



A Family Haggadah II [Silberman, Rosalind, Kahn, Katherine Janus] on desertcart.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. A Family Haggadah II Review: Engaging and Accessible for All Ages - We’re now two years into using A Family Haggadah, and it’s been a fantastic upgrade from the PJ Library version. It strikes a great balance—engaging for kids while still meaningful for adults. I was able to lead a full seder using this Haggadah and still get everyone home by midnight! Highly recommend for families looking for something accessible, structured, and enjoyable for all ages. Review: Short and easy - Due to covid19 we did a virtual Seder this year. Because of the extenuating circumstances I thought these would be short precise and easy fir the kids. Thinking the adults were the happiest with the abbreviated Seder lol. Would recommend for whomever has needs of a shortened version of the Seder.


































| Best Sellers Rank | #346,724 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #23 in Haggadahs #39 in Jewish Holidays (Books) #100 in Jewish Life (Books) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars (210) |
| Dimensions | 6 x 0.3 x 9 inches |
| Edition | 0 |
| Grade level | 3 - 5 |
| ISBN-10 | 0761352112 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0761352112 |
| Item Weight | 4.8 ounces |
| Language | English |
| Part of series | Haggadahs |
| Print length | 64 pages |
| Publication date | January 1, 2010 |
| Publisher | Kar-Ben Publishing ® |
| Reading age | 8 - 11 years |
D**I
Engaging and Accessible for All Ages
We’re now two years into using A Family Haggadah, and it’s been a fantastic upgrade from the PJ Library version. It strikes a great balance—engaging for kids while still meaningful for adults. I was able to lead a full seder using this Haggadah and still get everyone home by midnight! Highly recommend for families looking for something accessible, structured, and enjoyable for all ages.
C**Y
Short and easy
Due to covid19 we did a virtual Seder this year. Because of the extenuating circumstances I thought these would be short precise and easy fir the kids. Thinking the adults were the happiest with the abbreviated Seder lol. Would recommend for whomever has needs of a shortened version of the Seder.
S**Y
Wonderful Haggadah
We really enjoyed this Haggadah. We changed to this new one after using the same one for 25yrs. This Family one was very easy to navigate. It’s also very kid friendly and that’s what Passover should be. It’s a short Haggadah meaning your service won’t be long.
D**A
I liked this one.
Simple, easy to follow book. Nice pictures. I like that it includes a brief story of Passover. Everything is in here, just in a simple, brief format. You can skip sections if you want, and read what you want. Plus, there are sort of discussion questions on the left hand page if you want to think more deeply about the seder. This book seems to include some pieces that more religious people would look for like hand washing and full grace after meals. I'm not that religious but the format of this book allows us to easily skip the parts we don't want to do. I like that it includes some of our favorite end of seder songs like One Kid and Who Knows One?
L**Z
Engaging and relevant Haggadah
We enjoyed this Haggadah because it is relevant to our lives today, pulling in the young adults with questions about how Passover relates to our lives and with suggestions for varied meanings of the Passover symbols. For example, after reading through the page about the Four Sons, we were asked if we had different opinions about what that represented than was written in the book. Passover is about freedom, so I chose this Haggadah because the typical Haggadahs seemed stuck in the old patterns that didn't engage us or stimulate our minds. This Haggadah helps everyone to participate willingly and eagerly in the Seder. The pictures are beautiful, too.
A**R
Great buy for bilingual families. Especially if you’re not deep into all the ‘heavy’ details
We bought it this year for our family and it was a huge success. Our Hebrew speaking kids could decide which language they wanted to read and our English speaking son went for the ‘easy’ English version. We all enjoyed this Seder more than any other year due to this addition to our table. Highly recommended.
C**S
Fantastic ~ I bought these as an upgrade to the ...
Fantastic ~ I bought these as an upgrade to the ones we've been using that my kids made in Sunday school 10 years ago....time for an updated sedar for young teenagers. The books are pretty, content is easy to follow, nice pictures and the perfect length service for our family.
K**.
Love this Haggadah!
My family has spent the last several years looking for a replacement for the Union Haggadah that my father bought in the early 80's. After purchasing and using several we fell in love with the 1st edition and kept going back to it. The 2nd edition is even better. Highly recommended for any Reform or even Conservative Jews that want something that is easily interactive with the kids and keeps them as entertained as any Haggadah I've seen.
A**A
I have several different Haggadahs and by far this is the best for me. It's easy to follow and even tells you "when" to eat or drink the next food/drink. Some Haggadah don't tell you "when". I do highly recommend this book. I also like the art/graphics and the lay out.
M**8
A really nice Haggadah; finally bought 12 and we all read from the same book, breaking a family tradition that goes back to 1890. Everyone loved it, for clarity, explanations, transliterations etc without detracting from the Story. Very suitable for families with mixed Hebrew capabilities. Now if they just added a CD with all the tunes - would be unbeatable.
B**.
Clear and thorough
M**Y
Very useful
K**R
I bought this book alongside its sister book, edition 1 'for families with young children'. On the plus side, this has more Hebrew than edition 1, but again whole sections are presented only in English which makes it hard for kids at a Seder wheretheadults are doing a fair amount in Hebrew. These 2 books are overly modern and make it harder, not easier, to run a Seder with kids. I ran a Seder with kids aged 7,5 and 2. Here,s why I wish I had not bought either book. 1. Both books insert far too many modernisms right into the heart of the text. I have nothing against progress and innovation, but this is a text that hasn't changed for 2000 years, and where many guests will be using their own versions of the Haggadah. So it's pointless and disruptive to add a tradition or a prayer into the heart of the narrative, as the kids reading this book will be confused as to why, for instance, everyone else thinks the Seder has finished after 4 cups of wine when this book asks you to sing Hatikvah and drink a 5th. Nice Idea. Nice innovation. Worthy of a footnote but not inclusion into the text itself. 2. The 2 books don't work together. They focus in, and skip out, different parts of the Seder. My 7 year old reading this would be unable to communicate with her brother, aged 5, reading edition 1, as to where they are in the service and what comes next. 3. BIG WARNING. This book stupidly, thoughtlessly, and totally inappropriately, introduces the Holocaust to the Seder table. As an example of a modernism introduced for benign reasons but with bad consequences, you cannot get much better than this. Essentially, midway through the Seder, there is a page with a huge cartoon of skinny people wearing striped pyjamas. The action suggested underneath is 'to pause to reflect on the Holocaust'. There is a pretty dull quote from a rabbi at Bergen-Belsen. Let's get one thing straight. My family lost people in the Holocaust. And as a father of 3, living in a Europe where the Germans are Meant to be a friendly, modern nation, I really struggle with how to educate my kids on the notion of the systematic murder of people like them, by our new allies and partners, all happening in the lifetime of their grandparents. But the Seder is the WRONG place to have this conversation. I would not mind if it were presented as a footnote, so that people who wanted to pause and consider theHolocaust coud do so. But the damn cartoon makes it impossible that bright, interested children will not stop to ask questions. Given that most people don't examine a Haggadah properly before Seder Night, this left me as a parent totally unprepared and genuinely shocked. Maybe it's less shocking for an American audience, but my advice for aEuropean family would be: Stay well clear of this book. 4. That is not to mention other modern innovations presented as fact (Miriam's cup, an Orange on the Seder plate, etc) which have no place in a 'traditional' Seder. I would also question if they have a place in a 'modern' Seder, as surely if you are seeking modern metaphors with which to engage progressive minded people you would encourage individuals to create their own, rather than importing someone else's guff. But that is a different question altogether. Hag Sameach everyone..... But avoid this book at all costs.
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