From The Disruptor's Haggadah

Dayenu, said no one ever.

Image: Abraham Wallin

“Jewish culture is in the mainstream, it’s popular, and that’s something any brand would want to jump on,” says Danya Shults, 31, founder of Arq, a lifestyle company that seeks to sell people of all faiths on a trendy, tech-literate, and, above all, accessible version of Jewish traditions.” —Bloomberg

Dayenu:

If God had made us “the chosen people,” which is a great name, from a branding perspective: It would have been enough

If God had carried out judgment against our former employers in a breach-of-contract suit: It would have been enough

If God had led us out of wage-bondage and into Y Combinator, where a sea of investors parted for us on demo-day: It would have been enough

If God had totally slain our first-born sales numbers, just absolutely killed them: It would have been enough

If God had given us “Wandr,” the app for navigating desert environments for periods of up to forty years: It would have been enough

If God had fed us “Manna,” the new kosher superfood and protein substitute from Heeb’s Herbal Supplements (the makers of “Matzo Muscle Bars” and “Tuchus Toner”): It would have been enough

If God had given us Don’t Worship The Golden Calf: And Other Business Wisdom From The Torah in paperback: It would have been enough

If God had led us to “Mount.Sinai,” a digital lifestyle community for gentiles to sample Jewish culture in a non-threatening, apolitical way: It would have been enough

If God had given us “Shabbat Strategy Sessions,” a Friday-night meet-up and networking event for business Maccabees to share learnings from the battlefield of commerce: It would have been enough

If God had built us “Holy Temple”, a private social-club for Jewish millennial influencers/entrepreneurs located in Gowanus: It would have been enough

Martin Bergman lives in New York and is at work on a novel