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Posts Tagged ‘Jewish Food’

It’s Passover time again. Once we were slaves in Egypt, and once my ancestors were indentured servants to the British Empire. Now my Grands love watching the Great British Baking Show, while Jewish women and maybe some men everywhere sweep all the bread crumbs out of their kitchens while making matzoh ball soup.

Coming on the heels of #NoKings, this holiday feels heady. Handmaidens dripping in red led the march in Nashville holding the names of every single man in the Epstein files. Bill Clinton and Donald Trump were first in line.

Today I will chop up butternut squash to make my famous casserole. I realize that most of the people who loved this particular dish will not be here. I had to send all the leftovers home with Aunt Sue over the many years of Grandma Ada’s seders. Eventually newer, more modern recipes will take its place. We don’t keep carp in our bathtubs anymore to make gefilte fish. But matzoh ball soup has stood the test of time. Like a birthright.

On Wednesday, erev Passover, SCOTUS’ “… nine justices will hear arguments over whether to allow the Trump administration to end that promise of birthright citizenship. The landmark case will test whether the Constitution guarantees citizenship to all babies born on U.S. soil, including the children of undocumented immigrants. It could potentially redefine what it means to be an American for generations to come.” https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/31/us/politics/supreme-court-birthright-family-histories.html?unlocked_article_code=1.XVA.1MWs.26nTC7VU3rcO&smid=url-share

I just read that Chief Justice Roberts’ Great Great Grandfather Albert Podrasky, was born in PA coal country to parents who arrived here from Slovakia. He was born before his parents were naturalized, and yet tradition had it that the baby was born on American soil and was therefore a citizen. It was not just tradition, it was the Law of the Land! It seemed sacrosanct. I wonder when, IF, my foster mother Nell’s parents were naturalized after immigrating from Czechoslovakia to Scranton, PA? 

Or what about my Great Great Grandfather who arrived here, in the same coal country as Roberts’ ancestors, from Ireland in 1854? Was he a citizen when my Grandfather was born six years later? This administration may try to rewind time, to ban books, to erase history, and yet we were all immigrants – we are a country of immigrants. And immigrants belong here.

I’m willing to bet if we all dug a little deeper, many of us would find a tiny blip, like our Chief Justice. I cannot imagine birthright citizenship would be overturned, and yet I couldn’t imagine that Mr T would win a second term. I couldn’t imagine that Roe would be challenged. I take nothing for granted these days.

When we pray on Wednesday night, over brisket and matzoh, I will ask God (if you’re listening) to stop this war that was started on a whim. To help ALL our citizens get out and vote in November, because I believe even the die hard MAGA supporters are beginning to question Mr T’s motives. And to forgive us for no longer making P’tcha, an Ashkenazi meat aspic dish made from jellied calf or chicken feet.

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What is it about this time of year? I realize it just recently snowed some up North, but traveling from VA to TN yesterday Bob and I witnessed Spring in all her glory. White Bradford pear trees are in bloom, and forsythia are bursting into their yellow coats. Last night birds were trumpeting us into the Music City; later, we played on the front porch with the Love Bug and said “Hey” to neighbors walking children and dogs.

Great Grandma Ada and Hudson will arrive today with Uncle Jeff for Friday night’s seder. With Cousin Sue gone, it doesn’t make sense for Ada to slave away in the kitchen for days just to celebrate a holiday about leaving slavery behind. In her 90th year she deserves to relax, it’s about time the younger generation took over. This year we skipped the Blue Ridge mountains   because the Groom is on call in the MICU. For the first time in 36 years, I bequeath the haroses to the Bride!

Here is my recipe:

Mix together 2 or 3 chopped apples with chopped walnuts, raisins, dried apricots and dates. Add a smidgen of Kosher wine and honey and voila, you have the condiment of condiments. The stuffing for your Hillel sandwich.

I brought along my seder plate from the Berkshires. It was thrown by a friend’s husband, Thomas Hoadley, http://thomashoadley.com/bio an exceptional potter. I remember when Bob was chasing after a cat and accidentally knocked it off a shelf in Windsor, MA. I was so heartbroken because it was the very first piece of real art I had ever picked out myself, and it was someone we knew, someone we sat with on a blanket at Tanglewood. Luckily, his wife Stephanie supplied me with another! https://www.hoadleygallery.com

We won’t hide eggs, but we will hide matzoh for the children. Cousin Jenny’s new baby girl will have to wait to meet the Love Bug’s now 5 month old brother. I am always surprised to think that right at sundown, all over the world, Jews will be sitting down to this dinner theatre. The equivalent might be if Christians everywhere sat down to dinner at the exact hour all over the world on Christmas Eve, but before they ate someone would recite the story of how they managed to survive all these years. No junior, no food for you until we recite all the saints and what they had to endure to remain Christian.

Only eventually Christians became the dominant religion in the West. After reading the Atlantic’s front page article, “Is It Time for the Jews to Leave Europe?http://www.theatlantic.com/features/archive/2015/03/is-it-time-for-the-jews-to-leave-europe/386279/ about the rise of hatred and anti-semitism, I feel bereft.

The previously canonical strain of European anti-Semitism, the fascist variant, still flourishes in places. In Hungary, a leader of the right-wing Jobbik party called on the government—a government that has come under criticism for whitewashing the history of Hungary’s collaboration with the Nazis—to draw up a list of all the Jews in the country who might pose a “national-security risk.” In Greece, a recent survey found that 69 percent of adults hold anti-Semitic views, and the fascists of the country’s Golden Dawn party are open in their Jew-hatred.

Is it possible that in the future the only safe place to be Jewish will be in Israel? The ratio of Jew to Arab in France is 1 to 10. Instead of saying Je Suis Charlie, one commentator said, we should be saying, “Je Suis Juif!”

And instead of fighting over which Islamic sect has dibs on their prophet, has dominance and power in the Middle East and Africa,, maybe Muslims around the world should begin to remember their shared values over dinner at Ramadan. I’m pretty sure they would not include flying planes into buildings or suicide vests.

When we break bread together, or matzoh, we can see into each other’s souls. Have a peaceful Easter/Passover weekend. I can only wish that my grandchildren – that ALL our grandchildren – will be able to live without fear. To not always have a bag packed.     IMG_2398

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