From the Hartman Institute Promoted Podcast

How is this seder different from other seders? – with Dara Horn

A robust conversation on monotheism as a stand against tyranny, scapegoats, and what Horn sees as the overriding and abiding message of the holiday: hope

A Jewish family welcomes home their Navy man and gathers for a Passover Seder at their home in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1943. (Minnesota Historical Society/CORBIS/Corbis Historical via Getty Images)

Take a great story from the past, add an obligation to live that story as though you’re in it, multiply by the complexities of your closest relationships, add wine, subtract food, and you have a seder – good luck.

This week on Identity/Crisis, host Yehuda Kurtzer and Dara Horn, author of “One Little Goat: A Passover Catastrophe,” get us ready for Passover with a robust conversation on monotheism as a stand against tyranny, scapegoats, and what Horn sees as the overriding and abiding message of the holiday: hope.

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