Hamas War

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Signs of The Moshiach, Messiah, All One Family

Living in Shiloh for almost thirty years, we've become part of a very Jewish community.  Diaspora-based ethnic distinctions are getting more and more blurred.   Every year after switching the kitchen back to its normal chametz mode we reward ourselves by celebrating the Moroccan Maimona, a Jewish holiday we knew nothing about growing up in Ashkenaz (Eastern European) New York Jewish families.


Like most of our neighbors with married children, we have grandchildren of "mixed ethnic" Jewish identities.  Everyone is 100% Jewish, but it's common for Yemenite grandmothers to have Ashkenaz grandchildren.  Or, like us, our Tunisian progeny eat their rice, forbidden by our ethnic custom, at our Passover table.  Menus, like families, are very mixed.  

After thousands of years of exile, we Jews have become comfortable, too comfortable in many of our temporary homes and cultures.  We've adopted and adapted foods, menus and cooking styles, clothing, art and music from our hosts frequently forgetting that those locations were supposed to be be temporary punishments.

Recent polls have shown a new a wonderful tolerance and acceptance of this phenomena.  This is very different from the early days of the State of Israel when the European Zionists  unabashedly discriminated against North African and Indian Jews.

We're in the midst of a process, preparing ourselves as a People to accept Moshiach Ben David, when he shows himself, speedily in our days, G-d willing.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

"Folding a mufletta"?

That's like so trivial. Goggle for Mimouna. There's so much more, both in people and in culinary creativity.

Batya said...

How could you say "trivial?" They're calorie-laden delicious!

Pesky Settler said...

We live down the street from both the Yemenite and Sepharadi shuls. The bulletin board outside their shul had posters for the Moshiach Seudah Chabad was hosting but nothing about a Mimouna.

I would LOVE to go to one though.

Maybe next year.

Batya said...

Invitations are probably personal. That's how it is here. Many years ago, when we were all new here, they invited the entire yishuv. Now it's just a small core group of friends and family.