Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

The Koren Tanakh of the Land of Israel: Echoes of Egypt: A Haggada

Rate this book

156 pages, Hardcover

Published March 1, 2026

2 people are currently reading
8 people want to read

About the author

Joshua Berman

33 books2 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
7 (58%)
4 stars
5 (41%)
3 stars
0 (0%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
405 reviews34 followers
Read
February 20, 2026
Echoes of Egypt: A Superb Haggada by Dr. Berman

Passover is one of the most significant holidays of Judaism. Many Jews consider it second to the Shabbat. It is the first command given to the Israelite ancestors during the period when Moses was rescuing the Israelites from Egyptian slavery. It teaches that Judaism stresses the need for all people, not only Jews, must be free, use their intelligence to learn and improve themselves, become all they can be from what they learn, and use what they learn to improve the world for all that is in it. The message is repeated often in different ways in the Haggadah, a word meaning “the telling (of the message).”
In Echoes of Egypt: A Haggada, Rabbi Dr. Joshua Berman—professor of Tanakh at Bar-Ilan University and an internationally respected biblical scholar—brings his formidable academic expertise into the home dining room of the Passover Seder. The Seder is a non-biblical setting where the message is repeated by reading the Haggada. The result of Berman’s book is a presentation that is intellectually serious, visually stunning, and spiritually stirring.
Rabbi Berman is well known for his earlier works, including Created Equal and Inconsistency in the Torah, as well as his more recent Ani Maamin, published by Maggid Books. In those volumes, he explored the theological and literary dimensions of the Torah with scholarly precision. In his Haggada, however, he turns his scholarship toward experiential understanding. He does not merely explain the Exodus—he reconstructs its world.
His Haggada’s most distinctive feature is its rich visual presentation. The 156-page volume contains nearly four dozen colorful images drawn from the art, inscriptions, monuments, and iconography of ancient Egypt. These images are not decorative embellishments; they are interpretive tools. They allow readers to see the imperial world that shaped the Israelites’ bondage and, more importantly, the ideological revolution that the Exodus represents.
Rabbi Berman frames the Exodus not simply as liberation from slavery, but as a bold theological protest against tyrannical empire. Ancient Egypt was not merely a powerful state; it was a civilization built on the control of humans by powerful kings, rigid hierarchy, and the sacralization of power. Against this backdrop, the Exodus emerges as a radical rejection of tyranny and a redefinition of human dignity. The God of Israel, unlike Pharaoh, cannot be contained in monuments or manipulated through ritual. Time itself is transformed: history is no longer cyclical and oppressive, but purposeful and redemptive.
The book opens with nearly twenty concise yet thought-provoking essays that illuminate central themes of Passover. Throughout the Haggada, these insights are expanded upon on the pages following the traditional text, enriching rather than overwhelming it. Rabbi Berman’s tone is accessible without sacrificing depth. He writes as both scholar and teacher, guiding readers through complex ideas with clarity and passion.
The famous declaration—"In every generation, a person must see himself as if he himself came out of Egypt”—serves as the heartbeat of this work. By immersing readers in the sensory and ideological world of ancient Egypt, Rabbi Berman makes the mandate of full freedom tangible. We begin to grasp not only what Jewish ancestors endured, but what they defied. The Exodus ceases to be a distant memory and becomes an ongoing moral challenge: How do we resist modern forms of Pharaoh? How do we affirm the Torah’s revolutionary vision of human worth? What is the purpose of life?
Echoes of Egypt succeeds on multiple levels. It is visually sumptuous, historically grounded, theologically rich, and spiritually energizing. For families seeking to deepen their Seder discussion, educators looking to contextualize the Exodus, and readers who appreciate the fusion of scholarship and Jewish religion, this Haggada offers a rare and compelling contribution.
In short, Rabbi Berman has crafted more than a commentary—he has created a joyous and educational experience. Echoes of Egypt invites us not only to remember the past, but to see it, feel it, and carry its message forward to an improved world.
Profile Image for Ben Rothke.
376 reviews54 followers
March 26, 2026
Every year brings new printings of Haggadah from every sector of the Jewish world, with a focus that encompasses every spectrum of religious thought.
Within this vast sea of choices, the most logical Haggadah that seemingly should have been published long ago is the Koren Tanakh of the Land of Israel: Echoes of Egypt: A Haggada by Rabbi Dr. Joshua Berman.
I’ve reviewed several titles in The Koren Tanakh of the Land of Israel series, and the Haggadah is their latest addition. The series focuses on archaeology, Egyptology, and more to connect the ancient world with modern scholarship. This gives the reader a much deeper understanding of the text and stories.
In this amazing and utterly unique Haggadah, Berman uses Egypt as the milieu for his commentary. The Haggah famously states that “In every generation, a person must see himself as if he himself came out of Egypt”. There’s no better way to do that than with a Haggadah that focuses on what Egypt was like, its culture, and the archaeological evidence that provides context for the Jewish exile in Egypt.
Berman opens with a few essays that introduce what transpired in Egypt in the book of Exodus. He writes that the Torah’s approach, in general and in its relationship with the Jewish people, was a radical departure from the other religions of the ancient Near East.
He has done a remarkable job showing how Egypt and the philosophy of ancient Egypt are inextricably linked to the Egyptian exile and Pesach story. It’s quite easy to miss those things if they are not attuned to those facts, which Berman brings here.
For example, in Genesis 41:42, when Joseph is elevated to viceroy of Egypt, Pharaoh “placed a gold chain around his neck”. At first glance, it is an easily overlooked detail. But in the world of ancient Egypt, this was no mere ornament.
Berman writes that the highest mark of royal favor in the Egyptian court was the golden chain of honor. In the tombs of high-ranking Egyptian officials who served the pharaoh with distinction, there are images of gold chains draped around their necks.
Some Haggadot include pictures, and this one does too. The difference is that these images are stunning, directly connected to the story, and depict what actually occurred in Egypt. You won’t find this in any other Haggadah.
For those seeking a Haggadah that is both unique and utterly central to the story, Echoes of Egypt is unlike any other.
Profile Image for Mindy Schaper.
482 reviews13 followers
April 6, 2026
This is a great Hagaddah for people with an entry level interest in the interplay of Jewish history and archeology, and even my husband, who has read all of Berman's other works and is a hobbyist in this field, said there were things he did not know in this Hagaddah.

The entries are perfectly sized- I read them all through our two sedarim, reading many of them aloud to our diverse Seder guests, and all were appreciated. The two essays I read in the morning.

It was really fascinating and also helped enlighten the visit we took to the Egyptian section of the MET over Chol Hamoed.
84 reviews
April 1, 2026
This is a very unique and fascinating Haggada.

Dr. Berman does an amazing job explaining not just some of the Haggada passages but the whole exodus from Egypt through archeology and egyptology and gives you a fascinating perspective on the words of the torah.

If you're looking for something truly unique and different I would highly recommend this one!
Profile Image for Yossi.
60 reviews
March 17, 2026
…wonderful and a great conversation starter to use at the Seder table itself!
Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews