Out of Egypt: A Last Passover in Alexandria

Despite the frantic packing and last-minute sale of all the furniture, my mother, my grandmother, and Aunt Elsa had decided we should hold a Passover seder on the eve of our departure. For this occasion, two giant candelabra would be brought in from the living room, and it was decided that the old sculptured candles should be used as well. No point…

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Aciman’s memoir chronicles the forced departure of Sephardic Jews who had called the cosmopolitan city of Alexandria, Egypt, home for hundreds of years. Unlike the European experience of persecution, which anchors the historical memory of American Jews, the story of the modern exodus from Egypt has a much more direct connection to the biblical narrative. The family debates whether and how to celebrate the Israelites’ joyous departure from Egypt while they prepare to leave their homeland for exile. The memoir captures the family's tension between feeling deeply at home in non-Jewish societies and remaining aware of their potentially precarious position as outsiders. 

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