the page are devoted to the ornamented "שְׁפֹךְ" and the continuation of the verse, while the bottom contains a rich scene of the coming of Mashiach, or perhaps Eliyahu the Prophet.  The harbinger of redemption is depicted carrying an entire family on his ass as he approaches the city.  One of the riders lifts a cup in her hand.  The others grasp tightly to one another while a child is humorously depicted catching a ride by holding the donkey's tail. In the left foreground, a man stands by his open door, greeting the redeemer with a raised cup.</p>
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<subcategory name="">Sassoon Haggadah
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<p>This Haggadah, like the others here, decorates the word "שְׁפֹךְ", in this case with large gold lettering.  Here, though, the accompanying illustration surrounds the word "שְׁפֹךְ" rather than being in a separate scene below.<fn>This may be because the word "שְׁפֹךְ" is much more central to the Sassoon Haggadah's rendering of the passage.</fn>  An angel is depicted pouring a fiery red substance into the cups of several figures, presumably representatives of the nations "who do not know [Hashem]" which are mentioned in the verse.<fn>The bottom half of the page (not shown in the image here), contains the rest of this single verse from Tehillim and then proceeds to the chapters of Hallel.  A marginal note, though, adds several more verses calling for vengeance on the nations.</fn></p>
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</subcategory>
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<subcategory name="">Mantua Haggadah
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<p>In this Haggadah, next to the verses calling for Hashem to pour out his anger, there is an image of an armored man wielding a spear. As in the Washington Haggadah, under the verses there is a scene of the Mashiach's arrival.  Here, he is depicted riding a donkey, while Eliyahu blows a shofar behind him.  They approach a gated house but nobody comes out to greet them.</p>
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</subcategory>
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</category>
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<category>Relationship to the Text of the Haggadah
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<p>The artists' choices reflect certain ambiguities in the text of the Haggadah and different possible interpretive stances:</p>
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<subcategory name="">Mashiach or Cups of Wrath
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<p>The opening verse of "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ"&#8206;<fn>See below that some Haggadot have more than one verse.</fn> calls on Hashem to pour out His wrath on the nations.  What, though, does this entail?  Both the Mantua and Washington Haggadot illustrate the passage with an image of the arrival of Eliyahu and/or the Mashiach, while the Sassoon Haggadah opts instead to depict a celestial figure pouring a fiery red liquid into cups being held by several people. How is each rendering the passage, and what connection do their illustrations have to Hashem's wrath?</p>
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<p>While all three Haggadot appear to understand the verse to be referring to Messianic Era,<fn>This is true of most commentators, though a minority understands the verse differently.  See <multilink><a href="RYehudabYakar" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda b. Yakar</a><a href="RYehudabYakar" data-aht="source">Haggadah Shel Pesach</a><a href="R. Yehuda b. Yakar" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yehuda b. Yakar</a></multilink> who instead associates it with the events of the Exodus itself.</fn> each attempts in its own way to avoid a graphic depiction of the consequences of Hashem's exacting retribution from the heathen nations. The Washington and Mantua Haggadot accomplish this by focusing on the positive and redemptive aspects of Messianic times, portraying merely the redeemer's arrival and ignoring the verse's explicit beseeching of Hashem to avenge His honor by subduing the nations.</p>
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<p>In contrast, the Sassoon Haggadah adopts a more subtle approach.  It appears to link the "חֵמָה" in our verse to the prophecy in <a href="Yirmeyahu25-15" data-aht="source">Yirmeyahu 25</a>, where the prophet is instructed to compel the enemy nations to drink a "wine cup of wrath" ("כּוֹס הַיַּיִן הַחֵמָה") which portends their destruction.<fn>Similar imagery appears also in <a href="Yeshayahu51-17" data-aht="source">Yeshayahu 51:17-23</a>, <a href="Yirmeyahu51-7" data-aht="source">Yirmeyahu 51:7</a>, <a href="Tehillim75-9" data-aht="source">Tehillim 75:9</a>, and <a href="Eikhah4-21" data-aht="source">Eikhah 4:21</a>.</fn>  Hashem's "pouring of his wrath upon the nations" thus becomes an image and metaphor, albeit one laden with implications.<fn>A connection between the Pesach Seder and the verse in Yirmeyahu and its parallel verses cited in the note above is made already by the <multilink><a href="YerushalmiPesachim10-1" data-aht="source">Yerushalmi Pesachim 10:1</a><a href="YerushalmiPesachim10-1" data-aht="source">Pesachim 10:1</a><a href="Yerushalmi" data-aht="parshan">About the Yerushalmi</a></multilink>.  The Yerushalmi cites these verses in support of its explanation that the four cups of wine symbolize the four cups of misfortune that Hashem is to give the enemy nations to drink.  See also the <multilink><a href="OrchotChayyim" data-aht="source">Orchot Chayyim</a><a href="OrchotChayyim" data-aht="source">Seder Leil Pesach</a><a href="Orchot Chayyim" data-aht="parshan">About Orchot Chayyim</a></multilink>, <multilink><a href="RitvaHaggadah" data-aht="source">Ritva</a><a href="RitvaHaggadah" data-aht="source">Haggadah Shel Pesach</a><a href="R. Yom Tov b. Ashbel (Ritva)" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yom Tov b. Ashbel</a></multilink>, and <multilink><a href="AvudrahamHaggadah" data-aht="source">Avudraham</a><a href="AvudrahamHaggadah" data-aht="source">Haggadah Shel Pesach</a><a href="R. David Avudraham" data-aht="parshan">About R. David Avudraham</a></multilink> who all suggest that, for this very reason, the passage of "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ" is chanted immediately following the pouring of the fourth cup.  Other opinions maintain that the cup is poured only after this passage is recited.</fn></p>
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<subcategory name="">Warring Nations?
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<p>In the Mantua Haggadah, the figure representing the evil nations is a warrior dressed in armor and holds a spear.  In contrast, in the Sassoon Haggadah, the people of the nations are dressed in regular garb, with no suggestion of any militant motives.<fn>See above that the Washington Haggadah does not depict the nations or allude to their punishment at all.</fn>  Is there any significance to this distinction?</p>
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<p>It is possible that the Mantua Haggadah is supplying the reason for the vengeance mentioned in the verse; the heathen nations, not only "do not recognize Hashem", but they have also tried to destroy the Nation of Israel.  This reasoning is in fact stated explicitly in the very next verse in Tehillim, "כִּי אָכַל אֶת יַעֲקֹב וְאֶת נָוֵהוּ הֵשַׁמּוּ".&#8206;<fn>While this second verse is not found in any of the three Haggadot here, it is included in the modern Ashkenazic rite (see more below).  Indeed, in the parallel verse of <a href="Yirmeyahu10-25" data-aht="source">Yirmeyahu 10:25</a>, the two verses are even combined into one.</fn> The Sassoon Haggadah, on the other hand, may find the reason (of not recognizing God or idolatry) given by the first verse to be sufficient.<fn>See <multilink><a href="RYehudabYakar" data-aht="source">R. Yehuda b. Yakar</a><a href="RYehudabYakar" data-aht="source">Haggadah Shel Pesach</a><a href="R. Yehuda b. Yakar" data-aht="parshan">About R. Yehuda b. Yakar</a></multilink> who claims that the nations referred to are the Egyptians who did not recognize Hashem's hand in Egypt and continued to curse Him as they pursued the Israelites.</fn></p>
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<subcategory name="">Opening the Door
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<p>Although each of the Washington and Mantua Haggadot depict the arrival of the Mashiach, only in the former does a person emerge from his door to greet him, holding a cup of wine.  The difference might reflect varying customs regarding the pouring of the "Cup of Eliyahu" and opening the door at this stage of the seder.  Although the custom of leaving the door ajar on the evening of the Seder dates to Geonic times, it was not always associated with "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ".&#8206;<fn><multilink><a href="RMatityahGaon" data-aht="source">R. Mattityah Gaon</a><a href="RMatityahGaon" data-aht="source">R. Mattityah Gaon</a><a href="R. Mattityah Gaon" data-aht="parshan">About R. Mattityah Gaon</a></multilink> (9th century) relates the custom to the inviting of the poor to join in the Seder, making no connection at all to Eliyahu.  <multilink><a href="RNissimGaon" data-aht="source">R. Nissim Gaon</a><a href="RNissimGaon" data-aht="source">R. Nissim Gaon</a><a href="R. Nissim Gaon" data-aht="parshan">About R. Nissim Gaon</a></multilink> (as quoted by the Rokeach) connects it to the coming of Eliyahu, but not to "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְך", noting that Pesach, being a "לֵיל שִׁמֻּרִים" is the time of redemption and  thus one should leave the door open (throughout the Seder) to be ready to greet the redeemer.  Later this reasoning became associated with opening the door specifically at "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְך".  See, for example, <multilink><a href="RamahOrachChayyim480" data-aht="source">R. Moshe Isserles</a><a href="RamahOrachChayyim480" data-aht="source">Haggahot HaRamah Orach Chayyim 480</a><a href="R. Moshe Isserles" data-aht="parshan">About R. Moshe Isserles</a></multilink> who states that we open the door at this point so as to merit the coming of the Mashiach and punishing of our enemies. In his Haggadah Sheleimah, R. Kasher brings other possible  reasons for opening the door at "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ", pointing to "some who say" that the custom actually started in an era of persecution, when Seder participants opened the door to check for informers before calling for calamities to befall their enemies.</fn> In fact, the Washington Haggadah is one of the earliest sources for the association!  Similarly, the Cup of Eliyahu might have originally served a practical function, only later to be associated with the coming of Eliyahu and the passage of "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ".&#8206;<fn>The cup is not mentioned at all amongst Geonim or Rishonim and first appears in halakhic literature in the fifteenth century.  One of the earliest to mention it is <multilink><a href="RZeligmanBengaPesachim1-11" data-aht="source">R. Zeligman Benga</a><a href="RZeligmanBengaPesachim1-11" data-aht="source">Pesachim 1:11</a><a href="Rabbi Zeligman Benga" data-aht="parshan">About Rabbi Zeligman Benga</a></multilink> in his comments on Pesachim.  He writes that he does not know the origin of the custom, but suggests that perhaps wine is poured for Eliyahu, since if he comes to the seder, he too will need a cup.  He neither mentions when this cup is poured, nor does he connect it to the passage of "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ". Others suggest that the cup had halakhic significance. <multilink><a href="PesachMeuvin182" data-aht="source">R. Chaim Benveniste</a><a href="PesachMeuvin182" data-aht="source">Pesach Meuvin 182</a><a href="Rabbi Chaim Benveniste" data-aht="parshan">About Rabbi Chaim Benveniste</a></multilink> connects it to the law that one is not allowed to drink from a cup which has wine remnants in it (כוס פגום). He explains that people, thus, had a custom to pour their leftovers into an empty cup in the middle of the table, which they called "the cup of Eliyahu". The Vilna Gaon, in contrast, connects it to the debate regarding whether or not to drink a fifth cup, suggesting that people poured one from doubt and declared that Eliyahu would act as a decisor in the debate when he arrived.</fn></p>
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<subcategory name="">The Verses
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<p>While the Washington Haggadah contains only one verse, from <a href="Tehillim79-6" data-aht="source">Tehillim 79:6</a>, the Mantua Haggadah adds two more verses, one from <a href="Tehillim69-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 69:25</a> and the other from <a href="Eikhah3-66" data-aht="source">Eikhah 3:66</a>.<fn>The Sassoon Haggadah has only a single verse like the Washington Haggadah, but in the marginal notes adds <a href="Tehillim69-25" data-aht="source">Tehillim 69:25</a>, <a href="Tehillim35-6" data-aht="source">35:6</a>, <a href="Tehillim69-23" data-aht="source">69:23</a> and <a href="Tehillim79-6" data-aht="source">79:7</a>.</fn>  The differences reflect varying customs as to what is said at this point.  The earliest custom seems to have been to say just one verse, but others were added in different communities over the years.  The custom of most Ashkenazic communities is to read four verses (<a href="Tehillim79-6" data-aht="source">Tehillim 79:6-7</a>,<fn>See above regarding the second verse of 79:7.</fn> <a href="Tehillim69-25" data-aht="source">69:25</a>, and <a href="Eikhah3-66" data-aht="source">Eikhah 3:66</a>), but some Northern French Haggadot contain as many as twelve.</p>
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Latest revision as of 01:47, 27 November 2016

Shefokh Chamatekha in Art

Introduction

At the Seder, immediately before reciting the second part of the Hallel, several verses1 are read which call for Divine revenge on the nations which are the enemies of Israel. The first of these begins with, "Pour out Your wrath upon the nations" ("שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ אֶל הַגּוֹיִם"). The three Haggadot shown here, the Washington Haggadah,2 the Sassoon Haggadah,3 and the Mantua Haggadah,4 all illustrate this passage. While both the Washington and Mantua Haggadot share similar iconography and connect "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ" to Messianic times, the Sassoon Haggadah illustrates a more literal reading of the passage, depicting a cup being poured over several figures' heads. The artists' choices suggest both different interpretations of this section of the Haggadah and varying customs related to it.

Contrasting Images

Washington Haggadah

The upper two thirds of the page are devoted to the ornamented "שְׁפֹךְ" and the continuation of the verse, while the bottom contains a rich scene of the coming of Mashiach, or perhaps Eliyahu the Prophet. The harbinger of redemption is depicted carrying an entire family on his ass as he approaches the city. One of the riders lifts a cup in her hand. The others grasp tightly to one another while a child is humorously depicted catching a ride by holding the donkey's tail. In the left foreground, a man stands by his open door, greeting the redeemer with a raised cup.

Sassoon Haggadah

This Haggadah, like the others here, decorates the word "שְׁפֹךְ", in this case with large gold lettering. Here, though, the accompanying illustration surrounds the word "שְׁפֹךְ" rather than being in a separate scene below.5 An angel is depicted pouring a fiery red substance into the cups of several figures, presumably representatives of the nations "who do not know [Hashem]" which are mentioned in the verse.6

Mantua Haggadah

In this Haggadah, next to the verses calling for Hashem to pour out his anger, there is an image of an armored man wielding a spear. As in the Washington Haggadah, under the verses there is a scene of the Mashiach's arrival. Here, he is depicted riding a donkey, while Eliyahu blows a shofar behind him. They approach a gated house but nobody comes out to greet them.

Relationship to the Text of the Haggadah

The artists' choices reflect certain ambiguities in the text of the Haggadah and different possible interpretive stances:

Mashiach or Cups of Wrath

The opening verse of "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ"‎7 calls on Hashem to pour out His wrath on the nations. What, though, does this entail? Both the Mantua and Washington Haggadot illustrate the passage with an image of the arrival of Eliyahu and/or the Mashiach, while the Sassoon Haggadah opts instead to depict a celestial figure pouring a fiery red liquid into cups being held by several people. How is each rendering the passage, and what connection do their illustrations have to Hashem's wrath?

While all three Haggadot appear to understand the verse to be referring to Messianic Era,8 each attempts in its own way to avoid a graphic depiction of the consequences of Hashem's exacting retribution from the heathen nations. The Washington and Mantua Haggadot accomplish this by focusing on the positive and redemptive aspects of Messianic times, portraying merely the redeemer's arrival and ignoring the verse's explicit beseeching of Hashem to avenge His honor by subduing the nations.

In contrast, the Sassoon Haggadah adopts a more subtle approach. It appears to link the "חֵמָה" in our verse to the prophecy in Yirmeyahu 25, where the prophet is instructed to compel the enemy nations to drink a "wine cup of wrath" ("כּוֹס הַיַּיִן הַחֵמָה") which portends their destruction.9 Hashem's "pouring of his wrath upon the nations" thus becomes an image and metaphor, albeit one laden with implications.10

Warring Nations?

In the Mantua Haggadah, the figure representing the evil nations is a warrior dressed in armor and holds a spear. In contrast, in the Sassoon Haggadah, the people of the nations are dressed in regular garb, with no suggestion of any militant motives.11 Is there any significance to this distinction?

It is possible that the Mantua Haggadah is supplying the reason for the vengeance mentioned in the verse; the heathen nations, not only "do not recognize Hashem", but they have also tried to destroy the Nation of Israel. This reasoning is in fact stated explicitly in the very next verse in Tehillim, "כִּי אָכַל אֶת יַעֲקֹב וְאֶת נָוֵהוּ הֵשַׁמּוּ".‎12 The Sassoon Haggadah, on the other hand, may find the reason (of not recognizing God or idolatry) given by the first verse to be sufficient.13

Opening the Door

Although each of the Washington and Mantua Haggadot depict the arrival of the Mashiach, only in the former does a person emerge from his door to greet him, holding a cup of wine. The difference might reflect varying customs regarding the pouring of the "Cup of Eliyahu" and opening the door at this stage of the seder. Although the custom of leaving the door ajar on the evening of the Seder dates to Geonic times, it was not always associated with "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ".‎14 In fact, the Washington Haggadah is one of the earliest sources for the association! Similarly, the Cup of Eliyahu might have originally served a practical function, only later to be associated with the coming of Eliyahu and the passage of "שְׁפֹךְ חֲמָתְךָ".‎15

The Verses

While the Washington Haggadah contains only one verse, from Tehillim 79:6, the Mantua Haggadah adds two more verses, one from Tehillim 69:25 and the other from Eikhah 3:66.16 The differences reflect varying customs as to what is said at this point. The earliest custom seems to have been to say just one verse, but others were added in different communities over the years. The custom of most Ashkenazic communities is to read four verses (Tehillim 79:6-7,17 69:25, and Eikhah 3:66), but some Northern French Haggadot contain as many as twelve.