This passover the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute created a family game called "Finding Personal Meaning in the Story of Our Freedom" for the seder. At the Passover Seder, we relive our tale of slavery and freedom and seek to make it relevant to our lives. These five questions are designed to challenge players to think about how the story of the Exodus can help them find personal freedom nowadays.

1.  The Hebrew name for Egypt, Mitzrayim, means a narrow and constricted space. Relate one area in which you feel stifled after repeating the answers of those before you.

2.  Despite all the terrible plagues that were destroying his country and his legacy, Pharaoh couldn't bring himself to let the Jews go. Let's get into Pharaoh's head. Imagine you are Pharaoh's therapist; can you name a "condition" that would explain his irrational behavior?

3. The purpose of the plagues was to force Pharoah to take action and free the Jews. Self-discipline is the freeman's motivation to take action. Can you name an 11th plague to motivate the Pharoah inside of us? Share one activity that inspires you to action.

4. By expressing gratitude, we can feel free even if we haven't completely escaped whatever is enslaving us. (This is the theme of "Dayeinu.") Using the letters D or Y, name one thing you are thankful for.

5. This is a meditation. Take a moment to relax your shoulders, close or rest your eyes, and take note of your heart rate. "In every generation, a person is obligated to regard himself as if he had come out of Egypt." Imagine what it might have felt like to walk through the parted Red Sea, to know that you would not be a slave, that you were truly free. What does it physically feel like to be free? Say one word expressing how it feels to be free.